D. P. Singh (runner)

Major D.P. Singh is a retired officer of the Indian Army. He is a Kargil War veteran and is known as the India's first blade runner.[1][2] After his amputation, he gradually started running using a prosthetic limb and has run in 26 half marathons in his running career.[1] This includes 3 HM in extreme high altitude as high as 11700 ft in Leh. The Limca Book of Records added his name to their "People of the Year 2016" list.[3][4] In 2018, Govt of India, Ministry of social justice and empowerment conferred him with National award for persons with disabilities under Role model category. In 2019 he was conferred with coveted civilian award, CavinKare Ability Mastery award in recognition of excellence achieved against all odds. He was taken as Ambassador by Indian army for year 2018, which was the year dedicated to soldiers who got disabled in line of duty.


Devender Pal Singh
Born(1973-09-00)September 1973
Jagadhari, India
Allegiance Republic of India
Service/branch Indian Army
Years of service1997–2007
Battles/warsKargil War
Operation Vijay
LOC in Akhnoor sector
Alma materIndian Military Academy

In 2019, he wrote another chapter in history when he became the 1st solo Skydiver among persons with disabilities in whole Asia.

His life story was chronicled in Grit: The Major Story, a 2019 graphic memoir Singh coauthored with V.R. Ferose and Sriram Jagannathan.[5]

Early life and career

Devender Pal Singh was born on 13 September 1973 in Jagadhari, India. He received his senior secondary education from Kendriya Vidyalaya Roorkee.[6] He did his bachelor of arts degree from CCU Meerut and PGDBM from Rani Durgawati University, Jabalpur.

Major Singh graduated from the Indian Military Academy (101st course, Regular batch) on 6 December 1997 and was commissioned into the 7th Battalion, The Dogra Regiment.[7] After the injury, in 2002, he converted to Army Ordnance Corps. He retired from the Indian Army in 2007, after serving for 10 years.[8]

Kargil War

Major D.P. Singh was injured on 15 July 1999 at LOC in Akhnoor sector while fighting for India during the Kargil War (Operation Vijay).[9]

He was 80 meters from a Pakistani Army post when a mortar fell within 1.5 metre of where he was; the shrapnel injured multiple parts of his body.[6] A part of his right leg was amputated as it had developed gangrene.[6]

References

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