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Sajjan Singh Rangroot !!exclusive!! May 2026

The men pointed to the mud-caked, shivering Sikh with frozen beard. “Sajjan Singh, sir. The Rangroot.”

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. sajjan singh rangroot

The winter of 1914-15 was apocalyptic. The Germans, dressed in field gray, held the high ground. The Sikhs, wrapped in their distinctive turbans (which offered no camouflage and made them sniper magnets), held the low, waterlogged ditches near Neuve-Chapelle. Legend (backed by regimental war diaries) holds that Sajjan Singh was not a seasoned Jamedar or Subedar when he arrived. He was the Rangroot —the new boy. The senior British officers saw him as just another colonial number. The German intelligence, however, saw the Sikhs as “the Emperor’s madmen” for advancing in brightly colored puggris. The men pointed to the mud-caked, shivering Sikh