Join Our Newsletter

Friday, February 13, 2026

Turtuk - The Village India 'Won'

 



Turtuk - The Village India 'Won' 

Turtuk is a village in India, and it is one of the most northern villages of India as it is only 12km away to the Pakistan border. In fact, it was included in Pakistan until 1971, when it was taken by the Indian troops in a surprise attack in the Indo-Pak War. It is one of the most important military posts nowadays- a gateway to the Siachen Glacier and a major scout position at the Shyok Valley.

A Rich Past

This small village has macro history. Turtuk used to be a busy point of the Ancient Silk Route that connected India with Central Asia and China. It was the capital of the Yabgo Dynasty that ruled Baltistan during more than 2,000 years. The old palace is also open to visit, and it contains some artifacts of that royal period.

A Living Culture

The people of Turtuk are the special features. The villagers are Balti -ethnically and culturally dissimilar to the greater part of India. They use the language of Bangli, which is a branch of Tibetan, and they have traditions that are still practiced today.


Seema Sanghosh English: February 2026

2 comments:

  1. Having visited Turtuk, I felt how geopolitics reshapes lives of local people. Its true, border villages are not mere strategic outposts but living archives of history, identity, and resilience. Just the way state secures frontiers militarily, it must also secure them socially, through infrastructure, cultural preservation, and sustained development for communities.

    ReplyDelete