By Lt Gen Baljit Singh
19 Aug , 2015
A non-combatant who witnessed and filmed the first flight to Leh & Battles For Zoji-La and Namka Chhu.
“…the fall of Leh will be a strategic blow to India. It has to be saved at all cost….. I will be on that flight in your cock-pit. So let’s go.” Major General K S Thimayya, DSO, 23 May, 1948.
“An eye witness to two stunning Himalayan Battles fought at either end of the range… had savored the joy of victory at Zoji La ……. And the sadness of withdrawal at Se La, from poor preparedness …” W M (Bill) Aitken, 2009.
“ … very special thanks are due to Serbjeet Singh for his kind permission to reproduce the spectacular panorama of the Namka Chhu Valley and Thagla ridge which he was still painting, perched on a hill over-looking the Battle-field, when the Chinese launched their attack on 20 October, 1962.” Major General D K Palit, Vr C, 1991.
It was in 1978, when waiting to catch the attention of the Director General Military Operations in his office, that I noticed a card-board object lying on a table by the window. On a closer look subsequently, that cratered card-board was in fact a paper-mache, three dimensional model of the Namka Chhu Valley. It was a stunning replica of the terrain over which 7 Infantry Brigade had sited its defenses and engaged the PLA troops in October 1962. The master crafts man was, Serbjeet Singh!
From times immemorial but especially beginning with Napoleon’s era, professional artists have been commissioned to paint battles and in particular scenes related to acts of valour (Victoria Cross) which are honored and prized to this day. All such art was a re-creation removed in time and space, even by Continents, but based on recorded history and supplemented at times by interviews with eye witnesses. But here was SS who was impelled solely by the inner urgings and the Faith of an artist (Dharma), not the money motive and certainly not ego. Perhaps SS may have assumed that his actions symbolized the “shoulder-to-shoulder” presence of the entire Nation with the front-line soldier? And in the same vane I salute SS, as the expression of gratitude to him on behalf of India’s Armed Forces as a whole, for recording on Film and through paintings the History of war in J&K in 1948-49.
Shortly, Gen Thimayya was appointed to command the newly raised Sri Division (later 19 Div) and on encountering SS in his ADC’s room, the General said, “I have been posted to Srinagar. Now there is no problem. Get ready to go!” By early May 1948, the General and his protégé, loaded with the paraphernalia of film-makers and artists, had arrived in Srinagar. And what followed is best summed up by SS; “Thimayya sent us all over the front in Kashmir, starting from establishing a piquet at 16,000 ft, above Zoji La on the Bodh Kulan Ganj cliffs, to the battle in the Gurais Valley and the operations in the Uri Sector. The finale came with the historic battle of Zoji La.”@
But praise be God that on the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Zoji La (Nov, 1997), SS put up an exhibition of his paintings, sketches and photographs at the All India Fine Arts and Crafts Society, New Delhi. After the inauguration by General V P Malik, PVSM, AVSM, Chief of The Army Staff, SS graciously bequeathed the entire collection to the Indian Army, for display as deemed fit. And in 1999, the Army Headquarters released a limited edition of the Book “Zoji La: 1 November 1948”, published by Vanity Books and funded by the BPL. Among the timeless visuals in the Book are:
(a) A panoramic painting of “Kashmir, Ladakh and Karakoram”, as seen in the mind’s eye of SS “afloat in a balloon 15,000 ft above Pathankote!” Ignoring a few geographical miss-placements, the over- all impact is simply wondrous.
(b) 1 Patiala (today 15 Punjab) inching up, on toe-holds to establish a piquet on a cliff-ledge, 16,700ft over the West face of Zoji La. In the absence of tinned/pre-cooked, frozen meals, they are seen valiantly lightingly a fire to cook a meal!
(d) A Stuart Tank supporting by fire, 3 Jat in the capture of the fortified defences at “Chabutra” and “Mukand Ridge”.
(f) 75 mm guns of the 51 Parachute Field Battery firing from a gun position at Dras, another altitude record for the times.
(g) Brigadier K L Atal with his Staff (77 Parachute Brigade) at the Dras IB, with a fluttering Tri-Colour!
(h) A formal photo-portrait of Major General K M Thimayya in full medals and gold-braid with Zoji La cliffs as back-drop. The General looks every inch, the future COAS!
(j) Lieut Colonel (later Major General) Rajinder Singh “Sparrow” in his Tank, giving orders on radio moments before the break out battle at Zoji La.
(k) Lieut General K M Carriapa, OBE, GOC-in-C Western Command and Lieut General S M Shrinagesh, the Corps Commander looking up the Zoji La forward slopes.
A few of the most fetching exhibits from this collection are on permanent display in the interiors of the NDC building at New Delhi. And as to the artistic merit of the works of SS, his J&K sketch books were priced in the London Art market at Rs 25 Lakh, but he refused to part with them. However, many a painting of the Himalayas and Trans-Himalayas by SS are in various Galleries in the World. For instance, a Leh Valley landscape under full moon (reproduced in this Book), has been with the Kremlin Museum, Moscow.
The question which begs an answer is about the in-accessibility of the 16 mm cine film of the J&K Battles shot on location by SS, between May 1948 and January 1949. I have not come across anyone who ever saw it screened publically or privately. I am told that the DD Television Channel, did recently pick on a few select episodes from its total footage but apparently the feature failed to excite the viewer’s appetites. Fortunately, Karamjit Singh (the son of SS), had retrieved some footage from the original Film and supplementing it with appropriate recent aerial photography, created an impressive DVD titled “THE LIBERATION OF LADAKH”. This DVD has some vintage visuals and voice recordings of Lieut General K M Cariappa, OBE, exhorting his Commanders during a visit to the battle-field, and of Major General K S Thimayya, DSO, whose voice validates the actions as they unfold with gems such as “this is supreme vindication of upright manhood” following the break-out from Zoji La, and Lieut Colonel R S “Sparrow” (among others), briefing their subordinate commanders at various stages of the war, and all of it seen to the soothing back-ground music provided by Mrs. Shanta SS! Need I dwell any more on the urgency to have the entire original Film converted to the Digital format, screened extensively at least with-in the Armed Forces fraternity, and also preserved as an archival treasure? Aren’t there any Indian philanthropists, reading this narrative!?
Now when the clouds of war reappeared over India in mid 1962, it seemed that armed conflagration was imminent in the Namka Chhu Valley, at the very least. In the event however, war was fought out in the Ladakh region as well. We do not know whether SS could have perceived the likely spread of the conflict but we do know that he had headed East, but was it out of the novelty of documenting a war in a new Theater? Probably not. Because among the military commanders of 1948-49 Battles in J&K that SS was acquainted well with, was Brigadier L P Sen, DSO, the then Uri Sector Commander. Now fourteen years later, Lieut General L P Sen, DSO, was the GOC-in-C Eastern Command and SS may well have sought his indulgence in getting him to the scene of imminent clash of Arms with the PLA.
But this Painting by SS will live forever, capturing in one sweep the foreground comprising the Tsangdhar and the Thag La Ridge lines in the minutest detail in full stretch, the Namka Chhu from source to its junction with the Nyamjung Chhu and thence the seemingly flat, vast expanse of the Trans Himalayas stretching beyond the limits of imagination! The geographical precision and the tonal effect of colours under sun and shadow are more perfect than a studio photo-portrait under controlled conditions. The overall impact of the painting is at once evocative of a remark by Mr. Grosvenor, the Founder President of The National Geographic Magazine, that one good photograph is better than a thousand worded article!
Notes.
(a). * This was the protocol of precedence between the Civil administration and the Armed Forces, visa-vis its sharp decline today.
(b). @ SS in the book “ZOJI LA: 1 NOVEMBER 1948.”
© Copyright 2015 Indian Defence Review
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