Wednesday 17 August 2022 02:10 PM Remarkable story of the only Sikh to become RAF pilot during WWI trends now

Wednesday 17 August 2022 02:10 PM Remarkable story of the only Sikh to become RAF pilot during WWI trends now
Wednesday 17 August 2022 02:10 PM Remarkable story of the only Sikh to become RAF pilot during WWI trends now

Wednesday 17 August 2022 02:10 PM Remarkable story of the only Sikh to become RAF pilot during WWI trends now

The remarkable little-known story of the only Sikh airman to become an RAF fighter pilot during the First World War is told in a new book.

Flying Officer Hardit Singh Malik, an Oxford University graduate, was playing county cricket for Sussex when war broke out.

He attempted to join the British Army but was denied entry because of his race, while his fellow students all went to the front line.

Still desperate to do his bit, he travelled to France to become an ambulance driver for the French Red Cross, and asked to join the French Air Force.

Irate that his former pupil was being discriminated against, his Oxford tutor Francis 'Sligger' Urquhart wrote to the head of the Royal Flying Corps - one of the precursors to the RAF - to tell them it was 'scandalous that the British armed forces had no use for him'.

This prompted a change of heart and Flying Officer Malik was accepted as a cadet, completing his flying training with the RFC in mid-1917.

He joined No 26 Squadron and took to the skies over Passchendaele and in other defining Great War battles.

Being a Sikh, he wore a specially designed flying helmet that fitted over his turban. It led to him gaining the nickname of the 'flying hobgoblin'. 

He was one of four Indians who flew in the war and was among two who survived the conflict. 

The remarkable little-known story of the only Sikh airman to become a fighter pilot during the First World War is told in a new book. Above: Flying Officer Hardit Singh Malik

The remarkable little-known story of the only Sikh airman to become a fighter pilot during the First World War is told in a new book. Above: Flying Officer Hardit Singh Malik

Flying Officer Malik, an Oxford University graduate, was playing county cricket for Sussex when war broke out. Above: The airman is seen during a cricket match between Sussex and Leicestershire

Flying Officer Malik, an Oxford University graduate, was playing county cricket for Sussex when war broke out. Above: The airman is seen during a cricket match between Sussex and Leicestershire

Flying Officer Malik continued serving as an airman after the RFC and the Royal Naval Air Service were merged to form the Royal Air Force in April 1918.  

Flying Officer Malik was shot down by a German aircraft during a dogfight while returning to his base in October 1917.

He crashed to the ground behind Allied lines and was knocked unconscious in his Sopwith Camel which was riddled with over 400 bullet holes.

After a month's recuperation, Flying Officer Malik returned to front line action for operations over Northern Italy.

He then transferred to No 141 Squadron at Biggin Hill in Greater London, and No 11 Squadron at Aulnoye-Aymeries.

He was officially credited with two kills, although the actual number may have been as high as six, which would have given him 'ace' status.

Flying Officer Malik, who was born in Rawalpindi, which was then part of India and is now in Pakistan, survived the conflict and resumed his cricketing career, playing 18 first-class cricket matches.

Flying Officer Malik was shot down by a German aircraft during a dogfight while returning to his base in October 1917

Flying Officer Malik was shot down by a German aircraft during a dogfight while returning to his base in October 1917

In later life, he was the first Indian High Commissioner to Canada and then served as the Indian Ambassador to France. He died in Delhi aged 91 in 1985.

Flying Officer Malik's extraordinary life is documented in The Flying

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