CHENNAI: The sprawling campus of SRM
University at Kattankulathur, 35 km from the city, came to life as students
jostled for a close look at India’s latest icon, shooting champion Abhinav
Bindra, who had come down to grace the university’s fourth annual
convocation and collect his first honorary doctorate. (
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Bindra, the only Indian to win
an individual gold in Olympics, arrived at 9.30 am, accompanied by father Apjit
Bindra and mother Babli. Thousands of mobile cameras clicked as they entered the
SRM auditorium at 10.45 am along with ISRO chairman Dr G Madhavan Nair, 15
minutes before the scheduled start of the convocation. Abhinav looked composed
as ever in his red ceremonial robe as he took his marked seat next to
vice-chancellor of the university P Sathyanarayanan, who briefed the ace shooter
about the university and the activities on the campus.
There was a
whole gallery of faculties and top officials of the university on the dais,
dressed for the occasion in different colours of robes. Another 2,000 people
formed the audience. Apjit Bindra and Babli were seated on the front row of the
audience and both of them were busy reading the convocation addresses in print.
At 11, Tamil Nadu governor and chief guest Surjit Singh Barnala walked in.
Dr Madhavan Nair, in his address, lauded his ‘young
friend’ Abhinav Bindra and emphasised that “he (Bindra) has become
the role model for all”. The ISRO chairman said Bindra had proved what
individual talent can do in a chosen field and exhorted the youth to put in the
extra effort to achieve top results in whatever field they
pursued.
Between Dr Nair and Bindra, the focus was trained on the
sportsman as cameramen demanded that the shooter turn his face towards them
while receiving the degree award. In his address, Bindra said he would help the
university in its promotion of sports. “Right now, the media in India is
cricket-focused...They have to look at other disciplines as well,” he
said. As he left the auditorium, the shooter was surrounded by hundreds of
students and a horde of photographers — the kind of adulation reserved
only for cricketers in India.
Apjit Bindra said he and his family
enjoyed the visit to Chennai. “The function was very well
organised,” said Bindra senior. He ruled out sight-seeing in the city and
said he had been to Chennai 20 years ago and visited Mahabalipuram then. Apjit
recalled a recent felicitation function for Bindra in Bhopal where a road has
been named after him. “There was a crowd of 1, 50,000 on the road at the
function,” he said and added two more doctorates are awaiting Bindra from
Bangalore and Punjab.