This year’s Asiad medallist sells tea at brothers’ stall to help family
Father Drives Auto, Mother Was House Help Until Recently
New Delhi:
The sepak takraw world championship in Bangkok is just a fortnight away and Asian Games bronze medallist Harish Kumar is busy serving—not on court but at his brother’s roadside tea stall in Delhi’s ‘Little Tibet’, Majnu ki Tila. Tea has been the 21-year-old’s ticket to sporting glory. For each one of his 15 medals, he and his family have passed countless steaming cups over the counter.
Five days after the Jakarta-Palembang Asian Games ended, Harish’s euphoric return home is a fading memory in the neighbourhood, but his celebrity is undimmed. On a wet Friday afternoon, his house in Majnu ka Tila’s narrow lanes is easily found. Being part of India’s first-ever sepak success at the Asian Games has made him a role model for young athletes here.
Harish’s success is all the more inspiring because of his family’s precarious financial situation. His father Mohan Lal drives a rented autorickshaw. His mother, Indira Devi, till recently worked as a household help to bring up Harish and his five siblings, two of whom are sightless. Two of his brothers, Naveen and Tarun, started the tea stall to increase the family’s income, and Harish not only helps them but also drives his father’s auto when he is not training at the Sports Authority of India centre in Bawana.
They are a gifted family, but have been unlucky twice. Harish’s eldest brother Pradeep was a talented cricketer who became a coach, but had to leave his job after injuring his right leg in a bike accident in 2011. Naveen showed promise as a sepak takraw player and was handpicked by coach Hemraj. He played at the international level, but was forced to quit after a ligament injury in 2013.
Inspired by Naveen, Harish had started playing sepak with a ball made of bicycle tubes, in 2011. Luckily for him, “Hemraj sir” took him under his wing.
“All credit must go to our coach Hemraj sir. He took me to IG Stadium and provided me shoes and kit. He also helped me get a monthly allowance from SAI. I represented India for the first time in 2013 at the World Championships in Bangkok and won a medal,” says Harish.
He has never looked back since, but the family’s finances sometimes cast a cloud over his future. The Asiad medal couldn’t have happened at a better time, as a cash award of Rs 5 lakh from the sports ministry will help in the treatment of his blind brother and sister, and also pay for his education. He has enrolled in Class XII at an open school in Chandigarh.
Father Drives Auto, Mother Was House Help Until Recently
New Delhi:
The sepak takraw world championship in Bangkok is just a fortnight away and Asian Games bronze medallist Harish Kumar is busy serving—not on court but at his brother’s roadside tea stall in Delhi’s ‘Little Tibet’, Majnu ki Tila. Tea has been the 21-year-old’s ticket to sporting glory. For each one of his 15 medals, he and his family have passed countless steaming cups over the counter.
Five days after the Jakarta-Palembang Asian Games ended, Harish’s euphoric return home is a fading memory in the neighbourhood, but his celebrity is undimmed. On a wet Friday afternoon, his house in Majnu ka Tila’s narrow lanes is easily found. Being part of India’s first-ever sepak success at the Asian Games has made him a role model for young athletes here.
Harish’s success is all the more inspiring because of his family’s precarious financial situation. His father Mohan Lal drives a rented autorickshaw. His mother, Indira Devi, till recently worked as a household help to bring up Harish and his five siblings, two of whom are sightless. Two of his brothers, Naveen and Tarun, started the tea stall to increase the family’s income, and Harish not only helps them but also drives his father’s auto when he is not training at the Sports Authority of India centre in Bawana.
They are a gifted family, but have been unlucky twice. Harish’s eldest brother Pradeep was a talented cricketer who became a coach, but had to leave his job after injuring his right leg in a bike accident in 2011. Naveen showed promise as a sepak takraw player and was handpicked by coach Hemraj. He played at the international level, but was forced to quit after a ligament injury in 2013.
Inspired by Naveen, Harish had started playing sepak with a ball made of bicycle tubes, in 2011. Luckily for him, “Hemraj sir” took him under his wing.
“All credit must go to our coach Hemraj sir. He took me to IG Stadium and provided me shoes and kit. He also helped me get a monthly allowance from SAI. I represented India for the first time in 2013 at the World Championships in Bangkok and won a medal,” says Harish.
He has never looked back since, but the family’s finances sometimes cast a cloud over his future. The Asiad medal couldn’t have happened at a better time, as a cash award of Rs 5 lakh from the sports ministry will help in the treatment of his blind brother and sister, and also pay for his education. He has enrolled in Class XII at an open school in Chandigarh.
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