Sunday 1 December 2013

Why Sachin deserves his Bharat Ratna

Just hours after the legend retired, Dr Singh's government presented him with that Indian award of awards - the Bharat Ratna. It seemed long overdue to many. But surprisingly, there were more than just a handful of dissidents, some rather politically influential. While a few claimed that it was an 'election campaign' publicity gimmick, others felt the government had jumped the gun.

Regardless of what dissidents think, I think there are ample reasons to assert why Sachin deserved his Bharat Ratna. Granted, he didn't rule the country, remove poverty, fight wars or save lives. But that isn't exactly what the Bharat Ratna is all about. Contrary to public thought, the Bharat Ratna isn't just meant for the 'messiahs' of the Indian people. It is in many ways borrowed from the Mughal concept of the 'Navratna' - the Emperor's nine court jewels that symbolized his reign and empire. Therefore, the Bharat Ratna is meant to felicitate those who symbolize the idea of India in some way or the other.

Motherland First: Sachin has been the new India's flagbearer
If one accepts that idea, it shouldn't be too hard to see why Sachin Tendulkar deserved the jewel. For 24 years, Indian cricket - indeed Indian sport - has been synonymous with Sachin Tendulkar. So much so that Mark 'Tubby' Taylor once remarked after losing to India that his Aussie side "lost to one man." In similar ways in fact, if one were to extend the argument, Tendulkar has been synonymous with world cricket itself. If cricket to the colonial world meant Sir Donald Bradman, cricket to the contemporary age means Sachin Tendulkar. There are countless individuals in different parts of the world - even where cricket has never gone - who adore Tendulkar without even knowing his trade. As one of my friends in the Middle East put it after his teary farewell, "I don't know cricket but I do know Sachin Tendulkar." Hard to think of another man who transcended his profession by such a distance!

But that isn't the only reason why Tendulkar deserves his Bharat Ratna. Consider India in 1989. A young democracy that was reeling under a lack of direction, searching for a path to its 'Tryst with Destiny'. Its economy was caged and soon nearly capitulated. Its finance minister had to pledge gold at the World Bank to keep his country alive. But perhaps in more relevant terms, its cricket team - its most followed sports outfit - was struggling too, for breath. Six years after a World Cup win, many were writing it off as a one-time wonder. That was in Tendulkar's early days.

But fast forward 24 years later. India is the world's third largest economy. Its consumerist middle class is making the world sit up and listen. It is world cricket's biggest superpower and nations jostle for its good offices. It owns one of world sport's most popular and powerful domestic leagues and millions (both people and dollars) are flowing into the country.

In the midst of it all, Tendulkar has been the one constant. His resilient career of 24 years has symbolized a new and buoyant India - one that has and will fight many odds and get better in the face of adversity. Tendulkar has been a brand ambassador for this new and buoyant India, defining and advertising its growing and widely acclaimed soft power. His cool and soft nature perfectly matches the world's view of India - a soft, peace-loving and tolerant force for good in the world.

India's soft power, they say today, is comparable to that of the rising superpower that Kennedy's America was in the 1960s. Several individuals are a part of it. Sachin Tendulkar one of the most notable ones - a true Bharat Ratna.

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