| Review by Major General Himmat Singh GillArjan Singh, DFC
 Marshal of the Indian  Air Force
 by Roopinder Singh.  Rupa. Pages 88. Rs 95.
 
  IN these depressing days  of a scam a day, a biography of a living legend of our armed forces,  the first Marshal of the Indian Air Force, Arjan Singh, brings some  hope that all is not lost yet. This intrepid soldier stands out as an  example of how one man with his dignified behaviour and soldierly  élan, can truly be called a leader of men and of a mighty force that  he has so energetically lead with distinction in war and in peace  over the last many decades. Roopinder Singh, now on  the editorial staff of The Tribune, has put together a very readable  account of an ace pilot who handled with distinction every  assignment, be it in the Air Force, in the field of governance or in  diplomacy. As Ambassador to Switzerland and the Vatican, and later as  High Commissioner to Kenya, he rubbed shoulders with the high and  mighty. Back home he served with the Minorities Commission of India  and later on became the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi in the V. P.  Singh government in 1989. While with the commission he said, "There  were not too many problems of the Sikhs, since by nature they are  problem-solvers themselves. However, I must point out that the Muslim  community does have many problems of marginalisation". In 1984  when the anti-Sikh riots took place, he narrates that he, along with  Kuldip Nayar and Patwant Singh, went and met President Zail Singh and  asked him to call out the Army without delay. Arjan Singh says, "He  (Zail Singh) attempted to contact the Prime Minister and the Home  Minister but without success. Unfortunately, the deployment of the  Army was delayed till the evening. As a result, many lives were lost.  It was a politically inspired situation which went out of control by  omission and commission and I do not blame any particular community  for it". Polite yet firm, the Marshal has his own way of  spelling out the truth. Ever a farmer at heart and a son of the soil,  he, as the Lieutenant Governor of Delhi, ensured that the farmers  whose lands were bought out by the builders and the Delhi Development  Authority, were paid reasonable rates of compensation. Born at Lyallpur, now in  Pakistan, Singh was commissioned into the IAF in 1939, and shortly  thereafter awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross in 1944 during  World War II. He commanded the IAF station at Ambala and was the  Deputy and Vice Chief of Air Staff, before being selected to command  the elite Air Force in the critical days of the Indo-Pak war of 1965,  when he was awarded the Padma Vibhushan. He retired from the IAF in  1969, but continued to lead an active life. In 2002, at long last,  one has to say, because this recognition should have by right come to  him much earlier (Manekshaw who was the COAS in the 1971 war became  the Field Marshal well before Singh), this soldier-cum-diplomat was  appointed the Marshal of the Indian Air Force. The NDA government did  what the Congress governments should have done long ago. Roopinder  Singh, in his taut and captivating account, written in simple yet  effective prose, has brought centre stage a man who never asked for  anything himself, not even the honorary Marshalship of a force that  he had nurtured from its very inception in the early days in the  NWFP, when the single-engined Wapiti aircraft that he so ably flew as  a youngster, was the mainstay of the IAF. Arjan Singh set exacting  standards for his command, and sent home many who had not done well  in the 1965 war. "You have to maintain discipline. If someone  has done wrong, punish him, if he has done well, reward him", he  states. How one wishes that some of our very senior armed forces  commanders remember this piece of advice from a war veteran. There is  no dearth of testimonials that Singh has earned from his superiors  and peers. In 1965, Defence Minister Y. B. Chavan said while  referring to him, "When he is asked to go on a new task, CAS  walks as a dancing bird. A real fighting Sikh: and yet how soft and  gentle". And then again Chavan said, "Air Marshal Arjan  Singh is a jewel of a person; quietly efficient and firm, unexcitable  but a very able leader". Recently, George Fernandes said about  him, "The significant changes that you brought about in the  structuring and functioning of the Air Force took it towards becoming  a strong professional force. Successive generations of officers and  men in the Indian Air Force have looked up to you as a father  figure". Some of the photographs  from the Marshal’s personal collection that appear in the book are,  indeed, priceless. From his earlier days at the RAF Flying College at  Cranwell in UK, to the active flying days with the fearless Baba  Mehar Singh and Pritpal Singh, to the pinning of the DFC by Admiral  Lord Mountbatten at the Imphal airstrip in 1944, and then in an  achkan and chooridar pyjama with bride Teji on their wedding day, all  bring to mind an active and energetic personality, who lived life to  the hilt. Now that a beginning has been made with this book, this  writer hopes that Arjan Singh will find time to pen down his memoirs  in his own words for posterity. A delightful read of a man  who towers above most of today’s Generals, Admirals and Air  Marshals. And also above the majority of our politicians, who somehow  persist in calling themselves leaders. The review was  published in The Tribune on Sunday, September 15, 2002
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