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The telegrams were encoded using a simple book cipher—the key being the Bengali novel Anandamath (Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, 1882), famous for the song Vande Mataram . British cryptanalysts at the (the precursor to GCHQ) broke the cipher after intercepting a repeat transmission error.
The Kalikot Telegram was not a single message, but a cache of intercepted revolutionary communications that exposed a sprawling pan-Asian anti-colonial plot. It revealed direct links between Indian revolutionaries, the Soviet Union, the Chinese Communist Party, and Irish republicans—all coordinated through a small press in the remote Kalikot region (present-day Nepal and northern India). When British intelligence cracked the code, it triggered mass arrests, a sensational trial, and a diplomatic crisis that reshaped colonial security policy for a decade. By 1924, the British Raj had suppressed the first wave of post-WWI revolutionary activity. The Ghadar Party (1913) had failed to spark a mutiny, and the Rowlatt Act (1919) gave authorities sweeping powers to detain suspects without trial. Yet a new, more sophisticated generation of revolutionaries emerged, influenced by the Bolshevik Revolution (1917) and the rise of anti-colonial movements in Ireland, Egypt, and Turkey. kalikot telegram
Introduction: A Crack in the Empire’s Armor In the annals of India’s struggle for freedom, the spotlight often falls on the Jallianwala Bagh massacre (1919), the Non-Cooperation Movement (1920–22), or the Quit India Movement (1942). But beneath the surface of mass protests lay a shadowy world of revolutionary conspiracies, coded messages, and spy-vs-spy intrigue. One of the most explosive—and now largely forgotten—incidents from this underground war is the Kalikot Telegram affair of 1924 . The telegrams were encoded using a simple book