Jump to content

Raja Aziz Bhatti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2601:541:4500:1760:e58e:adca:92ef:1216 (talk) at 13:54, 28 September 2018 (fix link). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.


Raja Abdul-Aziz Bhatti

Born1928
Hong Kong
Died12 September 1965(1965-09-12) (aged 37)
Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Allegiance Pakistan
Service / branch Pakistan Army
Years of service1948–1965 (Pakistan Army)
RankMajor (Pakistan Army)
Unit17 Punjab Regiment (Pakistan Army)
Battles / warsIndo-Pakistani War of 1965
AwardsNishan-e-Haider
Sword of Honour

Major Raja Abdul-Aziz Bhatti (Template:Lang-ur; 1928 – 12 September 1965)[1] usually known as Aziz Bhatti was a Staff officer in the Pakistan Army who received Pakistan's highest award for valor. He is also known as "Muhafiz-e-Lahore" (Protector of Lahore). He was born in Hong Kong to a Punjabi Muslim family in 1928.[2] He moved to Pakistan before it became independent in 1947, living in the village of Ladian, Kharian, Gujrat. There he enlisted with the newly formed Pakistani Army and was commissioned to the Punjab Regiment in 1950.[3]

He was from a Punjabi family. His father's name was Abdullah Bhatti, and his mother's name was Bibi Amana. He had four brothers, Nazir, Bashir, Sardar and Rashid, and two sisters, Rashida and Tahira. His brother Bashir was killed during the Second World War by the Japanese while leaving Hong Kong. He had initially joined the Pakistan Air Force as Airman and later applied for commission in the Pakistan Army. He himself had six children, four sons named Major Zafar Javed Bhatti, Dr. Zulfiquar Ahmad Bhatti, Rafique Ahmad Bhatti, and Iqbal Javed Bhatti, and two daughters named Riffat Bhatti and Zeenat Bhatti. Throughout his career, he was a brilliant officer and stood out among his peers. He did very well at the Academy and was awarded the Sword of Honour for being best in his batch of 300 officers, and the Norman Medal.

Major Raja Aziz Bhatti was posted in the Burki area of Lahore sector during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. As the company commander, Major Bhatti chose to move his platoon forward under constant firing from Indian tanks and artillery. For three or more days he went without rest. He resisted for five days and nights defending a Pakistani outpost on the strategic BRB canal.On 6 September 1965, as a Company Commander in the Burki area of the Lahore sector, Major Raja Aziz Bhatti chose to stay with his forward platoon under incessant artillery and tank attacks for five days and nights in the defence of the strategic BRB Canal. Throughout, undaunted by constant fire from enemy small arms, tanks and artillery, he was re-organising his company and directing the gunners to shell the enemy positions. To watch every move of the enemy, he had to place himself in an elevated position, where he was exposed to Indian fury. He led his men from the front under constant attack from Indian Artillery batteries. Although he tried to counter every Indian offensive in his area, he was hit by an enemy tank shell in the chest while watching the enemy's moves, and was embraced shadaat on 11 September 1965.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

See also

References

  1. ^ "Major Raja Aziz Bhatti". Nishan-i-Haider recipients. Pakistan Army. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
  2. ^ "Raja Aziz Bhatti". PakistanTimes. Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  3. ^ http://www.pakistantimes.com/topics/raja-aziz-bhatti/