It’s Sunday afternoon and the parking lot outside the Shankarlal Concert Hall in New Delhi is full. There’s even a short queue outside the gate, manned heavily with bouncers scrutinising ID cards and entry tickets. Young men and women are here to either participate in or watch the strongman and bodybuilding championship. Edging my way past bouncers whom I mistook for participants, I see spots of green — on the trees, the freshly-cut grass on a garden and neon shades on participants. People have come to participate in India’s first strongman competition, which requires participants to lift unrealistically heavy objects and run from one end of the park to the other. When I say unrealistic, I mean equipment that looks like mini missiles and weighs over 200 kg. It also means pulling an entire truck with just ropes tied to your body.
The central park is occupied either with participants taking a break between events or with spectators marvelling at how the participants can achieve such feats. On one side of the park, men are lifting baseball bats of different weights. The task at hand is to run with one end to the other, touch the bat down and make the trip back — without once pausing. Few seem to cross the milestone of six trips.
Most spectators wonder why someone would voluntarily put himself through such challenges: the answer lies in their sense of pride. When I ask one of the organisers about who won the previous challenge, a participant piped in to say that he only lost by a few seconds. The test of strength is as much for himself as it is to come out a winner, he says.
Unlike Amit, Rajesh Rai, managing director of Jerai Fitness Equipments, which organised the events, gives me a bone-crushing handshake. Upbeat despite the humidity, Rai does let on that he is slightly disappointed with the turnout. “We’ve only got about 350 so far because people don’t know how exciting strongman can be,” he says. Nick Orton, CEO of BodyPower, finds that Indians are not shy of expressing themselves. “You’ll find that in most other countries, men beef up to get women. But in India, there is a lot of true passion,” he says.
As if on cue, two men in fitted T-shirts that show off their biceps well ask for a selfie with a supposed celebrity. Edging closer, I find that it is a hulky man dressed in black. When I ask who that is, the young men, almost gasping in shock, tell me that it is the former Mr India. I take a minute to cherish the rare moment where men in Delhi would rather stare at other men than the women at the venue.