Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
    Monday, September 15
    Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn RSS
    Nalin Mehta
    • Home
    • The New BJP
    • Books
    • Columns
      • Politics & Current Affairs
      • Sports
      • Public Policy
    • Videos
    • Research Articles
    • In The Media
    • About
    Nalin Mehta
    You are at:Home » Blog » A brief history of India’s Olympic movement
    In The Media

    A brief history of India’s Olympic movement

    Nalin MehtaBy Nalin MehtaNovember 19, 2013Updated:December 25, 2021No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Olympics: The India Story Boria Majumdar and Nalin Mehta HarperCollins 480 pages Rs 695

    There is perhaps no better time to read a book on the Olympics than when the Olympics are around. A nation that has been a minnow in the Olympic arena is not expected to have a great Olympic tradition in its 112-year history. But Boria Majumdar, noted historian and scholar, and fellow academic Nalin Mehta, have shown that there is a lot more to Indian sport than just cricket. Or rather, those hockey golds.

    A well-researched effort, the book brings out some astounding details of Indian sports, its origin, the politics, passion and sacrifices. As the authors write, “The Indian Olympic story is also a story of Indian politics, of power equation, regionalism, and the failed commercialism of Olympic sports vis-à-vis cricket.”

    But they establish that cricket never played much of a role in the country’s freedom struggle. Hockey did. “It was in Indian hockey, and in the Olympic Games, that the nationalist aspirations of colonial India found full expression,” they write. Indians went to participate in the Olympics on equal terms with the British, at a time when the colony was not even invited to the first British Empire Games (1930), which went on to be called the Commonwealth Games.

    The book claims that Olympism came to India as part of the process of globalisation, “decades before the term itself became fashionable” and give credit to Sir Dorab Tata for starting the Olympic movement in the country. The Tata scion sent three runners to the Antwerp Games in 1920 at his expense, to record India’s first Olympic participation. The book, however, doesn’t provide the names of India’s first ever batch of Olympians.

    The early days of Indian Olympism witnessed a fierce power struggle, with many groups trying to gain control of the reins of the Indian Olympic Association, the regional infighting being as old as the Olympic movement in the country itself.

    There is an interesting story about a man called Sohrab H Bhoot of Bombay who formed the National Cyclists Federation of India, of which he went on to become not just president, but chairman, secretary and treasurer at the same time. He was known to pocket the gifts meant for the cyclists. Not surprisingly, he was once beaten up by aggrieved cyclists at one tournament. The chapter on the 1936 Berlin Olympics describes in detail Dhyan Chand and his hockey team’s journey to Germany and their defence of the gold in adverse conditions. When the team left Mumbai, there was no one to give them a send-off and when the team returned with the gold, it was same story. However, the Germans gave them a five-star treatment.

    Mujumdar, also a cricket historian, tries to spice up the reading with cricketing anecdotes, but one need not read Olympic history to read about cricketing trivia. In all, this is a well-documented reference book. You may not complete it in one sitting, but you do want to keep going back. especially when the Olympics are on.

    Source : https://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/books-and-more-a-brief-history-of-india-s-olympic-movement-1182411

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleHeadlines Today appoints Nalin Mehta as Managing Editor
    Next Article Report of the Expert Committee on Prasar Bharti, 2014
    Nalin Mehta
    • Website
    • Twitter

    Nalin Mehta is Managing Editor, Moneycontrol, Chief AI Officer - Editorial Operations, Network18 and Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He is an award-winning Indian journalist, political scientist and author who has held senior leadership positions in major media companies and educational institutions; served as an international civil servant with the UN and the Global Fund in Geneva, Switzerland; taught and held research positions at universities and institutions in Australia (La Trobe University, ANU), Singapore (NUS), Switzerland (International Olympic Museum) and India (Shiv Nadar University, IIM Bangalore). Most recently, he has been Dean and Professor at School of Modern Media, UPES University. He has previously been Group Consulting Editor, Network18; Executive Editor, The Times of India-Online, Managing Editor, India Today (TV channel) and Consulting Editor, The Times of India. Mehta is the author of several best-selling and critically acclaimed books, including The New BJP: Modi and the Making of the World’s Largest Political Party (hailed as a ‘seminal’ work, No. 1 on Amazon’s bestseller lists for 26 consecutive weeks in 2022, and republished worldwide in several languages); India’s Techade: Digital Revolution and Change in the World’s Largest Democracy, India on Television (Asian Publishing Award for Best Book on Asian Media, 2009), Behind a Billion Screens (Longlisted as Business Book of the Year, Tata Literature Live, 2015) and Dreams of a Billion (2022 Ekamra Sports Book of the Year Award, co-authored). His edited books include Gujarat Beyond Gandhi (co-editor), Television in India and The Changing Face of Cricket (co-editor). Mehta is a DFID-Commonwealth scholar with a Ph.D in Political Science from Trobe University, Melbourne; M.A. International Relations from University of East Anglia, UK; and B.A. Journalism (Honours) from University of Delhi.

    Related Posts

    Emergence of a powerful PM was a turning point in India’s digital revolution

    October 31, 2023

    Numbers don’t lie: India’s success on the digital fronts sketched in celebratory detail

    October 17, 2023

    Moneycontrol Decodes PM Modi’s Mega Exclusive Interview

    September 6, 2023

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Tags
    2002 riots Army Asian Games BJP BSP China Commonwealth Games communal violence Congress corruption Cricket defence Delhi diplomacy education Gujarat hockey Indian Army internal security international relations IPL Kashmir Mayawati media and politics military Modi Nalin Mehta Narendra Modi Nehru Olympics OROP Pakistan Parliament politics of sports Punjab Rahul Gandhi RBI Rio 2016 television terrorism The New BJP United States UP Uttar Pradesh West Bengal
    Archives
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    Don't Miss

    India eyes partnership with France’s Safran to power next-gen Tejas Mk2 jets

    Modi’s big middle class outreach, tax changes to put more money in pocket: 5 political takeaways from Union Budget

    When Atal Bihari Vajpayee considered dissolving BJP: Story of how a young party found its footing

    BJP reverses Lok Sabha dip, Brand Modi shines again: Five poll takeaways for national politics

    BJP juggernaut and national politics: Seven takeaways for 2024 elections

    Exit polls: Five takeaways for national politics on road to 2024

    About

    Nalin Mehta is Managing Editor, Moneycontrol, Chief AI Officer - Editorial Operations, Network18 and Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore. He is an award-winning Indian journalist, political scientist and author who has held senior leadership positions in major media companies and educational institutions; served as an international civil servant with the UN and the Global Fund in Geneva, Switzerland; taught and held research positions at universities and institutions in Australia (La Trobe University, ANU), Singapore (NUS), Switzerland (International Olympic Museum) and India (Shiv Nadar University, IIM Bangalore).

    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn RSS
    Recent Posts

    India eyes partnership with France’s Safran to power next-gen Tejas Mk2 jets

    August 23, 2025

    Modi’s big middle class outreach, tax changes to put more money in pocket: 5 political takeaways from Union Budget

    August 23, 2025

    When Atal Bihari Vajpayee considered dissolving BJP: Story of how a young party found its footing

    August 23, 2025
    Tweets by ‎@nalinmehta

    Tweets by nalinmehta

    Copyright © 2025
    • Home
    • The New BJP
    • Books
    • Columns
      • Politics & Current Affairs
      • Sports
      • Public Policy
    • Videos
    • Research Articles
    • In The Media
    • About

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.