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The Lone Wolf - Jaswant Singh Rawat

Jaswant Singh Rawat was born on 19th August 1941  to Guman Singh Rawat in Pauri Garhwal, Uttarakhand. Rawat joined the Indian Army on 19th August 1960, aged 19 years, as a Rifleman. On 17th November 1962, when the troops of Garhwal Rifles had been ordered to retreat from the Battle of Nuranang (Sino-Indian War), Rawat refused to budge and desert his post.



It was the final phase of the war, which had in any other case fared poorly for the Indian Army because the Indian troops started to fray from a scarcity of manpower and ammunition. So when the Chinese attacked that morning from the Sela top, they did now no longer assume to come upon the daredevilry and uncommon braveness of a younger Indian soldier to come in their way and ruin their larger plans.

The attack, which began out in the morning on seventeenth November, went on for the next 72 hours. At one point, when the Chinese came too close to his company with an MMG, Jaswant determined to make the final sacrifice and went ahead to neutralize it with Lance Naik Trilok Singh Negi and Rifleman Gopal Singh Gusain. In the occasions that followed, Jaswant hung on to his post alone, fired constantly from different bunkers, and ended up killing nearly 300 Chinese infantrymen single-handedly, before he became fatally injured and succumbed to his injuries.



This one selfless act turned the course of the whole war and helped the Indian troops get an edge. The Indian Army was able to prevent the Chinese progress into Arunachal Pradesh. It turned Rawat into a legend and the locals erected a Buddhist temple on the spot in the memory of the great Jaswant Singh Rawat.

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