On 8 October 2025, as the Indian Air Force marked its 93rd anniversary at Air Force Station Hindan, a moment of extraordinary emotion and pride unfolded before thousands of spectators and officers. Amidst the synchronized march pasts, roaring flypasts, and award presentations, one silent gesture spoke louder than words: a left-hand salute. That salute came from Corporal Varun Kumar, a gallantry awardee who lost his right arm during Operation Sindoor earlier this year. Yet, as he stood tall before the Chief of the Air Staff to receive the Vayu Sena Medal (Gallantry), Varun chose not to bow to circumstance. He raised his left hand in salute, a salute of resilience, defiance, and unbroken spirit.
Born in Punnapra, Alappuzha (Kerala), to Shashidhar and the late Ratnakumari, Varunโs life has always been anchored in discipline and service. He joined the Indian Air Force in 2013, serving as a Medical Assistant, a profession that demands both precision and compassion. For the past two years, he had been posted at Station Medicare Centre, Udhampur, where he provided emergency medical aid to serving air warriors and support staff in one of Indiaโs most strategically sensitive sectors.
In May 2025, as India launched Operation Sindoor, a high-tempo, coordinated campaign in response to escalating cross-border hostilities, Varun was stationed at his post in Udhampur. On the morning of May 10, a Pakistani missile struck a forward facility, killing Sergeant Surendra Kumar Mog and grievously injuring Varun. His right arm was shattered, and fragments of shrapnel tore through his body.
Immediate medical evacuation saved his life, but doctors were forced to amputate his arm to prevent further infection. What followed was a months-long recovery at the Command Hospital, Udhampur, and later at the Artificial Limb Centre (ALC), Pune. There, under the care of military doctors and rehabilitation specialists, Varun learned to rewrite his life, quite literally, with his left hand.
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At ALC Pune, Varunโs transformation became an inspiration. Within weeks, he began eating, writing, and performing daily tasks with his left hand. He received a cosmetic prosthetic arm before Independence Day and is now preparing for a bionic prosthesis, which will enable finer movement and greater control. His wife Anju and young son Vihaan stood by him throughout, embodying the strength that military families silently bear. โHe adapted faster than we ever imagined,โ said Anju. โEven after everything, he smiles and says, โI still have one hand to salute my country.โโ
When President Droupadi Murmu announced the Vayu Sena Medal (Gallantry) for Corporal Varun Kumar on August 14, 2025, the nation celebrated his courage. But it was during the Air Force Day celebrations at Hindan that the story reached its emotional zenith. As Varun approached the dais, wearing his uniform with medals gleaming on his chest, he raised his left hand in salute to Air Chief Marshal Amar Preet Singh. The gesture, non-regulation yet profoundly symbolic, moved many to tears.
It wasnโt just a salute. It was a testament to the human spirit, to the bond between a soldier and his service, and to the promise that even when flesh fails, faith never does. Varunโs left-hand salute has since become a symbol of courage within the Indian Air Force community. His peers from the Artificial Limb Centre recall how he motivated others, including a Subedar who lost both arms and a Sergeant who lost a leg during Operation Sindoor, to believe that rehabilitation is not the end of service, but the continuation of duty in a new form.
Corporal Varun Kumarโs salute will be remembered not for which hand he raised, but for what it represented: the will to stand tall after being knocked down, the pride of wearing the uniform despite the scars, and the unwavering belief that service to the nation transcends all physical limits.
As the Indian Air Force continues its journey into its 94th year, that one salute at Hindan will echo as a reminder that courage doesnโt come from the body; it comes from the soul.