Mumbai to get its own Cellular Jail
The first museum to be dedicated to revolutionaries of the Indian freedom struggle will be set up in Dadar, reports
Quaid Najmi
Soon
a replica of the famous Cellular Jail in the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands, along with some original fittings and articles, will be
seen in Mumbai at the country’s first upcoming museum
dedicated to revolutionaries of the Indian freedom struggle. The
museum will come up on 10,000 sq ft at the existing
Swatantryaveer Savarkar Rashtriya Smarak (SSRS) at Dadar, which
is a national monument to one such revolutionary, Vinayak D.
Savarkar, famous as Veer Savarkar. According to his
grand-nephew, Ranjit V. Savarkar, the museum will be an
ultra-modern one, with special 3-D effects to highlight the
struggles and travails undergone by Savarkar in the dreaded Kala
Pani jail.
"Veer
Savarkar spent 14 years in an isolated cell in the Cellular Jail
and another 13 years under house arrest in Ratnagiri in coastal
Maharashtra," said Ranjit V. Savarkar, who is also
executive president of the SSRS. He said many people in the
country have little or no idea of the Cellular Jail situated on
a remote group of islands in the Bay of Bengal, around 1,200 km
from Kolkata and Chennai."
Many people
want to go there and witness its historical past but are
constrained by various factors. A replica with some of the
original articles from that jail will enable the new generation,
especially students and youth, to get a glimpse of its
history," he added.
Parts of the historic Cellular Jail to be recreated in Mumbai: From left the oil-crushing instrument to which prisoners were chained; the entrance to the jail; and the punishment dress Photos: IANS |
SSRS president
Arun S. Joshi said while some of Veer Savarkar’s belongings
have already been brought to Mumbai, a team will leave for
Andaman and Nicboar Islands on February 1 to bring back some
other articles.
"So far,
we have brought a couple of the original doors of the iron cell
where he was lodged, some heavy iron chains and cuffs with which
he was tied on the arms and legs, his jail clothes and other
small items," said Joshi. The SSRS team also plans to
request the jail authorities to hand over the other belongings
or items used by Veer Savarkar there.
"This will
include a huge crushing instrument to which the prisoners were
chained and forced to move around to crush and extract oil from
dried coconuts, one of the most dreaded forms of rigorous labour
in those times," Joshi said. For the past three years, SSRS
has been in regular touch with the jail authorities seeking
custody of Veer Savarkar’s items, which can be displayed at
its Mumbai premises, he added.
"It is now
more than 45 years since Veer Savarkar died after giving up food
and water for several days. However, there is not a single
museum in India dedicated to armed contribution or
revolutionaries in the country’s freedom movement,"
Ranjit V. Savarkar explained. "Besides Veer Savarkar, the
museum will also depict major events spanning 1857-1947 in which
armed freedom fighters also played a significant role."
The SSRS plans
to have a full-fledged library of all available literature
around the country at the proposed museum. So far, the SSRS has
already uploaded for free download of all the writings,
including books, poems and plays, penned by Veer Savarkar.
According to Joshi and Ranjit V. Savarkar, while the
contribution of the non-violent freedom fighters has been
focussed upon for the past six decades, the struggle of armed
revolutionaries has been relegated to the fringes of history.
"One of
the aims of the museum is to enable people get a total picture
of the Indian freedom struggle with the valuable contribution of
people like Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose, Vinayak D. Savarkar, the
Bhagat Singh-Sukhdeo-Rajguru trio, and many others around the
country," Joshi said.
The three-storeyed
Cellular Jail, constructed between 1896 and 1906, originally had
seven wings in a circular design with a tall watch tower and a
bell at its centre.
Two of the
wings were destroyed after the Japanese invasion of the islands
in 1942 and its reign there till 1945 — when the British
re-captured it. Since India’s Independence in 1947, the jail’s
693 tiny cells remained vacant, even as two more wings were
demolished.
The remaining three wings were
converted into a 500-bed public hospital for the local
population in 1963, though Veer Savarkar’s original cell has
still been preserved. Later, in 1969, the premises of the entire
Cellular Jail and the watch tower at the centre were declared as
a ‘national monument’. Incidentally, the Cellular Jail was
made famous in a Bollywood movie in 1996, Sazaa-e-Kala Pani,
a multi-lingual classic directed by Priyadarshan, which won
three National awards and six Kerala state awards. — IANS
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