| Category |
Telenovelas
|
| Genre(s) |
Drama
Romance
|
| Format |
43 x 52' / (86 x 26')
|
| Date |
2013
|
| From |
Philippines
|
| Version(s) |
Original Version Dubbed English
Original Version Dubbed French
|
The water was freezing, up to his chest. His turban unraveled slightly, trailing in the icy sludge. But he and a handful of other “Rangroots” emerged on the German flank. They didn’t fire volleys; they fought with the kirpan (dagger) and the brutal short sword of the khanda.
This is the story of , a name that became synonymous with a rare and controversial title: Rangroot . The Anatomy of a Slur To understand Sajjan Singh, we must first understand the word Rangroot . In the British Indian Army, it was a derogatory term for a fresh recruit—literally translating to “color of the root” or, more cruelly, “raw, unseasoned meat.” It was a label given to green soldiers who hadn’t yet tasted battle. But in the cauldron of the Great War, the word transformed. From the Dust of Punjab to the Snow of Ypres Sajjan Singh was a Jat Sikh from the village of Mahla in Ludhiana district. He belonged to the 15th Ludhiana Sikhs, a regiment with a ferocious pedigree. In 1914, like thousands of his countrymen, he boarded a ship to Marseille, leaving behind the golden wheat fields of Punjab for the frozen, shell-pocked hell of the Western Front. sajjan singh rangroot
According to oral history passed down in Sikh regiments, Sajjan Singh, the Rangroot , did something unexpected. The water was freezing, up to his chest
He proved that a Rangroot is not defined by his lack of experience, but by his refusal to stay down. In the pantheon of forgotten warriors of the Great War, Sajjan Singh stands tall—turban wet, beard frozen, sword drawn—roaring defiance at the empires of the world. They didn’t fire volleys; they fought with the
The turning point came during the Battle of Neuve-Chapelle in March 1915. The British offensive had stalled. Wire was uncut. Machine gun nests at the Port Arthur salient were chewing up the advancing waves. As the British officers fell—their khaki uniforms blending poorly with the mud, their tactical rigidity failing—the command structure dissolved.
They overran the machine gun nest. They captured 40 German soldiers. They secured the flank. When the battle ended, a surviving British colonel asked, “Who led that charge?”
When we think of World War I, the images are often fixed: muddy trenches in France, Tommy Atkins with his Enfield rifle, and the poppies of Flanders Fields. But what if we shift the lens? What if the soldier in the mud wasn’t from Manchester, but from Punjab? And what if his last name was a challenge to an empire?