Youngest Shaolin Kung Fu Instructor

‘How I Punched & Kicked Away My Hearing Disability’

Kartik Verma, 18, recounts his journey to become the youngest Shaolin Kung Fu instructor in the county in spite of his hearing and speech impairment

I was four or five year old when my parents came to know about my hearing and speech impairment. Naturally it was a heart-breaking realisation, leaving them worried about my future. At this moment they also felt it was important for me to gain focus and let off my pent-up energy. They decided to arrange karate coaching for me. For my condition, I was often teased and bullied among children of my age. The family felt martial arts training will help me gain confidence to keep off bullies.

However, few instructors were willing to teach me; they considered it a time-consuming and arduous task to teach karate to a differently abled child. My parents were not going to give up. They approached a Shaolin Kung Fu school run by Shifu Kanishka Sharma in Noida who agreed to enrol me as his student.

It was not easy for me to follow instructions as I cannot hear or speak properly. My coaches too had a tough time in the beginning but they were up for the challenge. A few months later, our communication improved. I grasped all the moves by watching the instructors and kept long hours to master the moves. Meanwhile, my academic studies also continued at a school for the differently abled.

Kartik Verma with his parents

I made martial arts the aim of my life. I kept practicing hard and excelled in the ranks of Shaolin Kung Fu. The hard work paid and I was selected to perform at a Shaolin Kung Fu demonstration in China. For the first time, I saw a proud glitter in the eyes of my parents. They were apprehensive about my travel to a foreign country, but my coach convinced them and I underwent training with grandmasters of Shaolin Kung Fu in China.

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I became a certified instructor, the youngest in the country, and started teaching my fellow students at the Shaolin Dojo. There I heard about a Jiu Jitsu championship for the differently abled in Dubai and decided to take part in this form of martial art. With no experience in Jiu Jitsu, I started watching videos on YouTube to pick up its nuances. I successfully defeated all my competitors in India and was selected for the championship. I secured a silver medal in the Dubai competition.

I believe, we must follow our dreams as nothing is impossible. I have a circle of friends and we often meet and communicate in sign language. I keep encouraging my friends to work hard towards what they wish to achieve. My new mission in life is to act as an inspiration to the differently abled children.

The society needs to understand the especially abled people like me. We are perfectly sound in most aspects. All we need is equal opportunities. We can do wonders, we can work like any other person and we have the similar emotions other people have.

The Reigning Para Badminton World Champion

‘I Don’t want Segregation; I Want Access & Acceptance’

Manasi Joshi, the reigning Para Badminton World Champion who has a Barbie doll modelled after her, narrates her journey and the challenges ahead

I was 22-year-old when I met with a horrific road accident. I was fresh out of college and working as a software engineer. Like any callow youth, I wanted to work hard, earn a decent living in Mumbai, go for higher studies and settle down. The accident changed it all.

While recovering in hospital, I accepted the new reality. Thanks to the support from my family and friend, I didn’t get into a self-sympathy phase. I understood that it was a struggle but people fight and I will move on with it too.

Playing badminton also helped. I had played the racket game since my school days to the corporate world. I was undergoing the rehab then and playing the sport helped me balance better, move swifter. It also took my mind off a few issues which I had started worrying about.

My first faceoff with reality came post-recovery. As I resumed office, I noticed that people’s perception had changed; I was viewed as a lesser person because I lost a leg. I understood that this is how I would be treated in future, and this needed to be changed.

My hours on the badminton court extended. One thing led to another and I started participating in corporate level tournaments, followed by state level championships. I also started posting my pictures on social media and made new friends. Some of these friends encouraged me to move up in competitions. Eventually I played my first Nationals that was held in Mumbai and won a silver medal. In 2019, when the last Para Badminton World Championship was held in Switzerland, I bagged the Gold.

It is not easy to be a para athlete, reach to your highest level and still keep on fighting for your rights. The victory gives only a onetime push: we are written about; rule the social media for a few days; and eventually it dies down. The able-bodied athletes are recognized through the year, have sponsors and ministry supporting them. Para athletes aren’t so lucky. At times most struggle with finances for basic training.

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I have always been an opinionated person but today I have the privilege of voicing my opinion. If I have a disability, I do not need segregation; I want inclusion, access and acceptance. I demand change in social attitude, affordable high-end equipment and aids, equal opportunity in education, employment and healthcare. They say these are apples for you. But other people are getting mangoes, and I too want mangoes.

I don’t want to say ‘I wish I had accessibility’; I demand that accessibility. If I cannot go to a particular venue it means I am not allowed to access it. And that is not my failure, it is the failure of the so-called ‘abled’ who could not get that arranged.

I want to live in a world where people with disability are not living on social security but as taxpayers to the state. Of course, we don’t have social security anyways. People with disability are an invisible minority which is never spoken about because they are not considered a vote bank.

Not all is lost, though. Last year a Barbie doll was modelled after me. When I received the one-of-a-kind doll mode, I was filled with gratitude for the manufacturer. I realized it is not a conversation starter but a conversation supporter. It gives young girls hope to be limitless, to chase their dreams. This is how we start inclusion… by encouraging young children to believe in it.

As an athlete I want to reach to a level where no one faces any kind of discrimination in sports. Currently it so happens. My journey in the field of para sports has just begun. I want to grow and become better. I want to be a contributor to the disability rights movement in India in whichever way I can.

As Told To Mamta Sharma