“Kai Pahalwan”(What say! Pahalwan) this was a common form of greeting
young lads from Kolhapur in the days gone by. Wrestlers are called pahalwan in most
Indian languages. As a young boy I too had my tryst with the sport of Kushti or
wrestling at the local Talim ( Akhada) and swelled with pride when called
Pahalwan. The talims used to be full strength early in the morning with the sounds
of chest thumping and the aroma of sweat filling the air. Youngsters took pride
in building their bodies and playing the sport. It was very common practice in those days that young boys from Haryana & Punjab came
to Kolhapur in the Talims to build their bodies and learn the nuances of
wrestling, many of them could be seen competing at the local wrestling matches
called ‘Dangals’. Though the number of such enthusiasts has reduced it is still
not uncommon to find young lads from North doing their ‘Dand Baithaks’ (squats
& pushups) in the talims of Kolhapur.
Genesis of Kushti was rooted in 1894 during
Chatrapati Shahu Maharaj’s rule when he built hundreds
of talims throughout Kolhapur and invited wrestlers from all over pre-partition
India, several of them from the part of Punjab that now lies in Pakistan.
Kolhapur was also the alma mater of the legendary Gama pehelwan, born Ghulam
Muhammad in 1878, who remained undefeated in a career spanning over 50 years,
his story known to every pehelwan. The saga of Kushti continued even after the
death of Shahu Maharaj who had built the Khasbag Maidan, a stadium for
witnessing the dangals or fights. This place can comfortably accommodate a
large crowd with a gallery for the royals & has its inspiration in the colosseum
of Rome. Kolhapur has been the venue for a number of reputed matches including
that of the defeat of then famous Stanislaus Zbyszko the two time world champion from Poland to
Rahim Baksh from Lahore, as also the
Hind Kesari championship in 2012. But the one remembered till date by all
Kolhapuris is the loss of Satpal Maharaj of Delhi akhada to Yuvraj Patil of
Kolhapur.
Kolhapur boasts of the first Indian
Olympic medal in individual sport by KD
Jadhav, when he won the bronze in 1952 at Helsinki. Such was the love for
this sport in Kolhapur that Barrister Balasaheb Khardekar, principal of the
Rajaram College, where Jadhav studied, mortgaged his home for Rs 7,000 to send
his former student to the Olympics while other sports lovers also added to the
funds. On his return he was welcomed to a big fanfare including elephants. Later came many famous wrestlers from the
talims of Kolhapur that include Hind Kesari,
Birajdar & Dadu Chougule. But of late there has been no significant
contribution to the list of wrestlers of repute, so much so, that even the Pro
Wrestling League doesn’t have any wrestler from Kolhapur.
Where
did Kolhapur lose it all then? Despite the love for the sport and despite the
pride with which the Kolhapuri once thumped his chest on being called a
Pahalwan the day has come when no longer Kolhapur can bask in in its old glory
of wrestling. Could it be the fact that the Kolhapuri is too stuck to his
traditional Kushti in the talims on the ground rather than on the mats. Or due
to the lack of Government support in promoting the Greeco Roman & Freestyle
forms of wrestling and the paucity of exposure to the pahalwans of Kolhapur.
Lack of style quotient attached to the sport has also been a reason till the
recent past; movies like’ Dangal’ & ‘Sultan’ have surely contributed to the
resurgence of interest in the sport. Only
time will tell, whether, the Kolhapuri Pahalwan will rise again.

In the meantime may good sense prevail and
the Pahalwans accept change & take to the popular forms of wrestling on the
mat and may Kolhapur keep producing international sportspersons like Shailaja
Salonke, Tejaswani Sawant, Rahi Sarnobat & Veerdhawal Khade. A day will
surely come when the Kirti Satmbh of KD Jadhav at the famous Bhavani Mandap,
the central Pavilion of old palace at Kolhapur, will have to add space to honor
other international sportspersons from Kolhapur.
4 comments:
Well written!
Where have all the pahalwans gone ?
Where did Kolhapur lose it all then?
Both questions are worth thinking over.
Very nice👌🏻. My grandfather (fathers uncle was a pahlwan practising in motibaug & another was soccer player for team" Jaibhavani " for kolhapur state(shahu maharaj team)
Ajit Salokhe
True n man too man sports really needs courage#potential and speed game. And happy to read the above story,it really helps to understand the,what the pahlwan is capable off.hatsoff Kolhapur
Post a Comment