Smells like Sourav Spirit
[Written on Sep 12, 2008 - when Sourav Ganguly, the ex-India captain, was contemplating retirement]
- Partha Sarathi Chatterjee
India , that
was shining, that now brimmed with self-confidence, that went multinational,
had the most appropriate leader – Sourav. He exemplified all what India had
needed in the past and lacked; all what was supposed to be against the Bengali
character. From the grand-mom to the grand-kid, they worshipped Dada. They
vicariously lived all his successes; they saw themselves standing up to
intimidation – showing the world – we want to be counted. A Bengali became Dada
to all Indians!
[Written on Sep 12, 2008 - when Sourav Ganguly, the ex-India captain, was contemplating retirement]
- Partha Sarathi Chatterjee
As news articles crop up on Sourav’s fading from cricket, it is
time to evaluate the Sourav sprit – smell the essence of the man.
Sourav was just not a cricketer - he unknowingly became the
symbol of Bengal and the new India .
My note is about Sourav the man, what he meant to Bengal and in a broader
sense, India .
I was in India
that winter - the day Sourav became the Indian captain, some time after Amartya
Sen got his Nobel Prize. I remember my dad saying: “We think Bengalis are
intellectual. There are many more fireworks and celebration tonight than when
Amartya Sen got the Nobel.” True!
Years of failure or at least retrenchment in Bengal as India shone gave Bengalis a defensive attitude,
a sense the whole of India
was against it, may be the excuse as to why they did not succeed. Bengalis were
moving out of Calcutta ,
selling their ancestral land to promoters. Flats built there were being gobbled
up by “outsiders”. My neighborhood of traditional Bengalis (“bonedi ghotis”),
where I could tell you the habits of a Bidesh Bose or Manas or Babloo
Bhattacharjee growing up (where on Saturdays either I went for a Mohun Bagan
match or watched them practice), got transformed into this place where people
played cricket and I did not know any of
them or their parents.
We were failing – the whole of India was against it. We do not
stand up – we are “bheto” Bangali. We take things handed out to us – we
complain but do not contest. There was a persecution complex – every time I
went to Calcutta
(since 1990), I heard that. Same old story!
My mom, who hated sports, as my dad and I reveled in it growing
up, always said “God will take care of it. Bhabityabya.”
In the broader context, previously Indians were meek, submissive
compared to the outside world. They deferred rather than differ; they agreed
rather than made people agree.
Then, in came this man, who brought fighting spirit; proactively
pushed fighting young men to the team. He believed that we always had the
talent – we needed the right self-belief and aggression. Ready to do battle and
not cower in front of the opponent! Sourav, as a captain, believed in these
fighters – Yuvraj, Harbhajan, Sewag, Kaif. As a captain, he led from the front
– these guys knew the captain had their back. They gave their all for Dada – the team spirit was unbelievable!
On a cloudy day at Lords, with India
in dire traits, Kaif and Yuvi pulled India out and the captain,
shirtless, waved his shirt on the Lords balcony. To some, it was blasphemy; to
the masses, it was a charismatic leader throwing down the gauntlet. The masses
started to believe – this is a new India !
World conquerors Australia
ate humble pie in India
– with an improbable win after a follow-on. Hundred thousand crazies, in the
garden of Eden, paid their obeisance to the leader and fighting team spirit.
The myth was born!
Finally, came the World Cup in South Africa . India went to
the finals against all odds. The whole nation was fixated. The non-believing
Bengalis found an icon. My mother, who hated sports, started only talking about
Sourav – more than my dad. He stood upto arm-twisting - what many of the people
wanted to do – not cower, not be afraid of one’s power. The Bengalis, who ate
“phish” and played “phootball”, now had Sourav – top that! New India looked
upto him – he did not have the talent of a Tendulkar, the proper style of a
Dravid; but, he did have guts, self-belief and a desire to take on the world.
Sourav’s final hurray was the incredible comeback after being
sidelined by the brashest Aussie of all – Greg Chappell. Well, time seems to
have come to bid adieu!
People remember the glitzy malls, the cybercafés, the latest
designer clothes, the electronic gadgets as the transformation of Calcutta . I salute the
no-nonsense spirit, incredible self-belief and the confidence to try to do the unthinkable
– that is the new India and Bengal , that is what Sourav signified.
Hundred years ago, Swami Vivekananda had said: “'You cannot
believe in God until you believe in yourself.” Well, Sourav exemplified that!
Salute Sourav! Sabaash Sourav!
Partha cheers mate we too live Dada loads here in Chennai. He is the majestic prince.lovely article to relieve those lords moment. Lucky guys to catch legends at work hmmmm enjoy
ReplyDeleteSorry spell error live - LOVE
ReplyDeletePartha cheers mate we too live Dada loads here in Chennai. He is the majestic prince.lovely article to relieve those lords moment. Lucky guys to catch legends at work hmmmm enjoy
ReplyDelete