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Unveiling India’s prisons: A scholar’s indictment of a failing democracy

By Harsh Thakor* 
"The Cell and the Soul: A Prison Memoir" by Anand Teltumbde is not merely a prison memoir but a profound exposition of the Indian state, society, and criminal justice system, revealing their inhumane nature. It stands as one of the most powerful indictments of a democracy teetering on the brink of collapse. The book lucidly explores the stark realities of prison life in India, chronicling not only Teltumbde’s personal struggles but also those of his co-accused, serving as a testament to the resilient spirit of countless imprisoned activists. 
It meticulously traces the evolution of Hindutva neo-fascism since the Narendra Modi-led BJP government came to power in 2014. The narrative bridges the gap between the incarcerated and the free, offering a painstaking scholarly dissection of Teltumbde’s persecution and the broader collapse of democratic principles. It powerfully conveys that in today’s India, free thought itself is a seditious act.
Teltumbde’s memoir provides an illustrative picture of prison conditions, the authorities governing them, and their role in undermining judicial processes, access to basic resources, and hygiene. His firsthand experience of systemic injustice makes this work a testament to the complexities of India’s judiciary. The book transcends the daily routines of prison life, beginning with an exploration of the state’s tightening grip on dissenting voices. It is both a narrative of confinement and an investigation into the farcical democracy that orchestrates it. 
Comprising 22 of the over 100 notes Teltumbde wrote during his 31 months of incarceration, the memoir transcends personal catharsis to examine jail life, exposing the humiliation, cruelty, and high-handedness of prison administration.
The book’s symbolism lies in Teltumbde’s astonishment that a man of his stature—a professor of Big Data Analytics, an IIM alumnus, a corporate professional, and a practitioner of capitalism—could be branded an enemy of the state. “I was under the delusion,” he admits, “that because of my qualifications, integrity, and public image, I might not qualify for arrest.” 
The memoir offers a grounded examination of how a so-called democracy imprisons its thinkers. Teltumbde recounts his shock at the blatant lies presented by the Pune police in their initial press conference, which formed the basis of the charges against him. His pleas to quash the case were repeatedly rejected, with courts accepting sealed envelopes from the prosecution. Despite his background in corporate and business academia, he never imagined a ludicrous charge of being a Maoist could stick—until his arrest shattered that illusion.
The memoir opens with a poignant observation: incarceration is often seen as a fate worse than death, especially for those who have committed no unlawful act. It begins with Teltumbde being woken by his wife, who received a call from the Director of the Goa Institute of Management (GIM) informing her that the Pune police had raided the campus and stormed their home. This moment captures a life upturned. 
Teltumbde writes that watching a raid on television is one thing, but experiencing it at your doorstep is “like fluid from a festering wound seeping into your being.” His analysis extends beyond prison walls, drawing parallels between underreported COVID-19 deaths inside jails and those outside, reflecting the same insensitivity in both realms. For Teltumbde, prison mirrors India’s moral decay. “Prison is a mirror image of society,” he writes, “except that it does not pretend to be free.”
The most evocative passages focus not on physical suffering but on psychological torment, illustrating how a man whose life revolved around teaching, writing, and thinking was stripped of his intellectual freedom. The book shifts between the personal and the political, navigating Teltumbde’s longing to complete his course at GIM and his victimization in a neo-fascist state. This duality defines the work. 
“These notes,” he writes, “are not just a glimpse of jail life but a commentary on the system that perpetuates problems while pretending to solve them.” Teltumbde condemns the judiciary for obscuring the truth and the police for their complicity, citing the case of Param Bir Singh to expose the farce of India’s “rule of law.” He describes the Bhima Koregaon case as a landmark in how democracies crush dissent and evolve into neo-fascist states.
The memoir is dedicated to Teltumbde’s late brother, Milind Teltumbde, killed by security forces and branded a Maoist, ironically also a co-accused in the same case. Their intertwined fates highlight the height of state paranoia, equating a brother in the jungle with one in an IIM classroom as enemies of the state. “It was my pursuit to make the world a better place that landed me in prison,” Teltumbde writes in the prologue, encapsulating the book’s moral gravity.
Despite his anguish, Teltumbde initially placed faith in the judiciary and media, hoping they would recognize the fabricated charges against him. However, a broken democracy and complicit media maligned his image, with letters meant for police custody inexplicably reaching news channels without scrutiny. Even when the judiciary warned the police of this unlawful act, the oppression of Teltumbde and other intellectuals persisted, as the government sought to silence those exposing the truth. 
Teltumbde vividly describes life inside a prison cell, recalling his childhood curiosity about the fate of prisoners, many of whom were mascots of liberation. He examines how a repressive system sows inequality, injustice, and bitterness, breeding crime. Yet, he never imagined he would end up in a dark cell, with only a cheap cot for rest. The memoir urges readers to look beyond the spectacle of arrests and trials to the repressive state machinery behind them, reflecting that what happens in Taloja jail mirrors society at large.
In the Bhima Koregaon case, arrests during the COVID-19 pandemic weakened protests against these unconstitutional detentions. Accusations against Muslims, Tablighi Jamaat, and migrant workers served as a distraction, obscuring the false evidence and mass arrests. 
Teltumbde questions why the government ignored the Kumbh Mela in Haridwar, which, according to the World Health Organization and The Lancet, significantly spread the virus, while targeting other groups. The pandemic exacerbated prison conditions, with social distancing imposed amidst overcrowding, and prisoners denied proper diets, hygienic facilities, and basic resources. Teltumbde asserts that the death of Father Stan Swamy was a custodial death.
In the chapter “Entering the Hellhole,” Teltumbde explores how the right to dignity, enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution, is trampled within prison walls. He requested a pen and paper from the Superintendent of Police to keep notes, but the request was denied. Despite a biometric database linked to Aadhaar, he was forced to provide fingerprints repeatedly, enduring constant harassment. At Taloja jail, he was stripped naked and searched under CCTV surveillance—a tactic to assert fascist power over prisoners and their loved ones. 
The state’s prime targets, seen as adversaries, are not only imprisoned but barred from expressing their views, exercising fundamental rights, and maintaining their identity. In the Bhima Koregaon case, intellectuals were prohibited from writing to courts, and when permitted, the delivery of their letters was deliberately delayed.
Teltumbde includes an article he wrote in prison criticizing the Narendra Modi government’s privatization of Public Sector Units, falsely promoted as an economic boost.
The Superintendent summoned him for writing it, and despite Teltumbde’s argument that publishing from prison is not unlawful, he and his co-accused were banned from sending or receiving letters—a clear violation of constitutional rights. 
Teltumbde compares Indian prisons to those in developed countries like Norway, Portugal, New Zealand, and Switzerland, where correctional facilities are regularly updated to avoid harming prisoners’ consciences. He holds little hope for Indian prison reform, given the dire reality, and advocates for their abolition to enable true rehabilitation.
In the chapter “Of Labels and Labelling,” Teltumbde critiques the hero-worship of Marxism and Ambedkarism, offering a nuanced analysis of their ideologies. He finds coherence in Marx’s framework but sees Ambedkar’s as incomplete. He views Ambedkar’s Buddhism as a rationalist reinvention rejected by traditionalists and subtly compares the opposing origins of Marx’s and Ambedkar’s ideologies. Teltumbde criticizes Ambedkar’s endorsement of religion, particularly his views on Dhamma, which he believes fueled a personality cult and sectarianism.
---
*Freelance journalist

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