The cellular jail brings back memories of torture chambers during the British Raj, of all those great names who were condemned to a life in the small, dark cells.
The genesis of the Cellular Jail in Port Blair, the capital of the Andaman Islands can be traced back to the British efforts of suppressing the rampant hoards of thugs or thuggies (clan of dacoits), who ravaged large tracts of India. However, the jail became significant and grasped the imagination of the people of India and abroad when, during the course of our freedom struggle, the British began deporting political prisoners to Port Blair. The penal settlement in Andaman goes back to 1857 (the first war of Indian independence), when a lot of revolutionaries were deported to this island. Though not much literary and material evidence of that colony is available, it is said that the deportees were badly treated and made to live in sub-human conditions. |