Beating Retreat ~ It is Attari ... Not Wagah .. the Real Heroes of Motherland
Posted on the 03 April 2019 by Sampathkumar Sampath
The
Battle of Sobraon was fought on 10 February 1846, between the forces of the
East India Company and the Sikh Khalsa Army, the army of the Sikh Empire of the
Punjab.
1stMar 2019, was
a Happy Friday for the Nation, as we
celebrated the return of Indian Air Force (IAF) Wing Commander
AbhinandanVarthaman, who had been captured by Pakistan after the MiG-21 Bison
jet that he was flying crashed.The IAF
pilot returned to India from Attari-Wagah border at around 9:20 pm, where
thousands had been waiting for hours for a glimpse of him. Prime Minister Narendra Modijiand other leaders welcomedthe brave pilot.As the Nation waited with bated breathe,
expecting the Wing Commander in the AN – it got delayed. According to a report in news agency PTI, the
IAF pilot’s return was delayed as he was asked to record a statement on camera
by Pakistani authorities before he was allowed to cross the border. The
recording released on the official Twitter handle of Government of Pakistan was
later deleted.
It
was reported that Indian govt proposed his return by air by a special flight
but Pak wanting to showcase this – stated that they would release him only at
Wagah border. The daily beating retreat and band ceremony at the Attari-Wagah
border was cancelled on Friday as India waited for the return of Indian Air
Force pilot AbhinandanVarthaman from Pakistan. .. .. all news and media spoke
about Wagah border.
Much
has been written about the ‘beating retreat’ at Indo-pak border .. .. The
'lowering of the flags' ceremonyis a
daily military practice that the security forces of India (Border Security
Force) and Pakistan (Pakistan Rangers) have jointly followed since 1959.The ceremony starts with aparade by the soldiers from both the sides,
and ends up in the perfectly coordinated lowering of the two nations' flags.A couple of years back, it was mutually
agreed and the troops have abandoned aggressive postures adopted during the
daily beating the retreat ceremony held at sunset. As multitudes wait to watch the event unfold
daily - 'Please don't raise slogans
other than Bharat Mata ki Jai, Hindustan Zindabaad and VandeMataram,' the
parade anchor repeatedly cautions the audience that has gathered to witness the
beating retreat ceremony.
Emotions
run high among all those who have gathered here.Last year, the Pakistan cricket team visited Wagah border to witness the
flag-lowering ceremony following arequest of Pakistan Rangers after concluding their training camp for the
Test tour of Ireland and England. The immature bowler
Hasan Ali entertained the crowd with his trademark celebrations without
realising ever that this is a different field altogether and his gestures had
no meaning. Hasan Ali entered the drill and performed his
signature wicket-taking gesture towards the Indian armed force.
.. .. what we should be knowing is ~ we should refer this
significant place as ‘Attari’ and not ‘Wagah’ !~ somehow you see the latter used in the media often !!
Wagah
is a village and union council (UC 181) located in the Wahga Zone of Lahore,
Punjab, Pakistan.The townalso serves as a goods transit terminal and a railway station between
Pakistan and India.Wagah lies on the historic Grand Trunk Road between
Lahore and Amritsar in India.
We should only be referring this place as ‘Attari border’. Attari, also
spelled Atari, is a village of Amritsar District in the Punjab state of India,
situated 25 km west of the Sikh holy city of Amritsar, and is the last Indian
station on the rail route connecting Lahore, Pakistan with the Indian capital
Delhi.Attari village was the native
village of Sardar Sham Singh Attariwala, one of the generals in the Army of
Maharaja Ranjit Singh.
It
is the starting point of the National Highway 1, part of the historic Grand
Trunk Road and is also part of AH1, the longest route of the Asian Highway
Network. Administratively Attari is one of the five sub-Tehsil and a block in
Amritsar district. Sham Singh Attariwala (1790 - 1846) was a general of the
Sikh Empire. He was educated in Gurmukhi
and Persian. When Ranjitsingh became the Maharaja of Punjab, he got
Attariwala's services at his disposal. Maharaja Ranjit Singh knowing his
qualities and fighting abilities made him a 'Jathedar' of 5000 horsemen. He
participated actively in many campaigns, notably like the campaign of Multan,
campaign of Kashmir, campaign of the Frontier Province etc.
Sham
Singh Attariwala is also famous for his last stand at the Battle of Sobraon. He
joined the Sikh military in 1817 and during the Afghan–Sikh Wars participated
in the Battle of Attock, Battle of Multan, Battle of Peshawar, and the 1819
Kashmir expedition. Atari Shyam Singh
railway station is located in Amritsar district in the Indian state of Punjab
and serves Attari and the Wagahborder with Pakistan.In May 2015, Government of Punjab changed the
name of station to Atari Shyam Singh railway station after Sham Singh Atariwala
who was general in the Sikh Empire.
So
let us make every reference to this border by the martyr name ‘Attari’ – Wagah
has no significance for us – but was it by any political design, that it we
have all along heard it referred as Wagah and not as ‘Attari border’.
Jai
Hind
With
regards – S. Sampathkumar
3rd
Apr 2019.