Introduction
Few soldiers in modern history
have combined audacity, wit, and strategic brilliance as seamlessly as Field
Marshal Sam Hormusji Framji Jamshedji Manekshaw. India’s second Field Marshal, and
one of its most celebrated military leaders, was as famous for his unflappable
courage on the battlefield as he was for his razor-sharp humour.
One of his
most quoted exchanges
captures this duality perfectly. In the tense months before the 1971 Indo-Pak
war, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi pressed him to launch immediate military
action in rainy season in East Pakistan. Unmoved, the Chief of Army Staff replied: “I am ready to fight a war for India,
but I am not ready to lose it for you.” His words were not mere defiance; they were the declaration of a
professional soldier unwilling to compromise strategy for political expediency.
This
article seeks to examine the life and legacy of Sam Manekshaw critically—not
merely as a military commander, but as a complex human being, dedicated,
unwilling to yield under any circumstances, and not only a professional but
also one who instilled this ethos in the Indian Army. His journey from a
mischievous schoolboy in Nainital to the architect of one of the swiftest
military victories in modern history is filled with stories of courage,
irreverence, integrity, and contradiction. It
is a story of an undaunted combatant who endured nine bullets in World War II
in the Burmese front, stared death in the face with characteristic wit,
orchestrated the creation of Bangladesh, and yet spent much of his later life sidelined
by the very establishment of the land he had served with a smile of contempt.
By revisiting his formative years, wartime heroics, post-independence
career, the 1971 war, his elevation to Field Marshal, and his later struggles
with the government, we attempt to unravel the essence of this towering
figure—a leader whose laughter was as infectious as his leadership was decisive.
The Formidable Years: From Amritsar to Dehradun Military Academy:
Sam
Manekshaw was born on 3 April 1914 in Amritsar, Punjab, into a
distinguished Parsi family. His father, Dr Hormusji Manekshaw, was a physician
who had moved from Valsad, Gujarat, to practice in the bustling city. His
mother, Hilla, brought warmth and discipline into the household. As members of the Parsi
community—cosmopolitan, industrious, and relatively affluent—the Manekshaws
belonged to an environment that valued education, integrity, and service.
Young Sam
grew up in a home that nurtured confidence. His
siblings often remarked that he had a sharp tongue even as a child, never
afraid to speak his mind. This boldness would remain his defining trait
throughout life.
He attended Sherwood
College in Nainital, a school known for its strict discipline and rigorous
academics. Teachers recalled him as
mischievous yet brilliant, often challenging authority with cheeky remarks.
On one occasion, after being punished
for an escapade, he quipped that the cane “hurt less than the sermon.” Such
anecdotes reveal the seeds of a personality that refused to be subdued, one who
valued independence above obedience.
But it was
at the Indian Military Academy (IMA), Dehradun, that Sam’s destiny
crystallised. Unlike many of his contemporaries who were trained at Sandhurst,
he was part of the first batch of the IMA in 1932, making him a true
product of Indian soil. The nascent institution was symbolic of India’s
aspiration to develop its own officer cadre rather than remain reliant on
British academies.
The
atmosphere at Dehradun was demanding. With British instructors introducing the
rigor of Western drills and Indian officers forging a sense of indigenous
pride, cadets were tested not only physically but psychologically. Manekshaw sailed through in this
environment, earning respect for his quick wit and companionship. His
contemporaries would later say that Sam could lift spirits even in the harshest
conditions—a leadership trait that would prove invaluable in war. By
the time he was commissioned into the 4th Battalion, 12th Frontier Force
Regiment in 1934, Manekshaw had
already shaped a distinct identity: Indian in soul, global in outlook,
disciplined yet disarmingly jovial. His military career was about to begin
in earnest.
The Crucible of War: World War II and the Birth of a Legend:
The Second
World War catapulted Manekshaw from an eager young officer into a living
legend. His first real taste of battle came in Burma (now Myanmar),
where he and his regiment fought against the Japanese in some of the harshest
conditions imaginable. Jungle warfare in Burma was gruelling: sweltering
humidity, treacherous terrain, and a relentless enemy.
It was here, during the Battle of the Sittang Bridge in 1942, that fate tested him brutally. Leading his men against a Japanese assault, Manekshaw was struck by a burst of machine-gun fire. Nine bullets tore through his abdomen and liver. Few expected him to survive.
At that moment, Major General David Cowan, his commander, found him bleeding profusely. Believing his young officer was on the verge of death, Cowan removed his own Military Cross and pinned it to Manekshaw’s chest, saying, “A dead man cannot be awarded a Military Cross.”
But Sam was
not ready to yield. When the British surgeon initially refused
to operate, declaring the injuries hopeless, the young officer quipped, “Never
mind, Doctor, Mule kicked me, but I am
still alive. Don’t make me a patient who died waiting.” The wit, the
audacity, and the refusal to give up encapsulated the essence of the man. The
surgeon was surprised to see the vigour, and after a critical operation,
Manekshaw survived—his body scarred, but his spirit indomitable
This episode
was more than a brush with mortality; it was a baptism of resilience. His
miraculous recovery elevated him to near-mythical status among his peers. The
tale of the officer who laughed at death would follow him throughout his
career, fuelling a reputation that made both subordinates and superiors believe
he could accomplish the impossible.
Astounding accomplishment: Post-Independence
and the 1971 War:
The Path to Chief of Army Staff
After
independence in 1947, Manekshaw remained with the Indian Army, navigating the
turbulence of partition and the birth of a new nation. His career advanced
steadily: he served in staff positions, commanded divisions, and was known for
his blunt assessments.
During the 1962
Sino-Indian War, he warned political leaders about the army’s
unpreparedness—a prediction that proved tragically accurate. His honesty,
though often uncomfortable for politicians, established him as a man of
principle. In 1969, he was appointed Chief of Army Staff (COAS).
The Defining Moment: 1971: “It is my soldiers who won the war.
I only gave them the orders.”
By 1971, the
crisis in East Pakistan was spiralling out of control. Millions of refugees
were pouring into India, fleeing the brutality of the Pakistani military.
Public pressure mounted on Indira Gandhi’s government to act.
At a critical cabinet meeting, Gandhi demanded immediate military
intervention. Manekshaw, calm but firm, refused. He explained that the monsoon
would turn the terrain into a swamp, making armoured manoeuvres impossible. The
army needed time for preparation, and the northern frontier with China could
not be left exposed. If forced, he was ready to resign rather than lead the
army into disaster. His audacity shocked many, but
Gandhi, recognising his sincerity, relented. She gave him the time he
requested. The Indian Army was fully
prepared when war eventually broke out on 3 December 1971. Within 13
days, Pakistan
surrendered. The war and the creation of Bangladesh were
one of the swiftest and most decisive military operations
in modern history.
The
surrender of 90,000 Pakistani troops remains unparalleled. Manekshaw’s
meticulous planning—ensuring logistics, morale, and strategy aligned—was the
key. His rapport with Indira Gandhi evolved into mutual respect; she trusted
him to deliver, and he did.
In this triumph, his character shone brightest. While others sought
glory, he celebrated his soldiers, crediting the victory to their sacrifice. His jokes and warmth during briefings became legendary, easing the
tension of war. He embodied the paradox of a general who could laugh with his
men one moment and lead them to extraordinary feats the next.
Field Marshal and the Unjust End:
For his extraordinary service, Sam Manekshaw was promoted to the rank of Field Marshal in 1973—the second Indian officer to hold the
ceremonial five-star rank. It was a fitting tribute, yet the honour masked a
troubling undercurrent.
In
retirement, his relationship with the government soured. Bureaucratic apathy
and political indifference denied him the salary, pension, and perks that
should have accompanied his rank. For
decades, the man who had delivered
India’s greatest military victory received nothing close to his due. Gen
Sam, who was full of content, brushed aside the issue as if nothing had
happened.
Speculation abounded: was it
jealousy, political insecurity, or sheer neglect? Whatever the reason, it was a
national disgrace. That the architect of Bangladesh’s independence lived his
twilight years overlooked by the state he had served so gracefully with
unquestionable loyalty speaks volumes about the pettiness of political systems dependent on corrupt bureaucrats; this incident was an act of heinous crime and an
unforgettable shame to the nation.
Accidentally, the incident got the
attention of the President, Dr.A.P.J.
Abdul Kalam, and his dues were finally cleared expeditiously, more than
three decades later. The amount, exceeding ₹1.3 crores was significant. Yet, in
a final act of grace, Manekshaw donated the entire sum to the Army Central Welfare
Fund. What a big slap! on the face of those offenders who remain in oblivion and never brought to book.
This gesture
epitomized his character. A man denied his rightful dues for so long gave them
away without hesitation, proving that his loyalty was never to politicians or
pay cheques but to the soldiers who served under him.
Conclusion: The Unfading Legacy:
Sam Maneksaw’s
life resists easy categorisation. He was at once irreverent and deeply
principled, humorous yet fiercely professional. His wit was never
flippancy—it was confidence in his own judgement. His courage was not just physical, though nine bullets bore testimony
to that, but moral: the courage to tell the Prime Minister “no” when national
interest demanded it.
He remains a
case study in leadership. He commanded respect, not by fear but by example. He
knew his soldiers by name, shared jokes with them, and yet inspired them to
fight with unmatched loyalty. His legacy endures not only in military history
but in the broader discourse on civil-military relations.
In 2008, when he
passed away quietly in Wellington, Tamil Nadu, the nation mourned. “His funeral carried a quiet
dignity—perhaps too quiet for a man of his stature. And yet, in its
simplicity, there was a certain rightness. Sam never sought grandeur; he stood
for principles, not pomp.” “Leadership is about being
dedicated, firm, fair, and with a touch of humour.”
His story is more than a biography—it is
a reminder of what leadership should mean: integrity over expediency, being
firm, fair, and with a touch of humour, rather than egotism, duty over
self. In a world where power often corrupts, Sam Manekshaw’s life stands as
testimony that greatness can coexist with humility, and that a soldier’s greatest weapon may sometimes be his smile. Let us long for
yet another with salutation from the core of our hearts.
Disclaimer: The
content of this blog is derived from news articles released at various
intervals and other printed sources. The blogger lacks expertise in verifying
them. Consequently, there may be inadvertent inaccuracies in the narration, for
which the septuagenarian blogger should be forgiven. The intention is to pay
homage to the immortal soul. Readers are encouraged to read more on the issue.

Very nice. I learned a lot of unknown information about Field Marshal Maneksaw.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
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ReplyDelete"Hats off" to our Indian Soldiers. Their dedication and responsibilities make Indians safe to sleep at night.