How HAWS Became India's Winter Sports Medal Factory in Gulmarg

The High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) in Gulmarg has transformed from a military winter warfare institution into India's premier factory for winter sports champions. Athletes from the Army, CRPF, and states credit HAWS for providing elite coaching, world-class infrastructure like ski simulators, and systematic training programs. Success stories include Kajal Kumari Rai and Bhavani T N, who won gold medals shortly after their first exposure to snow at HAWS. The school's pipeline, which includes international coaches and sends athletes to Europe, is producing podium sweeps at national events like the Khelo India Winter Games.

Key Points: HAWS: India's Winter Sports Training Crucible in Gulmarg

  • Born from military necessity in 1948
  • Trains 250-300 Army athletes annually
  • Features India's only ski simulators
  • Sends top athletes to Europe for training
  • Provides stable funding and world-class infrastructure
4 min read

KIWG focus: Born for battle, how HAWS has become India's winter sports medal factory

Discover how the High Altitude Warfare School in Gulmarg is systematically producing India's top winter sports athletes and medal winners.

"HAWS plays a great role in grooming winter sports athletes not just from the Army but also from other forces and states. - Padma Namgail"

Gulmarg, March 1

The medals glittered in the thin mountain sun, but when athletes were asked where the real gold was forged, they didn't point to the podium. They pointed uphill toward the snowbound ridges of Gulmarg and the disciplined, relentless world of the High Altitude Warfare School, according to a release.

At the 6th edition of the Khelo India Winter Games, held here from February 23 to 26, athletes from across India, representing states, Union Territories, and institutional giants like the Indian Army, the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), echoed a common refrain that HAWS made this possible.

Founded in December 1948 by General K S Thimayya, then a Brigadier, as the 19 Infantry Division Ski School, the institution was born out of necessity. Perched in avalanche-prone terrain, it evolved into the Winter Warfare School before being upgraded on April 8, 1962, into a Category A Training Establishment and emerged with its current name and a sharpened mission to master the mountains.

HAWS specialises in snowcraft and winter warfare, running elite Mountain Warfare and Winter Warfare courses that blend high-altitude combat readiness with survival instinct and intelligence training. But over time, something else began to take shape on its slopes - athletes. Not hobbyists, not tourists, competitors.

Twenty-five-year-old Kajal Kumari Rai from Shillong had never seen snow before 2024. Twelve months later, she owned it. Kajal struck gold in the Nordic women's 15 km and 10 km sprints, an ascent as improbable as it was poetic. The CRPF athlete credits a 15-day initiation into skiing at HAWS for altering her trajectory.

"Joining the CRPF gave me direction," Kajal said. "HAWS and the Army gave me belief."

Belief is currency here. It's traded in oxygen-starved climbs and frozen lashes, in the quiet before a downhill charge.Bhavani T N, who clinched gold in the Nordic women's 1.5 km sprint, adding to her bronze medals in the 15 km and 10 km this season, also came to snow late. At 23, she hadn't touched it. It was at the Indian Institute of Skiing and Mountaineering (IISM) and HAWS where the Khelo India Winter Games veteran from the coffee hills of Karnataka learned her edges, her balance, her bite.

In the men's Nordic 10 km event, the Army painted the podium in its own colours with Padma Namgail winning gold, Aman silver, and Manjeet bronze. In the 1.5 km sprint, Sunny Singh, Shubam Parihar, and Majeet repeated the medal sweep. All of them credited HAWS not as a facility, but as a crucible.

"HAWS plays a great role in grooming winter sports athletes not just from the Army but also from other forces and states," Namgail said. "There are no issues of funding, training, coaching, or competition. The best are even sent to Europe. The tracks are tough, the ice is hard but we are always ready because of HAWS."

That readiness is engineered. Indian Army team manager Col. Kumar Singh Negi calls it systematic. "Expert trainers from Italy, Norway, Sweden and Kazakhstan sharpen technique to international standards," he said.

Indian Army team coach Rameez Ahmad said HAWS oversees a pipeline of 250 to 300 Army winter athletes every year, alongside five to ten civilian trainees.

"Currently, 24 athletes train in Alpine skiing, 16 in snowboarding, and 20 in Nordic skiing. Some double down in mountain skiing. They log a minimum of 600 training hours annually," Ahmad said.

"There are ski simulators for Alpine skiing, the only ones in India, roller skis for summer cross-training, a state-of-the-art gymnasium, an indoor sports complex that hums with basketball, volleyball, and badminton even when Gulmarg is buried in white silence. It is conditioning without interruption. Nutrition is calibrated, a dietician charts protein and carbohydrate intake, energy bars and gels are standard issue. The kits mirror those seen at the Olympics."

Physio Vivek Kaktwan calls the infrastructure "world-class." "Funding is stable, the advantage is altitude itself. By staying in Gulmarg, our athletes train more and train better," he said.

The impact extends beyond the Army. CRPF team manager Magesh K acknowledged HAWS' role in elevating his contingent from equipment support to elite coaching.

"Army coach Nadeem Iqbal, himself an Olympian, worked closely with CRPF athletes over the past three years, refining technique and raising performance thresholds. The results are beginning to show," Magesh said.

They certainly are. In Gulmarg, the medals may hang around individual necks. But their story winds back to a singular address in the snow, a place where warfare training met winter sport, and somewhere along the way, built champions.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who loves winter sports, it's fantastic to see India developing this pipeline. The infrastructure described - ski simulators, roller skis, calibrated nutrition - sounds world-class. Sending athletes to Europe for training is crucial. Hope we see an Indian on the Winter Olympics podium soon!
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Aditya G
A very positive story, but I have a respectful criticism. The article mentions only 5-10 civilian trainees alongside 250-300 Army athletes. While the Army's role is commendable, for winter sports to truly grow in India, we need to massively expand access for civilians and state-level athletes outside the forces. The talent pool is nationwide.
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Priya S
Heartwarming to see athletes from Karnataka and Shillong excelling in Gulmarg! It shows how sports can unite our diverse country. Bhavani from coffee hills learning to ski is amazing. More power to HAWS and Khelo India for creating these opportunities. 👏
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Vikram M
General Thimayya's vision in 1948 continues to bear fruit. HAWS is a strategic asset for national security *and* now for sports glory. The discipline of the armed forces is perfect for creating champions. "Born for battle, built for medals" – what a powerful legacy.
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Kavya N
The collaboration between forces is great! CRPF athletes training under an Army Olympian coach shows we are working as one team. This is the model we need for all sports in India. Less politics, more focus on training and infrastructure. Well done to all involved!

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