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Jai Hind to be now official salutation of Indian Army

Abingdonboy

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Instead of a bland ‘Good Morning/Afternoon’ the Indian Army officers will now greet each other with a crisp salute accompanied with ‘Jai Hind’, immortalized by Subhash Chandra Bose as the battle cry for his Indian National Army.


The new order has been part of Army Chief General Bikram Singh’s mandate to his troops –“Back to Basics”. The initiative is part of the Indianisation of the Indian Army that has drawn heavily from the traditions of the Royal British Army.

“The directions have come this month only. The Indian Air Force (IAF) has already been using ‘Jai Hind’ as part of the salutation among officers,” an army official said. The Indian Navy in informal settings use ‘Jai Hind’ and in formal settings greeting appropriate to the time of the day – Good Morning/Good Afternoon/Good Evening is used.

Salute is an intrinsic part of military tradition. Elaborate rules have been laid down to define the manner in which an official would do the salute. A salute is a form of respect not to an individual but to the uniform and rank of the officer. If a junior officer salutes his seniors, only the senior-most of the officers will acknowledge and return the gesture. If officials of all the three forces are present, the senior-most of them will return the salute. The Indian Army is considered the senior-most, followed by the Indian Navy and the Indian Air Force.

“The jawans while saluting their officers will continue to use their regimental salutation. The new rule pertains to only officers greeting each other,” the official added. For instance, a jawan of Gorkha regiment says “Ram-ram”, an Assam regiment soldier gives a crisp “Tagda Raho” (Remain Healthy), a Sikh regiment soldier says “Sat Sri Akal” with a smart salute to an officer.

The three forces also have different salutes – like in the Army a salute is executed by keeping the open palm forward, with fingers and thumb together and middle finger almost touching the hatband or right eyebrow. The Navy, in turn, salutes with the palm facing towards the ground at a 90-degree angle, basically to hide the dirty hands of sailors working on board warships. The IAF salute involves the right arm being sharply raised from the front by the shortest possible way, with the plane of the palm at 45-degree angle to the forehead.

defence eXpress: Jai Hind to be now official salutation of Indian Army
 
A very good move.

One thing the article misses is that from henceforth all the regimental parades, events, functions will end with regimental warcries followed by "Bharat Mata Ki Jai" thrice.
 
Each Chief tries a new shosha.

Sundarji tried to remove the use of the word ' Sir' during conversations and replace it by addressing an officer by his rank like the US Army does - didnt work or last.

Mere cosmetic superficial attempts at changes will not make a man more or less patriotic.
 
This salutation has been in use for more than 3 decades in de facto form, but it was more between Officers and Men, than between Officers. So its no big deal that its being 'officialised' now.
 
:what: why Indian army 's different regiments' salutation is religious based? "Ram ram, Sat sri akal"

and whats the use of making "jai hind" slogan official salutation for Indian army when according to new rule only officers can use it.
 
:what: why Indian army 's different regiments' salutation is religious based? "Ram ram, Sat sri akal"

and whats the use of making "jai hind" slogan official salutation for Indian army when according to new rule only officers can use it.

Because British made these regiments based on races 200 yrs ago and are being followed till date.
 
Because British made these regiments based on races 200 yrs ago and are being followed till date.

As far as I have seen common form of salutation even among the common folks in north is "Jai ram bhaiya" or "Ram ram" and for the Sikhs it is "Sat Sri Akal"...just like we say "Vanakkam" in Tamil. Also as you mentioned since the regiments were also based on common ethnicity, this was continued as a ploy to increase the spirit of brotherhood among the troops. And let us be frank, religion is one of the most effective morale boosters in the history of warfare and every Army employs that. As long as the job is done we should not worry about it.
 
:what: why Indian army 's different regiments' salutation is religious based? "Ram ram, Sat sri akal"

and whats the use of making "jai hind" slogan official salutation for Indian army when according to new rule only officers can use it.

Firstly , ' Jai hind' is an existing form of salutation between officers and JCO/ Soldiers in units which are not based on religion - ASC, Ordnance , EME etc and fighting arms who are of mixed class composition.

Next, in class based regiments the form of salutation ( and battle cry) is that of the Religion of the soldiers - this is applicable to all ranks.

Only among officers the form of salutation is Good morning etc. This is proposed to be changed to Jai Hind as the AF & Navy does.

Hope this helps.
 
wht next make hinduism ur state religion & stop this fake secularism drama....:lol:

Thank you

But we shall ask when we need advice.

This ' drama' has kept this nation together for 60 + years and shall do so for ever.

Why fix something that's not broke ?
 
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