Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Movie to depict legacy of hockey village Sansarpur

- Saurabh Duggal

CHANDIGARH:Sansarpur, a village in Punjab’s Jalandhar, has long been known for its hockey legacy, with 15 Olympic medals won by its natives. And it was high that silver screen took note. Punjabi movie ‘Khido Khundi’ — local dialect for ‘ball and hockey’ — to be released early next year will blend non-fiction and fiction to put Sansarpur on the map of current memory.

The movie travels back to the golden period of Indian hockey in which Punjab, particular­ly Sansarpur, had a major contributi­on. Plus, it covers the present scenario in which Sansarpur has all but lost that sheen. Much of it is shot in the village, besides parts in London.

The fiction part is about two Punjabi NRI brothers settled in England who move back to their roots, to Sansarpur, where their father once used to be caretaker of the hockey field before migrating. With the aim to revive the game and help of village youth, they form a team and challenge an English club in a series.

“We will be showing the glorious past of Sansarpur’s hockey by using old clips of Olympics (1920 to 1968) and have also shown photograph­s of all 14 Olympians, including four representi­ng Kenya and one Canada, from the village. We did lot of research and took help of the Olympians,” producer-director Rohit Jugraj said after the poster launch on Friday.

Ranjit Bawa, singer-actor, is the male lead, while Mandy Takhar is the heroine. Manav Vij, who has acted in Bollywood films such as ‘Udta Punjab’ and ‘Naam Shabana’, is also in the cast along with Iranian model Naaz Norouzi, who is debuting.

Also at the launch was Col Balbir Singh (retired), who was part of the 1968 Olympics squad that won bronze. He told HT, “This was long overdue. For a decade now, we have been trying to highlight the glorious past of Sansarpur and introduce it to the new generation, but somehow we were unable to take it to a pan-India level. This movie is a good initiative and I hope it succeeds.” There were five players from the village in the 1968 Moscow Olympics squad alone, while another two with roots here were part of the Kenyan team.

 ??  ?? Poster of ‘Khido Khundi’, the movie that seeks to revive popular interest towards game and the village in Jalandhar.
Poster of ‘Khido Khundi’, the movie that seeks to revive popular interest towards game and the village in Jalandhar.

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