Hima Das’s Historic Gold Rejuvenates Her Assam Native Village

Hima Das’s Historic Gold Rejuvenates Her Assam Native Village

Not many in the country would have been familiar with Kandhulimari village in Dhing — a small town situated approximately 20 kilometres from Nagaon district headquarters, narrowed by the land-eating Brahmaputra — until 18-year-old sprinter, Hima Das scripted history by clinching a 400 metres gold at the IAAF World U-20 Championships at Tampere in Finland last week.
Back in my native Nagaon for a week’s break, with the monsoon at its peak, it was another lazy day when this correspondent woke up to the news of Hima’s golden feat even as the locals erupted in joy and all roads leading to Dhing were choked — after all, Hima became the second Assamese athlete after Bhogeswar Baruah to win an international gold medal.
Baruah had clinched the yellow metal in the men’s 800m event at the Bangkok Asian Games, way back in 1966 and had once lamented if he would live to see another Bhogeswar but felt glad that he was proved wrong.
“We have someone better,” the 77-year-old said when asked about Hima’s feat.
Somehow after battling the traffic for an hour or so, I managed to reach Kandhulimari, one of the five Assamese villages on the eastern edge of the mighty Brahmaputra where Hima was born to rice farmers Ranjit Das and Jonali Das.
The village, with a population of around 5,000, wore a festive look notwithstanding the showers from the heavens, with the locals playing the Dhol, Taal and Gogona (musical instruments mostly used during Bihu celebrations), and many offering prayers at the local ‘Naamghar’ (temple).
Hima’s old Assam-type house at No. 3, Kandhulimari village, was thronged by hundreds of locals even as the 18 members of the joint family were still to come to terms with the historic feat of the teenager the previous night — marred by a power cut which prevented them from savouring her moment of glory.
“Hima called up her mother at around 9 p.m. on Thursday night and said that her event would start in a couple of hours, we all were eager to watch it on television but then there was a four-hour power failure,” her aunt, Puspalata told IANS.

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