Why do
writers feel that for someone to be labeled a champion or a hero, he/she must be shown to have been through
untold suffering - constantly warding off detractors and evil spirits,
silencing the relentless doubters and critics, putting up with major
inconveniences, struggling with poverty and so on?
For
example, a student who gets the first rank in the Board Exams must be described
as one who read in the park everyday ( no lights at home) or walked six miles
through slush everyday to reach school. I can almost visualize the reporter
prompting the student, “ Did you have to study in candlelight or using kerosene
lamps anytime?”. “Yes, yes, now that you
remind me. The evening before my Maths Exam, there was a two-hour power cut in
our area…”
A
sports champion must be shown as one who came from a very humble background, practiced
16 hours a day, cycled 15 km for his coaching, caught up with his school
homework at midnight and rose to the top through sheer determination in the
face of adversity.
Many
of these stories are true, of course. We should not belittle them. But look at anybody’s life, I’m sure you’ll
find some major setbacks they’ve faced or the many challenges they had to
overcome. This is a reality and it’s ridiculous to hype this aspect. Every
sportsman who has achieved something or not would have worked very hard at the game,
often at the expense of something else in life.
When
Anand won the World Championship title for the 5th time recently, it
was no mean achievement. He had to work hard against a formidable opponent who
showed enormous resolve and intent to dethrone Anand. But that’s how it is in
any sporting event. Theirs is often a reigning champion and someone else trying
to unseat him from that position. At the level of a World Championship, it does
get intensely competitive.
But
when you put it this matter-of-fact manner, it sounds tame and insipid. So, a special dose of melodrama needs to be
injected into the narrative. That’s what Chidanand Rajghatta does in his report:
They trash-talked him, ridiculed him, and wrote him off. They said he had slowed down, lost his flair and chutzpah, and become conformist and traditional in his play. But Viswanathan Anand took on everything the Russian-Israeli chess mafia and his growing band of critics threw at him and emerged on top yet again on Wednesday, winning the world chess title for the fifth time, and shutting up detractors for now... the Russian chess mafia has long been smarting at the loss of the chess crown to the genial Indian after the Karpov-Kasparov combine dominated the game for decades.Anand has taken on everything they have fired at him from since 2000, including a divided and discredited world title. But since 2007, he had been the undisputed world champion, defeating the Russian Vladimir Kramnik, whom Moscow regarded as the heir to the two Ks, and the Bulgarian Veselin Topalov in 2010.In each instance, Anand has had to battle not just his opponent, but also a mighty chess establishment, and sometimes even forces of nature. In 2010, he had to drive from Spain to Bulgaria, a distance of nearly 3000 kms across Europe, after the volcanic ash disrupted flights and the (challenger's) host country refused to delay the start, citing TV rights issues. He got to Sofia just in time -- and went on to win.
So,
this is the picture that Rajghatta conjures for you. Anand, the valiant Indian,
all alone and with no weapons- surrounded on all sides by the evil, scheming
Russian-Israeli mafia who want his blood to mix with their cocktail. He can hear his severe
critics guffawing away in a menacing and cinematic voice over. But Anand subdued and tamed them all, as only Chidanand Rajghatta - out of the
billions of people on earth -knew he would. For, he alone knew the size of Anand’s
heart.
Anand’s
triumph was fantastic, even without bringing in these references to
Israeli-Russian mafia and so on. But it had to be brought in by Rajghatta. Perhaps he felt that the
reader won’t be able to appreciate the enormity of the achievement without this hyperbole.
Maybe, while reporting on achievers,
the emphasis on the hardship is necessary to inspire so many people who are
struggling with poverty and discrimination, to provide them the motivation to
pursue a lofty ambition. If Ramanujam hailing from a poor family and who had
his schooling in a small town could become a world-renowned mathematician, so
can you. If Mary Kom can win five world champion titles in women’s boxing
despite her background as the daughter of a poor farmer in a remote place in
North-East India, so can you.
But
this aspect need not take over the narrative and become the dominant or central theme. And, as in the case of Rajghatta’s report on
Anand, new forms of hardship or adversity need not be invented just to conform
to the template.
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