

To mark six years of the arbitrary arrests and imprisonment of political dissidents in the Bhima Koregaon case, The Polis Project is publishing a series of writings by the BK-16, and their families, friends and partners. (Read the introduction to the series here.) By describing various aspects of the past six years, the series offers a glimpse into the BK-16’s lives inside prison, as well as the struggles of their loved ones outside. Each piece in the series is complemented by Arun Ferreira’s striking and evocative artwork. This poem has been translated to English by Vernon Gonsalves.
Of the six-and-a-half years I spent in prison in the Bhima Koregaon-Elgar Parishad case, four-and-a-half years were in the Anda cell. The Anda cell is a prison within a prison. Its stony walls and sight-obscuring forest of iron bars put the mental fortitude, ideological endurance and courage to the test. What happened to political prisoners like me confined to these cells of darkness? Why have prisons been built? For whom, and by whom? Prison is marked by many contradictions—between exploitation and theft; prisons and justice; prisons and democracy; prisons and correctional homes. Trying to understand these contradictions and figure out the psychology behind it and resolve them is a struggle in itself. Throughout, we wonder how can one remain in prison and still keep alive that optimism of the words of the poet Saahir Ludhianvi who envisioned a time “when the government of the world will be run without jails.”…
Related Posts


Donald Trump’s Master Economic Plan I Opinion by Yanis Varoufakis
