THE HERO WHO WON A PARAM VIR CHAKRA ON SIACHEN
http://www.rediff.com/news/special/the-hero-who-won-a-param-vir-chakra-on-siachen/20160211.htm
Honorary Captain Bana Singh
won the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest ranking gallantry award, for
recapturing a Pakistani post on the Siachen Glacier.
Living a retired life in a quiet village in Jammu and Kashmir, he makes you feel that his act of phenomenal courage was part of a soldier's day at work.
Words: Archana Masih/Rediff.com. Images: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
Living a retired life in a quiet village in Jammu and Kashmir, he makes you feel that his act of phenomenal courage was part of a soldier's day at work.
Words: Archana Masih/Rediff.com. Images: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh,
Param Vir Chakra, outside his modest village home in Kadyal.
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
In a country which has only three living winners of the Param Vir Chakra,
it is a rare honour to meet one.
"It is an honour to meet you,
Sir," we say and Param Vir Chakra winner Honorary Captain Bana Singh
replies, "What I did was my duty to the country. I was given a task and I
did it."
There is no trace of arrogance that a
decorated soldier would perhaps be fully entitled to -- he should after all be
an icon of courage in a nation woefully short of heroes -- but Captain Bana
Singh makes you feel that what he did was part of a soldier's day at work.
The difference being that when he set out
for work that morning 29 years ago he was at the world's highest battlefield on
the Siachen Glacier, leading an operation to recapture a Pakistani post at a
height of 21,000 feet, scaling vertical walls of ice 1,500 feet high under
blinding snowfall.
Pakistani troops sat on top of this brutal
climb as Bana Singh and his men launched a brilliant attack, clearing the post
of every Pakistani soldier, setting an example in high altitude warfare which
would bring him the country's highest ranking gallantry award.
The man sitting in front of us in his modest village home flanked with
green fields, dressed in a simple pyjama and light sweater, had not only
defeated the enemy but nature itself on the most vicious battle terrain known
to man, one that has taken the lives of countless Indian and Pakistani
soldiers.
"'Three months in Siachen are like 30
years', a colonel once told me and asked, 'How did you do it?'" remembers
Bana Singh who some years ago was invited to speak to young men in Siachen,
soldiers not even born when he had won the Param Vir Chakra on that ruthless
terrain.
Much has changed at the glacier since Bana
Singh's time; men now have better gear, equipment and food, but Siachen
continues to be an unimaginable challenge for military and human survival. A
landscape where men guard the frontlines at temperatures below minus 52 degrees
Celsius that saps the body of energy and hunger.
It was here that Naib Subedar Bana Singh
fought the battle of his life.
IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param
Vir Chakra, Bana Singh, 8 J&K Light Infantry, with then President K R Narayanan.
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
The scale of his heroic accomplishment cannot be
understood without the back story.
Pakistani soldiers were entrenched on the
highest post in the Siachen Glacier, so important that it was named the Quaid
Post, after the founder of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Jinnah.
From here the Pakistanis had a vantage
point, with a clear view of Indian posts that were supplied only by
helicopters. By controlling that post Pakistani soldiers targeted the Indian
supply lines on the Soltoro range.
India had failed to recapture the post in
two previous attempts; a reconnaissance patrol under young Lieutenant Rajiv
Pande was gunned down by the Pakistanis, leaving only three survivors.
In a do or die attempt, then Subedar Bana
Singh and 6 men were tasked to recapture the post once again on June 26, 1987.
If the mission had to succeed it had to be completed before sunset that day --
and by 5 o'clock that evening, the Indian flag was flying at the top.
,font size=7>India had won back the
Quaid Post in a battle so heroic that the post was renamed Bana Post, by which
it is known till today.
'There was a single bunker on the top. I
threw a grenade inside and closed the door. At the end, a total of six
Pakistanis were killed,' he had told Rediff.com contributor
Claude Arpi in 2007.
Claude's wife Abha Tiwari's maternal
uncle, Major Somnath Sharma, incidentally won the first Param Vir Chakra. Major
Sharma died fighting Pakistani intruders in Badgam in the Kashmir valley in
November 1947.
Major Sharma's last words, inscribed below
his bust in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh, were: 'The enemy is only 50 yards from
us. We are heavily outnumbered...I shall not withdraw an inch but will fight to
the last man and last round.'
IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param
Vir Chakra, Bana Singh, 8 J&K Light Infantry, with then prime minister
Rajiv Gandhi.
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
Captain Bana Singh is the only soldier along with the
late Major Ramaswamy Parmeswaram, to be awarded the Param Vir Chakra in
peacetime, an award which is otherwise only given for exemplary military
courage during war.
Major Parmeswaram, 41, was martyred during
the Indian Peace Keeping Operation in Sri Lanka in 1987, five months after Bana
Singh's heroism in Siachen.
The last time the Param Vir Chakra was
awarded was in the Kargil war in July 1999; at that time Bana Singh was the
only serving Param Vir Chakra winner in the Indian Army.
Looking back at the Kargil conflict in
which India lost 527 soldiers, he feels that that war changed many things for
the armed forces and compliments then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and
then defence minister George Fernandes.
"It was only in Vajpayeeji's time that we acquired the
facilities of proper transportation of the bodies of fallen soldiers
home," he says, surrounded in his home by India war memorabilia like the
historic surrender of the Pakistani forces in Dhaka after the 1971 war and
photographs of two famous Indian generals -- Field Marshals K M Cariappa and S
H F J 'Sam' Manekshaw.
"The Kargil war highlighted the
entire fauj. The
media also played a role and as a result martyrs' families are looked after
much better than before."
A year after Kargil, he retired after 32
years of service to the nation and went home to his village of Kadyal near
Jammu where he was born. His son Rajinder Singh now serves the Indian Army.
For a decade after his retirement, apart from his pension from the Indian
Army, Captain Bana Singh would receive Rs 160 as pension from the Jammu and
Kashmir government. A sorry comment on that state's regard for the only Param
Vir Chakra from Jammu and Kashmir.
It was only after a long and sustained
effort that the Jammu and Kashmir pension was raised to Rs 10,400 in 2010. His
pension from the army is Rs 32,000 per month.
"People say I have set an example and
I say I don't know how I did it, but I am proud to have successfully fulfilled
the task my unit gave me," says Captain Bana Singh in his small drawing
room festooned with army felicitations.
"I have received a lot of respect and
fame from my country. It is a blessing."
Every year, Bana Singh is invited by the
government to be part of the Republic Day parade, in the small contingent of
soldiers awarded the highest gallantry award.
It is a day when the soldier, who retired
from the Indian Army in 2000, wears his full uniform, puts his Param Vir Chakra
medal and salutes the President on Rajpath in the country's grandest parade.
In all these years, he has missed just two
parades, he says and tells us a story reminiscent of days past when some men
lived their whole lives on words like honour, duty and discipline.
IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param
Vir Chakra, outside his modest village home in Kadyal.
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
Sitting on a small water tank in a field behind his
house, Captain Bana Singh speaks of one such incident when a few years after
his retirement, a retired senior army officer whom he had served under stopped
by at his home.
"He looked at me and asked 'Bana, do
you remember me?' and I said 'Sir, if an Indian soldier cannot recognise an
officer who has commanded him, he has no right to this country'."
In a nation overdone with places named
after politicians, the long overdue Bana Singh stadium in his native tehsil may
yet not be fully functional -- but Captain Bana Singh Param Vir Chakra is not
one to get perturbed about any such lack of recognition.
That afternoon when we had came looking
for his home, we only had to ask for his name and people would lead the way.
Later, as he bade us good bye, the postman
dropped by with an envelope, bearing only his name and the village name as the
address.
"Someone is inviting me to speak to
their students and inspire them. I travel at least ten times a year for
interactions in schools and colleges," he smiles, folding the letter
neatly, overwhelmed with the respect he has got from people over the years.
On his school visits, children want to
know how he won that battle in Siachen for India; how he conquered fear. At
other functions, people touch his feet in respect of his valour.
The recognition is unbridled and comes to
him spontaneously. No officially named plaque, road, bridge or stadium can
rival that.
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