The Story of Sam Manekshaw and His Driver
Field Marshal Sam
Manekshaw had a dedicated driver named **Havildar Shyam Singh**, a soldier from
Haryana.
As Manekshaw's
retirement approached, he noticed Shyam Singh seemed unusually tense and
uneasy. When the General asked what was wrong, the driver finally requested a favour:
he wanted to take premature retirement from the army.
Manekshaw was
surprised and tried to dissuade him, promising to help him get promoted to the
rank of Naib Subedar if he continued to serve. However, Shyam Singh was adamant
but refused to explain why until his release was approved.
Respecting his
driver's wishes, Manekshaw processed his early retirement papers. After the
papers came through, the General asked again why he had left service early.
Standing at attention, Shyam Singh replied:
"Sir, after being your driver, I cannot drive
anyone else in my lifetime. This has been the high point of my life, and I want
to go home with this honour."
Manekshaw laughed
and called him a "big fool," but the driver's papers had already been
finalised.
### The Sealed
Envelope
On the day Shyam
Singh was leaving, Manekshaw gave him a sealed envelope with strict
instructions: **"Shyam Singh, open it only once you reach your
home."**
The driver
saluted and left. When he reached his village, he got busy with life and forgot
about the envelope. He even found a new job driving a freight truck. One day,
his wife found the envelope in his old army uniform pocket and asked him to
open it. Since he couldn't read or write much, they took it to the village
schoolmaster.
The schoolmaster
opened the envelope and was stunned. It wasn't a letter of appreciation—it was
a **transfer deed for 25 acres of agricultural land**. The Haryana Government
had given Manekshaw a "war jagir" (a land grant) for his victory in
the 1971 war, and he had gifted it to his driver.
### Aftermath
Shyam Singh's
wife was furious with him for almost burning the envelope, but they were now
the owners of 25 acres of land. The story is often shared as a testament to
Manekshaw's greatness, not just as a military leader, but as an exceptionally
generous and humane person.
Poetic stanzas capturing the essence of that
beautiful story:
The driver held
the wheel with pride,
For decades, side
by side,
He served the
great Sam Bahadur's call,
The finest
general of them all.
But when the day
of leave drew near,
The driver's
heart was choked with fear—
"Forgive me,
sir, I must resign,
No other master's
car is mine."
The old Field
Marshal smiled and sighed,
And let his loyal
man abide,
Then gave a
seal—"Don't break this fast,
Not till your
home is reached at last."
At home, the
village master read
The gift that
left the driver's head
In awe—not words,
but fertile ground,
A hero's heart,
so vast, unbound.