Millennium Post

Retd Colonel travels to India for wedding in sahayak’s family

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It's a buddy tale. A Colonel retired from the 25 Madras Regiment has come all the way from Canada to attend the wedding of his former sahayak's son.

The friendship between the officer and the sahayak is in contrast to some recent cases of the sahayaks being misused or abused by the officers.

For Col G S Ghuman, all it took was a call from his former 'buddy' –as sahayaks are known in the Army –inviting him to attend his son's wedding.

Havildar Balagowda Raigowda Patil worked as the Colonel's 'buddy' for almost two decades, before the two retired from the Army around 10 years ago. "He (Patil) is family. How could I say no? I had to attend his son's wedding. So here I am, in India," Col Ghuman said.

The feeling was reciprocat­ed by Patil, who said, "Saab's (Col Ghuman) mother treated me like her fourth son. Saab also never treated me as a junior but like a brother."

"I was with 'saab' since the IPKF days in Sri Lanka. I never felt humiliated as a 'buddy'," Patil, who retired in 2006, said.

Col Ghuman retired the next year. Both were in the 25 Madras Regiment, where Patil's son, who got married recently, is posted as an Army jawan.

The wedding took place at Patil's native place, around 50 kms from Belgaum.

Col Ghuman also used this trip to reconnect with former jawans in his unit, and travelled to places like Mangalore, Kochi and Hyderabad to meet them and their families, before flying back to Canada. Called by various names like orderly and batman, the sahayak/ buddy are an intrinsic part of an Army officer's life.

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