"Hundreds of prisoners in the jail showered their gratitude upon me. All of them knew one thing very well, and it was that during ten years of my association with them, I had carried on incessant agitation in the Cellular Jail and outside for giving them an organized existence. I had carried on agitation in the press, through petitions, through civil resistance, through questions asked in the Imperial Legislature at Delhi, through protests, correspondence and personal letters, to draw the pointed attention of India and its Central Government to their condition in the Andamans. And it was my persistence at it that had made the matter a live issue before the Jail Commission. To those who would felicitate me I said, âAt last the Andamans as a prison-colony is no more, the Cellular Jail is dismantled. This change is not the result of any single-handed endeavour. It is the reward of ten years of continuous and all-sided agitation, to the success of which all of you, and especially the political convicts, have made a tremendous contribution by your trials and tribulations throughout this period. And if it has succeeded even partially, the credit is yours.â I told them so and offered my sincerest felicitations to them in return. I added how fine it would have been for Mr Barrie to be alive that day. Mr Barrie used to taunt me that all my efforts were to go for naught and add that I was dashing my head against a stone-wall, that [sic] was not the wall that would break, but that my head would break. I could have told him that day as follows: âMr Barrie, my head had received many bruises by my dashing it continuously against your prison-walls. No doubt about it. But behold! The wall of your prison has now been cracked and will soon crumble down. And I am here alive with all the bruises I have received in the fight.â"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
V. D. Savarkar, quoted in Vikram Sampath - Savarkar, Echoes from a Forgotten Past, 1883â1924 (2019)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Cellular_Jail
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Cellular Jail
8 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Cellular Jail â
Related Quotes
"The solitary cells were so arranged as to prevent any communication among prisoners. It was named âCellular Jailâ becâŠ"
"The first thing that one noticed in the jail was the distinction made between the Hindu and non-Hindu prisoners with âŠ"
"There was an apprehension that Hindu guards might sympathize and fraternize with us. Therefore all the masters of ourâŠ"
"Who can describe the sufferingâthese agonies of mind and body? I may give you an instance, however to point the moralâŠ"
"As soon as I was locked up inside the room and the door was shut, I would begin to write on the wall with that pencilâŠ"
"In jail there are various kinds of work to do, the most difficult being the oil-mill, whether by hand or by foot. TheâŠ"
"In the dark confines of Port Blairâs Cellular Jail, we see a gradual metamorphosis of Vinayak from a young, brash radâŠ"
"A report by Time Magazine (dated 30th June 1980) read, âIn the worst massacre, in the village of Mandai, the tribals âŠ"
"Now compare this with the attitude of the BBC during the Kargil war. Most of us foreign correspondents know by now thâŠ"
"Ex-Mandai MLA recounted, Manoranjan Debbarma. âChildren were spiked to death and wombs of pregnant women were ripped âŠ"