“As the biggest football festival begins it is time
to introspect what the FIFA World Cup
brings to the millions of football fans in the country. This show
is an attempt to revisit memories of one of the oldest sport in
the country. The language of football is one of the colonial
legacies whose lexicon is devoid of any contributions that the
country can be proud of. In fact the vocabulary is bereft of any
Indian flavour.
We have just indulged in passing the ball amongst
ourselves in our own half without making much progress even when
much of the opposition to our soccer advances have come from
within.
It is therefore time to move back into the locker room and take a
fresh look at the game that most of us love. Our own footballers
are a forgotten lot. When we join the world to celebrate the world
cup dreams, much of which would be played out on the television
and other media, we must open our eyes to other realities that are
immediate to ourselves.
Here is an invitation to an effort that in some way
would be able to make a beginning. This show is as much about art
as it is about a game and also about the art of football. When the
players from various nationalities join their fans in scoring
their own goals in the history of the sport using a new match ball
that has been specially created for the
World Cup we could also look at creating our own Jabulanis.
When we root for the likes of Julio Cesar
we could move backwards a bit and try to appreciate our own
Subratos. Subrato to Cesar can just be the starting point.
You are welcome for the kick off”. - Riyas Komu |