Monday, Dec 16, 2019 |
Vijay Divas at India’s National War Memorial for the first time
Published : Dec 16, 2019, 6:21
am IST
Updated : Dec 16, 2019, 6:21
am IST
Independent
India was destined for many wars. Independence itself was closely followed by
the first India-Pakistan war of 1947-48.
A file photo of
Lt. Gen. A.A.K. Niazi, commander of all Pakistani forces in the eastern
theatre, signing the instrument of surrender, as Lt. Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora,
GOC-in-C of India's Eastern Command and commander of the joint India-Bangladesh
forces, looks on at the Ramna Race Course in Dhaka on December 16, 1971. Seated
on extreme right is All India Radio's Surajit Sen, who was the first foreign
correspondent to reach Dhaka.
On December 16, 2019, for the first time,
Vijay Divas (Victory Day) will be celebrated at the Rashtriya Samar Smaarak,
India’s National War Memorial. On February 25, 2019, Prime Minister Narendra
Modi inaugurated the Rashtriya Samar Smaarak, dedicated to every soldier
martyred while fighting for India in 72 years of Independence. The third-names
of 25,942 fatal battle casualties have been inscribed on 16 walls of the
memorial.
The third India-Pakistan war which
began on December 3, 1971, ended 13 days later, on December 15, after the
Pakistani forces in erstwhile East Pakistan were completely surrounded and
defeated by the Indian Army, assisted by the Mukti Vahini (literally translated
as freedom force). On December 16, 1971, Lt. Gen. Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi,
heading 93,000 Pakistani troops, surrendered to the Indian Army under the
command of Lt. Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora at the Ramna Race Course, now
Suhrawardy Udyan, in Dhaka, and East Pakistan was declared as the newly
liberated “Bangladesh”. Since then, December 16 was instituted as Vijay Divas
(Victory Day) and observed across India by paying tributes to the martyrs who
laid down their lives for the nation. In the nation’s capital, New Delhi, the
Indian minister of defence and Chiefs of the Army, Navy and Air Force pay
homage at Amar Jawan Jyoti (eternal flame to the unknown soldier) at India
Gate, the war memorial built by the British to honour Indian soldiers in World
War I.
The famous and majestic India Gate
was built by the British as a memorial to 74,187 Indian soldiers who were
killed in various battles of World War I (WW I) and as many of their names as
possible are etched on all the walls of this memorial. The other WW I war
memorial is Teen Murti (pronounced moortee), literally meaning three statues,
dedicated to the Indian Cavalry for its valiant role and incidentally, its last
one as horsed cavalry — by World War II (WW II) horsed cavalry had become
mechanised. While about 1.5 million Indian soldiers participated in WW I
(1914-18) and in WW II (1939-45), 2.5 million Indian armed forces personnel
took part and over 87,000 of them were killed. Field Marshal Sir Claude
Auchinleck, Commander-in-Chief of the Indian Army from 1942, asserted the
British “couldn’t have come through both wars (WWs I and II) if they hadn’t had
the Indian Army.” This may have meant a war memorial even larger than India
Gate, but following a mutiny by some Indian Navy sailors shortly after WW II,
th
e British felt compelled to leave India in a hurry. So, a memorial to the sacrifices of Indians in WW II never got built.
e British felt compelled to leave India in a hurry. So, a memorial to the sacrifices of Indians in WW II never got built.
Independent India was destined for
many wars. Independence itself was closely followed by the first India-Pakistan
war of 1947-48. Then came the Sino-Indian War in 1962, the second and third
India-Pakistan wars in 1965 and 1971, many insurgencies and conflicts overseas
in which the Indian armed forces have participated widely as part of United
Nations’ missions and since the late 1980s. The fourth India-Pakistan war,
which began at Jammu and Kashmir in the late 1980s, continues till date.
However, till 2014, the Indian government under the Congress Party for 56 of 67
years never made any move towards building a national war memorial. Sometime
after it assumed charge in 2014, the BJP announced its plan of making a
national war memorial.
Leave alone not instituting a war
memorial and often stonewalling whenever the matter came up, after the surgical
strikes against Pakistani terrorists in 2016, ironically, some senior Congress
leaders and the Congress leaning bandwagon of leftists/pseudo-intellectuals/pseudo
secularists/human rights activists politicised and even ridiculed patriotism
and national pride. Some of these Congress leaders even questioned the
authenticity of the surgical strikes and also criticised the Army’s actions in
the Kashmir Valley.
Anyway, having announced its plan,
the BJP got going. The National War Memorial and Museum was designated as a
special project, and the task of its timely execution was allocated to a
special projects division under the chief administrative officer, ministry of
defence and the military engineer services.
A global design competition was
conducted, the result of which was announced in early April 2017. A Chennai
architectural firm, WeBe Design Lab’s proposal was declared the winner and was
accordingly chosen for the conceptualisation of the architectural design and
for coordinating the construction of the project. The chief architect of the
National War Memorial, Yogesh Chandrahasan of WeBe Design Lab, who designed the
project, said: “The whole concept is based on the thought that the war memorial
should be a place where we don’t mourn the death, but celebrate the life of the
soldiers and pay respect to the sacrifices made by them.”
The location of the memorial is
befitting. It is spread over 40 acres of land behind the “chhatri”
(canopy), about 100 m behind India Gate. The memorial wall is flushed with the
ground and in harmony with existing aesthetics. The names of armed forces
personnel martyred during the armed conflicts of 1947–48, 1961 (Goa), 1962 (China),
1965, 1971, 1987 (Siachen), 1987-88 (Sri Lanka), 1999 (Kargil), and other
operations such as Operation Rakshak, are inscribed on the memorial walls.
The memorial has four concentric
circles designed as a Chakravyuh, an ancient Indian war formation and a central
obelisk, at the bottom of which burns an “eternal flame” representing the Amar
Jawan (immortal soldier). The concentric circles are called Amar Chakra (circle
of immortality), Veerta Chakra (circle of bravery), Tyag Chakra (circle of
sacrifice) and Rakshak Chakra (circle of protection).
The Param Yodha Sthal, where the
busts of 21 recipients of the Param Vir Chakra, India’s highest gallantry award
during war, have been placed, is located in a large section of what was the
quadrant between Kasturba Gandhi Marg and the main entrance of Major Dhyan
Chand Stadium.
The memorial is open to the public
free of cost, from 9 am to 6.30 pm (November to March) and from 9 am to 7.30 pm
(April to October). For the first time since Independence, the Indian public
and foreign tourists are able to get a glimpse of India’s history of wars and
war heroes. The daily footfall on weekdays is 4,000 to 6,000 and on weekends
and holidays it goes up to 10,000 or more.
Since its inauguration, every
evening, five minutes before sounding the Retreat, a next of kin of kin of a
battle casualty lays a wreath at the memorial as a tribute, witnessed by
hundreds of spectators.
There is a National War Memorial App
for more detailed information on the memorial and there is a souvenir shop in the
memorial complex called Smarika, where memorabilia and war heroes’ stories in
illustrated comics are available.
A National War Museum will also be
constructed in the adjoining Princess Park area north of India Gate, measuring
14 acres. The proposed National War Museum and the National War Memorial will
be connected by an underground route.
The writer, a retired Army officer,
is a defence and security analyst based in New Delhi
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