The legendary Indian soldier, Field Marshal Sam Makekshaw, fought as a junior officer in the British Indian Army during the Second World War. In a daring endeavor to catch a strategic hill in Burma, bravely leading from the front, he was hit by a light machine gun burst. He had nine bullets lodged in his lungs, liver, kidneys and intestines. His orderly Mehar Singh lifted his injured boss on shoulders and walked fourteen miles to reach a military field hospital. His torso ripped apart and bleeding like flooded rivers, the young officer seemed sure to die.
From the look of it, only death seemed
a reprieve for the injured officer. The British senior officer, fully aware of
the Indian junior officer’s brave fight, tore his own Military Cross (one of
the most prestigious military awards) and put it on the chest of the apparently
dying soldier saying, ‘Military Cross is given to only living soldiers. So
hereby I confer it to you while you are still alive.’
The Australian surgeon, heavily
burdened under the big tasks with limited resources, thought it wastage of time
and medical supplies to attend a definitely dying soldier. Sam had a few traces
of consciousness at that time. ‘What happened to you?’ the doctor asked
ironically. And the legendary soldier’s answer would later change history, not
just for India but for Bangladesh as well. ‘A mule hit me,’ Manekshaw joked, a
weak smile emerging from his messed up body. The Australian surgeon was
shocked. ‘If someone can crack a joke even in this situation then his life is
worth saving!’ he said. He operated upon the soldier and extracted the bullets
from his lungs, liver, kidneys and intestines. It was a bloody operation; a
major part of Manekshaw’s intestines had to be cut out. But bravest are the
ones who can smile and joke even in the face of death. By cracking the joke
with death staring at his face, Sam had already defeated death.
The rest is history. Sam Maneskshaw not
only survived but went onto play important roles in all the wars including
Pakistan (1947-48), China (1962), ending with Bangladesh war (1971) when he was
the army chief.
He was as much famous for his bravery
and military strategy as he was for his sense of humor. If not for this sense
of humor, the Australian surgeon won’t have even considered treating him. If
not for this sense of humor, Sam would have died with a borrowed, consolatory Military
Cross on his chest. With this sense of humor, he retired as a Field Marshal,
living to the ripe old age of late nineties, holding the proud baton of a
perpetual soldier who is entitled to a salute from the highest of the high in
the country as long as he is alive. I think this unbuckling sense of humor won
him the toughest battle of his life by defeating death.
So keep your sense of humor dear
readers! Keep it alive! It’s precious because it defeats even death sometimes.
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