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‘Gatka’ player with 30% vision shows way

Jaskaran Singh, who trains Armaandeep, said: “It becomes a little difficult for him to play in the dark, as it happened during Khelo India Youth Games. Good performance is based on great judgement and Armaandeep has this talent. I have taught him some techniques, with which he is able to perform with ease.”

Jalandhar: A national gold medallist with 30 per cent of vision from Bhuju Khurd village in Bathinda district, Armaandeep Singh, a Class XII student, was part of a 22-member “gatka” team that performed in front of Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann during the inaugural ceremony of “Khedan Vatan Punjab Dean” on Monday, August 29, a report in The Tribune. Chandigarh, says’

Armandeep has a visual disability of 70 per cent. Fighting odds, he has been practising “gatka” for five years. 

The contingent also included eight girls, most of whom were from humble background. Among them were Kamalpreet Kaur and Hina, both 17. Kamalpreet’s father is a daily-wager, while Hina’s mother is a safai karamchari at a private school.

Kamalpreet said, “My neighbours mocked my father for allowing me to play. They would always say it was wrong for girls to perform outdoor activities. Now when I am winning medals, everyone asks him about me.”

Jaskaran Singh, who trains Armaandeep, said: “It becomes a little difficult for him to play in the dark, as it happened during Khelo India Youth Games. Good performance is based on great judgement and Armaandeep has this talent. I have taught him some techniques, with which he is able to perform with ease.”

Gatka, a simulated form of sword-play practiced as a martial art and sport, has its origin going back to 15th century. Since then it has been taught and handed down in an unbroken lineage by the Sikh gurus. It is associated primarily with the Sikhs of the Punjab and other related ethnic groups, such as Hindkowans 

The wooden Gatka ‘sword’ is usually 3–3.5 feet (91–107 cm) long, with a thickness of around 12 inch (13 mm). It comes with a fitted leather hilt, 6–7 inches (15–18 cm) and is often decorated with Punjabi-style multi-coloured threads.

Used as an accessory is a circular leather shield known as phari, measuring 9 by 9 inches (23 cm × 23 cm).

Gatka was used mainly by the British Indian Army in the 1860s as practice for hand-to-hand combat. 

Along with three other indigenous games, namely KalaripayattuThang-Ta and Mallakhamba, Gatka has gained recognition by the government of India as a traditional sport. 

 

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