Wicket worship : ‘Gully’ Cricket- Cricket in our Backyards.

Gully Cricket- Photo-Essay in Mint (sanjay austa austa)

Gully Cricket- Photo-Essay in Mint

(A photo-feature in Mint)

A cricket philistine documents the sport as it’s played in the country’s alleys and street corners

By Amrita Roy

Cricket in the subcontinent is much more than a game, a genteel one at that: It’s a proxy for war, a potent political and diplomatic tool, and the one religion that unites kings and commoners, holy men and brigands of every creed and colour. Far removed from its patrician origins on the estates of British nobility, cricket in the dusty fields and on India’s streets is a metaphor for life as it’s lived in its villages and cities—raucous, colourful, unfettered by rules, and eminently enjoyable.

Few can resist its charms or stay aloof, as Sanjay Austa, a Delhi-based photojournalist documenting gali cricket, has found over the last five years. “I was what you’d call a ‘cricket philistine’,” says Austa. Yet, despite this soccer fan’s disdain, he too, like the rest of the country, became a participant—not as a player or spectator, but as a documentarian.

 Sanjay Austa’s ongoing photo series Gully Cricket: Cricket in Our Backyards, portrays the game as it’s played in the monasteries of Ladakh and on the beaches of Kanyakumari. It did not develop as a cohesive mission; it was, instead, parallel to whatever assignment he happened to be working on at any given point.

Empty liquor bottes for wickets and the female cricketer in rural Himachal, Jan 2012. I have been photographing street-cricket for many years now but this was the first time I saw a girl at the crease. It was no surprise that she was a Himachali. Himachal has been a leading state as far as women empowerment is concerned and its literacy rate among women is even higher than that of erudite Kerala. And of course this was also the first time I saw the genius of using empty beer and liquor bottles for wickets. (sanjay austa austa)

Empty liquor bottes for wickets and the female cricketer in rural Himachali.

“The idea first struck when I was accompanying a friend on a shoot in Old Delhi. There seemed to be a game of cricket going on in every street,” says Austa. “Since then, wherever I travelled, I came across boys playing cricket—in madrasas, monasteries, graveyards, churches. It was impossible to ignore it.” He adds that the architectural structures were not consciously chosen as backdrops, but on hindsight, they seemed to provide a commentary on the unifying sway of the game.

Given the all-pervasive nature of Indian cricket, Austa felt compelled to record the game’s impact on our collective culture. “I was in Ladakh last year and there were some student lamas playing outside the Matho Monastery. It made a striking backdrop. I remember a little boy who was a (Sachin) Tendulkar fan. He was quite the rebel and refused to put on the lama’s maroon robes,” he says.

He even took off his helmet and raised his helmet like Sachin Tendulkar to the skies whenever he hit the ball. (sanjay austa austa)

He even took off his helmet and raised his helmet like Sachin Tendulkar to the skies whenever he hit the ball- Ladakh

Besides Ladakh, Austa has photographed boys swinging branches for bats in a remote Himachal Pradesh hamlet. “Bats are hard to come by in the remote tribal regions of Himachal. But the boys will not let that come in the way of their enjoying the game,” he explains.

In Chennai, a fisherman’s child forgot to brush his teeth, so caught up was he in the excitement of the game. “Even in the North-East, which is traditionally a football and Olympic sports-playing region, I would come across at least one group playing cricket in every city,” he adds.

As Austa’s series proves, there can be no real philistine when it comes to cricket in India.

Sanjay Austa is a New Delhi-based independent documentary photographer. These pictures are part of his ongoing series Gully Cricket: Cricket in Our Backyards.

This monk was their  best bowler and had a mean swing to his arm. (sanjay austa austa)

This monk was their best bowler and had a mean swing to his arm, Ladakh.

4 Responses to “Wicket worship : ‘Gully’ Cricket- Cricket in our Backyards.”

  1. Vijay says:

    Excellent Photos and article ofcourse !

  2. Ramit says:

    A great read & pics ….

  3. Pramod says:

    Hi Sanjay,
    Great photos. We posted these on “I am a cricketer” board on Pinterest.
    Please see here:
    http://pinterest.com/iamacricketer/i-am-a-cricketer/

Leave a Reply to Ramit