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Dude all the names you mentioned are also the names of regiment in the IA.So i thought you are talking about regiments not history...and dont forget the NAGA's...but then there is no region for bravery...brave people are present in every corner of our country.
Slight correction, Jats are not classified into any caste or Varna. They are a community, more like a tribe. The reason for that is that they arrived pretty late (comparitively) into the sub-continent and were not very well assimilated or assigned a place into the caste-based society.I
If you talk about caste Mahar or Rajput, they are also castes. What about Jats? Isn't it a caste also? .
I am not talking about the regiments but the bravery. Nair? Look at their history....
Nair - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If you talk about caste Mahar or Rajput, they are also castes. What about Jats? Isn't it a caste also? Than why there is a regiment in the name of a caste? So its not a matters of caste but history.
I mentioned Gurkhas, Sikhs, Rajputs and Nairs but I should also mentioned about Kumaonis, Gharwals etc. But thats doesn't mean they are not brave.
Where did these units fought in WW II
Most of the men you see in these pictures are men from the 9th Gurkha rifles. They are recruited from Khas/Thakuri tribes. These men are from Nepal and are a mixture of pure Brahmin men and local Mongolian women. Thats why some of them look Indians and some look a mixture of both. Only 1 regiment is made up of these men. The remaining 10 regiments are all recruited from 4 Magar/Gurung/Rai and Limbu tribes. You will also find some Tamangs/Sunwars/Sherpas mixed in with the Rai/Limbu regiments. All these tribes are pure Tibeto-Burman Mongolian men from the hills of Nepal. They have no blood relation with the Indians and chase their ancestry to Mongolia/Serbia/Tibet/ etc depending on the tribe. So Gurkhas as a whole are a Tibeto-Burman race and looks Mongolian in appearance. Only the men from the 9th Gurkha rifles have some Indo-Aryan blood and some looks Indian but they make a very small percentage of the Gurkhas. All Gurkhas are Nepalese, not Indians but you do find Nepalese who looks pure Indian in Nepal. Nepal is a melting pot of culture. There are more than 100 different tribes in Nepal, all with their own Language and culture. Its where Indo-Aryans from south and Mongolian people from north met and lives side by side in peace. Hope that helps to explain why Gurkhas looks Chinese.truly very nice pics man..but why do most of them look like chinese inidan don't look like this
How do they look like!? They don't look typical indian, they look more like a mix of Philippine and African!? Often many gorkhas committed suicide there!
At one point Nepal was under control by India kingdoms every now and then. Testament to the power of India back then.
Nepal has always been a sovereign country. You do not have enough research. When India was enslaved by British back then, Nepal stood sovereign and they fought fiercely against British colonial army that's how Gurkha/Gorkha Regiment came into establishment!
The Gurkhas(British Army) and The Gorkha(Indian Army), these brave of the bravest are not Indian but Nepalese, the fear fighters from the high land of Nepal. They are military units in the British or the Indian army (Gorkhas) enlisted in Nepal.
Gurkha units are closely associated with the khukuri, a forward-curving Nepalese knife. Former Chief of Staff of the Indian Army, Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw, once famously said[2] about Gurkhas: "If a man says he is not afraid of dying, he is either lying or is a Gurkha."
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Nepal has always been a sovereign country. You do not have enough research. When India was enslaved by British back then, Nepal stood sovereign and they fought fiercely against British colonial army that's how Gurkha/Gorkha Regiment came into establishment!