Lucknow Super Giants head coach Justin Langer has revealed that he was left humbled during this year’s IPL after visiting his team’s physiotherapist Rajesh Chandrashekhar’s one-room dwelling in Mumbai’s Dharavi slums where he witnessed the complete antithesis of the “extreme luxury” he has experienced in life.
LSG failed to make the playoffs after a mixed run in the league stage of the IPL.
“After a life of living what I would now define as extreme luxury, I was humbled like never before seeing how other human beings live their day-to-day lives,” Langer said of his experience in a post for ‘The Nightly’.
It all started with Chandrashekhar’s insistence on giving Langer a haircut.
“At first, I thought nothing of the invitation, but as the days moved into weeks, RC kept asking me if I needed a haircut.
“Eventually, I relented to his offer and within minutes he was knocking on my door, manned with clippers, scissors, and a spray bottle full of water,” he recalled.
“RC told me that he lived in the slums of Mumbai and that he had earned a lucky break as a masseur for the local football (soccer) team. From there one thing led to another and that is how our paths now crossed,” he said.
Langer said Chandrashekhar told him that his house was the size of the bathroom of the hotel they were staying in and he lived there with his mother, father brother, sister, and brother-in-law. Chandrashekhar’s father works as a helper and his brother is a hairdresser in the local salon.
“The bathroom in this luxury hotel we were staying in was nice, but as I looked around, it was about the size of my laundry here in Perth,” Langer said.
Langer said a day before his last day in India (May 24), he asked Chandrashekhar to take him to meet his family at his home.
“‘You want to visit my home?’ he asked with a surprised look on his face,” the former batter said.
Langer and his brother went to Chandrashekhar’s home the next day.
“We were guided through tiny alleyways, like a maze of very narrow passageways between concrete houses. And like most mazes, it became instantly apparent that it would be very easy to get lost in this hidden community.
“Each lane was narrow, just wide enough for two people to pass. The alleyways were dark because just above us were the overhangs of buildings and tangled power lines,” Langer recalled.
He described the scene inside the house which was “four by five metres in diameter.”
“…the first thing I saw was a single mattress on legs, not unlike a makeshift massage table. In one corner was a tiny kitchenette, with a stove and small fridge. Bundles of onions and cloves of garlic lay in bags under the miniature kitchen bench.
“The six family members had one shelf each for their clothes,” he said.
“What struck me about our visit to RC’s house was that while they seemed to have nothing, they also had everything they really needed to be happy.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: May 28 2024 | 9:36 PM IST