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Who Gilled Indian Hockey?
Jagmohan Singh
Dear Dhyan Chand
Ji
After
thirteen hours of cogitation and uneasiness, my heart was able to
connect to your soul. On 10th March, at 10 am in the
morning, I learnt about India’s defeat in the hockey pre-qualifiers
for the Beijing Olympics and by 11 pm at night I was able to connect
and decided to write this open letter to you. During the day, I
vacillated from writing to the main villain to those who are
producing such villains, but my conscience prevailed upon me and I
decided to write to you.
Among those who
have passed away, the one who would be saddest and angry would be
you. Perhaps no one else can feel the pain inflicted by the nadir
touched by Indian hockey.
There is no
doubt that a game is a game and there will be winners and losers.
However, it is the consistency with which
India has been
losing which must be most disturbing to you.
You may have
noted from your high pedestal that the official lovers of the game,
who are alive are also shedding tears –some real, some glycerine-oriented
but a majority of them crocodile. Most of these hi-fi lovers of the
game are individually and severally responsible for the present
state of the game in the country.
My interest in
the game started when as a student I accompanied my father, Waryam
Singh to the Bombay Hockey Association grounds, next to Churchgate
railway station in Mumbai. I enjoyed watching Ajit Pal Singh and
his team and the Pakistani team led by Samiullah Khan during the
tournaments that used to be played there in the seventies. My
father never played hockey but watching hockey games was his only
‘side-kick’ which irritated my mother a lot, but it was a habit
every hockey season which he could not give up even at the cost of
his earnings. In fact, living in Mumbai, it was his only connection
with Punjab, the other being the ritual ‘summer-trip’ of children to
homeland Punjab to meet maternal and paternal grandparents, uncles
and aunties. I was able to collect autographs of many Indian and
Pakistani hockey players courtesy the only Sikh umpire -the burly Phulel Singh Sujlana, who helped me get them under the promise that
I would also wield the stick. I reneged on the promise for as far as
sports was concerned, I was jack of all and master of none.
I must tell you
that June 1984 changed all that. Though my father was a member of
the Bombay Hockey Association (he still flaunts his old identity
card), the storming of Darbar Sahib never saw him again in the
stands. Something snapped and his interest waned. Today, his
interest and mine is limited to watching the occasional game on
television and keeping abreast of news of Indian hockey and hockey
in general. His enthusiasm for India has waned but he still loves
good hockey and is acutely aware of the nuances of the game and can
give a lecture on how the introduction of astro-turf and the lack of
adaptation to it by Indian players and organisers to the new grounds
since its inception has been the key reason for India’s defeat after
defeat.
Since you are
away for long, I thought it necessary to update you on the
scenario. A few decades after your departure from the game, Indian
hockey has gone downhill. Those who have been the managers of the
game have played everything but hockey. After the days of Sir Kunwar Prasad, Naval Tata and Ashwini Kumar, the rule book of IHF
has been continuously and mercilessly breached at the cost of the
game.
The person who
presides over the demise of Indian hockey today is an
ex-policeman, a convicted debauch, a self-proclaimed
‘conflict-resolution expert’, a known violator of human rights, a
man who has graciously been awarded a ‘suspended sentence’ by the
Indian judiciary, who was a one-time darling of the Indian media for
his ‘gilling-spree’ of perceived terrorists and who also happens to
be the president of the Indian Hockey Federation for the last 14
years.
Dhyan Chand ji,
this man has ‘gilled’ hockey. A person who has unabashedly gloated
over killings of innocent people, a person who has been invited as a
security expert by governments of Gujarat and Chattisgarh to teach
their police personnel how to kill with impunity, has done what he
is best at, “kill” or shall we say, “gill”.
In recent times,
he “gilled” Dhanraj Pillai and in the last qualifying attempts at
Santiago,
he “gilled” Rick Charlesworth, the technical advisor, appointed at
the instance of the International Hockey Federation by not making
return tickets available to him from Santiago. So in the end, he
had to “gill” hockey.
You must be
wondering whether things would change and whether the
“gilling-spree” would stop or not. I don’t think so. This is a
classic occasion to understand how the Indian state’s systems work.
Let us see the
system. KPS Gill is a Sikh. He is a patriotic Sikh. He has killed
Sikhs for
India’s
integrity. Having done that, India had “no use” for him,
particularly after an “errant” Indian bureaucrat dared to take
criminal proceedings against him to a logical conclusion. The
vigilant Indian judiciary awarded him a ‘suspended sentence’ when
his crime of molestation of a senior bureaucrat –Rupan Deol Bajaj
was proved. Then there came the time to rehabilitate him for his
‘exemplary contribution to the country’. So he was ‘elected’ the
chief of the Indian Hockey Federation. How KPS Gill used his
police powers to get elected by overawing his opponent is another
story. Had it not been hockey, it would have bee n
something else. Had he not been convicted, he would have been
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of a tin-pot little
African nation, enjoying the fruits of serving his motherland.
So, the story
goes on. The Indian government, which does not care for sports
anyway, is not going to so easily disband the IHF and make KPS Gill
‘vulnerable’. After all he is a state asset and cannot be left in
the lurch. Hockey can wait.
Unless, Chak
De spills to the streets from the celluloid, unless the state
amends its policies and practices, KPSG will be very much around,
IHF will be there, SM will also be there, hockey jave thathe
khooh vich (hockey be damned!).
I was conscious
that not many would have written to you nor even recalled you, for
had they done, things would have not come to such a pass –that is
the reason I dwelt on so many peripheral aspects of Indian hockey and
that is why I chose to write to you. You need to wield your magic
stick or else as Rick Charlesworth –the Australian technical adviser
has said, “Indian hockey has the potential players but the future is
bleak with the way in which sports is managed there”.
In case, India
chooses to reprimand the ‘giller’ for the hockey debacle and send
him to Timbuktu for soul-searching and repentance, or he actually
undergoes training for humanitarian conflict-resolution from the
United Nations or nemesis catches up with him through some daring
judge’s order in the case of involuntary disappearance of human
rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra and hundreds of other innocent
Sikhs, then I will have better things to say.
May be, then we
will have Shah Rukh Khan as the new hockey chief with his vast
experience of promoting hockey in films and promoting cricket in
real life and perhaps his son would be a well-deserved hockey
player.
Till then, Rab
Rakha.
Jagmohan Singh
(Jagmohan Singh
is a commentator based in Ludhiana, Punjab.
He may be contacted at jsbigideas@gmail.com)
12
March 2008
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