Raniganj Coal Mine Incident |verified| «COMPLETE – GUIDE»

He sent the lightest, thinnest men first. Each trip took fifteen agonizing minutes. The capsule rose, was emptied, and descended again. Gill stayed below, calming the panicked, rationing the hope. Once, the rope jammed. He was stuck, half-buried in silt, the water lapping at his chest. He did not scream. He simply pulled the signal rope twice— stop —and waited. Above, they fixed the winch. He lived.

After an eternity, a soft thump . He was at the bottom. With a hammer, he chipped away the last crust of shale. A rush of stale, warm air hit his face. And then, light—flickering helmet lamps in the dark. Thirty-six faces, bearded, hollow-eyed, weeping.

Gill looked at the deputy. Then he looked at the crowd of women. “If I send a volunteer and he dies,” he said quietly, “I live with that. If I go and I die… at least I tried.” raniganj coal mine incident

(The story is based on the real 1989 Raniganj rescue led by Jaswant Singh Gill, who was awarded the Sarvottam Jeevan Raksha Padak for his bravery.)

The air in the Mahabir Colliery had a taste—iron, damp earth, and the ghosts of ancient forests. For the men who worked the Raniganj coalfields in West Bengal, that taste was as familiar as the salt on their wives’ cooking. But on a raw November morning in 1989, the taste changed. It became sharp, metallic, and wrong. He sent the lightest, thinnest men first

“I’ll go,” Gill said, strapping on the harness. He was not young. He was a manager, not a rescue diver. His deputy grabbed his arm. “Sir, you don’t have to. Send a volunteer.”

His plan was insane on paper: fabricate a steel capsule—a narrow, vertical coffin, really—that could be lowered through a new borehole. One man would go down. He would break through the final layer of rock into the trapped miners’ chamber, and then, one by one, pull them up in the same capsule. Gill stayed below, calming the panicked, rationing the hope

Then, from the city of Dhanbad, came a man named Jaswant Singh Gill. No relation to the first Jaswant. This Gill was a tall, stern Sikh with eyes that had measured the insides of dozens of mines. He was a technical manager for a different company, but he had heard the SOS on a crackling radio.