Updated On: 15 October, 2023 07:00 AM IST | Mumbai | Jane Borges
Lawyer-trade unionist Sudha Bharadwaj, out on bail after three years in the 2018 Bhima-Koregaon violence case, says her time in Yerawada and Byculla women’s jail made her acutely aware of the gender gap in legal aid

Sudha Bharadwaj took to activism in the 1980s, after completing a five-year maths degree at IIT Kanpur. Pic/Anurag Ahire
Mumbai was Bombay, when Sudha Bharadwaj first visited the city in her teens. This was in 1978, the trade unionist-activist-lawyer tells us. “My mother [an academic] had gone abroad for a year, so I moved here to do my Class XI. I lived with my mama in Prabhadevi, and I’d travel all the way to Navy Nagar to my school [Kendriya Vidyalaya]. I still remember that beautiful bus journey, passing by Worli seaface, Haji Ali and Mantralaya. I have such fond memories of that time.”
It was in Mumbai that Bharadwaj also recalls experiencing the comforts of family. “I was the single child of a single mother, but here, I got to be with my uncle and children. I loved being around everyone,” she smiles.