Padma Bandopadhyay Explained

Honorific Prefix:Air Marshal
Padmavathy Bandopadhyay
Honorific Suffix:PVSM, AVSM, VSM, PHS
Birth Date:1944 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Tirupathi, Madras Presidency, British India (now Andhra Pradesh)
Nickname:Padma
Birth Name:Padmavathy Swaminathan
Allegiance:India
Branch:Indian Air Force
Serviceyears:1968–2005
Rank: Air Marshal
Servicenumber:11528 MED (MR-2246)
Commands:DGMS(Air)
Awards:PVSM, AVSM, VSM, Padma Shri
Spouse:Wg Cdr Sati Nath Bandopadhyay (m. 1968–2015; his death)
Children:2
Alma Mater:Armed Forces Medical College, Pune

Air Marshal Padma Bandopadhyay, PVSM, AVSM, VSM, PHS (born 4 November 1944) is a decorated former flight surgeon in the Indian Air Force. She was the first woman to be promoted to the rank of Air Marshal in the Indian Air Force. She is the second woman in the Indian Armed Forces to be promoted to a three-star rank, after Surgeon Vice Admiral Punita Arora.

Early life

Bandopadhyay was born as Padmavathy Swaminathan on 4 November 1944 at Tirupathi, Andhra Pradesh into a Tamil speaking Iyer family. When Padma was four or five years old, her mother contracted tuberculosis and eventually became bedridden. As a result, Padma's thoughts have been consumed with medical difficulties since she was a small child, and she also took on the role of her mother's primary caretaker while she was still quite young. In addition, her neighbor in the Gole Market neighborhood in New Delhi was Dr. S. I. Padmavati, Professor of Medicine at Lady Hardinge Medical College. Padma has said that her experience with her mother's illness and hospitalization at Safdarjung Hospital, and having a neighbouring lady doctor with the same name as her were early motivations to become a doctor.[1]

Education

She studied at Delhi Tamil Education Association Senior Secondary Schools in the humanities stream. After graduating from school, she made the difficult and uncommon transition from humanities to the science stream in Delhi University. She studied pre-medical at Kirori Mal College and then joined the Armed Forces Medical College, Pune, in 1963.

Career

She joined the Indian Air Force in 1968. She married Wing Commander S. N. Bandopadhyay, a fellow air force officer.[2] She was awarded the Vishisht Seva Medal (VSM)[3] for her conduct during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. Sati Nath and Padma were the first IAF couple to receive a President's award in the same investiture parade.[4]

She was the first woman to become a Fellow of the Aerospace Medical Society of India and the first Indian woman to conduct scientific research at the North Pole.[5] She is also the first woman Armed Forces officer to have completed the Defence Services Staff College course in 1978.[6] She was the Director General Medical Services (Air) at the Air Headquarters.[7] In 2002, she became the first woman to be promoted to air vice marshal (two-star rank). She subsequently became the first woman air marshal of Indian Air Force. Bandopadhyay is an aviation medicine specialist and a member of the New York Academy of Sciences.[8]

Military awards and decorations

Ati Vishisht Seva MedalVishisht Seva MedalPaschimi Star
Sangram MedalOperation Vijay MedalHigh Altitude Service Medal50th Anniversary of Independence Medal
25th Anniversary of Independence Medal30 Years Long Service Medal20 Years Long Service Medal9 Years Long Service Medal

Awards and honors

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bandopadhyay, Padma. The Lady in Blue: The memoirs of First Lady Air Marshal. 21 December 2017. Zorba Books. Amazon.
  2. Web site: तेजस्विनीः भारत की पहली महिला एयर मार्शल, डॉ. पद्मा बंधोपाध्याय से ख़ास बातचीत. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211215/rETtLRO4z8o . 15 December 2021 . live. www.youtube.com.
  3. Web site: Service Record for Air Marshal Padmavathy Bandhopadhyay 11528 MED at Bharat Rakshak.com. Bharat Rakshak.
  4. Book: Limca Book of Records: India at Her Best. 5 May 2018. Hachette India . 9789351952404.
  5. Web site: Success Story. anusandhan.net.
  6. Web site: Marching Ahead: 14 Incredibly Brave Women in Indian Armed Forces Who Broke the Glass Ceiling. 24 January 2017. The Better India.
  7. Web site: Padmavathy Bandopadhyay – Inspiring story of the first woman Air Marshal of the Indian Air Force. Anshika. Kumar. 15 September 2017. indianyouth.net.
  8. News: First woman Air Vice Marshal . 26 November 2002 . The Times of India . 5 September 2019.
  9. News: Padma Awards 2020 Conferred To 13 Unsung Heroes Of Medicine . 27 January 2020 . Medical Dialogues . 27 January 2020.