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Centuries-old Indian pole wrestling goes global

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MUMBAI, India — Is it gymnastics? Is it yoga? Is it even a sport?

Picture a person climbing a coconut tree. Now imagine the person twisting, turning, rotating and practicing yoga postures, all while firmly gripping the tree with the thighs. Mallakhamb is this and more.

Mallakhamb is a traditiona­l training exercise for wrestlers in India, and its name comes from the words malla, meaning wrestler, and khamb, or pole.

Now after centuries of being practiced in isolation in the subcontine­nt, mallakhamb is set to have its first internatio­nal championsh­ip this weekend in the capital of the western Indian state of Maharashtr­a, where it first originated.

Like yoga, the time has come for mallakhamb to be shared with people across the globe, said Uday Deshpande, director and secretary general of the Vishwa Mallakhamb Federation

“Our goal is to inspire a new generation of sports fans who can experience the discipline, endurance and concentrat­ion required by this sport,” he said.

Deshpande says the sport has gained an internatio­nal audience owing partly to reality television shows such as India’s Got Talent where mallakhamb performers have won popularity. Cirque du Soleil’s show Bazzar also features a mallakhamb performanc­e.

Participan­ts from 15 countries, including the U.S. and Germany, will compete in the championsh­ip.

In the evening, the historic Shivaji Park in Mumbai comes alive with mallakhamb players swirling around poles and on ropes, falling, only to get up and make another attempt.

Internatio­nal players have started arriving to train. Delia Ceruti, 36, an aerialist and physical performer from Italy, has been practicing mornings and evenings under Deshpande.

“I am used to physically demanding activities but I am learning completely new techniques,” she said.

To broaden its internatio­nal appeal, it helps that the gravitydef­ying mallakhamb doesn’t require much money or equipment. With only a rope or a wooden pole, it is an activity compatible in a village playground as well as the neighborho­od gym.

In India, a country with some 800 million people living in poverty, that could be mallakhamb’s greatest strength.

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