thesolar65
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NEW DELHI: Twenty-two months after Colonel Santosh Mahadik died fighting terrorists in J&K's Kupwara forests near the Line of Control on November 17, 2015, his widow Swati Mahadik on Saturday became an Army officer after 11 months of gruelling training at Chennai-based Officers Training Academy (OTA).
Like her husband, Swati is also a true example of grit and courage. The mother of two children, daughter Kartikee (12) and son Swaraj (6), Swati drew inspiration from her husband's olive green uniform. "Colonel Mahadik had been proud of his olive green uniform. Since November 2015, his uniform hung desolately in our house. That was when I vowed that I had to bring the uniform alive," she told TOI.
Swati had already crossed the upper age limit for entering the Army and it was only after the force and defence ministry relaxed the age limit for her that she could initiate her new career goals. After clearing the SSB examination in 2016, she underwent several rounds of physical fitness and medical examinations as part of the five-tiered selection process. Only after such a rigorous selection process, she was selected to join OTA.
The 38-year-old who had joined the academy as the non-technical course for women cadets will serve in the Pune-based Army Ordnance Corps. Swati said, "I wanted to be with Santosh therefore I joined the Indian Army. Now, I feel happy and satisfied." An emotional Swati, after the passing-out parade, said, "My family supported me and my children a lot during the tough time. My children are happy that I have become an Army officer like their father."
Mahadik, 39, was an officer from the Army's elite 21 Para Special forces and according to his colleagues, he was known for always leading from the front. The commanding officer of 41 Rashtriya Rifles (Maratha Light Infantry) won a Sena Medal in Assam for 'Op Rhino' in 2003. The Colonel, the son of a tailor from Satara, was more than a brave soldier. He worked hard to revive tourism in terrorism-affected Kupwara. He sent youths on tours to Jaipur's Choki Dhani and Rishikesh to learn about village tourism and white-river rafting. "Despite terror activities in Kupwara, he wanted to beautify the region. He wanted to make youth self-reliant and self-dependent," Swati told TOI. The Colonel would personally counsel ex-militants and show them the path to a new life. He was a champion boxer, manic runner and football goalkeeper in his school days and had also trained star cricketer MS Dhoni in paragliding.
Nidhi Dubey, the widow of another soldier, who joined the Army along with Swati, told TOI, "Swati is a hard working and dedicated woman."
Swati has become the Army officer a day after the force, under new defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman, gave finishing touches to a plan to induct 800 women in the military police. "If I become a Colonel like my husband one day, it would be great. But my immediate focus is to learn new things under the guidance of my superiors."
Like her husband, Swati is also a true example of grit and courage. The mother of two children, daughter Kartikee (12) and son Swaraj (6), Swati drew inspiration from her husband's olive green uniform. "Colonel Mahadik had been proud of his olive green uniform. Since November 2015, his uniform hung desolately in our house. That was when I vowed that I had to bring the uniform alive," she told TOI.
Swati had already crossed the upper age limit for entering the Army and it was only after the force and defence ministry relaxed the age limit for her that she could initiate her new career goals. After clearing the SSB examination in 2016, she underwent several rounds of physical fitness and medical examinations as part of the five-tiered selection process. Only after such a rigorous selection process, she was selected to join OTA.
The 38-year-old who had joined the academy as the non-technical course for women cadets will serve in the Pune-based Army Ordnance Corps. Swati said, "I wanted to be with Santosh therefore I joined the Indian Army. Now, I feel happy and satisfied." An emotional Swati, after the passing-out parade, said, "My family supported me and my children a lot during the tough time. My children are happy that I have become an Army officer like their father."
Mahadik, 39, was an officer from the Army's elite 21 Para Special forces and according to his colleagues, he was known for always leading from the front. The commanding officer of 41 Rashtriya Rifles (Maratha Light Infantry) won a Sena Medal in Assam for 'Op Rhino' in 2003. The Colonel, the son of a tailor from Satara, was more than a brave soldier. He worked hard to revive tourism in terrorism-affected Kupwara. He sent youths on tours to Jaipur's Choki Dhani and Rishikesh to learn about village tourism and white-river rafting. "Despite terror activities in Kupwara, he wanted to beautify the region. He wanted to make youth self-reliant and self-dependent," Swati told TOI. The Colonel would personally counsel ex-militants and show them the path to a new life. He was a champion boxer, manic runner and football goalkeeper in his school days and had also trained star cricketer MS Dhoni in paragliding.
Nidhi Dubey, the widow of another soldier, who joined the Army along with Swati, told TOI, "Swati is a hard working and dedicated woman."
Swati has become the Army officer a day after the force, under new defence minister Nirmala Sitharaman, gave finishing touches to a plan to induct 800 women in the military police. "If I become a Colonel like my husband one day, it would be great. But my immediate focus is to learn new things under the guidance of my superiors."