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| I dream of an India
that is more than hope |
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By
Sachin Tendulkar
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| Sachin is umpire as his son Arjun runs in to bowl/HT File |
My dreams began young. But I always lnned on things one step at a
time. I think, later, that made all the difference, between just imagining
and realising that that imagination needed a focus.
I began playing cricket because everyone around was into cricket.
They did play other sports in our neighbourhood, badminton and hockey,
volleyball; football was really popular when Mumbai's monsoon was
on, we would dance in the rain as we played the beautiful game, but
yet, somehow, it never was quite cricket. Cricket was special.
I think things began to change for me when I began understanding that
there was more to cricket than picking up a bat and trying to take
a wild swipe at everything that came its way. That was also when I
began to dream.
I was around 9 or 10 and, watching my brother and some older guys
in the building play, I wanted to be like them, to play like them,
with them. My imagination at that stage only took me to a place
where I was intensely competitive, enough to be among the top batsmen
in my group. If you did well, were lucky, you would get a prized
invitation to play with the older boys and if that happened, your
success and reputation in the peer group was assured.
So that's what happened with me. I was 10 when I was called to play
with people aged 20 or 22. And then, that year, India won the World
Cup. Life was never the same again. For millions of us, young and
restless and hopeful, that was the beginning of a special love story
with a special game.
Having said that, I think every game is special and India's recent
winning season across sports has been wonderful to watch and so
very encouraging. I have watched, with pride and joy, as the hockey
team has started to pick itself up; I have watched our footballers
play with rejuvenated enthusiasm and dreams in their eyes; and have
watched excitedly as people like world billiards champion Pankaj
Advani, golfer Jeev Milkha Singh and tennis star Sania Mirza have
made us proud. Most of all, I have followed, every inch a proud
Indian, the ascent of Viswanathan Anand to the chess world championship
crown over the weekend.
In sport, we have several ups and downs, but being a sportsman of
course, one doesn't like to lose. In fact, I think the only time
I have intentionally allowed myself to relax in competition is against
my children, because my wife tells me that you have to sometimes
let your kids win.
At the same time, I still don't allow them to win every time. They
have a long way to go and I think it's important to reinforce the
message, as subtly as possible to youngsters that you have to earn
your stripes in life; that, the world might lie ahead but you need
to work towards conquering that world.
This is as much in life, as in sport, and, just to expand on this
beyond the world I inhabit, I have put together my seven-point agenda,
my dream for my India.
Eradicating hunger
I dream of an India where there is enough food for everyone, where
nobody goes to sleep hungry. There are places in Mumbai where they
regularly feed those who cannot otherwise afford food, and I think
they do a very precious, vital job.
Accessibility to clean drinking water
I'm not talking just of water crises in metros but of those people
who have to walk miles to get drinking water in remote areas in
the great Indian interior. We need to find a way to make sure that
if someone is thirsty, water is within easy reach.
The right to shelter
One of the things that strike you about the cities is the miles
upon miles of suffering homeless, wrapped in ragged newspapers,
on the streets of our megapolises. My future India will see a roof
over every Indian's head; be an India that will have a home for
everyone.
Educated women
My India would see an end to the discrimination against women that
is prevalent in many places; an end to the evil of female infanticide.
Educating our girls is a must; it is women who make families and
influence generation next. We cannot be unfair to them.
Access to healthcare
I've read and seen enough about the lack of decent medical facilities
across the country. We, as a people, need to make sure that anyone
and everyone who needs a doctor is able to reach one and be helped.
And be helped properly.
The end of terror
I am from Mumbai, where too many have fallen prey to terror
attacks. People have suffered all over India, too many have lost
near and dear ones. Somehow, somewhere, this needs to stop. Maybe
that can only happen if we have a common dream, one of a better
tomorrow.
A more tolerant India
Finally, when I look at my team-mates, people from different
religions and socio-economic backgrounds who still bond like brothers,
I wonder why that cannot be replicated across India. My final prayer,
therefore, is for a tolerant India, where religious and other differences
do not matter.
I also think that's where people like me have a role to play by
setting an example, because little things - gestures, moves, speech
- it all matters.
For instance, I've often been asked about what I felt about personal
milestones, like breaking the world record for maximum hundreds,
I always say it feels good but personally, I feel that if my doing
this can inspire someone else, some kid watching me, to dream about
going one step better, one step further, then that's what makes
it worth the while.
As a child, growing up, it's hugely important to have heroes, to
have someone to idolise. I had my heroes while growing up, and I
have them now.
Idols and idealism
If I think that, in any way, I have been able to inspire generation
next into imagining; into believing, hoping and dreaming that a
future unknown might be possible, then that would be my contribution.
If you're lucky enough to be blessed, it's important to distribute
those blessings too.
I would like to imagine an India where Generation X is consistently
raising the bar, where they believe that the impossible does not
exist. My dream for India is the creation of a sporting system where
no child believes that he or she has been hard done by.
Between around 1975, the time of the first World Cup, and now, Indian
sport has taken huge steps; it has moved from the metropolises into
the small towns, there has been a huge social change that is both
heartening and welcome. Yet, there is still work to be done, more
remote places to be brought into the fold, not in a haphazard manner
though, but in an organised fashion.
It's not just about handing someone a racquet or a cricket bat and
a rubber ball but also about teaching them the intricacies of sport,
of inculcating in them a sense of achievement and inspiring in them
the belief and the will to succeed.
There have to be proper facilities, accessibility to sport for people
with hitherto no access. in the years ahead, if we can manage that,
we will definitely move forward.
I also want to imagine an India as a land of equal sporting opportunity
and choice, one where people honestly believe that sport can give
them a better shot at life. No one should have the option of saying
that he didn't get a chance, he or she should only be able to say
that 'look, I got a chance, but I wasn't quite good enough to make
it'.
If we can get sport to that level, a place where there are no excuses,
tomorrow would be a far better place to be.
(The author, Sachin Tendulkar, is history's most prolific batsman
and a living legend)
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