BIG NEWS BUT WHO CARES ?

She says she remembered the days she was slapped and made to sweep floors
when she went to the Panchayat Office get birth certificates for her
passport. “That is the pain of being a tribal girl in India. I do not remember the
slap, I remember the Cup,” says Rinky.
?Few days back, as a billion plus India slept, a handful of tribal girls
proudly held aloft a trophy they won in their maiden entry in a football
tournament in far-flung Spain.

It was the night of July 13. Hundreds of fire crackers lit the skies as the
girls screamed Vande Mataram – their battle cry – for being placed third in
the Gasteiz Cup, the world’s best testing ground for teenager football in
Victoria Gastiez, also popular as Europe’s Green Capital.

They were the same girls who were slapped, kicked and made to sweep floors
by arrogant bureaucrats in Jharkhand when the girls asked for birth
certificates, a necessity to apply for passports.

But they eventually managed their passports, thanks to a strapping American,
Franz Gastler, who pushed the cases of the girls with mandarins of the
Ministry of External Affairs in the Indian Capital. He was a lone ranger in his efforts.

The girls were lovingly titled the Supergoats by the organizers in Spain the
moment they saw the girls playing barefoot in practice matches on arrival.
Why?
The girls had limited football gear and could not take the risk of tampering
with it before the tournament. They were overawed by international teams in
the first tournament, the Donosti Cup, but came to their own in the second
tournament.

Offering a consolation prize for the third team – winner of a match between
losing semi-finalists – was a mere formality for the organizers.

But for the girls, it was a giant leap into global soccer from their
impoverished Rukka village near Ranchi, considered one of the world’s
epicenters of child marriage and human trafficking.

As soon as the announcement was made for the prize distribution ceremony,
the girls rushed into their dressing room and returned, some barefoot,
wearing red-bordered white saris, their traditional festive dress. Many had
their plastic flowers in their hairs.

And when they huddled together after the mandatory photo session, some wept
inconsolably because they had almost given up their hopes to participate in
this tournament. “They were over the moon. It was their night,” said Gastler of the girls, who subsist on less than a dollar a day.

For a country low on soccer, this was – arguably – good news for the
mandarins of the game. But no one cared. All India Football Federation
(AIFF) president Praful Patel was not aware of the girls’ superlative
achievement, nor was the country’s new sports minister Jitendra Singh.

“We could not sleep that night (July 13),” says Rinky Kumari, 13, captain,
Supergoats. Once she bunked her school helped her mother do household
chores. Today, thanks to football, everyone knows her name in the village.

She says she remembered the days she was slapped and made to sweep floors
when she went to the Panchayat Office get birth certificates for her
passport. “That is the pain of being a tribal girl in India. I do not remember the
slap, I remember the Cup,” says Rinky.
For her, and her teammates, it means a lot.