The Pawn Prodigy
Marathon kid Budhiya is a wonderball that anyone even remotely associated with him or his sport wants to play with. His latest accusations of torture against his coach and godfather Biranchi Das notwithstanding, the five-year-old child has probably witnessed more politics in his early life than many seasoned politicians in this country.
Today, while his parents and child welfare activists are up in arms against the coach who allegedly tortured him, Budhia had no one to look up to and seek help from when he was still running short distances. None of these people came to help this unprecedented Indian talent when the shackles of poverty had chained his abilities. It was Das who recognised the sporting prodigy in this child and honed his skill. However, he too probably, after Budhia’s success, used him as ladder for his own economic prosperity. And now, joining this force of economic parasites are, probably, his parents. Das has alleged that his parents are accusing him of torture because he refused to make them a house.
No one knows whether the statements that Budhia gave to the police were given of his own free will or under duress — a medical examination of the boy has revealed that his injury marks are six-nine months old and not acquired due to torture. However, in this entire saga the one thing that comes out starkly clear is that a childhood has been lost somewhere in the personal ambitions of grown ups.
1 Comments:
hi, this is a beautiful piece of a childhood lost. it's very well written not for the plot between the coach and the parents, but the child and his identity. I remember we carried a picture of him running... he looked so tired and so tiny doing such a big man's job, ian't this labour... isn't it worse? anyway, nice to read
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