India’s freedom struggle was not fought only on the streets—it was fought in courtrooms. In Freedom on Trial, advocate Akash Vajpai uncovers a forgotten front of the independence movement, where colonial courts became battlegrounds and justice itself stood accused.
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Through twelve landmark legal cases involving figures such as Mahatma Gandhi, Bhagat Singh, Bal Gangadhar Tilak and Veer Savarkar, the book shows how biased colonial trials were transformed into acts of resistance, exposing the moral bankruptcy of imperial justice and awakening political consciousness across the nation.
With a foreword by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, this compelling work restores neglected legal battles to their rightful place in history—revealing how law, repression and resistance shaped India’s path to swarajya.
?? What You’ll Discover Inside
• Detailed reconstructions of twelve pivotal colonial-era trials
• How British legal procedures were structured to criminalize political resistance
• The courtroom strategies adopted by freedom fighters and their lawyers
• The role of trials in shaping public opinion and nationalist consciousness
• How legal repression inadvertently strengthened the independence movement
?? Why These Stories Change How We Read History
? Shifts the freedom struggle narrative from streets alone to institutions of power
? Demonstrates how colonial law operated as a political weapon
? Reveals the moral and legal tensions within the British justice system
? Shows how constitutional ideas evolved under colonial constraint
About the Author
Akash Vajpai is an Advocate-on-Record practising before the Supreme Court of India and the Delhi High Court. He currently serves as Central Government Standing Counsel for the Union of India, representing the Government in important constitutional, civil and statutory matters.
A law graduate of the University of Delhi, Akash has been enrolled with the Bar Council of Delhi since 2013. Alongside his legal practice, he maintains a deep academic interest in modern Indian history.