India has a bittersweet relationship with the All England Open, on one hand, it has given the country moments of ecstasy on the other moments of loss and agony. This thread is about one such moment of agony where events in court succumbed to the events in real life. 1/n
India held its breath on March 21st as the country’s new Badminton sensation Lakshya Sen lined up against the world No 1 Viktor Axelsen in the All England Open final. The 20-year-old from Almora, Uttarakhand fought hard but ultimately had to settle for second place. 2/n
It wasn't the first time an Indian had lost in the finals of the All England Open, the country's history with the tournament dates back long before Padukone's and Gopichand's time. 3/n
In 1947, India was on the cusp of Freedom and Europe reeling from the effects of the second world war. The atmosphere was both of despair and hope. In this midst, Britain decided to hold the All England Badminton Championship, the first since 1939. 4/n
India was given a chance to send two players to the tournament, and they sent their very best Prakash Nath and Devinder Mohan. The duo were boy-hood friends, it was expected that they would meet in the finals and fight for the championship. 5/n
The All-England Authorities had other ideas. Since there was no seeding, they pitted Nath and Mohan against each other in the quarterfinal itself after the duo managed to ease through in the first few rounds. 6/n
What followed was quite remarkable. Instead of playing a grueling match against each other, the duo tossed a coin. Their sole concern was that an Indian should win, no matter who it was. 7/n
Luck favoured Nath and he moved on. Britain’s media was in shock and made a huge fuss about the matter, but Nath and Devinder didn’t think much of it. Nath made light work of an Englishman in the semis and romped into the final against the Dane Conny Jepsen. 8/n
However, on the morning of the match, Nath was shocked to read the headlines, 'Lahore in flames'. Riots had broken out in his hometown, the areas around his house had been destroyed by mobs, and many people had been killed. 9/n
Nath was devastated, his thoughts going back to his family and friends, were they safe? The match, which was supposed to be a defining moment for him and his country, became an afterthought. Nath lost to Jepsen, 15-7, 15-11. 10/n
Upon returning Nath found that his home had been burned down, though his family was safe. The atmosphere had become very hostile, he would later move to Bombay with his family after partition. 11/n
“I almost lost my life on several occasions during those dreadful days, and they gave me nightmares for years thereafter” Nath said in an interview years later. He would never play badminton professionally again. 12/n
Though Nath’s name as the first Indian to play in an All England final cannot be erased from the record books, the tragedy of his career has often veered out of memory. 13/n
As the cricket crazy nation heads into another cricket season, we look back at one of the first ladies of Indian cricket. The daughter of a legend and a star in her own right. A thread on the indomitable and multitalented Chandra Nayudu. 1/n
Chandra was the youngest of the three daughters of the legendary Col C.K. Nayudu from his first wife. Her love and adulation for the game must have started at an early age seeing her father, the country's test first captain play and preach the game. 2/n
Nayudu hailed from Indore, one of the largest cities in Central India and home to the princely Holkar dynasty. The city also has strong affiliations towards the game of cricket. 3/n
It was no less than a spy thriller when a fearless 22-year-old Usha Mehta from Surat ran an underground radio station to fight the British colonial forces. On her birthday, a thread on India’s bravest radio jockey, fondly known as Radio-Ben, and her secret Congress Radio. 1/n
Circa 1942 when all the prominent media were under constant British surveillance, a certain Usha Mehta emerged. She grew up highly influenced by Gandhi and was only eight when she joined the protest against the Simon commission. 2/n
1942 was a terrible time for the Indian press, as the prominent editors were forced to suppress all news on Congress activities to isolate the mass from the momentum of the freedom movement. 3/n
On 22nd March 1895, Auguste and Louis Lumière, two brothers invited 10 people to the National Industry Encouragement Society in Paris and showcased “La Sortie des ouvriers de l'usine Lumière”, the first motion-picture for mass, that forever changed the course of visual art. 🧵1/n
At 17, Louis came up with an ingenious idea of developing a highly sensitive photographic plate which immediately earned such commercial success that they had to build a factory for manufacturing. The quest for further innovation had just started. 2/n
In 1894, the Lumière Brothers deduced the first prototype of the Cinématographe, an advancement to the Kinetoscope. The machine was a combination of a camera, a printer and a projector which would be able to take and project moving pictures. 3/n
Today we reopen the 'murder by germs' file to recount how the Bubonic Plague found its way to Calcutta and murdered a Bengali Zamindar. Yes, you heard it right – murdered! A thread about the sensational case that shocked the world (1/n)
On a winter’s evening in 1933, Amarendra Chandra Pandey, the wealthy scion of a Bengali Zamindar family from Pakur (in present day Jharkhand), along with his compatriots, was walking down an usually busy Howrah station platform in Calcutta (2/n)
Amarendra was supposed to get on a train to Pakur, but before he could do so, a mysterious-looking person bumped into him. Suddenly, Amarendra felt a sharp pin prick (3/n)
On #WorldPoetryDay, we bring you the tale of how a close personal loss on the battlefield of World War I inspired one of the most iconic war poems of all time - a thread (1/n)
On August 4, 1914, when Britain declared war on Imperial Germany, John McCrae, a 41-year old Canadian physician and amateur poet was on a ship to the British Isles, looking forward to a welcome vacation (2/n)
Destiny had other plans though. A veteran of the Boer War, McCrae volunteered to join the Royal Canada Expeditionary Force as a medical officer and gunner. He was part of the 1st Brigade, Canadian Field Artillery and was part of the 2nd Battle of Ypres (3/n)
What if we tell you there was a rural community of oral storytellers who was banned by both the British Raj and the Nizam of Hyderabad because they posed a significant threat to imperialism and feudalism? A thread (1/n)
Burrakatha was an oral storytelling technique in the Jangam Katha tradition, performed in villages of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. The troupe mostly consisted of the main performer(kathakadu) and two others - hasyaka(joker) and rajakiya(politician) (2/n)
They would perform stories on either Hindu mythology (Jangam Katha) or contemporary social issues through dance, songs, poems, jokes, dramas or monologues. It used to be an all-night session of storytelling to entertain a village (3/n)