DESIBUZZCanada
Events Listings
International Day Of Yoga To Be Virtually Celebrated Saturday At 4pm
CANCELLED: Coronavirus Fears Kills Surrey’s Vaisakhi Day Parade
ADVERTISE WITH US: DESIBUZZCanada Is The Most Read South Asian Publication Online
SURREY LIBRARIES: Get Technology Help At Surrey Libraries
WALLY OPPAL: Surrey Police Transition Update On Feb. 26
GONE ARE THE DAYS - Feature Documentary Trailer
Technology Help At Surrey Libraries
Birding Walks
Plea Poetry/short Story : Youth Contest
International Folk Dancing Drop-in Sessions
HOCKEY LEGEND DIES AT 95: Indo-Canadian Balbir Singh Sr. Was India’s Greatest Sportsperson
- May 24, 2020
Field hockey legend Balbir Singh Sr., who captained the 1956 Indian hockey team and was the coach of the 1975 World Cup winning team, died early Sunday morning India time after being hospitalized in Mohali, Punjab on May 8. “Balbir Singh is my hero, and I hope that this Indo-Canadian hockey legend becomes a hero to many more people,” local journalist Patrick told DESIBUZZCanada in march 2016 when we profiled his new book A Forgotten Legend: Balbir Singh Sr., Triple Olympic Gold & Modi’s New India. “He represents everything we look for in our superstar athletes, something that is missing a bit in today’s modern culture – he’s modest, humble and always looking to give his teammates all the credit. Those are values our kids need to emulate when they start playing the sports they love.” Balbir Singh Sr. won three Olympic gold medals for India and is arguably the world’s greatest field hockey player of all time. However, in writing the book, Blennerhassett asked why this distinguished Canadian’s (Singh had become a Canadian citizen and Vancouver resident) vast sporting achievements had become unknown across the globe?
By R. Paul Dhillon – Founder-Editor DESIBUZZCanada
VANCOUVER – Field hockey legend Balbir Singh Sr. , who captained the 1956 Indian hockey team and was the coach of the 1975 World Cup winning team, died early Sunday morning India time after being hospitalized in Mohali, Punjab on May 8.
Balbir Singh Sr., India’s most decorated Olympian, visited Vancouver in March 2016 to unveil a new book about his life, written by an Vancouver-based Canadian journalist Patrick Blennerhassett, at Simon Fraser University’s Surrey Campus.
The non-fiction work, A Forgotten Indo-Canadian Hockey Legend: Balbir Singh Sr., Triple Olympic Gold & Modi’s New India, celebrated this remarkable sporting hero and Singh’s fascinating story of resilience, redemption, and survival.
In 2014, former SFU student Blennerhassett traveled to Chandigarh, India to find Singh Sr. and document his amazing tale. What he found was a momentous life lost throughout the decades, and a country struggling with its own identity.
Balbir Singh Sr. won three Olympic gold medals for India and is arguably the world’s greatest field hockey player of all time. However, the Canadian citizen and Vancouver resident are unknown across the globe. Why is this?
“Balbir’s story is like no other,” Blennerhassett told DESIBUZZbc in an interview in 2016.
“When I heard it, I knew I had to go to India and meet him and tell his incredible tale. He has done so much for India and gotten so little in return, I hope with this book we can uncover him to a new Canadian audience. I hope people get a chance to read it and find out who he is, and why he hasn’t been given his due throughout the years,” he said
And when asked about his perspective on how west’s sports-Olympic legends are treated compared to legends of the east, especially in terms of his subject’s context, Blennerhassett, who has won a Jack Webster Fellowship Award, and have published two previous fiction novels, said Balbir Singh’s story is different and unique.
“North American sports culture is very focused on a few sports. But with Balbir’s story, it’s great to not only show an Olympic and Indian hero but an Indo-Canadian hockey legend as well. Balbir is my hero, and I hope that he becomes a hero to many more people,” Blennerhassett said.
“He represents everything we look for in our superstar athletes, something that is missing a bit in today’s modern culture - he’s modest, humble and always looking to give his teammates all the credit. Those are values our kids need to emulate when they start playing the sports they love.“