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Cast Vedic Horoscopes
Create unlimited detailed horoscopes for anyone you want in the language you choose. Your horoscope comes with all the major charts and dashas and also detailed predictions and analysis.
Make Yearly Horoscopes
Create your Yearly progressed horoscope which will analyse your year and tell you on a period-by-period basis what you can expect out of your year. You get the set of charts and analysis in multiple languages.
Do Kundali Matching
Match kundalis for marriage and find out what the kundali score is. Not only that you get a detailed analysis of each Guna and how it can affect the married life in the kundalis concerned.
Features : Making Kundali , Varshaphal Report , Marriage Matching Languages : English , Hindi, Bengali , Marathi, Gujrati, Telegu , Kannada, Tamil , Odiya , Malayalam
Today, a monument stands at RAF Northolt. Every year, Polish and British flags fly together at the site of No. 303 Squadron’s operations. And in history books, their name is etched as the most lethal squadron of the Battle of Britain—proof that when freedom is at stake, those who have lost everything will fight hardest of all. | Metric | No. 303 Squadron | Average RAF Squadron | |--------|------------------|----------------------| | Enemy aircraft destroyed | 126 | ~15–20 | | Operational period (Battle) | Aug 31 – Oct 11, 1940 | July – Oct 1940 | | Kills per loss ratio | 7.2:1 | 1.1:1 | | Top ace (Urbanowicz) | 15 kills | N/A | “They were not afraid. They had nothing to lose. We had our island. They had only their honor—and that was enough.” — An RAF flight commander on No. 303 Squadron Further reading: A Question of Honor by Lynne Olson & Stanley Cloud; 303 Squadron: The Legendary Battle of Britain Fighter Squadron by Arkady Fiedler.
On August 31, just 24 hours after becoming combat-ready, 303 Squadron scrambled for the first time. In that single day, they claimed six enemy aircraft. The next day: six more. The day after that: seven. battle of britain 303 squadron
When Winston Churchill famously declared, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few,” he was speaking of the Royal Air Force pilots who defended Britain in the summer and autumn of 1940. But within that elite group, one squadron stood out—not for its numbers, but for its ferocity, its skill, and its astonishing kill count. That squadron was No. 303, better known as the Kościuszko Squadron —a unit of Polish pilots who had already lost their homeland and were determined not to lose theirs again. The Forgotten Allies By mid-1940, Poland had been crushed between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. Thousands of Polish airmen escaped through Hungary, Romania, and France, finally reaching British shores. Despite their combat experience—many had fought in the 1939 September Campaign and the fall of France—the RAF initially viewed them with suspicion. They were given obsolete aircraft, faced language barriers, and were often relegated to training or reserve roles. Today, a monument stands at RAF Northolt
But as the Battle of Britain intensified, desperation replaced prejudice. The RAF was losing pilots faster than it could replace them. In July 1940, the Poles were finally given a chance. No. 303 Squadron was formed at RAF Northolt, equipped with the iconic Hawker Hurricane—not as sleek as the Spitfire, but rugged, stable, and deadly. The squadron became operational on August 30, 1940—just as the Luftwaffe shifted its attacks from coastal radar stations and airfields to London itself. The Poles were hungry for revenge. And in history books, their name is etched
As one RAF officer observed: “They fought like men possessed. But they fought brilliantly.” After the battle, Churchill himself paid tribute: “The pilots of No. 303 Squadron have shown a gallantry that has never been surpassed.” But the post-war years were cruel. Many Polish pilots were not invited to the victory parades. Some remained in exile, unable or unwilling to return to a Soviet-controlled Poland. Others went home only to be persecuted by the communist regime.