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Capt. Gaje Ghale :Recipient of Victoria Cross

Gaje Ghale VC (July 1, 1922 -March 28, 2000) was a Gurkha recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He was 20 years old, and a Havildar in the 2nd Battalion of the 5th Royal Gurkha Rifles in the Indian Army during World War II when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.During the period 24/27 May 1943 in the Chin Hills, Burma (now Myanmar), Havildar Gaje Ghale was in charge of a platoon of young soldiers engaged in attacking a strong Japanese position. Wounded in the arm, chest and leg he nevertheless continued to lead assault after assault, encouraging his men by shouting the Gurkha's battle-cry. Spurred on by the irresistible will of their leader, the platoon stormed and captured the position which the havildar then held and consolidated under heavy fire, refusing to go to the Regimental Aid post until ordered to do so.He later achieved the rank of Hon. Captain. born at Gorkha district of Nepal.

On May 24 a large force of Japanese were attempting to make an advance into the Chin Hills, where the 2nd/5th Gurkhas were part of the defence force. The Japanese occupied a vital tactical point, the key to the position, on Basha East Hill, the approach to which was a long bare knife-edge ridge which in some places was as little as 15ft wide. Two attempts to capture this point had been attempted and both had failed, for the Japanese were able to rake the position with fire from a dozen machine guns, as well as artillery and mortars, from concealed positions in the surrounding jungle.

On May 25, Gaje Ghale was given the task of taking the position. Although it was his first time under fire, he showed from the beginning outstanding courage. Shouting the Gurkha battle cry, he led assault after assault along the ridge onto the entrenched Japanese. A Japanese grenade wounded Gaje Ghale in the chest, arm and leg. Though covered with blood, he ignored his injuries and continued to throw grenades with his other arm. After prolonged hand-to-hand fighting the position was captured. The Gurkhas succeeded in holding it in the face of heavy fire from the Japanese trying to retake it. In spite of his wounds, Gaje Ghale refused to go back to the regimental aid post until certain that the position was consolidated and secure, and then only when eventually ordered to by an officer.

Gaje Ghale, a Gurung of the Ghale tribe, was born in Barpak village in the Gorkha district of Nepal on August 1 1918 (though he also admitted to being born on July 1 1922). In 1934 he enlisted as a boy recruit, and on completing his training joined the 2nd Battalion, 5th Royal Gurkha Rifles (Frontier Force). He served in Waziristan, and from 1939 to 1942 was an Instructor at the Regimental Centre in Abbotabad. In 1943 when it was proposed to present Gaje Ghale with the Victoria Cross medal at the regimental centre in Abbotabad, the regimental Bahun (the near equivalent of a chaplain in a British regiment, who holds no rank and wears no uniform but is a respected religious adviser) announced that the date was inauspicious and should be postponed. Soon afterwards a signal giving official confirmation of the postponement was received.

Gaje Ghale later received the VC from Field Marshal Lord Wavell in Delhi at a parade beneath the walls of the Red Fort in the presence of a crowd of 5,000. He was later decorated with the Star of Nepal in Kathmandu by the Prime Minister of Nepal. In 1946 Gaje Ghale attended the victory parade in London, and after Independence in 1947 remained with the Battalion, now serving the Government of India. He was promoted to Subedar Major (Senior Indian Officer).In 1963 he served in the Congo with the United Nations Force, along with Subedar Agansing Rai, a fellow VC who had won his award in 1944. Before retiring he was granted the honorary rank of captain.

A regular attender of VC reunions, in 1990 Gaje Ghale joined four of the seven Gurkha VC- holders then surviving at the opening of the Gurkha Museum at the Peninsula Barracks , Winchester, Hampshire. Five years later he was one of a gathering of 21 VCs at the Royal Tournament as part of the 50th anniversary of V-J Day.Captain Gaje Ghale died aged 81 in Delhi on March 2000, Gaje Ghale was married; he leaves four sons and four daughters.

( Source - Deepak Rai with the help of Wikipedia,Telegraph)

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