Gurbakhsh Singh

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Died11 December 1979(1979-12-11) (aged 74–75)
Allegiance British India
India

Gurbakhsh Singh

Born1904 (1904)
Died11 December 1979(1979-12-11) (aged 74–75)
Allegiance British India
India
Rank Major General
CommandsJind Infantry, Indian State Forces
Patiala Brigade, PEPSU forces
Unknown Infantry Brigade under 26 Infantry Division, Jammu and Kashmir state
Indian Custodian Force, Korea
Conflicts
AwardsPadma Shri
Distinguished Service Order (DSO)
Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE)
Alma materKhalsa College, Amritsar
RelationsLt. Gen. Harbaksh Singh, VrC (brother)

Major General Gurbakhsh Singh, DSO, OBE (1904 - 11 December 1979),[1][2] also spelled as 'Gurbaksh Singh', was a general officer who served in the British Indian Army and later the Indian Army. He is known for his leadership of his battalion of the British Indian Army under the gruelling captivity of the Japanese forces in Singapore for three years. Later, he served with the Indian Custodian Force in Korea following the Korean War.

Gurbaksh Singh was born in a wealthy Madahar Jatt Sikh family, in the village of Badrukhan in the princely state of Jind, in British India. His father, Harnam Singh, was a doctor who had studied at the Medical College in Lahore.[1]

In the Introduction to Gurbaksh Singh's autobiography, Sardar Surjit Singh Majithia writes that Gurbaksh Singh studied at the Khalsa College, Amritsar, from where he got a commission in the Jind state army.[3] He joined the Jind State Forces as a cadet on April 1, 1923, and got commissioned as an officer on December 15, 1923.[4]

His younger brother, Harbaksh Singh, joined the British Indian army.[5]

Singh was married twice, his second wife being Sudesh Gurbaksh Singh.[6][2]

World War II

During World War II, in the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, Singh commanded a battalion of the Jind Infantry of the Indian States Forces in Singapore, when the British forces surrendered to the invading Japanese. For three years, he and his battalion were prisoners of war for the Japanese. But he refused to defect and join the Indian National Army, and coaxed his soldiers from doing so too. With the turning of the tide and the defeat of the Japanese, Singh brought his battalion back to India. For his 'leadership of his battalion under extreme adversity' during captivity, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order and the Order of the British Empire.[7][8][9][10]

In 1947, he was appointed as Commandant of the Jind State Forces, and promoted to the rank of brigadier.[4]

Post-Independence

See also

References

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