London: As he turned a memorable 101-years-old Sunday, Sikh marathoner Fauja Singh did not have his birthday celebrations on his mind at his London home. Instead, the oldest athlete on earth is busy preparing for his next event – the London Marathon – on April 22.
Getting up early Sunday at his Ilford-London home, Fauja was on the tracks to run six laps as the ‘Sikhs in the City’ team organized an event in London to run 101 laps of two km each to commemorate his 101st birthday.
Even at 101, what is top-most on his mind is the preparation for the London Marathon for which he is already training and not his birthday cake.
“Mere coach ne mainu dovara jinda kar ditta hai (my coach has given me a fresh lease of life),” Fauja Singh told his Chandigarh-based biographer Khushwant Singh.
Last year, Fauja Singh had become, perhaps the only man in the world to have lived a 100 years to see his biography being released at that age. The biography ‘Turbaned Tornado’ (Rupa/Rs.250) was released at the Atlee Room of the House of Lords in London in July last year. An illiterate person who converses only in Punjabi, Fauja had told IANS how he yearned that he could have read his biography.
As Fauja Singh prepares for the London marathon, no insurance company in Britain is ready to issue him a policy for the event.
His biographer has one regret: “He is the embodiment of all virile Sikhs in the world. But the state (Punjab) of his birth has not come forward to honour his achievements.” The Guinness World Records had last October refused to recognize Fauja Singh as the world’s oldest marathoner after he successfully completed the Toronto Marathon (42.195 km) in just over eight hours. Though Guinness officials came to Toronto, they refused to acknowledge him as the oldest man running marathons as he could not produce a birth certificate. (IANS)