By JYOTSNA MOHAN BHARGAVA
He is a teenager who has been long forgotten, yet yearns to be remembered. At the age of four, when nothing makes a child happier than sprinting to a swing in the park, he ran seven hours from Bhubaneswar to the religious town of Puri. Today, those 65km are a hazy memory because Budhia Singh can barely finish a 400m lap.
He is a teenager who has been long forgotten, yet yearns to be remembered. At the age of four, when nothing makes a child happier than sprinting to a swing in the park, he ran seven hours from Bhubaneswar to the religious town of Puri. Today, those 65km are a hazy memory because Budhia Singh can barely finish a 400m lap.
His story is one of rags to relative riches which nosedived as suddenly back to a one of penury.
He was sold for just Rs 800 by his family and after that, it was not a happy existence.
Budhia was treated badly by the new family until a judo coach Biranchi Das bought him and took him under his wings.
It was here in Odisha that Biranchi discovered the
powerhouse of talent the little boy was. One day, he asked Budhia to run
as a punishment and then forgot about him for hours. The rest should
have been history but sadly, is a story of broken dreams and promises
waylaid.
A four-year-old Budhia Singh runs during a marathon in Bhubaneswar on May 2, 2006. |
Budhia's fame as a runner soon spread far and wide,
endorsements came and there was suddenly money, but what also followed
were allegations of the coach exploiting the boy.
With Biranchi's murder four years later, no one will ever
know if what he and Budhia shared was a guru-shishya relationship or he
was simply a man who found his golden goose. In spite of that, by all
accounts Biranchi was the only stability in Budhia's life.
What no one can deny though is that the boy was a prodigy
who is now languishing in an obscure sports hostel, his amazing stamina
and endurance stifled after the child welfare department and the state
government banned him from running.
I don't deny that running 40-odd marathons at a tender age
were unhealthy and harmful but where in the world is talent destroyed so
callously like it was done in Budhia's case?
He was too young to run miles but why was that gift not
nourished systematically, why did no one focus on his diet or other
aspects of training?
China may be an extreme example but remember gymnast Nadia
Comaneci, the Romanian who scored the first perfect ten at the Olympics
at age of 15? For that matter, the youngest Olympic champion was just
13. In sports, you are never too young but your sell by date comes
before you can blink.
Budhia may have been exploited but what we did to him
afterwards was even worse. His talent was never in doubt, yet he has
been forced to live in a sports hostel without a specialised coach. He
may still be too young to run a marathon but you don't become a champion
overnight.
So we played our usual brand of politics even over this
little boy with everyone laying claim to his future yet no one being
really interested in investing in it.
Why else would this child prodigy be made to run short
sprints when this was never his forte? A Usain Bolt will never be able
to beat a Mo Farah in 5,000m.
A few years ago, Budhia's family may have seen a faint
light at the end of the tunnel and hoped that their son, small as he
was, would bring some big changes in their lives.
But today, they continue to live in a slum and have probably long given up hope of Budhia taking them out of misery.
After all, you cannot dream on an empty stomach. Their only
hope now is the money they will get from a movie on the child which
will be released soon. It may be easy for this biopic to win some
critical acclaim but it will be empty praise if it does nothing to
transform the boy's life.
Remember that image of an innocent Budhia running doggedly
on the streets? Today it seems like we, as a county, have failed him.
There is nothing worse than indifference. Now we can only hope it's not
too late.
A life of poverty is probably the biggest inspiration for
anyone. Surviving in such squalor and abandoned by his family, it's not
easy to dream, but Budhia had one.
He wanted to reach the Olympics and if he was born in the West, he just may have.
But here, people have mostly forgotten him and he no longer knows how to fight with his destiny.
[Originally published in: http://www.dailyo.in/sports/budhia-singh-biranchi-das-olympics-usain-bolt-mo-farah-marathon/story/1/12164.html]
[Originally published in: http://www.dailyo.in/sports/budhia-singh-biranchi-das-olympics-usain-bolt-mo-farah-marathon/story/1/12164.html]
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