This wrestling school is empowering girls and changing perceptions

A student lifts dumbbells during a morning fitness routine at the Altius wrestling school in Sisai, India.

This wrestling school is empowering girls and changing perceptions

Photographs by Anushree Fadnavis/Reuters
Story by Vanessa Leroy, CNN
Published February 3, 2024

A student lifts dumbbells during a morning fitness routine at the Altius wrestling school in Sisai, India.

Hours away from the bustle of New Delhi, Reuters photojournalist Anushree Fadnavis shadowed young girls training at a wrestling school in the rural farmlands of Sisai, a village in the Indian state of Haryana.

They are looking to follow in the footsteps of wrestlers such as Sakshi Malik, who made history in 2016 when she became the first Indian female wrestler to win a medal at the Olympics.

Wrestling has long been popular among men in India, but in recent years there has been a surge of interest among female athletes. The Altius school is nurturing this next generation.

“I wanted to capture their hopes, dreams, ambitions and their drive to succeed,” Fadnavis said.

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Students wrestle in the training room at the Altius school. There are two dozen students there.

The school was co-founded in 2009 by Usha Sharma, India’s first woman wrestling coach, alongside her husband, Sanjay Sihag. Sharma’s inspiration to empower the youth through the sport stems from her and other women’s experiences of lacking agency and respect in a patriarchal society.

“There is no value of a woman in a village,” Sharma told Fadnavis. “In a village, an animal has more value to it than a woman, as an animal gives milk and there is a cost attached to it.”

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Students return to their boarding hostel after a morning fitness routine and practice session. Funding from the state government covers training, while some parents pay about 9,100 rupees a month ($109 US) for board and academic tuition.
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Students do pushups during their morning exercises. They wake up at 4 a.m. every day except Sunday.

Fadnavis visited the school where two dozen female students, aged 8 to 22, train, study and support one another in its humble facilities. She stayed for two days, learning about the students and witnessing their work ethic.

“What surprised me was the grit and determination of the girls to train themselves for a sport that requires a lot of physical strength,” she said. “Also, the willingness of parents from villages to send their girls to a faraway residential school pointed towards changing times and changing mindsets of society towards a sport and more importantly, women.”

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A student performs a headstand in between wrestling bouts.
Pictures of students and their loved ones hang on a wall next to their beds at the wrestling school's boarding hostel.
Weightlifting bars are lined up inside the school’s training room.

With the exception of Sundays, the students wake at 4 a.m. each day for their morning fitness routines and practice sessions. When they’re not training, they attend daily academic lessons. Often, they take the lead in preparing meals for themselves throughout the day.

These responsibilities are embraced by all of the students, who are learning how to live independently and feel empowered in their choices.

“Women in the villages in Haryana have very little to no agency in their lives, and hence are very dependent on their families and especially men in their lives,” Fadnavis said.

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Students prepare breakfast together. "Hostel is like family. We work, play and also study together," 16-year-old Swati Berwal told Fadnavis. "We also fight with each other just like families do, but we get support from each other.”

The confidence and skills gained by the students serve as inspiration to others, as evidenced by Sonu Kaliraman, one of the school’s coaches who trained there as a young girl.

When Kaliraman was a child, she was on her way to work on a farm when she witnessed a group of children from Altius making their way to a wrestling competition. A new world opened up before her eyes. She quickly inquired at the school grounds and got herself enrolled.

Years later, she would travel internationally for the first time ever, to take part in a wrestling competition.

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Sonu Kaliraman, a former student who is now a coach at the school, looks at her sister Neelam's medals. Kaliraman says women are changing conservative attitudes by winning medals and proving they can be world-class athletes. "We have progressed a little, and we will keep progressing further," she said.

Having women coaches like Kaliraman has a pivotal impact on the young girls at the school, providing them with a comfortable space to be themselves as they work hard to carve out their futures, wherever they may land.

“Most of them told me that having a woman coach really helps them, as they can be themselves and don’t have to overexplain things to anyone,” Fadnavis said.

One of Fadnavis’ favorite moments from her stay was a brief moment between Kaliraman and her mother during a home visit, when her mother brushed her hands across Kaliraman’s face and expressed that she was deeply proud of her.

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Students put on their shoes before wrestling.
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One of the three male students at the school lifts weights and exercises during the morning fitness routine.

Reflecting on her own school days, Fadnavis said she loved the adrenaline rush of participating in sports such as long jump and throwball. She sensed that same spirit within the cohort of wrestling students that arrived to their training sessions each day with renewed passion and discipline.

Fadnavis remembered her similar path to following her passion, as she used to work as a software engineer before pivoting to photography after being inspired by a late friend of hers, who she described as a big dreamer.

“It felt great to see the girls have so many different opportunities and someone who could guide them on the right path,” Fadnavis said. “To have someone believe in you and reinforce positive energy really helps us do better at our work or any sport.”

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Wrestling coach Naveen Sihag speaks to students in the training room during a rest day.
Medals hang from a photo of Indian freedom fighter Chandra Shekhar Azad that is displayed at the school's boarding hostel.
Uma Beniwal, 12, draws on a bed at the boarding hostel.

Altius student Swati Berwal recently won a medal at the 37th National Games of India, but not all students will go on to compete for medals or prize money. Still, when they eventually leave the school they will do so with a wider support network, friendships, and lessons learned that they will carry into adulthood.

“When I opened the academy and we started getting medals, it felt nice to know that the same girls who used to graze cows and buffaloes are now being favored by the men in the family,” Sharma told Fadnavis. “It felt good to know and see the girls at jobs and buying their cars, and now they are giving something back to society.”

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Usha Sharma, India's first female wrestling coach, co-founded the Altius school in 2009 alongside her husband, Sanjay Sihag.

Credits

  • Photographer: Anushree Fadnavis
  • Writer: Vanessa Leroy
  • Photo Editors: Emmalee Reed and Brett Roegiers
  • Editor: Kyle Almond