Thank You, 17th
Punjab. Dinesh K Kapila
I entered the General ICU at a
local reputed hospital just last week to meet my mother. She had collapsed at
home due to a diabetic complication and for us it was touch and go till the
ambulance got her to the Emergency Wing and subsequently moved her to the
General ICU. Thankfully she has recovered quite well and is now recuperating at
home now.
But to go back to the General
ICU, I saw my mom lying quietly on her bed and walked towards her. This was the
second day of her stay. As I bent down to greet her, she smiled, asked about me
( a mother is a mother) and then gestured to the elderly tall lanky Sikh
gentleman in the next bed. She said with a sense of familiarity, he is Major
Jagtar Singh from 17 Punjab. I moved towards him, so did Major Jagtar Singh, he
insisted upon getting up and embracing me. My mother said, my eldest son, and
as we embraced, I wished him and said thank you. We had never met, my mother
had never met him, but it was as though we knew each other. My father, as I
came to know, had already met him and
had a long chat, the Major was from near Bhatinda and was undergoing treatment
at the hospital. The 17th
Punjab Battalion was located nearby only.
Our family owes a real debt to
this battalion, years pass on, memories fade, but not for my parents and not
for me, being the eldest. We understand their emotions and feelings. In early 1969
Dad as Lt Col was commanding 6/11 GR (Gorkha Rifles) at Ambala and on promotion
he was promoted to Brigadier and tasked to command a Mountain Brigade on the
active Chinese Border at Sikkim. The 17th Punjab was one of the
battalions comprising the Brigade. He moved to Sikkim while my mother stayed on
at our bungalow at Allenby Road so as to avoid interrupting our education. The
Brigade we do not clearly remember but it could be the 165th.
My father loves the mountains and
is passionate about them. Since he moved
to the Indian Military Academy at Dehradun in 1946 from Hoshiarpur in Punjab
(my grandfather practised as a lawyer at Lahore and Hoshiarpur), he loved the
mountains, this has been lifelong. Well, gung ho, always on the go and self
confident in handling mountains and complications, he was visiting his units in
1969 and getting familiar with the terrain regularly. Maybe he ought to have been taking it easy but
then nearing ninety years now, he still does not !.
In April 1969 he was to visit
some pickets of 17 Punjab and before he set out, his long time Batman, Amber
Bahadur Gurung, told him politely not to go. In chaste Gorkhali, he submitted
my father was tired. As my father decided to go, he insisted on placing a copy
of the “Hanuman Chalisa” in my father’s folder. Well, it was a snowy day, it
was snowing heavily at 16000 feet, when my father collapsed after inspecting a
picket. There was commotion as to the officers and men realised it was the
dreaded high altitude sickness, Pulmonary Oedema. Water or rather fluids leak into the lungs and
it is not possible for the lungs to handle it, leading to collapse of the lungs
and major complications, sometimes fatal. The only solution is to bring the
patient to lower altitude, on priority and as early as possible. Then also it
can be a gamble. Here in Sikkim at that time the infrastructure was poor, roads
located far away and the path was just a mountain track. The helicopter could not fly in because of
very adverse weather conditions.
The 17th Punjab
scrambled fast. Three groups were constituted at varied locations. One advance
party set out to ascertain the easier and faster path in heavy falling snow and
ice on the tracks. The resolve was we are not losing our Commander. They tied
my father to a cot, strapped him in and physically four to six men at a time
started carrying the cot down. We can only imagine how tough it would have
been. But the typical army spirit of not losing a man and not giving in carried
them on. After every few hundred feet another team took over, shouting
encouragement to him in Punjabi and moving on relentlessly. I can only imagine
today the planning put in, the tasks allocated and then executed on a real time
basis. I can only be thankful today, as
we have been always.
The rescue parties, with sheer
grit and determination, brought him down to around 10000 feet in around four
and a half to five hours maximum. This is really swift going while carrying a
man strapped on a cot and on a mountain track in snowy conditions. There a jeep
was waiting with the unit doctor. His laconic statement was, one lung collapsed,
one about to, move him down very very fast.
The men cleared the way, the jeep raced to 8000 feet, that’s when my
father felt the urge to relieve himself and the doctor said, you will live Sir,
the 17th Punjab saved you. It’s just in time.
Next day he was airlifted to the
Military Hospital at Calcutta from the Base Hospital, where he would spend
nearly 75 days recovering. My mother would get to talk to him once a day, that
was her lifeline. I forgot to add, my maternal grandfather turned up early
morning after the episode, his address was listed in the contact numbers at
Army HQ’s. Then the telegrams followed and the ladies of the 6/11 GR rallied
around my mother. It would have been very tough on her.
So thank you 17 Punjab. Thank you
always. It’s because of them my father would celebrate his 90th
birthday this 26th September. Thank you Amber Bahadur too.
Tailpiece – I also want to thank
the Regiment of Artillery of the Pakistan Army. In 1971 in East Pakistan they
traced his vehicle and fired off a series of bursts. His jeep was thrown in the
air by the shells. The driver, guard, my father and his GSO3 (A Captain) were
thrown all over and were in shock but unharmed. A few more shells fell but all
survived. In fact the GSO3 said amidst all the confusion and chaos I feel we
lost the Commander but then my father shouted I am on the other side of the
road. So for inaccurate firing by the Pakistan Artillery my thanks.
In 1974
there were floods in the Munawar Tawi, a river in Chamb, J&K. Two jawans were
marooned. Returning from another location by helicopter, my father (then a
Major General) directed the pilots to rescue them as he was monitoring it on
the radio. and with him on board the helicopter they went is past haste for the rescue. They had to stray rather deliberately enter into
Pakistani territory to approach the two stranded men from an angle suitable to enable the rescue. It took multiple attempts in bad weather and the observation post was not stable too. Later on his
Pakistani counterpart (Division Commander) told him on the radio, my troops had noticed the
violation, We knew you were on it, they just wanted my orders to fire, I
withheld it. But it will not happen next time. So a thanks here to his wisdom.
PS. Years later when my father commanded 10 Infantry Division, 17 Punjab was there and some of the men who rescued him were still serving. He had a real celebration with them and introduced my mother to each person and prayed with them too.
Well,
lying in bed recuperating from viral fever, I thought of penning this. 17th
Punjab, all the glory and success to you, I was 8 years old in 1969, my
youngest brother 3 years, as my mother says. The Unit gave the rescue it’s all,
Major Jagtar Singh is now carrying a letter from my father to the current Commanding
Officer conveying his gratitude again. I
asked Major Jagtar Singh, do you remember him, he said it is as if it was
yesterday. He was the Intelligence Officer at the unit in 1969 and said your
dad’s swagger and self confidence rubbed off on us, plus he remembers the
handlebar moustaches !. Across the years we meet, part and move on. But the
gratitude is there from all of us.
Very touching. Looking at life through a sense of gratitude...a good way to live!
ReplyDeleteVery touching. Looking at life through a sense of gratitude...a good way to live!
ReplyDeleteReally touching.... Thanks to 17 Punjab and thanks to you for bringing the live action after so many years!
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ReplyDeleteWow...whatta an expression...impeccable....a beauty of a tribute to Armyz comradery...spirit...salutations....cheers!!!
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