AN AMAZING STORY
WHEN YUSUF CROSSED THE LINE(LOC)
A true story from the midst of madness and bloodshed, the ‘Kargil War’.
The early morning calm was rudely shattered by numerous
blasts that rang out in quick succession. The sound was akin to repeated
hammering of a wooden mallet on corrugated, galvanized iron (CGI) sheets.
Soldiers sprinted hither and thither to find some cover while Paki artillery
shells rained down on them and burst with ear shattering explosions. The
intense Paki artillery barrage continued for about half an hour. When it ended,
there was sudden silence and troops waited inside their bunkers for another
half hour or so before they tentatively emerged from numerous hiding places and
went about their routine morning chores.
The loud
explosions woke Brig Jasbir Singh SM (Jas), Commander of a Brigade in the
Chhamb-Jaurian Sector, with a start. He sat up on the bare camp cot
coughing and sneezing because of the dust and debris that filled his
underground fortified bunker. It was still dark and he groped around for his
mobile to check the time. Deep within the bunker he could not hear the
whistling noise as the shells went overhead.
The Paki
heavy artillery bombardment had just taken place on the line of bunkers located
on a ‘bund’ (raised ground). The bund ran along the ‘line of control’
(LoC) at Pallanwala. Operation ‘VIJAY’ (Kargil Operations) were in full swing
between India and Pakistan and the intruding Paki forces were being physically
removed from the rocky heights that they had surreptitiously occupied in
Kargil, at the northernmost end of the LoC. The difficult operations in Kargil
and Tololing were in full media glare and a shocked nation watched troops
battle it out on the high mountains, on their TV sets, right in their bedrooms.
But elsewhere in Pallanwala, in Chhamb-Jaurian Sector, out of the media glare,
there was another incredible drama unfolding.
It was a clear morning at the southern end of
the LoC where Jas was located. Puffs of a few white clouds dotted the blue sky.
After the mortar bombardment ended, he could hear the light hearted banter of
his troops. They chatted and joked with one another as they spread their
sleeping bags and clothes to dry in the warm sun. Occasionally, a loud peal of
laughter could be heard as troops stretched themselves in the sun. The radio
sets crackled with the Brigade Net operational natter, the voices sombre and
full of static.
Suddenly there was a yell from inside a nearby concrete bunker, in
which a day sentry manned a light
machine gun
(LMG). He was peering through a loop-hole at the flat land in front of the
bunker. The flat land extended for about 200 meters and sloped into Munnawar
Tawi River, along the centre of which ran the LoC. The flowing water in the river
was only about half a meter at its lowest point.
On hearing the sentry’s alarm, troops rushed into their bunkers, expecting
another round of deadly enemy barrage. Looking through the loop-holes, they
were surprised to see the figure of a small boy, 10 or 11 years old,
splashing through the river towards them. Field telephones were rapidly cranked
and before the little boy had waded across the river, reports of this most
unexpected event was flashed up the ladder from the company and battalion headquarters,
right through to Jas. Jas instructed the troops to hold their fire and guide
the boy through the mine-field adjacent to the river. The Platoon Commander,
followed by some soldiers, climbed to the top of the ‘bund’. They stood in full
view of the Paki defences across the river and shouted directions to the boy,
on how to negotiate the minefield. A wrong step here or there could have blown
up the child or maimed him. Laboriously, as if in a daze, the child
followed the instructions with hesitating steps. Soon the child arrived at the
bunker’s entrance. He was dressed in a dark-grey coloured kurta-pyjama suit and
had his pyjamas rolled up to his thighs. He seemed quite unperturbed though he
had a serious expression on his face. He was made to sit under a large tree and
gently questioned by the Platoon Commander. In Punjabi, the boy gave his name
as Yusuf Mohammad and said he belonged to the large village across the river.
When asked where he was going, he shyly related that his father had been extremely
annoyed to see his poor Class IV results. He had scolded the boy volubly and
even told him to leave the house. Disgusted with his father’s shouting, Yusuf
had left the house and walked towards the fields adjoining the village. He had
continued to walk through the fields, crossed the river and wandered into the
Indian Army Post.
Yusuf was quickly bundled into a ‘Gypsy’ and driven to Brigade HQ at
Pallanwala where he met a lanky, affable Sikh with a luxurious white beard,
attired similarly in Kurta Pyjama, much like a Pathan. Jas made him as
comfortable as he could on a camp style folding easy chair. Since the boy said
he had not eaten since the previous afternoon, Jas offered him a hot meal of
rice, dal and vegetables. Jas chatted with him with paternal affection. From
the answers Yusuf gave Jas, it became apparent that he did not know he had
crossed the LoC. During the gentle prodding, Yusuf proudly said that his father
was a retired ‘fauji’ who would soon become lambardar of his village. Since
the artillery bombardment had taken place while the boy was walking to the
river, he was asked if he had heard any loud bangs as he had approached the
river. The observant boy thought a while and brightly remarked that he had
passed a grove of large trees where ‘faujis’ were gathered and there had been
explosions from tubes placed on the ground. With a smile he added that ‘faujis’
had been scampering about in a funny manner but he had avoided going near them.
When the child was told he had crossed over to India, he become visibly
scared and even began to tremble in fear. After instructing his men to look
after the young boy, Jas rang his General Officer Commanding (GOC) in Akhnur
and told him about the Pakistani boy who had strayed across the LoC.
Perhaps there were more important things on the General’s mind and Yusuf was
quickly brushed aside. ‘Send the rascal back’, the General said gruffly and
began to discuss other more pressing military matters. Jas sent the boy back to
the Battalion HQ in-charge of the spot where the boy had crossed the river and
ordered them to look after the boy, but to send him back to the other side of
the LoC first thing in the morning.
With an unobtrusive guard outside the room, Yusuf was allowed to relax and
given a Hindi movie to watch on TV. After he had happily watched the movie,
Yusuf innocently told the astonished Junior Commissioned Officer (JCO) who was
stationed in the room, ‘Eh picture teh main pehle vekh chuka haan!’ The
boy became a subject of great attraction and many soldiers peeped into
the room to catch a glance of the Paki child. As the evening progressed, Yusuf
began to miss his mother and tearfully told the JCO he wanted to go home. He
was reassured that he would be sent home safely in the morning. After the
uneventful night, Yusuf was again taken to see Jas. Jas told him to be a good
boy, study well at school and never again defy his father and walk out of home,
despite what his father said in anger. Yusuf solemnly agreed with what Jas
asked him to do and nodded repeatedly in agreement. He was given a small packet
of sweets for his parents, two CDs of Hindi movies and a fountain pen to take
back with him. Jas gently patted him on the cheek and asked the JCO to see that
the boy was safely sent through the mine-field and to the river. Yusuf was told
to shout loudly to the Pakistani soldiers, while he was crossing the river and
then follow the same track through the Pakistani mine-field across the river.
Yusuf was taken ahead of the forward defences once again in a Gypsy. Here, he
alighted from the vehicle and carrying the small bag containing his presents.
He walked back the way he had come the previous morning. The JCO and others
watched the small boy move slowly along the narrow foot-track in the minefield
till he reached the river bank. At the river bank, Yusuf stopped and bent over
to roll up his pyjamas. Before he stepped into the cold waters of Munnawar
Tawi, the Paki child turned and waved at the Indian soldiers waiting near the
Gypsy. They smiled and waved back at him, silently wishing him luck. In such a
short time a strong bond had developed between the child and the Indian
soldiers. Perhaps they were reminded of their own children at home, and they
hoped the boy would safely complete his hazardous return journey and re-unite
with his parents.
The soldiers watched Yusuf’s slender figure get smaller and smaller as he
crossed the flowing waters and went further towards the Paki defences. All the
while they could hear loud shouts from the boy to warn the Pakis of his
approach so that they did not open fire. Soon, they happily saw Paki soldiers
come out of their bunkers and get atop their ‘bund’ to guide Yusuf through
their mine-field. Then Indian Army soldiers returned to their defences and
reported to Jas ‘mission accomplished’
After allowing enough time for Yusuf to be interrogated by the Pakistanis soldiers
and moved to rear areas, it was back to business for the Indian Brigade. Jas
ordered a devastating barrage of mortar fire on the enemy’s gun positions
hidden in the grove beyond the Paki forward line of defences. Soon the complete
grove was obliterated. It was business as usual for the two opposing armies,
each trying to kill the other with everything they had. That night both sides
re-laid the minefield where the boy had crossed, the clear passage through the
minefield which the child had crossed had been noted by either side.
Jas soon forgot about Yusuf and immersed himself in his routine operations,
trading bullet for bullet and shells for shells. Barrages of mortar bombs
exploded among the defences, while ambushes, raids and intense small arms fire
caused numerous casualties. The wounded were promptly evacuated to rear areas
while machine-gun fire swept the line of defences, on both sides. Soldiers hid
in their bunkers or used crawl-trenches to move about. Climbing atop the bund
was akin to committing suicide and it became an activity of happier times of
the past.
After a few days, Jas got a call from the GOC. The GOC told Jas that Yusuf
was son of a retired Pakistan Army JCO whose ex CO was then the Paki Director
General of Military Operations (DGMO). When the ex JCO and his wife failed to
find the boy, they had enquired from villagers. They were shocked when they
came to know that Yusuf had been seen fording Munnawar Tawi and walking
towards the Indian defences. In sheer desperation, the ex JCO rang up his old
CO (the Paki DGMO) and narrated his tale of woes. The Pak Army General had
sympathized with his old JCO, as any General would, and amidst the numerous
daily telephone calls related to the ongoing operations in Kargil, he had
informed his Indian counterpart DGMO about the lost child. The Indian DGMO had
informed Northern Army Commander and the information ultimately trickled down
to GOC of the Infantry Division holding Chhamb-Jaurian Sector.
‘Where the
f*** is that Paki rascal ?’, he asked.
‘Hopefully
back at home with his parents’, Jas informed him.
Soon the
information was relayed back from one DGMO to the other.
Amidst intensive firing across the LoC a few days later, Jas received a
strange message from one of his commanding Officers (COs). The CO told him that
a forward post commander had reported that the Pakis, just 25 meters away, had
yelled over the sound of firing and asked for a temporary cease-fire to deliver
a letter for the Brigade Commander. They had been told to await further
instructions. Jas overcame with curiosity ordered the CO to accept a temporary
‘cease-fire’ for 10 minutes and to accept the letter from the enemy side. The
CO reported to Jas that the Paki soldiers had tossed across an envelope affixed
to a small stone with a rubber band.
The letter was brought to the Brigade HQ and opened by Jas. The letter from
his Paki counterpart, said that he had been directed by his GOC to convey
sincere thanks for returning the little boy in a safe and sound condition.
While Jas was reading the letter, he heard a distant rattle of machine-gun
fire. The sharp sounds came from the direction of the IA Post where the letter
had been thrown across the LC. He smiled wryly to himself. He hoped that Yusuf
by now would be safe at home with his parents. Hopefully, one day Yusuf would
remember his brief sojourn with Indian Army and grow up to be a fine young man.
Jas cranked the field telephone, got across to his Brigade Major (BM) and
ordered 100 rounds of retaliatory fire with the heaviest calibre artillery
weapons that he possessed. It was not for him to reason why Pakis and Indians
fought continuously, but to do and die. An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth. But Yusuf, well he was not an enemy. He was a young child just like all
children, the future of Pakistan. Jas hoped that one day Yusuf would grow old
enough and be a better man, perhaps help stop the madness and bloodshed that
still continues on the LoC.
Post script
Jas is a
Rimcolian (R 62/66), 37th NDA (Hunter) and 46th IMA,
commissioned into 4 Kumaon in 1970, the same battalion in which his late father
Brig Balbir Singh MC did incredible things to the Japs with a bayonet in the 2nd
WW ( Jas’s book ‘Escape From Singapore’). Jas is the tail ender of a long
illustrious family spanning 5 generations of hard core soldiers, each of them
more illustrious than his predecessor. Jas was commissioned at 20 and
immediately to fight the B’Desh war. For 35 yrs afterwards he fought every Tom,
Dick and Paki. At the height of his military career, he was the National
Security Advisor to Rwanda, where he stopped a bloody civil war, wrote their
constitution to turn it into a ‘Republic’, supervised elections, installed a
Govt and ensured peace and prosperity in that impoverished country, all of it
single handed in just 22 months. And what did he use for doing all these ? Just
a silly foot long ‘Malacca’ cane, his baton of authority !!! So it came about,
that ‘a stick is better than the tongue’, and that a soldier is as adept at
making peace, as he is in making war.
As my best
friend for 53 yrs, Jas continues to inspire me, ………. daily.
Unni
Kartha
Indeed
Jas is an amazing person. I had not met him earlier, though heard of his
exploits as all good Rimcollians do. We had a wonderful time with him and
his gracious wife at Ranikhet where he has settled down. He is wheelchair
bound, and typical of the Zatt, that all energy now goes to the brain. He
along with Unni and Thapa and a few other Rimcollians have been writing true
stories of their exploits and they are amazing We enjoyed being with them
They run a cafe and a guest house, extremely well maintained. A lot of
foreigners were then camping at his place. We enjoyed an excellent lunch
before heading for our golf at the Ranikhet Golf Course, the highest golf
course, and surprisingly well maintained, in spite of milling crowds of
tourists who stop at nothing and have free run of the course
Enjoy
Yusuf's venture into India
Niranjan
Malik
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