Sunday, April 3, 2011

Experiment #24: The Final Wicket


The time is 18:55. Crossing Subhas Bridge Circle.

On any normal day, this is nearly impossible. With the non-stop stream of honking buses, rickshaws and motorbikes, we are lucky to make it across with just a few hairs shaved off our arms rather than a few years shaved off our lives.

But this particular Wednesday, I could have lied down in the middle of the road and meditated.

The usually bustling pani puri vendors at the corner had closed up early. The vegetable market at the corner was eerily stagnant.

Everyone in Ahmedabad was glued to the television. The city (and probably the entire subcontinent) had more or less shut down for the cricket match of the decade. India vs. Pakistan.

I went through various chapters of fair-weather fandom while growing up, each time committing my temporary loyalty to a team whose name appeared in headlines and schoolyard discussion that month. But I’ve never understood the passion which real sports fans pledge to their teams.

I’ve never experienced the angst of uncertainty while an umpire’s decision is pending. Or the deep-rooted disappointed of watching my team’s players flounder. Or the unchecked thrill of winning a critical match.

Until this week.

With Pakistan at bat, 28 balls and 30 runs stood between India and a place in the Cricket World Cup Finals. It looked good for India, but victory wasn’t locked in yet.

As the bowler wound up for each ball, everyone in the room watched the screen unblinkingly, the tension thick.

Not a six. Not a six. Not a six.

If the sentiment at that moment can be summed up in three words (and I assure you, it cannot), that is it. Not a six.

(For those of you illiterate in cricket terminology, a six is the cricket equivalent of a home run.)

With each successive ball, we allowed ourselves to breath a little easier, trying not to celebrate too early.

And then, with two balls to go, and no hope left for Pakistan, the final wicket fell. After a split second of silence, the city erupted.

I don’t mean that figuratively.

The roads that had been whisper-quiet just minutes before were filled with dancing children, shouting men and entire families sharing celebratory hugs and tears. Fireworks peppered the streets non-stop. The beating of drums and metal spoons against cookware created the backdrop for the unforgettable night.

Myself and a dozen other Manav Sadhna volunteers and staff piled onto the roof of the Manav Sadhna car to drive through Ahmedabad and congratulate our fellow Indians. Spirits were so high that even Suzanne from France and Jeanne from Holland became Indian for those few hours, touched by the celebrating masses.

Bharat Mataji ki…Jai! Hail Mother India!

India vs. Pakistan can assume many meanings. Hindu-Muslim tensions. The nuclearization of the sub-continent. The dispute over Kashmir.

The political and religious conflicts between these two countries have manifested themselves in ugly ways. People have been persecuted, killed, and made to live on opposite sides of boundaries – both real and imagined. So when the players from their respective cricket teams met in Mohali Stadium last week, Indians and Pakistanis had much more invested in the match than ordinary sporting bets.

It was a bloodless, refereed opportunity to settle the score of many decades, while the entire world watched from their living room.

Even I, with a cricket knowledge limited to what I learned from Aamir Khan in the movie Lagaan, felt ecstatic in those post-victory moments, simply from the realization of how many millions of people had their hopes pinned on those men in the sky blue India uniforms.

I was so proud.

And yesterday, as I watched India beat Sri Lanka by six wickets to win the World Cup, even after suffering through several distressing overs early on, I too jumped up and down like a cricket fanatic.

After nearly six months in this beautiful and vibrant country, I can assure you this is one team I will not be cheering for only in fair weather. Especially since the 100+ degree April temperatures are anything but fair.   

1 comment:

  1. Pooja,you have me smiling from ear to ear.You write so lovely!

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