{"id":28759,"date":"2021-10-22T18:00:10","date_gmt":"2021-10-22T23:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/?p=28759"},"modified":"2021-10-22T18:43:11","modified_gmt":"2021-10-22T23:43:11","slug":"aarohi-pandit-reenacts-jrd-tata-first-flight","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/aarohi-pandit-reenacts-jrd-tata-first-flight\/","title":{"rendered":"Capt. Aarohi Pandit Reenacts Air India Founder JRD Tata\u2019s First Commercial Flight that Took off in 1932"},"content":{"rendered":"

History repeats itself. Celebrating Air India\u2019s homecoming to its actual owner and paying tribute to JRD Tata who made India\u2019s dream of flying come true, 23-year-old Aarohi Pandit re-enacted the undivided India\u2019s first commercial flight this October 15. On a fine morning of the same date in 1932, JRD Tata, a passionate aviator and visionary, piloted the first commercial flight from Karachi to Bombay, carrying 25kg of airmail and inducting India (undivided then) into aviation. He was just 28 back then.<\/p>\n

Captain Aarohi Pandit, who became the world\u2019s first woman and youngest pilot to operate a light-weight aircraft solo over the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean in 2019, took up the challenge of re-enacting what had marked the dawn of aviation in India. Born in Gujarat and brought up in Maharashtra, she has created four world records in flying over precarious regions.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

\"Captain<\/p>\n

Re-enacting history was not easy for Captain Aarohi Pandit<\/strong>. In the present era of topnotch aviation technology, she navigated the aircraft without GPS, autopilot system, or computerized equipment. She managed to fly 7000 feet above the sea level from Kutch to Juhu, India\u2019s first civil airport in Mumbai. She flew over the 500 nautical miles (one nautical mile is 1.852 kilometers), with less than 60 liters of petrol in her\u00a0Mahi VT NBF, a Pipistrel Sinus that weighs only 330 kg.<\/p>\n

She chose to take off from the Bhuj runway in Kutch for a very historic reason.<\/strong> The take-off of her flight from the Bhuj airstrip is a salute to the brave women from Madhapar, a nearby village, who had rebuilt the damaged airstrip, with no formal training but sheer patriotism, in only 72 hours for the Indian Air Force\u2019s counter-attack on Pakistan\u2019s fighter aircraft during the 1971 Indo-Pak war. 300 brave-hearted and iron-willed women stepped out of the threshold to execute an impossible task amid aerial bombings. Below is a detailed post about the women who played a pivotal role in determining the fate of the 1971 war.<\/p>\n