A NON-COMBATENT WHO
WITNESSED AND FILMED
THE FIRST FLIGHT
TO LEH & BATTLES FOR ZOJI-LA AND
NAMKA CHHU.
By
Lieutenant General (Retd) Baljit
Singh.
“…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!
I had known the name but not the
Man, leave alone his stupendous deeds and fame. A graduate in History (First Division) from Forman
College, Lahore but his life’s calling lay elsewhere; the Himalayas were his load-stone,
not just their physical attraction but rather the philosophical introspection
they inspire among human beings at different levels and how they shape the
lives and cultures of those who dwell in and around them. Above all, Serbjeet
Singh (SS) perhaps even understood the geo-strategic significance of the
Himalayas as India’s Northern frontier. For, how else can one explain the
presence of a twenty four year old film-maker-cum-artist (Charcoal, water
colour and Oils), participating of his free volition in the First Flight to Leh
(24 May, 1948), and witness the Battles at Zoji La (01 November, 1948), watch
the history-making exploits of the Stuart Tanks of 7 Cavalry beyond Zoji La and
all other engagements culminating with the capture of Kargil, on 23 November,
1948!! And all of it filmed, sketched, painted and recorded in text too, in his
personal diaries.