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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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724 Wrestling and Grappling: India<br />

gives his chelas (disciples) instructions on training, self-discipline, technique,<br />

and overall development. However, a guru is more than a teacher;<br />

he is the object of his disciples’ absolute devotion and service, and this devotion<br />

and service are understood as an integral feature of training. In<br />

many respects, the guru is revered as “greater than God” by his disciples,<br />

and thus the regimen of training in the gymnasium takes on the aura of ritual<br />

practice. Young wrestlers must prostrate themselves at their guru’s feet,<br />

and on Gurupuja (devotion to the guru [master teacher]) must formalize<br />

their obeisance by transforming the guru into God. In this sense the guru’s<br />

persona is much closer to that of an ascetic adept intent on the embodiment<br />

of truth than to that of a coach. However, Guru Hanuman cast himself,<br />

and was cast by the central government of India, in the role of an Olympic<br />

coach, and many if not most other ustads in contemporary gymnasiums<br />

struggle with the conflicting demands of athletics and asceticism, of selfdiscipline<br />

as an end in itself and training for competition.<br />

Although there were senior wrestlers in the stables of many rajas and<br />

maharajas who functioned, undoubtedly, as teachers, and there were men<br />

who built and defined urban gymnasiums around themselves and their sense<br />

of national purpose, the status of a guru, as such, has an ambiguous history.<br />

Little or no mention is made in the medieval literature and in the history of<br />

competitive wrestling of who won against whom. Much more is made of individual<br />

prowess than of a tradition of training defined by a specific master<br />

of the art. In short, the ideal of the guru-chela relationship seems to be much<br />

more important than the practice as such. More significantly, the ideal is a<br />

function of the way in which the priorities of modern wrestling and modern<br />

coaching require that for Indian wrestling to be anything other than just<br />

wrestling in India, it requires the form of difference. Wrestlers in contemporary<br />

India are quite clear on this point. While categorically defining themselves<br />

as disciples of a master, they say it would be foolish not to avail themselves<br />

of a broad range of expertise. As the range of expertise expands to<br />

include training camps run by coaches from Russia and Canada, the need<br />

for there to be gurus may increase or decrease, depending on the degree to<br />

which wrestlers define themselves as pahalwans or Olympic hopefuls.<br />

<strong>The</strong> designation pahalwan refers to a man who embodies the ideals<br />

and practices of wrestling. A pahalwan is a wrestler, but a wrestler who is<br />

oriented in two directions at once. As a wrestler in India competing with<br />

other wrestlers for the chance to participate in the Asian Games or the<br />

Olympics, he is drawn, through the structure of sports hostels and recruiting<br />

camps, toward the mats of the National Institute of Sports. As an Indian<br />

wrestler he is grounded in the akhara, as the akhara defines a cultural<br />

space that is modern by way of its location in the colonial and postcolonial<br />

history of India.

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