Showing posts with label Gurkha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gurkha. Show all posts

Thursday, May 01, 2014

Happy 68th Birthday Joanna Lumley!! (Purdey - New Avengers GIF Set 1)



Today marks the 68th birthday of Joanna Lumley. Fans will probably know her best from her BBC-TV comedy series Absolutely Fabulous, but I know her as "Purdey" from The New Avengers (not the Marvel Comics series of the same name). The New Avengers was the 1976-1977 sequel to the 1960's British spy series, The Avengers (also not Marvel Comics). I also know her from the BBC-TV Sci-Fi series called "Sapphire and Steel".

Recently though, while working on my Gurkha Spotlight Series, I found out that she was also an activist for the interests of the Gurkhas! Gurkha Lieutenant Tul Bahadur Pun, awarded the Victoria Cross for his heroic deeds which included saving the life of Major James Lumley, the father of Joanna Lumley. In 2008, Joanna Lumley became an activist in the Gurkha Justice Campaign which was fighting for the right for Nepalese born Gurkhas who served the British Army before 1997 the right to settle in Britain. On May 21, 2009 the UK Government changed its policies regarding the ex-Gurkhas who wanted to settle in Britain!

In Joanna Lumley's honor, I'm making animated GIFs of her as Purdey from The New Avengers! Enjoy!!

Happy 68th Birthday Joanna Lumley!









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Sunday, April 06, 2014

GURKHA: Major Desmond Wilson (Jan. 2, 1922 - Jan. 3, 2014)

Major Desmond Wilson OBE, MC, DSC
Click pic for larger
Photo credit:  www.telegraph.co.uk



WHO:  Major Desmond Wilson
WHAT:  Shown complete disregard for his own safety and had been an inspiration to his men
WHERE:  Italy
WHEN:  Sep. 12, 1944 - Oct. 1944




Major Desmond Wilson was an inspirational officer who won an MC in northern Italy and later excelled as a career diplomat

7:20PM GMT 20 Jan 2014

Major Desmond Wilson, who has died aged 92, was awarded an MC in Italy in 1944 in the forcing of the Gothic Line; he subsequently had a distinguished career in the Diplomatic Service.

On September 12, Wilson was serving with 2nd Battalion 10th Princess Mary’s Own Gurkha Rifles (2/10 GR) in an attack on Passano Ridge, near Rimini. He was up with the forward elements of his company when he led his platoon in a charge on a tank and a fortified house from which the enemy was putting up fierce resistance.

He got the Germans out of their tank and killed or wounded the entire crew as they tried to get away. He then took the tank intact and the captured the house, dealing with eight of the enemy, and consolidated the position.


Wilson was awarded an MC. The citation stated that he had shown complete disregard for his own safety and had been an inspiration to his men.

William Desmond Wilson was born in Belfast on January 2 1922 and educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. Aged 19, he left his home and family and embarked on a troop ship to Bombay. After completing his officer training in Bangalore, he joined 2/10 GR.

In Italy, near Santarcángelo, on September 22, he went forward to deal with two snipers who were concealed in a tree and had been giving considerable trouble. After a cunning but hazardous stalk, he killed them both.

The following month he led two platoons in an attack on a hill near Montecodruzzo. There were 150 Germans, well dug in, but he captured the position before beating off six counter-attacks. Artillery support could not be provided because, given the nature of the terrain, the risk of casualties to his own men was too great.


By the end of the war, Wilson had also been awarded the United States Distinguished Service Cross, the highest gallantry award that can be given to a non-citizen. He then joined the Colonial Service where he served for 17 years in Northern Nigeria, initially as an assistant district officer.

He often spent more than 20 days a month on horseback touring the remote districts in his charge – an area the size of Northern Ireland.

On one occasion he was confronted by an armed mob of some 3,000 people, some of whom had already taken part in the murder of government tax collectors. Wilson’s force of local police was quickly overwhelmed and his groom made off on his horse.

Completely alone, he charged into the crowd, physically attacking the ring leaders. By sheer force of personality he made the mob give up their spears and swords. For this, he was awarded an immediate MBE for gallantry.


After Nigerian independence, he remained in the country for two more years in order to establish the infrastructure for a ministry of information which included a fledgling television broadcasting agency.

Wilson subsequently joined the Foreign & Commonwealth Office, in which he served for five years in Turkey. He was advanced to OBE in 1964 at the end of his tour. Thereafter, he served with the United Nations in New York for a spell before moving to Nepal for five years. There he was reunited with wartime comrades whom he had feared he would never see again.

He returned to Northern Nigeria as the Deputy High Commissioner in Kaduna, from where, due to his excellent contacts, he was able to give London several months’ warning about an impending coup.

Desmond Wilson retired in 1981 and settled in Kent. He married, in 1949, Lucy Bride, a member of the Royal Colonial Nursing Corps, and the eldest daughter of Harold Bride, the only wireless operator to survive the sinking of Titanic. She survives him with their two sons.


Desmond Wilson, born January 2 1922, died January 3 2014

Copied from: http://www.telegraph.co.uk.



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Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Dipprasad Pun: Lone Gurkha vs 30 Taliban



'I had so many of them around me that I thought I was definitely going to die so I thought I'd kill as many of them as I could before they killed me.'
~Dipprasad Pun




WHO:  Corporal Dipprasad Pun, 31
WHAT:  Completely surrounded by Taliban, managed to thwart their efforts single-handedly in taking his checkpoint
WHERE:  Babaji in Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan
WHEN:  September 2010




'I thought I was going to die... so I tried to kill as many as I could': Hero Gurkha receives bravery medal from the Queen

By Daily Mail Reporter


  • Corporal Dipprasad Pun defeated more than 30 Taliban fighters single-handedly
  • Used the tripod of his machine gun to beat away a militant after running out of ammunition

A Gurkha soldier who single-handedly defeated more than 30 Taliban fighters has been awarded the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross by the Queen.

Corporal Dipprasad Pun, 31, described how he was spurred on by the belief that he was going to die and so had nothing to lose in taking on the attackers who overran his checkpoint in Afghanistan.

His gallantry award is second only to the Victoria Cross - the highest honour for bravery in the face of the enemy.

Cpl Pun, from the 1st Battalion the Royal Gurkha Rifles, was presented with the CGC during an investiture ceremony at Buckingham Palace, during which a number of other soldiers were recognised for their bravery.

Speaking after receiving the honour from the Queen, the Gurkha said: 'I'm very excited and happy to here in the Palace to receive the Conspicuous Gallantry Cross. This will be a great memory for the future.'

The soldier fired more than 400 rounds, launched 17 grenades and detonated a mine to thwart the Taliban assault on his checkpoint near Babaji in Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan, last September.

At one point, after exhausting all his ammunition, he had to use the tripod of his machine gun to beat away a militant who was climbing the walls of the compound.

After the ceremony, Cpl Pun was congratulated by investiture guests who queued up to shake his hand.

Speaking about the actions which earned him the CGC, he said: 'At that time I wasn't worried, there wasn't any choice but to fight. The Taliban were all around the checkpoint, I was alone.

'I had so many of them around me that I thought I was definitely going to die so I thought I'd kill as many of them as I could before they killed me.

'That incident happened in the middle of my tour and after that I thought nobody can kill us now - when we met the enemy I wasn't scared.

'I thought the Taliban did not have the capacity to fight with us.'

Cpl Pun, an acting sergeant during his Afghan deployment, was on sentry duty at the time of the attack when he heard a clinking noise outside the small base.

At first he thought it might be a donkey or a cow, but when he went to investigate he found two insurgents digging a trench to lay an improvised explosive device (IED) at the checkpoint's front gate.

He realised that he was completely surrounded and that the Taliban were about to launch a well-planned attempt to overrun the compound.

The enemy opened fire from all sides, destroying the sentry position where the soldier had been on duty minutes before.

Defending the base from the roof, the Gurkha remained under continuous attack from rocket-propelled grenades and AK47s for more than a quarter of an hour.

Most of the militants were about 50ft away from him, but at one point he turned around to see a 'huge' Taliban fighter looming over him.

The soldier picked up his machine gun and fired a long burst at the man until he fell off the roof.

When another insurgent tried to climb up to his position, the Gurkha attempted to shoot him with his SA80 rifle. But it did not work, either because it had jammed or because the magazine was empty.

He first grabbed a sandbag but it had not been tied up and the contents fell to the floor.
Then he seized the metal tripod of his machine gun and threw it at the approaching Taliban militant, shouting in Nepali 'Marchu talai' ('I will kill you') and knocking him down.

Two insurgents were still attacking by the time the heroic Gurkha had used up all his ammunition, but he set off a Claymore mine to repel them.

At this point his company commander, Major Shaun Chandler, arrived at the checkpoint, slapped him on the back and asked if he was OK.

In total he fired off 250 general purpose machine gun rounds, 180 SA80 rounds, six phosphorous grenades, six normal grenades, five underslung grenade launcher rounds and one Claymore mine.

The only weapon he did not use was the traditional Kukri knife carried by Gurkhas because he did not have his with him at the time.

The married soldier, whose father and grandfather were also Gurkhas, is originally from the village of Bima in western Nepal but now lives in Ashford, Kent.

His medal citation said he saved the lives of three comrades at the checkpoint at that time and prevented the position being overrun.

It read: 'Pun could never know how many enemies were attempting to overcome his position, but he sought them out from all angles despite the danger, consistently moving towards them to reach the best position of attack.'

Major General Nicholas Carter, who was commander of combined forces, including British troops, in southern Afghanistan during Cpl Pun's deployment, praised the soldier and those from the Mercian Regiment receiving gallantry awards today.

The senior officer, who received the Distinguished Service Order from the Queen for his leadership in the Middle East country, said: 'Their efforts have been tremendous. It was a privilege to have members of the 1st Battalion Royal Gurkha Rifles and the Mercian Regiment under my command.

'The Conspicuous Gallantry Cross does not get handed out lightly, it was a most remarkable achievement by that particular young Gurkha.'

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Monday, November 11, 2013

Lieutenant Tul Bahadur Pun, VC





The citation for Pun’s Victoria Cross declared: “Rifleman Pun’s courage and superb gallantry in the face of odds which meant almost certain death were most inspiring to all ranks and were beyond praise.”





WHO: Lieutenant Tul Bahadur Pun
WHAT: Pun charged into automatic fire directed straight at him to take the machine gun bunker and more brave deeds
WHERE: Burma
WHEN: June 23, 1944




Lieutenant Tul Bahadur Pun, VC

Lieutenant Tul Bahadur Pun, who died on April 20 aged 88, won the Victoria Cross while serving with the Second Chindit Expedition in Burma in 1944.


6:58PM BST 21 Apr 2011 Early in March that year the Second Chindit Expedition, a force of six brigades comprising some 9,000 men together with stores, was air-landed in Burma. The main objectives of the Expedition were twofold: first, to support the advance on Myitkyina by the American-led Chinese troops and to establish a strong position astride the Japanese lines of communication; and secondly, to impede the build-up of Japanese forces for an invasion of India by harassing them in the Mogaung area.

The Chindits were supplied by establishing a number of fortified bases with airstrips south of Myitkyina. These strongholds provoked a strong reaction from the Japanese, and some of them subsequently proved indefensible and had to be abandoned.

On May 27 the 77th Indian Brigade was ordered to capture the Japanese supply centre of Mogaung. After almost a month of savage fighting which had greatly depleted the brigade’s numbers, the 3rd Battalion 6th Gurkha Rifles was ordered to attack the railway bridge at Mogaung on June 23. As soon as the attack had been launched, the Japanese opened concentrated and sustained crossfire at close range from a position known as “The Red House” and from a strong bunker position 200 yards to the left of it.

Captain Allmand, in command of “B” company, went forward alone and charged a machine-gun nest, but he was mortally wounded. So intense was the fire that both the leading platoons of “B” Company, one of which was Rifleman Pun’s, were pinned to the ground. Pun’s section — apart from himself, the section commander and one rifleman — was wiped out.

The section commander led his two remaining riflemen in a charge on The Red House, but he was at once severely wounded. Pun and his comrade continued the charge — but the latter, too, fell badly wounded. Pun then seized the Bren gun and, firing from the hip as he ran, continued the charge on the heavily bunkered position. He charged alone in the face of a shattering concentration of automatic fire directed straight at him.

With the dawn coming up behind him, Pun made a perfect target for the Japanese. He had to cross 30 yards of open ground, ankle deep in mud, through shell holes and over fallen trees. Against all the odds, he reached The Red House and closed with the occupants.

Pun killed three of the enemy, put five more to flight, and captured two machine guns and much ammunition. He then gave accurate supporting fire from the bunker to the remnants of his platoon, enabling them to reach their objective. Among the lives saved by Pun’s action was that of Major James Lumley, father of the actress Joanna Lumley, who has become one of the Gurkha Welfare Trust’s staunchest supporters.


The citation for Pun’s Victoria Cross declared: “Rifleman Pun’s courage and superb gallantry in the face of odds which meant almost certain death were most inspiring to all ranks and were beyond praise.” Pun was invested with the Victoria Cross by the Viceroy, Field Marshal Viscount Wavell, at a special parade held at the Red Fort in Delhi on March 3 1945.

Tul Bahadur Pun was born on March 23 1923 at Banduk village in the Myagdit district of west Nepal. He enlisted in the Gurkha Brigade in west Nepal and, after completing his basic training, joined the 3rd Battalion 6th Gurkha Rifles for the Chindit Expedition.

After Independence in 1947, he transferred to the British Army and joined the 2nd/6th Gurkha Rifles, seeing action in Malaya and Hong Kong. He rose to be regimental sergeant major of his battalion and retired from the Army in May 1959 in the rank of honorary lieutenant.

Pun returned to Banduk village, where he farmed. Always concerned about the education of children, he opened two primary schools in the area. In 1986 his farm was washed away by floods, but he was able to resume his life on the land after a “benefit” football match in Kathmandu raised the necessary funds.

Pun came to England in 2007 and settled initially at Hounslow, west London, before, last year, moving the short distance to Chiswick. He attended many reunions of the VC and GC Association, supported many Gurkha charities and in 2009 was made a Freeman of the borough of Hounslow.

Pun, who presented his VC to his old regiment, died at Banduk, where he had gone to be present at the opening next month of a new secondary school.

He was twice married, and is survived by his second wife, Punisara, and by his two sons and eight daughters.




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Friday, November 08, 2013

Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Heaven supporting some Gurkhas

Lt-Col Heaven demonstrating a mortar to Sandhurst officer cadets in the 1950s

... Heaven recalled, "and up the hill came these two Gurkha companies with their kukris out. I have never seen such alarm and dismay in the German faces before or since, and there were very few of them left alive."



WHO:  Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Heaven
WHAT:  Supporting some Gurkhas
WHERE:   Near Bologna.
WHEN:  August 26, 1944



Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Heaven

Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Heaven, who has died aged 89, was the last officer-cadet to be awarded the Sword of Honour at the Royal Military Academy Woolwich before it closed in 1939, and was later awarded a Military Cross as a mountain battery commander in Italy.




6:19PM GMT 09 Mar 2009

In November 1943 Heaven landed at Naples with 479 Light Battery, which had 3.7in guns that split into eight pieces to be transported by mules. These (he recalled in his memoirs) were beautiful, placid, broad-backed beasts, which were drilled to prepare for action by standing in a circle looking outwards, with a smaller, pivot mule at the centre. The unit would march six days a week between dawn and around 6pm, halting every two hours for a 20-minute break. The animals would then be unloaded and watered, have their girths slackened and their hooves inspected for repair, if necessary, by the farrier sergeant using a portable anvil.

Though the battery trailed well behind the front-line troops as it marched north, it none the less amazed infantry battalions it passed by its average speed of five miles an hour and the way the animals held their heads down with their ears flopping backwards and forwards in a way that suggested a happy acceptance of their lot.

Heaven proved an efficient officer, refusing to allow the men to drink water before lunch because it made them drowsy, and not letting officers ride unless they were sick or checking the rear of the column. He was involved in several skirmishes with stragglers from the retreating German army before he earned his MC supporting some Gurkhas on August 26 1944, near Bologna.

The action took place on a hill that was the Gurkhas' headquarters, which had little more than one depleted company. As the brr-brr of German machine guns drew closer, Heaven agreed to start continuous firing, but finally had to turn to the Gurkha colonel, saying he could do no more to hold off the enemy. "At that moment we heard whoops and cries and shouts of joy," Heaven recalled, "and up the hill came these two Gurkha companies with their kukris out. I have never seen such alarm and dismay in the German faces before or since, and there were very few of them left alive."

As a tiny Gurkha ran towards him, waving a kukri streaming with blood, the colonel said: "Don't worry, Richard, he is just telling you he has killed three German soldiers. He has been bloodied, it is the first time he has done it, and he is going to carve three notches on his kukri. And what a splendid warrior he is."


Excerpted from http://www.telegraph.co.uk/.






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Thursday, November 07, 2013

Lt-Col Donald Ramsay-Brown killed 2 Germans with a kukri

Lieutenant-Colonel Donald Ramsay-Brown, 2nd from Left

In the face of heavy machine-gun fire and grenades at close range, he killed two Germans, including the No 1 of a machine-gun section, with a kukri.





WHO:  Lieutenant-Colonel Donald Ramsay-Brown
WHAT:
WHERE:  The high ground west and south-west of Medenine, Tunisia
WHEN:  March 14-16, 1943




Lt-Col Donald Ramsay-Brown

Lieutenant-Colonel Donald Ramsay-Brown, who has died aged 89, won two MCs in the African campaign while serving with the Gurkha Rifles.



12:01AM BST 19 Jul 2007

In October 1942 Ramsay-Brown, then a captain, was serving with the 1st Battalion 2nd King Edward VII's Own Gurkha Rifles (1/2 GR) in north Egypt. During the build-up to the Battle of El Alamein, he led patrols by day and night into No Man's Land on the Ruweisat Ridge. The enemy front line was wired, mined and highly organised but, at great risk, he brought back much valuable information.

On the night of October 10 Ramsay-Brown penetrated enemy minefields and reached their wire, only to find himself surrounded. He remained in observation and subsequently extricated his men safely. At the end of the month he led a patrol to a German strongpoint on the Ridge while the brigade was staging a dummy attack. He followed the wire for a considerable part of the front, shooting up the enemy with broadsides from his carriers.

He was awarded an MC; the citation paid tribute to his coolness and daring and stated that he had played a large part in the complete domination of the enemy in No Man's Land.

Donald Ramsay-Brown, the son of a missionary, was born at Chuddergent, Hyderabad, India on July 3 1917. He was educated at St George's Grammar School, Hyderabad, where his father was headmaster, and St Aloysius School, Vizagapatam. After Sandhurst he was attached to the 2nd Battalion the Duke of Wellington's Regiment, joining it in India in 1937. The following year he was posted to 1/2 GR and went with them as adjutant to Iraq and Persia before joining 4th Indian Division in Egypt.

During the period of March 13-17 1943 the task of the battalion was to hold the high ground west and south-west of Medenine, Tunisia. Much valuable information was obtained, due almost entirely to Ramsay-Brown, who organised and led the patrols.

On the night of March 14, while on patrol, he captured single-handedly two armed German sentries who had opened fire with automatics. Two nights later he led a silent attack against a strong enemy position in the hills. Half of the enemy were killed and the rest fled. In the face of heavy machine-gun fire and grenades at close range, he killed two Germans, including the No 1 of a machine-gun section, with a kukri. After this action, in which he was wounded, he was awarded a Bar to his MC.

Excerpted from http://www.telegraph.co.uk/.





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Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Bhanubhakta Gurung used his bayonet, kukri and a rock on his enemies




His company commander described him as "a smiling, hard-swearing and indomitable soldier who in a battalion of brave men was one of the bravest".





WHO:  Bhanubhakta Gurung
WHAT:  Took on pretty much single-handedly a sniper, a few foxholes, and a machine gun bunker
WHERE: The high ground east of Tamandu, Burma
WHEN:  March 5, 1945




Bhanubhakta Gurung, VC

Havildar Bhanubhakta Gurung, who has died aged 86, was awarded a VC when serving as a rifleman in the 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Gurkha Rifles in Burma on March 5 1945.



12:01AM GMT 04 Mar 2008

At that time the Fourteenth Army was making a drive toward Mandalay in central Burma, and the task of the 25th Division (of which the 2nd Gurkhas were part) was to engage in diversionary action along the coastal sector of Arakan.

The 3rd Battalion landed at Ru-Ywa and advanced to the high ground east of Tamandu. Capturing the area would assist British progress to the Irawaddy through the An pass, but the enemy here was the formidable Japanese 54 Division and a machine-gun battalion.

The dominant feature was .582, nicknamed Snowdon, to the east of which was another high hill known as Snowdon East. No enemy was encountered on either hill and by the evening of March 4 "A" Company was in position at both points.

However, during the night the Japanese attacked Snowdon East in overwhelming strength, killing half the Gurkhas on it; the remainder, completely out of ammunition, managed to cut their way through to their comrades on Snowdon.

The following day "B" Company, with which Bhanubhakta was serving, was ordered to retake Snowdon East "regardless of cost".

Bhanubhakta's citation (in which his name was spelled Bhanbhagta) recorded that: "On approaching the objective, one of the sections of the company was forced to the ground by a very heavy light-machine-gun, grenade and mortar fire, and owing to the severity of this fire was unable to move in any direction.

"While thus pinned down, the section also came under accurate fire from a sniper in a tree some 75 yards to the south. As this sniper was inflicting casualties on the section, Rifleman Bhanbhagta Gurung stood up and, while fully exposed to heavy fire, calmly killed the enemy sniper with his rifle, thus saving his section from suffering further casualties."


Bhanubhakta then began to run for the top of the hill, yelling for his comrades to follow him. Though the casualties were heavy, the section ploughed forward until within 20 yards of their objective, when the Gurkhas were again halted by exceptionally heavy fire.


Without waiting for any orders, Bhanubhakta dashed forward alone and attacked the first enemy foxhole. Throwing two grenades, which killed the two occupants of the trench, he immediately rushed on to the next enemy foxhole and killed the two Japanese in it with his bayonet.


All this time he was under continuous light-machine-gun fire from a bunker on the north tip of the objective, and two further fox-holes were still bringing fire to bear upon the section. Bhanubhakta dashed forward and cleared these trenches with bayonet and grenades.


He then turned his attention to the machine-gun bunker, and realising, as the citation put it, that it "would hold up not only his own platoon which was not behind him, but also another platoon which was advancing from the west", he pushed forward a fifth time to knock out the position.


"He ran forward and leapt on to the roof of the bunker from where, his hand grenades being finished, he flung two No 72 smoke grenades into the bunker's slit." Two Japanese rushed out of the bunker, partially blinded by the smoke and with their clothes aflame with phosphorous; Bhanubhakta promptly killed them both with his kukri.


One Japanese soldier remained inside, holding up 4 Platoon's advance with the machine gun. Bhanubhakta crawled in and, prevented by the cramped space from using his bayonet or kukri, beat the gunner's brains out with a rock.


Most of the objectives had now been cleared by the men behind, but the enemy which had been driven off were collecting for a counter-attack beneath the north end of the objective.

Bhanubhakta ordered the nearest Bren gunner and two riflemen to take up positions in the captured bunker with him, from where they repelled the enemy counter-attack.

Bhanubhakta, the citation concluded, "showed outstanding bravery and a complete disregard for his own safety. His courageous clearing of five enemy positions single-handed was in itself decisive in capturing the objective and his inspiring example to the rest of the Company contributed to the speedy consolidation of the success."

As a result of this engagement, his regiment gained the Battle Honour "Tamandu."

Bhanubhakta was a Gurung, one of the two main tribes from which the second (King Edward VII's Own) Gurkha rifles (the Sirmoor Rifles) enlisted their men. He was born in September 1921 at Phalpa, in western Nepal, and joined the 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Gurkhas in 1940.

He took part in the first Chindit operation in 1943 when Brigadier Orde Wingate led some 3,000 men on a destructive mission behind the Japanese lines in Burma.

By 1944 he had achieved the rank of Naik (corporal) but was reduced to rifleman for an offence which was subsequently found not to have been his fault.

It was said that this unfair loss of rank played a part in his determination to prove that he had been unjustly treated - but in fact Bhanubhakta was a reasonable man and not one to bear a grudge.

After the war his company commander tried to persuade Bhanubhakta to continue serving but he had a frail widowed mother and a young wife at home, so he decided to leave. When he quit the regiment in January 1946 he had already regained his former rank of Naik and had been given the honorary rank of Havildar (sergeant).

In the years after the war he visited his regiment in Malaya, Hong Kong and in Britain, and was always greeted as an honoured guest. In addition to his VC he was also awarded the Star of Nepal, 3rd class. In 2000 the Gurkha training company block at Catterick was named after him.

His three sons also served in the 2nd Gurkhas. Bhanubhakta suffered from asthma for many years and for the last four years of his life was housebound at his youngest son's house at Gorkha, where he died on Saturday.

His company commander described him as "a smiling, hard-swearing and indomitable soldier who in a battalion of brave men was one of the bravest".


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Brave doesn't even begin to describe Bhanubhakta Gurung!!


Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Tuljung Gurung: Gurkha who was shot & hit by a grenade & then took on Taliban with only his Kukri


Heroic: Rifleman Tuljung Gurung, of the Royal Gurkha Rifles, who has been awarded a military cross after fighting off a Taliban terrorist with his kukri, a traditional Gurkha knife



‘I thought, “Before he does something I have to do something”. I was like a madman.’
~Tuljung Gurung





WHO:  Tuljung Gurung
WHAT: Fought Taliban with Kukri, after being shot and hit by a grenade

WHERE:  Patrol Base Sparta, in Nahr-e Seraj
WHEN:  March 22, 2013; 4 AM




Excerpted from http://www.dailymail.co.uk/:

Military Cross for hero Gurkha who was shot and hit by a grenade... then took on Taliban gunmen armed with only his ceremonial Kukri

  • Tuljung Gurung fought desperately to protect his comrades
  • He used traditional knife to slash attacker, forcing him to flee
  • Other soldiers were decorated for extraordinary bravery

By Ian Drury
|


A hero Gurkha has won the Military Cross after single-handedly fighting off two armed Taliban attacking an Afghan patrol base... with just his ceremonial Kukri knife.

Rifleman Tuljung Gurung tackled the gun-wielding insurgents armed only with his razor-sharp traditional Nepalese blade and forced them to flee.

Incredibly, the soldier - now an acting Lance Corporal - battled them despite being dazed after a bullet smashed directly into his helmet and he was knocked down by shockwaves from an enemy hand grenade which he threw to safety when it landed next to him.

Now the modest 28-year-old has won the third highest gallantry award for his courage in Afghanistan.

Acting L/Cpl Gurung received the Military Cross for stopping the extremists from reaching sleeping British soldiers in the Helmand compound.

Top brass said his selfless bravery had prevented a ‘potentially catastrophic loss of life’.

He is among 117 servicemen and women who received awards in the operational honours list, published today.

Most of the honours go to troops who served with 4 Mechanized Brigade in Helmand between October last year and April.

Acting L/Cpl Gurung, who serves with the Royal Gurkha Rifles, was on duty at Patrol Base Sparta, in Nahr-e Seraj, at 4am on March 22 when he spotted two Afghans running towards his sangar, or watchtower.

When he challenged them to stop, the insurgents opened fire with an AK47 assault rifle.

One of the rounds struck him on the helmet, knocking him to the ground. Groggily getting to his feet, he saw a grenade bounce into the tower.

Fearing it would explode, the married Gurkha picked it up and hurled it away a split-second before it detonated, the force of the blast throwing him to the floor.

But as the dust and debris settled, Acting L/Cpl Gurung came face-to-face with one of the Taliban who was climbing into the 3 metre high sangar.

L/Cpl Gurung drew his 18inch kukri and tenaciously took on the insurgent in hand-to-hand combat


Lacking room to aim his rifle, the soldier drew his 18inch kukri and tenaciously took on the insurgent in hand-to-hand combat.

During the fight, the pair plunged to the ground outside the base. In a life-or-death struggle, Acting L/Cpl Gurung continued to lash out with the blade.

He said: ‘He was quite a bit bigger than me. I just hit him in the hand, body, I just started to hit him.

‘I just thought, “I don’t want to die. If I am alive I can save my colleagues”.

‘I thought, “Before he does something I have to do something”. I was like a madman.’

Faced with his ferocity, the Taliban turned and fled. Acting L/Cpl Gurung’s citation said he had displayed the ‘highest levels of gallantry and courage’.
 


If you haven't already checked out other entries in this Gurkha/Kukri Spotlight series please see:




Monday, November 04, 2013

Bishnu Shrestha: Lone Nepali Gorkha who subdued 40 train robbers

Today, I'm kicking off a series of posts on the Gurkhas and/or the Kukri. Enjoy these real-life tales of bravery and derring-do!






"Fighting the enemy in battle is my duty as a soldier. Taking on the thugs on the train was my duty as a human being." 
 
 ********
 
“I am proud to be able to prove that a Gorkha soldier with a khukuri is really a handful. I would have been a meek spectator had I not carried that khukuri.”
 
~Bishnu Shrestha




WHO:  Bishnu Shrestha (Gurkha soldier)
WHAT:  Fought for 20 minutes against 40 train robbers armed only with his kukri
WHERE:  Riding the Maurya Express to Gorakhpur from Ranchi
WHEN:  September 2, 2010



Written by Hamrosite
Friday, 14 January 2011 19:58

Lone Nepali Gorkha who subdued 40 train robbers

POKHARA, Jan 13: Gorkha soldiers have long been known the world over for their valor and these khukuri-wielding warriors winning the British many a battle have become folklore. A retired Indian Gorkha soldier recently revisited those glory days when he thwarted 40 robbers, killing three of them and injuring eight others, with his khukuri during a train journey. He is in line to receive three gallantry awards from the Indian government. Slave girl Morgiana in the Arabian Nights used her cunning to finish off Ali Baba´s 40 thieves, but Bishnu Shrestha of Baidam, Pokhara-6 did not have time to plot against the 40 train robbers. He, however, made good use of his khukuri to save the chastity of a girl and hundreds of thousands in loot.

Shrestha, who was in the Maurya Express to Gorakhpur from Ranchi on September 2 while returning home following voluntary retirement from the Indian army--saved the girl who was going to be raped by the robbers in front of her helpless parents, and in doing so won plaudits from everybody. The government of Nepal decided to provide special honor to the Indian Gorkha soldier who fought as many as 40 bandits in a train with nothing but a khukuri, and thwarted them from robbing passengers and raping a minor. “He will be provided a special honor for doing Nepal proud at international stage,” Finance Minister Surendra Raj Pandey said after the cabinet meeting on Thursday. The government, however, has yet to declare what the honor would comprise of and when will it be given. The Indian government is to decorate Shrestha with its Sourya Chakra, Bravery Award and Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Medal and the 35-year-old is leaving for India Saturday to receive the first of the awards on the occasion of India´s Republic Day on January 26. “The formal announcement of the awards will be made on Republic Day and on Independence Day on August 15,” said Shrestha, whose father Gopal Babu also retired from the same 7/8 Platoon of the Gorkha Regiment around 29 years ago.

His regiment has already given him a cash award of Indian rupees 50,000, and decided to terminate his voluntary retirement. He will get the customary promotion after receiving the medals. The Indian government will also announce a cash bounty for him and special discounts on international air tickets and domestic train tickets. The band of about 40 robbers, some of whom were travelling as passengers, stopped the train in the Chittaranjan jungles in West Bengal around midnight. Shrestha-- who had boarded the train at Ranchi in Jharkhand, the place of his posting--was in seat no. 47 in coach AC3. “They started snatching jewelry, cell phones, cash, laptops and other belongings from the passengers,” Shrestha recalled. The soldier had somehow remained a silent spectator amidst the melee, but not for long. He had had enough when the robbers stripped an 18-year-old girl sitting next to him and tried to rape her right in front of her parents. He then took out his khukuri and took on the robbers.

“The girl cried for help, saying ´You are a soldier, please save a sister´,” Shrestha recalled. “I prevented her from being raped, thinking of her as my own sister,” he added. He took one of the robbers under control and then started to attack the others. He said the rest of the robbers fled after he killed three of them with his khukuri and injured eight others. During the scuffle he received serious blade injury to his left hand while the girl also had a minor cut on her neck. “They had carried out their robbery with swords, blades and pistols. The pistols may have been fake as they didn´t open fire,” he surmised.

The train resumed its journey after some 20 minutes and a horde of media persons and police were present when it reached Chittaranja station. Police arrested the eight injured dacoits and recovered around 400,000 Indian rupees in cash, 40 gold necklaces, 200 cell phones, 40 laptops and other items that the fleeing robbers dropped in the train. Police escorted Shrestha to the Railways Hospital after the rescued girl told them about his heroic deed. Mainstream Indian media carried the story. The parents of the girl, who was going for her MBBS studies, also announced a cash award of Indian rupees 300,000 for him but he has not met them since. “Even the veins and arteries in my left hand were slit but the injury has now healed after two months of neurological treatment at the Command Hospital in Kolkata,” he said showing the scar. “Fighting the enemy in battle is my duty as a soldier; taking on the dacoits in the train was my duty as a human being,” said the Indian army nayak, who has been given two guards during his month-long holidays in Nepal. “I am proud to be able to prove that a Gorkha soldier with a khukuri is really a handful. I would have been a meek spectator had I not carried that khukuri,” he said. He still finds it hard to believe that he took on 40 armed robbers alone. “They may have feared that more of my army friends were traveling with me and fled after fighting me for around 20 minutes,” he explained. Meanwhile Shrestha is finding it difficult to reach out to all those who intend to honor him for his courageous act. He has already been honored by around a dozen private firms, mothers´ groups, local political leaders and schools, while many are preparing to honor him. Some firms from Kathmandu have also invited him for felicitation. “My son is finding it difficult to manage time to accept all the honors,” said Shrestha´s elated father Gopal Babu who had also retired around 29 years ago from the same 7/8 Platoon of the Gorkha Regiment, that his son served. “We had never thought that he would be honored at this scale,” Gopal Babu expressed his happiness. Agni Air, Rastriya Paropakar Mahasangh, Shantipatan Tole Sudhar Samiti, Miteri Mothers´ Group, ward committees of the Nepali Congress and Communist Part of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist, Tal Barahi Higher Secondary School and others have already honored him. “He could not travel to Kathmandu due to lack of time,” his father said. On most occasions he was felicitated with shawl (khada), vermillion, dhaka topi and given certificates. Agni Air has given him an honorary life membership and announced a limetime free air travel. “Some of my friends from India even called me to congratulate for his bravery. Everybody should honor such brave persons,” said Sushil Basnet of Agni Air. The soldier was happy about all the appreciation he has received from different quarters and thanked the media for covering the news. “The Indian media brought the incident to light and the Nepali media too gave it due importance. I may have even been sent to jail on the charge of robbery had the girl and the Indian media not come forward to my support,” Shrestha said. “I was hardly recognized even in Baidam. Now the whole country knows."



For further information:



If you haven't already checked out these related articles on the Kukri/Gurkha, please see:







After reading Bishnu Shrestha's heroic deed, was that bravery or not? Would you be able to do that?


Tuesday, April 16, 2013

The Kukri Knife: Fighting Blade of Nepal by Shuny Bee




The kukri knife (also spelled khukuri) can be reliably traced back to the 17th century, when the Gorkhas used it for cutting meat and vegetables, digging holes, hacking branches and other odd jobs. Some historians insist it dates back further — perhaps as much as 1,000 years, according to one temple drawing in India — but there’s a lot of disagreement. 


What isn’t disputed is the existence of an early kukri knife that belonged to Drabya Shah, the king of Gorkha, in 1627. Why isn’t it disputed? Because that kukri knife lives in the collection of the Arsenal Museum in Katmandu, Nepal.


In 1742 Prithvi Narayan Shan became king of Gorkha. Although his army was small, he was ambitious, and in 1768 he became the first king of Nepal. His victory is attributed, in part, to the fact that his troops were armed with kukri. From that point on, members of the Nepalese military carried the feared fighting blades. 


In 1948, Padma Shamsher Janga Bahadur Rana, prime minister and supreme commander of Nepal, wrote: “The kukri is the national as well as religious weapon of the Gorkhas. It is incumbent on a Gorkha to carry it while awake and to place it under the pillow when retiring.”



The Construction of the Kukri Knife


The kukri knife strategically balances weight, size and shape to complement the movement of the user. During the 19th century, Nepalese models of the kukri knife were made with a notch cut into the blade just in front of the handle. It’s been suggested that it was used to intercept enemy blades or to keep blood from flowing onto the handle, thus making it less slippery. Other theories refer to Hindu depictions of sex organs and representations of the cow’s hoof.


Because they were intended to be used hard, most historical kukri blades weren’t decorated, except possibly with some simple floral engravings along the spine or symbols from the armory where they originated. Better blades were hollow ground with one, two or three fullers (grooves).


The kukri knife comes in a variety of lengths, with the average being from 14 inches to 16 inches. The kukri knife can be up to 30 inches long, but such models are more ceremonial than combative. Example: At the Hindu festival of Dashain, large kukri knives are used to execute bulls. A one-stroke decapitation means good luck and well-being for the people in attendance.


The blades come in two varieties with respect to tangs. The rattail tang runs to the end of the handle, narrowing as it goes. The end is peened over to secure the handle in place. The other type has a full flat tang that extends to the tip of the weapon and is as wide as the handle, thus making it the stronger of the two designs. It uses steel rivets to attach the handgrip. A pommel plate or butt cap is usually fitted over the end.


Kukri knife handles are made of local wood — walnut, chandan or sisnal — or sometimes water-buffalo horn. Fancier models are made of brass, ivory or even rhino horn. In the distant past, handles were curved, but modern versions are usually straight.


The scabbard is made of two pieces of wood that are covered with leather derived from a goat, water buffalo or elephant. In olden days, the scabbard didn’t have any features that allowed it to be attached to a belt, which meant the kukri knife was usually carried stuck in its owner’s sash. Later, hardware was added so the weapon could be attached to a belt.


Located near the throat of the scabbard are two pockets that hold smaller knives, called karda and chakmak. The karda is a utility knife, and the chakmak is a blunt tool that’s used to sharpen the kukri blade and make sparks from a flint. Early scabbards also had a leather pouch for carrying a small survival kit.



How the Kukri Knife Is Used


The kukri knife can be used to smash, slash or stab. For smashing, the butt of the handle, the flat side of the blade or the spine is used. For slashing, the edge of the blade is used, and for stabbing … well, duh.


Because of the weight of the kukri knife, a moderate smack to the skull can cause dizziness or unconsciousness. The curvature and weight of the blade facilitate slashing to such an extent that even a weak stroke will slice the skin. 


A stronger stroke can cut muscle and bone. A moderate-power stab can puncture the skin and sever blood vessels, while a more committed attack can easily cause death.



The Kukri Knife in Battle


The design of the kukri knife screams close-quarters combat, which is why the Gorkhas became enamored with it. Records from 1824 tell how a fierce hand-to-hand battle took place between a Gorkha unit under Frederick Shore and Capt. Frederick Young and a band of armed robbers who’d seized a fort at Koonja. The Gorkhas destroyed their enemies with their kukri knives.


When Gorkhas were given leave to visit their families, they naturally packed their kukri because of the dangers — both two-legged and four-legged — they inevitably faced on the way home. In one account, a man named Ajamlal Rai was on his way to Darjeeling when he was attacked by a leopard. The animal mangled his left hand, but he managed to kill it. 

When asked how he escaped, he told an official he didn’t have time to unsheathe his kukri knife, but he gave the animal such a hard blow that the scabbard split open. Despite his injury, Ajamlal skinned the leopard and brought back the head, which he gave to the officer. He was financially rewarded for his bravery.

Fast-forward to the 21st century: The kukri knife is still used as a backup weapon for soldiers in war zones. It’s also carried by civilians concerned with protecting themselves on the streets. Even though much more advanced weaponry is available, the people of Nepal are still comfortable and confident carrying their kukri knife.

How to Get Your Own Kukri Knife

It’s no surprise that Cold Steel [2], with its reputation for razor-sharp blades of every possible design, sells several versions of the fabled kukri knife. Among the company’s current offerings are:






About the Author:


Shuny Bee is a freelance writer and martial artist who comes from Nepal. He now lives in Portland, Oregon. For more information, visit beemartialarts.com









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