A 'Princely' Rs.400 For Winning Two Gold, One bronze At Ipoh
By
Brij Khandelwal
Agra, 25
November: When constable and sportswoman Anita Yadav went to meet a
top Agra police official with her prized possessions- two gold and one
bronze medal won at the November athletics championships in Malaysia- she
could scarcely imagine what lay in store.
A 'princely' Rs.400
had been sanctioned as her reward by the police, says a bitter Anita. This
was the response to her application informing the police department of the
laurels she had won.
"No compliments,
bouquets or encouraging words from any quarters. Even the media took no
notice of my achievements," Anita told Agratoday.in in an
interview. "Cricketers would have been honored and recognized by everyone
but athletes like us are cold shouldered."
Anita's kitty of
medals weighs several kilograms, having won them at state, national and
international meets at regular intervals. But the cold indifference and
lack of encouragement from people in general and her own department in
particular has begun to hurt.
"When I returned
after 15 days of hard grueling competitions at the international level in
Malaysia and applied for three days' leave, my boss said you have already
had such a long outing and rest. Get back to work.
"With this kind of
attitude how can sports flourish here?" Anita wonders.
At the Malaysian
International Open Masters Athletics Championship held at Ipoh November 7
and 8, she was given the best woman athlete award.
She touched 5 m 40
cm in long jump, winning gold. She clinched gold in javelin throw and a
bronze in the Medley relay race. She was the lone representative from
Uttar Pradesh.
"At 35 plus, I had
to compete with a 23-year-old girl," she said.
As a constable
attached to the Sadar police station in Agra, she finds it hard to combine
her duties with sports.
"But I manage
because my husband, Shanti Swarup, who is also in the police, takes care
of my 11-year-old daughter and six-year-old son. He has never let me feel
burdened with domestic chores and has been a great source of
encouragement.
"I come from a very
conservative background in Etawah and when I go to my in-laws, I still
have to hide my face behind a veil despite my long international exposure.
"Even with 80 odd
medals I have no future in sports. They give me nothing extra, no
facilities, no allowances. My own salary is spent on my diet. I eat 85
almonds daily, two litres of milk and a very rich vegetarian diet of dal
roti, plus lots of desi ghee and at least five glasses of fruit juice.
"I could win medals
at Malaysia because I am fit and practice regularly, come what may."
A post graduate in
sociology from Jeevaji University, Gwalior, Anita is totally devoted to
sports and has won medals not only in athletics but also judo, table
tennis, weight-lifting.
She keeps a low
profile. "At the international meets I stay alone, don't mix around with
people, keep a low profile and concentrate on my work because I am a
fitness freak," she says.
In fact, the poor
efficiency and performance levels of the police she attributes to lack of
interest in sports.
"Speaking for myself
and my family, let me put it in bold letters: we do not accept a single
penny from corrupt sources or as bribery. The whole department knows that.
You know how difficult it is to stay away from the corrupting influences
of the system you are part of, but I am proud of this fact," Anita said.
"I have won all
the shields and honors in police games for Agra and Uttar Pradesh in the
past 12 years. But no one is proud of me. I feel so frustrated and feel
like giving up because I cannot give anything to my family.