logo
"Come See Where We Fought": He Honours His Son, A Kargil War Hero, Every Year

"Come See Where We Fought": He Honours His Son, A Kargil War Hero, Every Year

NDTVa day ago

Colonel Virender Thapar (Retired) visits the Dras War Memorial in Ladakh every year in May-June to honour his son, Captain Vijayant Thapar, who was killed in action in the 1999 Kargil conflict. Capt Thapar was conferred with Vir Chakra (Posthumously), India's third-highest wartime gallantry award, for his valour.
Mr Thapar is fulfilling something his son asked of him in his last letter, written shortly before he was killed on the Knoll Peak in Drass. Vijayant, who was 22 at that time, wrote the letter and asked it to be handed over to his family in case he failed to return.
"If you can, please come and see where the Indian army fought for your tomorrow," he wrote in it.
It's been 26 years since Mr Thapar has been honouring his son. A 2017 photo in which he is accompanied by several Army officials is going viral on social media, with the caption saying, "A father's pilgrimage to a small temple for his son who fell fighting @22 during Kargil war."
a father's pilgrimage to a small temple for his son who fell fight ing @22 during Kargil war. pic.twitter.com/UHMIPbOF8m
— virender thapar (@Thapar77Thapar) August 3, 2017
Responding to his own tweet a year later, Mr Thapar said: "Shall go on my annual pilgrimage to Drass to pay homage to those who fought and fell in the Battles of Tololing and Knoll Three Pimples 19 years ago. All heroes of the country, including a 22-year-old Capt. Vijayant Thapar, officers, JCOs, men of 2 Rajputana Rifles. We remember."
Shall go on my annual pilgrimage to Drass to pay homage to those who fought and fell in the Battles of Tololing and Knoll Three Pimples 19 years ago.All heros of the country including 22 year old Capt Vijyant Thapar officers Jcos men of 2 Rajputana Rifles.We remember
— virender thapar (@Thapar77Thapar) May 29, 2018
This year, Mr Thapar wrote that the small temple was built exactly where his son had his final gunfight with Pakistani soldiers. "Close by were 3 martyred Pakistani soldiers. Proud he acquitted himself so well. With a pacemaker you can't go to this mandir any longer; hence, love to see this picture," he added.
This is a very touching post. A small temple built at the very place where Robin had his last gun fight with the Pakistanis.Close by were 3 martyred Pak soldiers.Proud he acquitted himself so well With a pacemaker can't go to this mandir any longer hence love to see this picture.
— virender thapar (@Thapar77Thapar) May 28, 2025
The heartwarming post quickly grabbed the attention of various social media users.
One person wrote, "Sir the temple may be small in size, but it's HUGE in significance and reverence for what it represents."
Sir the temple maybe small in size but it's HUGE in significance and reverence for what it represents. https://t.co/N1BZo67uKe
— Rohit Agarwal ???????? (@ragarwal) August 4, 2017
Another wrote, "Salute to the Braveheart and also a Salute to his brave parents. Thank you Sir for giving a Gem like him to the country. JAIHIND."
Salute to the Brave heart and also a Salute to his brave parents.Thankyou Sir for giving a Gem like him to the country.JAIHIND.
— Rajive Sood ???????? (@SoodRajive) August 3, 2017
"Sir, no words to express your courage & nationalism. I salute you & your son. Can / will never forget the sacrifices made by your family," commented another.
Sir, no words to express your courage & nationalism.
I salute you & ur son. Can / will never forget the sacrifices made by your family.
— pawan kalwani (@pawankalwani) August 3, 2017
In his letter, Captain Vijayant Thapar expressed another heartfelt wish - that if he were to be reborn, he would still join the army and fight for the nation. He also requested that his parents continue contributing some money to an orphanage and keep giving Rs 50 to Ruksana per month, a young girl he met during his posting.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bee-mergency: 250 million honeybees swarmed a Washington highway. Here's what happened
Bee-mergency: 250 million honeybees swarmed a Washington highway. Here's what happened

Hindustan Times

time3 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Bee-mergency: 250 million honeybees swarmed a Washington highway. Here's what happened

The area near the Canadian border on Friday witnessed an unusually busy morning, not with traffic, but with about 250 million honeybees who swarmed in northwestern Washington state after a truck carrying their hives overturned. The truck, hauling about an estimated 70,000 pounds of beehives, rolled over around 4 am close to the Canadian border near Lynden, the Whatcom County Sheriff's Office said in social media posts. According to AP news agency, the crash occurred when the uninjured driver failed to navigate a sharp turn. While the driver walked away safely, the bees did not stay put. Also Read | Donald Trump reveals what he told India, Pakistan before ceasefire as he again claims US averted 'nuclear disaster' Deputies, county public works employees and several bee experts responded to the scene. The box hives later came off the truck, and local beekeepers swarmed to help recover, restore and reset the hives, according to the sheriff's office. The plan is to allow the bees to return to their hives and find their queen bee in the next day or two, according to the sheriff's office. The goal is to save as many of the bees as possible. Also Read | 'Hardly any savings left': Indian IT professional torn between US stability and job offer in India 'Thank you to the wonderful community of beekeepers: over two dozen showed up to help ensure the rescue of millions of pollinating honey bees would be as successful as possible,' the sheriff's office post said. The public was warned to avoid the area while the bees settled. Authorities hoped that over the next day or two, most would naturally return to their hives. Honeybees are more than just a backyard nuisance—they're a cornerstone of the global food supply. Honeybees are crucial to the food supply, pollinating over 100 crops including nuts, vegetables, berries, citrus and melons. Bees and other pollinators have been declining for years, and experts blame insecticides, parasites, disease, climate change and lack of a diverse food supply. Also Read | 'I think people severely underestimate India': US founder praises India's booming startup scene In 2018, the UN General Assembly sponsored the first 'World Bee Day' on May 20 to bring attention to the bees' plight. Alan Woods, president of the Washington State Beekeepers Association, told the newspaper the state should have a standardised 'emergency bee response' for bee vehicle crashes. In 2015, 14 million bees escaped a truck north of Seattle on Interstate 5 and started stinging people, the newspaper reported at the time. (with AP inputs)

The one-man army who secured the tiger — with love and awe: Valmik Thapar (1952-2025)
The one-man army who secured the tiger — with love and awe: Valmik Thapar (1952-2025)

Indian Express

time5 hours ago

  • Indian Express

The one-man army who secured the tiger — with love and awe: Valmik Thapar (1952-2025)

Conservationist and tiger chronicler Valmik Thapar passed away early this morning after a brave and tough fight with cancer at his Kautilya Marg residence in New Delhi, his family said. He was diagnosed with cancer in his digestive tract. Considered one of the world's foremost authorities on tigers, Valmik Thapar inspired generations to rally for the cause of wildlife conservation. A veritable one-man army, he authored over two dozen books mostly on big cats, presented several wildlife documentaries, including the seminal BBC series Land of the Tiger (1997), and remained the loudest – and most articulate – voice for conservation in India since the 1990s. With no formal training in wildlife biology or conservation, Thapar developed a deep understanding of tiger behaviour, as he put it, by watching wild tigers in Ranthambhore over five decades. In 1976, it was a chance encounter with Fateh Singh Rathore, then director of Ranthambhore tiger reserve, that had him hooked for life. Both outspoken and often contrarian, Rathore and Thapar formed an indefatigable partnership — until Rathore's demise in 2011 — that influenced and, often, shaped India's conservation efforts and policies over the decades. Thapar served in multiple apex bodies of the government, including the National Board for Wildlife and the Central Empowered Committee of the Supreme Court. He was also a member of the Tiger Task Force set up to prescribe reforms in the aftermath of the disappearance of tigers from Rajasthan's Sariska in 2005. That was also the year I started learning the mercurial ways of India's Tigerman. Thapar was warmly supportive of my work in The Indian Express from the day I first reported the total loss of tigers in Rajasthan's Sariska tiger reserve in January 2005. He offered me encouragement, insights and contacts, as the investigative series took me to parks across the country: Ranthambhore (Rajasthan), Panna, Kanha (Madhya Pradesh), Indrawati (Chhattisgarh), Valmiki (Bihar) and Palamu (Jharkhand) over the next three months. In May 2005, I reported how Ranthambhore was in shambles despite attracting more money than all other tiger reserves combined. Non-profits, including Thapar's NGO Ranthambhore Foundation, had received a sizeable chunk of those funds. The report appeared in the morning then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Ranthambhore. Thapar was livid over what he said would be his last phone call to me. It was a we-told-you-so moment for a couple of young conservationists who had flagged how often Thapar used to grandly bemoan how he failed to save 'his' tigers. 'Valmik is in love with his ego,' his critics would carp. Two months later, it was Thapar himself, back at what he loved doing, who would alert me to what he perceived as a 'pro-people bias' in the Tiger Task Force report which observed that the tiger 'issue is not about the tiger per se… but about rebuilding forest economies.'' Thapar's legendary stubbornness – a key shield for his activism – did not come in the way of changing his mind. Inviolate areas are often impractical, he would eventually concede, and 'conservation is impossible without community support.' Thapar had set up his Ranthambhore Foundation back in 1987 to work towards integrating local communities into conservation efforts, and also partnered with another non-profit, Dastkar, to create livelihoods for displaced villagers. But Thapar's fight, as he wrote in his 2012 book Tiger My Life, Ranthambhore and Beyond, 'was always for inviolate spaces—where the tiger could live free, away from noise, away from humans.' Post-Sariska, though, reform was in the air and prompted him to look beyond the model of exclusionary conservation. Around 2006, Thapar's 'tiger guru' Fateh Singh Rathore was also warming up to 'soft strategies' — such as educating children from traditional hunter communities — pushed by biologist Dharmendra Khandal, who had recently joined Rathore's non-profit TigerWatch. From mostly-stick, the Rathore-Thapar conservation scale started leaning decisively towards mostly-carrot in a matter of years. What did not change was Thapar's inbuilt distrust of the government system, even though he remained an insider most of his life. Perhaps that intimate knowledge led him to observe that 'bureaucracy killed more tigers than bullets ever did.' Yet, even Rajesh Gopal, who took heavy flak as then head of Project Tiger from Thapar during the Sariska years, is quick to assert that his adversary was not self-serving. 'All said and done, Valmik really helped the tiger's cause,' Gopal told The Indian Express. Until his last days, Thapar was involved in conservation work, guiding Khandal on various TigerWatch projects, and curating a defining collection of photos of Ranthambhore. Thapar was born in 1952 in Mumbai to Romesh and Raj Thapar, journalists and co-founders of the political journal Seminar. He is survived by his wife, actor and director Sanjana Kapoor, and son Hamir Thapar. Days before his death, I had called Thapar for a comment about a story I was working on related to the use of live bait to lure tigers. He never mentioned he was admitted to a hospital, but readily agreed to weigh in on the 'stupid thing they are doing, feeding tigers and risking lives.' The promised quote arrived on WhatsApp within minutes. Later, I learnt he was in considerable discomfort and 'fussed all day in an irritable mood.' On his first tiger sighting, Thapar once wrote: 'It was like shedding one layer of skin and putting on another… The transformation was total.' Until his last days, the mere mention of tigers would have the same impact on the man. Not always William Blake's tiger with its 'fearful symmetry' but something softer, more magical.

7 best ways to make fresh cheese at home — A complete guide
7 best ways to make fresh cheese at home — A complete guide

India Today

time6 hours ago

  • India Today

7 best ways to make fresh cheese at home — A complete guide

Making cheese at home is easier than you think! Whether you're a cooking enthusiast or simply curious about how cheese is made, creating your fresh cheese can be fun, rewarding, and surprisingly simple. From soft cheeses to aged varieties, here are 7 popular methods to make cheese at home, along with the basics you need to get MAKING PANEER (INDIAN COTTAGE CHEESE)Paneer is one of the simplest cheeses to make. All you need is milk and an acid like lemon juice or the milk, add the acid to curdle, strain the curds through a muslin cloth, and press them for a few hours. Voila — fresh paneer ready to cook!2. HOMEMADE RICOTTA Ricotta requires just milk, lemon juice or vinegar, and the milk, add the acid to separate curds and whey, strain, and you get soft, creamy ricotta perfect for pastas or desserts.3. CREAM CHEESE AT HOMEStart with full-fat milk and gently with lemon juice or vinegar until it curdles, then the curds with a pinch of salt for smooth, spreadable cream cheese.4. MOZZARELLA CHEESE MAKINGMozzarella is a little trickier but need milk, citric acid, and rennet. After curdling and cutting the curds, they are heated and stretched to form the famous stretchy texture.5. YOGURT-BASED CHEESE (LABNEH)Labneh is a Middle Eastern soft cheese made by straining yogurt overnight to remove excess result is a thick, tangy cheese you can spread on bread or use in dips.6. COTTAGE CHEESE WITH CREAMMake simple curds by adding acid to milk, drain and mix with cream and salt for a rich, slightly tangy cheese you can enjoy plain or in salads.7. AGED CHEESES (CHEVRE, CHEDDAR, ETC.)For the adventurous, aging cheese requires starter cultures, rennet, and specific conditions for fermentation and more complex, making aged cheese at home is possible with the right tools and TO KEEP IN MINDUse fresh, full-fat milk for best is crucial to prevent (lemon juice, vinegar, or citric acid) or rennet is needed to separate curds and making involves curdling, draining, pressing, and sometimes cultures are important for fermented and aged cheese at home is a great way to explore new flavors and enjoy fresh dairy products without preservatives. Start simple and experiment — your perfect homemade cheese awaits!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store