Background
Ganju Lama was born in Sangmo, southern Sikkim, India, on 22 July 1924.
Ganju Lama was born in Sangmo, southern Sikkim, India, on 22 July 1924.
He enlisted in British Gurkha Army in 1942 at the age of seventeen. At that time, however, Gurkha regiments were prepared to accept any recruit who closely resembled the Gurkha and lived near the border of Nepal. Ganju Lama"s tribe lived in the kingdom of Sikkim.
His name was Gyamtso Shangderpa, but a clerk in the recruiting office wrote it down as Ganju, and the name stuck.
After leaving the regimental centre in 1943, he joined the 1st Battalion, 7th Gurkha Rifles, near Imphal, India. On 12 June 1944, near Ningthoukhong, India, "B" Company was attempting to stem the enemy"s advance when it came under heavy machine-gun and tank machine-gun fire.
Rifleman Ganju Lama, with complete disregard for his own safety, took his PIAT gun and, crawling forward, succeeded in bringing the gun into action within 30 yards of the enemy tanks, knocking out two of them. Despite a broken wrist and two other serious wounds to his right and left hands he then moved forward and engaged the tank crew who were trying to escape.
Not until he had accounted for all of them did he consent to leave to his wounds dressed.
A month earlier, during operations on the Tiddim Road, Ganju Lama"s regiment had surprised a party of Japanese and killed several of them. He was awarded the Military Medal for his part in the action. After India gained its independence, he joined the Indian 11th Gorkha Rifles, retiring in 1968, when he became a farmer in Sikkim.
He was appointed honorary Aide-de-Camp to the President of India for life.