Subedar Major Yogendra Yadav is a non-commissioned officer of the Indian Army who survived 12 bullets and played an instrumental role in capturing Tiger Hill in the 1999 Kargil War. Consequently, he was awarded the Param Vir Chakra, the highest gallantry award of India. The daredevil sepoy was just 19 years old when he received the medal, making him the youngest recipient of the Param Veer Chakra.
Yogendra Singh Yadav was born on Saturday, 10 May 1980 (age 40 years; as of 2020) in Aurangabad Ahir village, located in Bulandshahr district of Uttar Pradesh. He passed 10th standard from a government school in his village. While studying in class 12, he cleared the required test on his first attempt and joined the Indian Military Academy (IMA) in the Manekshaw Battalion in June 1996. On 6 December 1997, he graduated from the IMA after concluding his 19-month training.
Height (approx): 5′ 8″
Eye Colour: Black
Hair Colour: Black
Yogendra Singh Yadav belongs to Ahir community.
Yogendra Singh Yadav’s father, Karan Singh Yadav, is a retired Indian Army personnel of the Kumaon Regiment, who fought in the 1965 and 1971 wars against Pakistan. His mother’s name is Santaro Devi. Yogendra has three brothers; Devendra Singh Yadav, Rambal Singh Yadav, Jitendra Singh Yadav. Elder brother Jitendra Singh Yadav is an engineer in the Indian Army and had joined the Armed Forces a couple of years before Yogendra.
Yogendra was married to Reena Yadav on 5 May 1999, 15 days before the Kargil war broke out. He attributes all his good fortune to his wife.
The couple has two children, Prashant Yadav and Vishant Yadav.
Yogendra Singh Yadav was inducted in the Indian Army in 1997. After getting through the training, he was assigned to the 18th battalion of the Grenadier Regiment. Over the years, he has been promoted several times according to his service experience. At the present time, Subedar Major Yogendra Yadav is a non-commissioned officer and is currently posted at an Indian Army training institute in Bareilly. He trains young soldiers about prospects of soldiering and leadership in battle.
In the mission to recapture the Tololing hill, then Sainik Yogendra Singh Yadav, along with 14 other soldiers, was assigned the duty to supply food and ammunition to the soldiers who were fighting on the peak of the hill. The unit would start climbing the hill at 5 in the morning and would reach the spot at 2 in the night. Three jawans of the group, including Yogendra Singh Yadav, travelled back and forth to the hill for 22 days until the Indian army had successfully won the battle of Tololing on 12 June 1999.
After winning the battle of Tololing, the next significant task before the Indian army was to capture Tiger Hill, the highest peak of the Kargil, which was illegally occupied by the Pakistani army. At the age of 19, with only two-and-a-half years of experience in the armed forces, Sanjay Yadav was inducted in the Ghatak platoon (comprising 25 soldiers), that was given the responsibility to recapture the Tiger hill. The mission started on the night on 3 July 1999. The platoon was divided into three groups. On the forefront was the detachment of 7 soldiers, which was led by Yogendra Singh Yadav. Yogendra fixed rope for his fellow soldiers and climbed up the rocky and snowbound 16,500 feet steep hill. It took them two days to reach the top. When they were about to reach the area top, the Pakistani soldiers spotted them and opened heavy grenade, rockets, and artillery fire. After five hours of fierce battle, all the six soldiers of Yogendra’s detachment were dead. Yadav was lying wounded with the dead bodies of the soldiers of his detachment. As the gunfire stopped, the enemy soldiers came closer to check if everyone was dead or not. They pumped bullets in the motionless bodies to confirm the kills. Yogendra, who lay there, pretending to be dead, also received multiple shots on his body. But even after taking the shots, he did not let a word of pain come out of his mouth.
Sharing details of the particular event in a talk-show, Yadav said,
I had sustained 12 bullet wounds on my arm, legs. An enemy soldier also took an aim at my chest and fired a bullet, but it ricocheted off the Rs 5 coins I had kept in my pocket”
After confirming the kills, Pakistani soldiers were moving back to their positions. At this moment, Yadav gathered courage. Despite having taken 12 bullet shots from the enemy fire, he picked his Ak 47 and managed to fire towards the enemy positions. As he fired, he kept rolling from one position to the other, expecting that it would somehow confuse the enemy soldiers into believing that there was another company upon them. One after another, he eliminated four enemies. Overwhelmed by the incoming fire from different directions, the leftover enemy soldiers fled from the place in a panic. After the soldiers had fled the place, Yadav was left alone on the hill. He rolled down the hill in an attempt to reach his unit. Luckily, halfway down, he was evacuated by the soldiers of his unit. Upon reaching the base tent, he narrated the whole episode of Tiger hill to the commanding officer. Yadav informed him about the enemy positions so that the other soldiers who were climbing to the top could have an upper hand over the enemies. In the meantime, the additional reinforcement climbed the hill, killing all the Pakistani soldiers in close combat. The mission was declared successful on 26 July 1999. The day is annually celebrated in India as Kargil Vijay Diwas.
Four days after being evacuated by the Indian Army, Yogendra was flown to the army hospital in Delhi. He spent 14 months at Delhi’s Army hospital while recovering from the bullet injuries and multiple fractures caused during the Tiger Hill battle.
On 14 August 1999, the news of Param Vir Chakra to be given posthumously to Yogendra Singh Yadav was aired on the television. As Yogendra was still alive and recovering in hospital, he thought his namesake (the other Yogendra Yadav, a part of Yogendra’s detachment martyred during the Tiger hill battle), was being decorated with the Param Vir Chakra for his bravery and supreme sacrifice during the war. The next day, on 15 August 1999, the then Army Chief, V.P. Malik, came to hospital to greet him. Yogendra thought he was being congratulated on behalf of his martyred friend. But the Army General explained that they had made a mistake in a hurry, and they had not appropriately cross-checked the details before declaring the award. Hence, the PVC was actually meant for him.
The Indian Army official website has also written about the role of Yogendra Singh Yadav in the Tiger Hill. It reads,
Unmindful of the danger involved, volunteered to lead and fix the rope for his team to climb up. On seeing the team, the enemy opened intense automatic, grenade, rocket and artillery fire, killing the commander and two of his colleagues and the platoon was stalled. Realising the gravity of the situation, Grenadier Yogender Singh Yadav crawled up to the enemy position to silence it and in the process sustained multiple bullet injuries. Unmindful of his injuries and in the hail of enemy bullets, Grenadier Yogender Singh Yadav continued climbing towards the enemy positions, lobbed grenades, continued firing from his weapons and killed four enemy soldiers in close combat and silenced the automatic fire.’
My mother never wanted me to join the army. In fact, even I would like to have studied further. But the state of the country is such that even the educated need to shell out large bribes to land a job. Coming from a lower-middle-class family, the army was the only way out”
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