The Borneo Post

India hosts first ‘yoga on a pole’ world championsh­ips

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MUMBAI: Wearing only underpants, Pavel Kalina twists his body up a wooden pole before performing a handstand at the top in the first world championsh­ips of an ancient Indian sport.

The 55-year- old from the Czech Republic practises Mallakhamb, a gymnastics-like discipline that originated in western India in the 12th century and is often described as “yoga on a pole”.

“I do it because I’m a crazy man,” Kalina tells AFP, struggling to catch his breath after two minutes performing poses on the pillar, which is covered in castor oil to stop friction burns.

“To be honest it is like torture but I have to do it because I need to spend my energy,” adds the former gymnast who took up Mallakhamb ten years ago.

Kalina was among some 100 competitor­s from 15 different countries taking part in the Mallakhamb World Championsh­ips in Mumbai over the weekend.

The sport, first mentioned in Indian texts in 1135, is popular in western Maharashtr­a state – of which Mumbai is the capital – but is little known outside India.

“Malla means wrestler and khamb means pole,” explains Uday Deshpande, the organiser of the event and India’s most renowned Mallakhamb practition­er.

“The pole is eight and a half feet (2.6 metres) in height. It is smooth, well polished and tapered at the top. Different acrobatic exercises and yogic postures are performed on it. It is there in the absence of your partner and you are wrestling against it,” he adds.

On day one of the event – held in Mumbai’s Shivaji Park – men, mostly in swimming trunks, and women, mostly in leotards, wowed a crowd of several hundred with gravity defying moves.

Onlookers clapped and cheered as a competitor from Spain stretched out on his front like Superman on the top of the pole, which had a circumfere­nce of just 35 centimetre­s (14 inches).

A participan­t from England gave a Usain Bolt-like salute from the summit while Kalina sat in a meditative position with the palms of his hands facing skywards.

Faezeh Jalali, wearing a headscarf, represente­d Iran in the rope category which saw participan­ts perform stunts up and down a rope that hung 15 feet in the air.

“You feel a real achievemen­t and you build strength and flexibilit­y. It’s amazing what the human body can do,” Jalali, 39, told AFP.

Competitor­s from France, Germany, Malaysia and Vietnam also took part.

Deshpande, 65, says Mallakhamb helps people mentally as well.

“When you perform yoga on the ground you get lots of benefits – meditation, breathing, concentrat­ion.

“When you perform yoga at eight feet high you get the same benefits but you also develop your confidence, your courage,” he tells AFP. — AFP

 ??  ?? An Indian gymnast performs at the Mallakhamb World Championsh­ips in Mumbai. Some 100 competitor­s from 15 different countries take part in the Mallakhamb World Championsh­ips in India’s financial capital of Mumbai. — AFP photo
An Indian gymnast performs at the Mallakhamb World Championsh­ips in Mumbai. Some 100 competitor­s from 15 different countries take part in the Mallakhamb World Championsh­ips in India’s financial capital of Mumbai. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Tiger Woods hits a tee shot on the 12th hole during the third round of the Genesis Open at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. — AFP photo
Tiger Woods hits a tee shot on the 12th hole during the third round of the Genesis Open at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. — AFP photo

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