I AM THE DAUGHTER OF AN ARMY OFFICER
https://medium.com/@ meeraramesh/i-am-the-daughter- of-an-army-officer- 93321193f274#.22wonxxa9
I am the daughter of an Army Officer. I was born privileged and I am
aware of it. Yes, I grew up in safe cantonments, amidst greenery and civility.
As a child I had access to beautiful swimming pools and large lawns. I had
access to tennis courts and skating rings. I could go to fantastic libraries and
attend wonderful socials. In short, I had a childhood that people only dream of.
Every two or three years, we would move to a new city and I made new friends. I
was encouraged to take part in sports and extra-curricular activities. I was
always surrounded by children of my age and most neighbors had very amicable
pets. As a family, we had access to ‘canteens’ and military hospitals. For
vacations, we would go trekking to remote corners of the country because of the
privilege my father’s profession offered us. When children of my age were
playing hide and seek, my sister and I were exploring activities like tank
riding and rifle shooting; paragliding and horse riding. While they watched
series on TV, we would be out on the ground watching the Army Day parade.
Most kids, whose parents have served in the Indian Army, will paint
you this beautiful picture. And it is as true, as it is incomplete. Growing up,
life was also, about wondering why my father couldn’t take time off from work to
attend my annual day. I never understood why only my mother would attend my PTA
meetings in school. I knew my father was fantastic at tennis, but I could never
understand why he couldn’t spend more than one evening a month, to teach me how
to be that good. I never understood why annual trips in June, to my
Grandparents’ hometown would never involve my father for more than a week, why
did he have to return abruptly on ‘call of duty’? Why did he coach me for all my
debates over the telephone? Why was he not there for so many of my birthday
celebrations? Why was I not allowed to put on his uniform for fun? When I was in
grade two, for weeks we had drills in the middle of the night, in preparation to
evade bombs attacks. Why was only my mother present then, to hug me and say
“It’s okay, we are going to be fine”? Where was my father when I was growing up?
Why did he leave for work before I left for school and return after I went to
bed? Why did he wake up every single day; snow or hail to go for his morning
run? Why did some of my father’s friends have bullet injuries? When I was a kid
it took my mother five minutes, to distract me from those questions. But today I
know better. I have my answers.
My father is an Army Officer. A passionate and intelligent man who
has dedicated every day of the past 25 years of his life, to this nation. He has
worked on holidays and through the nights. He has served with pride and
conviction; two emotions I never fully comprehended till last year. Because last
year, I had the opportunity to visit Ladakh. All those dormant tales of men with
courage and zest suddenly came to life. As I am writing this narrative, far away
from that paradise; there are men sitting with rifles at altitudes of more than
15000 feet, at temperatures of -35 degree Celsius, vigilantly monitoring the
Indian borders. If there’s a lapse in their attention for even a second, they
might lose their lives. Is that what motivates them to get frost bites, to
celebrate Diwali and their children’s birthdays in an isolated, deserted
mountain far away from civilization? Or is it the discount in prices of canteen
items? Oh no, it must be the ‘discounted’ medical facilities they would have
access to, if the enemy shot at them. I am so sorry; it must be the glorious
salaries. But hold on, the money does not seem to be too much; in fact that’s
why the Army has catered for reduced prices of groceries in the canteens. So why
would any man with a sound mind, sacrifice everything; his family and comfort of
living, and risk his life for an ungrateful nation which sits back and talks
only of the “privileges” he gets? I don’t know. I honestly don’t know.
I don’t know how in every war that independent India has fought; our
men have effortlessly scaled up altitudes of 20,000 feet overnight, without a
day of medical acclimatization. I don’t know why they didn’t think twice about
their families that they left behind. The father who’s growing old and can’t
walk anymore, the daughter who needs to be educated, the infant who doesn’t even
recognize him yet; the wife who might get widowed at 21. What gave them the
courage to spend days in trenches without food or water, ensuring that a fellow
soldier doesn’t have to spill a drop of blood as long as he is breathing? How
did they breathe at all for that long? At that altitude? And for those who
didn’t, what fire must have burned in them, to die fighting a war, for a nation
that didn’t give tuppence for what happened to them. How is it that these men
didn’t once think about the religion or caste of their brothers fighting with
them in that trench, for a nation, that burns buses and loots shops in the name
of caste reservation? How is it that a Hindu was willing to give up his life for
a fellow Muslim so long as the ‘Tiranga’ was afloat on the highest peak of
Kargil? Why did Christians fight on behalf of the Sikhli regiment and Sikhs on
behalf of the Gorkha regiment? Why did an officer take a bullet for his soldiers
and die with a smile on his face? Why do we not even know the names of these
martyrs whose last words were “Jai Hind”? What could possibly motivate any man
to live a life of anonymity and sacrifice everything for the glory of a nation
that fails to recognize his contribution? I don’t know.
All I know is that I am an immensely proud daughter. A proud
daughter of a man who has given his everything, for a cause he’s believed in.
The proud daughter of an exceptionally talented woman who sacrificed her career
to raise a family almost single-handedly; and taught it to respect her husband’s
contribution to the nation. I am proud of all those times when my mother had to
fill in for my father, because he was on duty. I am proud, because all those
times, my parents were looking at the bigger picture and serving a larger
family, expecting absolutely nothing in return. I was NOT born privileged
because of all those perks I had as a child. I was born privileged because I had
parents who taught me that living only for yourself is a life not worth living.
I am privileged because I learnt through their actions and the lives they have
led. They taught me that as long as you live in accordance with your ideals and
beliefs, a life of passion and courage, you can hold your head high. They taught
me that you don’t serve, expecting returns. You serve because it’s your duty to
give back to the society, to think beyond yourself. And they did just that.
Yes, growing up as the daughter of an Army Officer was a privilege
and I’ve always valued it. But it was only last year that it hit me, that all
the chivalry and courage I had seen in the people around me, the ridiculous
amount of patriotism they had; the spirit of expectation-less commitment, the
pride they took in adorning their uniforms and the fervour with which they
saluted the ‘Tiranga’ shouting Jai Hind, was unique. Does it infuriate me, when
people don’t value it? Yes. Do I expect them to understand the lives the
soldiers and their families lead in return for a salary they could have got
anywhere else; but choose to remain in the army, serve and sacrifice because of
the pride they have for their nation? Yes. But if they fail to comprehend this,
will these exemplary men and women stop serving us? No. They signed up for a
lifetime of commitment to “Service Before Self”. It has taken me long enough,
but I now understand that serving in the Indian Army is not just a career; it’s
a way of life.
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