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Remembering the battle of Galli
Poli
S. J. S. Pall
WHEN the first World War broke
out in 1914, there were six battalions of the Sikh
Regiment forming part of the British Army. They were
named as 14th Ferozepur Sikhs, 15th Ludhiana Sikhs, 35th
Sikhs, 36th Sikhs, 45th Sikhs and 47th Sikhs. Since the
Sikh soldiers were known for their bravery and
steadfastness, the British employed all their battalions,
except the 35th Sikhs, for fighting at such far-away
places like Egypt, Palestine, Masopotamia, Galli Poli and
France.
In all the battles in which they fought, they had to
suffer heavy casualities. However, there was no wavering
among them and they always stood like rock as to rank sky
high among the fighting men. While recounting their brave
deeds, the immediate attention of all who have a sense of
history goes to the first battalion of the Sikh Regiment
called the 14th Ferozepur Sikhs, which was moved after a
short stay in the Suez Canal area to Galli Poli.
The battle of Galli Poli was fought to capture
Constantinpole so as to reach the Turkish land, who had
entered the war scene on the side of Germany. The 2nd
Royal Fusiliers were finding it difficult to fight the
Turks and as such the Coy of Sikhs was sent for their
help. although the allies did not succeed, the bravery
shown by the Sikhs during this operation became a
glorious chapter in the history of warfare.
The task given to the Sikhs was highly arduous. They were
to capture two Turkish Trench lines named as J-11 and
J-13. The brave soldiers of 14th Sikhs were equally
divided for the task on these two lines. The fierce
battle took place on 3rd and 4th June, 1915, wherein the
brave soldiers of 14 Sikhs lost 371 officers and men
killed or wounded.
Gen Sir Ian Hamilton was the concerned General at that
time. When Lord Kitchner, Secretary of State for War,
received an appeal on January 2, 1915, from the Russians
that with a view to diverting the Turks, a diversionary
front be opened, the War Council decided of a joint
attack under Gen Hamilton. When Hamilton landed on April
25 at the Southern Tip of the Galli Poli Peninsula, he
found that their strength as compared to that of the
Turks was highly inferior. He also realised that the
terrain greatly favoured the Turks, who were well dug-in.
With a view to meeting the situation effectively, he had
made the 14th Sikhs of the Indian Brigade a part of his
expeditionary force. Sir Hamilton wrote to the
Commander-in-Chief in India.
"In spite of the tremendous losses there was not a
sign of wavering all day. Not an inch of ground was given
up and not a single straggler came back. The ends of the
enemy's trenches were found to be blocked with the bodies
of Sikhs and of the enemy who died fighting at close
quarters, and the glacis slope was thickly dotted with
the bodies of these fine soldiers all lying on their
faces as they fell in their steady advance on the enemy.
The history of Sikhs affords many instances of their
value as soldiers, but it may be safely asserted that
nothing finer than the grim valour and steady discipline
displayed by them on the 4th June has ever been done by
soldiers of the Khalsa."
The brave Sikhs, who earned a very high degree of
appreciation included Sardar Udai Singh, who had saved
the life of 2nd Lt R.A. Savory. The handsome Jat Sikh of
Manikwal village (near Gill railway station) was over 6
ft tall and had a fair beard and light green eyes. He was
a wrestler from his very childhood and when in 1907 he
went to Ferozepur to take part in a wrestling match, he
was selected by the British to join the 14th Sikhs. He
was with the unit when Hamilton's forces landed at the
Galli Poli Peninsula. It is interesting to note that when
after the war, he was offered a gallantry award, he
pleaded that he should be allowed to go back to his
village so that he could pursue his vocation which was
dear to his heart.
Another prominent Sikh soldier associated with this
battle was L/Nk Bhola Singh. When Lt. Gen. Sir Reginald
Savory came to India in 1968 to attend the presentation
of colours ceremony at Meerut, L/Nk Bhola Singh was also
present on that occasion. Recapitulating the past, the
General spoke about the close relationship between
officers and his men as was achieved during that period.
In his own words:
"Only this morning (8th February 1968) Lance Naik
Bhola Singh of the 14th Sikhs, who had been wounded in
Galli Poli in 1915, took the trouble to come all the way
from his home to call upon me, and after 52 years we saw
each other again. I was deeply touched, not only at
having the pleasure of seeing him again, but also at the
thought of all the trouble he had taken to come and see
me. When he was wounded, he and I were both young men.
Now he is a 'chitti dari wala' and I am old and bald, but
although we have both grown much older, yet our affection
for each other and our mutual pride in our old Regiment
stays as young as ever. Long may this continue. Wahe
Guruji Ka Khalsa, Wahe Guruji Ki Fateh."
The discussion on the battle of Galli Poli will not be
complete if no mention is made of the appreciation earned
by the Sikhs from the Fusiliers. It was in 1921 when the
Fusiliers had been put on the firm footing and they along
with the Sikhs were on duty in the Khyber Pass area in
the North-West frontier of India. The Fusiliers presented
the Sikhs with a Silver Grenade inscribed "in the
memory of Galli Poli 1915 and the Khyber Pass 1921",
which continues to be a prized possession with them.
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