Jaipur, Jun 16: In the dark of the night, hope returned to Kailash Chand Yadav's family in Alwar town of Rajasthan, 155 km from here.

A soldier (sainik) with the 66 Arms and Corps Regiment in Dehradun, Dharamveer went missing after an Ambassador he was travelling in met with an accident on November 27, 2009.
The army declared him dead in November 2012 after they failed to recover his body, and soon an order for issuing a regular pension of Rs 8,000 to his wife Manju Devi was released.
For Manju, Dharamveer's return was nothing short of “walking in a dream” as she woke up to his presence in the dead of the night. Clad in a white saree–worn by widows–Manju, who was fast asleep next to her daughters Sangeeta (19) and Pushpa (17), woke up to see Dharamveer alive, but in a wretched condition.
The soldier told his family that he lost memory in the accident and that he was living on the ghats of Haridwar, dressed like a beggar. Dharamveer claimed that he regained memory after he met with another accident when a bike hit him in Haridwar.
An emotional Manju could barely complete a sentence, and Dharamveer's mother Antra Devi, too, was in tears when asked to speak about her son. District Army Welfare Officer (Alwar), R P Yadav, told DH: “Dharamveer was declared dead after the army could not recover his body. Since 2012, his wife Manju Devi is being given a regular pension of Rs 8,000. As soon as his family informed me about his arrival, I forwarded the message to the headquarters.”
Dharamveer's nephew Neeraj said: “His return has brought joy, but he is physically weak and interacts very less. Looking at his condition it seems like he has spent his last 7 years in trauma after losing his identity and memory.”



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