Friday, November 4, 2016

Post 2 -Availability

The book will be available on line (all leading e-commerce sites) as also at all leading book stores by end November.

Available on Amazon
Flipkart

For those who like things fast and first up, I can be contacted at ironbuttsitchysoles@gmail.com.

FROM POST #3 onwards, readers shall get to read some parts here for free!

HAPPY READING!

Post 1- About the Book



One of the principal organs of a secular state, Indian Army is yet another hallmark of stated religious stance of our country. Religion, for the most sensible believers, is simply a way of life. And when viewed from the perspective of a soldier for whom, not surprisingly, wreath laying ceremony in the regimental Quarter Guard may be more sacred than a visit to temple back home, religion tends to have a different import. In any case, a soldier who spends a minimum of nine months in a year in some professional environment wherein a Sarva dharam sthal (a place for all religions) signifies the point of spiritual indulgence for one and all, orthodox practices appear to be foreign and alien. For a soldier, there can be no distinctions based on religion because when the moment of glory comes and his blood mixes with that of his buddies, religious beliefs do not appear to make any difference to the colour and texture of the fluid of life. Being a modest soul, a warrior prefers to look beyond religion when it comes to soldierly way of life.
Sainik Dharamliterally meaning ‘soldier’s religion’- is what Indian Army calls its faith. And for all of us donning Olive Greens, this term is more about a soldier’s faith rather than his/her religion per se. In our professional lives, we follow certain code of conduct that defines our way of life. Therefore, way of life as defined by different religions, would many a time, get overshadowed by soldier’s code of conduct. For a soldier, it is more of a belief system that cannot really be kept bound by the defined boundaries of any particular religion. Every unit has a certain belief system that is nurtured with care and all members of the team, irrespective of individual religious alignments, dutifully follow such a belief system. This belief system, in turn, gives birth to soldiers’ faith. And this faith is such that it does not think even once before imbibing healthy rituals and deeds of any community (even if not strictly military) that it comes in contact with. It is a well-meaning, all-embracing state of mind that sets soldiers apart from conformist believers. This very faith guides us through critical situations when everything else appears to be deserting us.
This work is all about such a Faith. Based on folklore, existing practices and some related anecdotes, it attempts to place on record some of the practices that have been shaping our faith for decades and have been instrumental in lending such a great character to our profession. It is, in no way, an all-inclusive product since a combination of sheer size of our fraternity and great geographical dimensions of our nation can simply thwart any such attempt. Most of the tales and incidents mentioned here are based on experiences of the author as also some of the closest buddies. The work has been laid out in two parts – first one is about symbols of faith and the second one deals with experiences of a somewhat different kind.
Soldiers, for better part of their professional lives, live amongst intangibles and most of operational situations too come wrapped in dense foggy layers. We are expected to operate and take decisions in situations that come loaded with ambiguity. As we grow in our profession, we learn to accept and handle such settings with grace and élan. Unknown to many of us and beyond the reach of our conscious minds, our faith also builds up over a period of time. It is this near simultaneous evolution of such cognisant and subliminal facets that helps us accept varying practices, beliefs and received wisdom with a degree of natural ease. As a result, nothing remains alien for long and before we realise, our faith is well on its way to imbibe such beliefs even if the origin of such beliefs may lie well outside the perimeters of our operational bases and peacetime locations.

More than anything else, it is recommended that this work may be looked at as a way of appreciating such a unique quality of soldierly life. Soldiers cutting across their natal religious beliefs, adopt soldierly faith as they grow in the organisation. Without anyone forcing anything on anyone, all of us slowly get settled in a system where our collective faith becomes what a religion would become for others who have not been so privileged to be a soldier in their worldly lives.