His formative years were nothing if not full of turbulence. From leaving his school to working as a daily-wage labourer, Dalip Singh Rana has done it all. He was often the subject of ridicule due to his extraordinary size.
However, a determined Dalip relentlessly pursued his goal of wrestling and such was his passion that he did what no Indian had done before: enter the internationally acclaimed WWE arena.
The Great Khali had a difficult time in school. His friends laughed at him, he could not understand what his teachers taught and on top of it, his parents could not even pay his fees.
"It was the summer of 1979; the monsoon was awaited and there wasn't any money left for the fees since the crops had dried out. Almost a month had passed since I moved to class II and the principal was accosting me on a daily basis for not paying the school fees.
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He then decided not to go to school again.
"My schooling ended forever and so did my education. My mind was inclined to work - to work for my family and to support my parents," he says.
The pain of poverty had by then reached its highest level.
"One day, when I was with my father, the mat (account keeper) came to him and informed him about a plantation job available in the village. He said that every worker would be paid a sum of Rs 5 per day.
His father too was strictly against it and refused to
listen but later Khali's determination to help with the family's situation made him talk to the mat who finally relented.
The work was with the forest department for its new campaign to plant some trees in the village.
And when work on the first day was completed, the mat was happy as Khali did three rounds of planting. The account keeper took out a small bag from his pocket and took out a five rupee note and gave it to Khali.
According to Khali, his first real job was, however, as a body guard of a businessman who owned a number of restaurants in Shimla. He was paid Rs 1,500 a month and food and lodging expenses were also taken care of.