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"This country needs many more books like this one."-Arundhati Roy,
author of Walking with the Comrades and The God of Small Things A
powerful eyewitness account of life in an Indian prison shows how
abolition is necessary to achieve a democratic transformation of
society. In May 2007, Arun Ferreira, a democratic rights activist,
was picked up at a railway station in western India, detained by
the court, and condemned to prison for an expanding list of crimes:
criminal conspiracy, murder, possession of arms, and rioting, among
others added during his detention. In one of the most notorious
prisons in India, Arun Ferreira was constantly abused and tortured.
Over the next several years, each of the ten cases slapped against
him fell apart. At long last, Ferreira was acquitted of all
charges. As he exited the prison, moments away from freedom, he was
rearrested by plainclothes police. He never got to glimpse his
family waiting for him just outside the prison gates. In stark and
riveting detail, Ferreira recounts the horrors he faced in
prison-torture, beatings, the general air of hopelessness-and the
small consolations that kept hope alive-strikes and solidarity
among inmates. His memoir is a timely reminder that across the
globe policing and incarceration are institutions in desperate need
of being dismantled.
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