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Tokyo

Author:  Pooja Bhattacharjee

The recently concluded Tokyo Olympics gave people from all over the world a reason to celebrate. Considering the highly anxious environment at the Olympic village as well as the galloping threat of COVID – 19, the women athletes gave a stunning performance. The International Olympic Committee branded the 2020 edition as ‘the first ever gender-balanced Olympic Games in history’ with 49% of the 11,656 athletes being female. This is an amazing feat, considering that women were barred from participating in the Olympics when it first began. It shows not only the hard work that women athletes put in, but also the dedication and sacrifice of all the women who paved the way for them.

Indian athletes proved their mettle by giving exemplary performances at the games and showed that there is nothing that can affect their hard work and resilience. Out of the 127 athletes sent to the Tokyo Olympics by India, 56 athletes were women. India’s total medal tally at the Olympics stood at 7, which made history as being the highest ever India won in a single edition. Out of 7 medals, 3 were won by women. Mirabai Chanu won the Silver Medal in Weight Lifting (Women’s 49kg) and opened the books for Indian athletes for this edition. PV Sindhu bagged a Bronze Medal in Women’s Single Badminton and Lovlina Borgohain won India a Bronze Medal in Women’s Welterweight Boxing. 

Indian Women’s Hockey team may not have won a medal at the Olympics but they scripted history at the games by giving their best-ever Olympic performance in Tokyo. Aditi Ashok gave an unbelievably amazing performance and finished 4th in the Women’s Golf final at Tokyo 2020. Ms. CA Bhavani Devi made history by being the first fencer to represent India at the Olympics. This number can be increased if more women, especially women from small towns and villages have access to the sport facilities. 

Internationally too, women dominated the games. The U.S. women finished the Games with 66 medals, followed by China. The U.S women’s basketball team claimed its seventh consecutive gold, while the water polo team won its third gold in a row and the volleyball team won its first gold. Allyson Felix in her fifth Olympics claimed bronze in the 400 meters and gold in the 4×400 relay, giving her the 10th and 11th Olympic medals of her career. Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz became the first Philippine athlete to win an Olympic gold medal. Japan’s women’s basketball team won its first silver medal. Gymnasts from the Russian Olympic Committee won gold in the team event for the first time since 1992.

It is true that not all women athletes who participated in the Tokyo Olympics left with a medal. But all of them left a legacy of hardwork and strength, of sacrifice and overcoming the struggles and breaking the patriarchy which existed in this field to a great extent along with inspiring a generation of young girls to take interest in sports.  

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Ashmi Sheth

Manipur’s Mirabai Chanu tweets, “Finally, its a dream come true for me,” as she wins India’s first silver medal at Tokyo Olympics 2020 in the women’s 49-kg weightlifting category on Saturday. Mirabai lifted a total of 202kg (87kg + 110kg) to finish second to China’s Hou Zhihui, who won the gold with an Olympic record total of 210kg. 

Mirabai’s journey in the sport was not a planned one. As a child, Mirabai would go to the jungle to pick firewood, which the family needed to cook food. Her brother recalls how Mirabai showed strength even as a small child by carrying more wood than anyone else. At the age of 12, she had gone to the Khuman Lampak Stadium in Imphal to get herself enrolled in archery. When she found the archery centre closed, she stepped into the nearby weightlifting arena to enquire about archery. It was then that the weights and weightlifting apparatus attracted her attention and she got hooked to the sport for life. Mirabai strived hard at that young age to adjust her training to her school schedule. She had to change the bus twice from her village to traverse a distance of about 20 km to reach the training centre every day at 6am. 

Mirabai’s first breakthrough was in 2014, when she won silver at the Glasgow Commonwealth Games in the 48kg category. After a heart-breaking performance at Rio Olympics 2016 and recovering from multiple injuries, Mirabai’s win at the Tokyo 2020 is an example of what resilience, hardwork and persistent determination can do. It seems that the setback in 2016 Olympics only thrust Mirabai forward. She won a gold medal at the World Weightlifting Championships in 2017 and at the Commonwealth Games in Australia a year later. In 2018, Mirabai Chanu was honoured with the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Padma Shri. In April 2021, she set a world record in clean & jerk at the Asian Weightlifting Championships held in Tashkent.

“Mirabai comes from a middle-class family and had to struggle a lot to pursue weightlifting,” says N Kunjarani Devi, the most celebrated Indian veteran weightlifter, who hails from the same State.  “Her parents and family supported her and she also took care of them once she got a job with the Railways. She also got cash awards for winning medals at the Commonwealth and Asian Games,” she added. 

A number of sports celebrities, ministers, and fans took to Twitter and congratulated Mirabai on her feat. In addition to the pride, love, and praise, Mirabai would be awarded a sum of Rs. 40 lakh on winning the silver medal, as announced by the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) yesterday. Most of all, the name “Mirabai Chanu” will be marked in history and she will be remembered as an Olympic medallist forever, inspiring women for years to come.

What will be next on Mirabai’s mind? Will she be preparing for gold at the next Olympics or will she focus on the next Asian or Commonwealth games? While she decides, Indian Twitterati have already started planning on her biopic! 

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