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10-year-old boy honoured for serving soldiers during Operation Sindoor in Punjab border village

10-year-old boy honoured for serving soldiers during Operation Sindoor in Punjab border village

CHANDIGARH: A 10-year-old boy, Shravan Singh, from Tara Wali village in Mamdot block on the Indo-Pak international border in Punjab's Ferozepur district, who dreams of becoming an Indian Army soldier, played his part in Operation Sindoor by serving water, ice, tea, milk, and lassi to soldiers deployed in his village.
Recognising his dedication, Major General Ranjit Singh Manral, General Officer Commanding of the 7th Infantry Division (Golden Arrow Division), recently honoured him. Despite his young age and the sound of gunfire near the border, Shravan remained undeterred.
On May 25, the Army honoured Shravan, a Class IV student, for his bravery and tireless efforts during Operation Sindoor. He was felicitated with a memento, treated to a special meal, and given his favourite treat - ice cream.
Son of a farmer, Sona Singh, Shravan braved the scorching heat to serve water, milk, lassi, and even ice to soldiers camping in their fields. 'I was not scared,' Shravan says. 'I want to join the Army when I grow up. I used to give water, lassi, and ice to the soldiers, and they loved me a lot.'
Speaking to this newspaper, Shravan's father, Sona Singh, who owns one acre of land and runs a dairy, said, 'For about ten to fifteen days, the Army soldiers were stationed in our fields. My son used to go to them at least four to five times a day. He served them ice, water, tea, milk, and lassi. Sometimes, he stayed with them the whole day. He never missed a single day. I accompanied him occasionally. The soldiers gave him biscuits, bananas, chocolates, and even shared meals with him. They loved him.'

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Menu हिंदी తెలుగు اردو Home Politics Economy World Security Law Science Society Culture Editor's Pick Opinion Support independent journalism. Donate Now Culture The Scaling of Kanchenjunga and What it Means to Sikkim's Culture and Autonomy Jiwan Rai 11 minutes ago On May 18 this year, an expedition team under the Har Shikhar Tiranga Mission, an initiative of the Indian Army, planted the national flag atop the Kanchenjunga peak. This has hurt the indigenous Buddhist communities of Sikkim, to whom the mountain is a deeply revered spiritual entity. Colonel Ranveer Singh Jamwal during the Kanchenjunga expedition. Photo: Facebook. Real journalism holds power accountable Since 2015, The Wire has done just that. But we can continue only with your support. Contribute now Twenty-four years ago, while the rest of India was racing to open up 18 virgin peaks and 176 lesser-known summits to foreign climbers, the Sikkim government, through notification 70/HOME/2000, imposed a ban on expeditions to its highest peak, Kanchenjunga, along with seven other peaks considered sacred by local Buddhists. This administrative decision was actually the reaffirmation of a longstanding cultural tradition of reverence. In fact, an expedition to Kangchenjunga would fall under the scope of the Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1991, which prohibits any desecration of sites held sacred. When British climbers Joe Brown and George Band first successfully ascended Kangchenjunga in 1955, they voluntarily stopped just short of the summit to honour local sentiments. Their act of restraint was more than a display of mountaineering ethics. It was a profound gesture of civilisational respect. 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