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Trip to Longewala (1971 battle site) and Tanot (1965 battle site)

DavyJones

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Visited Longewala and Tanot from Jaisalmer recently. Amazing places in the middle of the Thar desert. Historical too as both were scenes of desperate battles in 1971 and 1965 respectively.

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Plaque at Longewala near "the post (which still stands on top of a large sand dune)

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Destroyed Pak T-59 from 1971

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Tanot victory pillar - the temple at Tanot was not destroyed even after 3000 Pak shells were dropped on it (as per BSF plaque)

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Proud to be an Indian. Jai Hind!
 
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the tank is not well preserved perhaps the pakisatni tanks in the ferozpur district are kept well.

Jai Hind
 
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Sam_Bajwa - hmm.. 1 thing I noticed was the tank did not have it's gun pointed downwards. Perhaps this is because it was destroyed (notice the missing track on the right side of the tank).
On Preservation - I guess a daylight shot could make this clear. The area was completely dark and I had rely on my flash!
 
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cheers Sam! btw are those Ferozpure tanks from 1965 ? And which make (Patton?) There is a surrendered Pak Patton tank at Battle honours mess Chanakyapuri as well.
 
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jones yes that's a long story there was a sufi shrine in the ferozpur cantonment it is believed that the pakisantani tank drivers were made blind by the sufi who lived there long time ago and whose tomb was commemorated by that shrine.
yes that was a patton tank
 
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IA definitely believes in God Sam - but mind you this means all gods and all saints!
I visited Bhimbar Galli in Rajauri district on the LoC and found a Sufi shrine maintained excellently by the Army there. Tanot mandir is maintained by the BSF and they have done a first class job. IA leads India follows!
 
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The Tanot story - courtesy Rediff.com
Miracle temple offers 'strength' to soldiers

You could miss Tanot in the blink of an eye as you drive down the road that cuts through the forbidding Thar Desert on the way to the border with Pakistan.

A few rickety wooden stalls selling an assortment of cheap snacks on the bend of the road, a collection of low sandstone buildings that house a detachment of paramilitary Border Security Force and Tanot is gone.

But on a slight rise in this tiny outpost, almost hidden from view to the uninitiated and nondescript from the outside, stands a small temple to goddess Durga.

The shrine to the deity has become a place of pilgrimage for Indian soldiers passing through Tanot to and from battle-ready positions facing Pakistani forces along the nearby frontier.

For, the soldiers say, a miracle they attribute to the powers of Durga took place in Tanot in 1965 during one of the three wars India has fought with Pakistan since their independence from Britain in 1947.

Outnumbered by Pakistani forces, who had Tanot pinned down from three sides, Indian troops holed up in the temple held out for three days until relief arrived from the air and over land from the city of Jaisalmer, 130 km to the southeast.

More wondrous than that, so the story goes, none of the 3,000 shells and mortars that the Pakistanis rained down on Tanot exploded within the temple confines and none did any damage except for one that clipped the tail of an unsuspecting camel.

The temple, with its red-painted inner walls, is maintained by the Border Security Force and has a powerful resonance for Indian soldiers deployed along Rajasthan.

"We derive strength from this," said one soldier visiting the sanctuary, where some of the artillery shells and mortar bombs that fell harmlessly into the soft sands around Tanot nearly 37 years ago are on display in a dusty glass case.

"We still feel that if something goes wrong and there is a war, we'll be safe here. God is always with the right people," said the man, a 41-year-old sergeant who declined to give his name on security grounds.

Soldiers in camouflage dress visit the temple in a steady stream, pausing after prayers to Durga to marvel at the unexploded ordnance and peer at fading black and white photographs of the battle of 1965.

Barefoot and wearing nothing of leather in temples in keeping with Hindu observance, many bring offerings to the deity of fresh coconut, incense sticks and small white sweets made from a sugary paste.

They ring brass bells that hang from the beams of the temple, donated by grateful devotees, and clasp their hands together in prayer, standing or prostrate before the shrine.

"Soldiers have had a lot of faith in this temple since what happened in 1965. Its history is that it saved the lives of Indian soldiers," said Sunil Bhatt, an artillery officer who visited the shrine to pray with a friend. "That faith will continue irrespective of what happens."
 
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yes that's true jones and i really appreciate the sarva dharma sthal idea of the Indian army a Hindu sikh temple,a mosque and church under the same roof that makes me proud!
 
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Oh get over it. God does not play dice - nor does He or She favor anyone in wars. Wars are fought by humans and Gods play no part in wars. I have heard some ridiculous stuff like angels descending from the heavens and fighting in the war...lol..yeah right. Be proud of your armed forces - but only to the point of sanity. The Indian population never criticizes its Armed Forces - I wonder why? It too should be subject to criticism - some generals were indicted in a land scam recently and some converted transports meant for Siachen into golf carts.
 
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We Pakistani member feel proud that we allow Indian to post their war monument in this forum with respect. And we have big heart.....
 
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