Commonwealth Games (CWG) gold medallist Mirabai Chanu had showed her weightlifting prowess even as a 12 year old when she would comfortably lift more firewoods than her elder brother.

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At 23, Mirabai has the world at her feet as she earned India's first gold medal at Gold Coast after smashing the Games records in 48kg category snatch, clean and jerk.

Born to a poor family in Nongpok Kakching village about 20 kilometres from Imphal, the youngest among six siblings, Mirabai would go to collect firewoods from a nearby hill with her brother Saikhom Sanatomba Meitei, who is four years elder to her.

 

"One day I could not lift the bundle of firewoods but Mira easily lifted it and took it our home, about two kilometres away. She was about 12-year-old then," said Sanatomba, amid the noise of firecrackers in celebration of Mirabai's success at her home.

It was the earliest memory of Mirabai that Sanatomba could recall on a day the world champion weightlifter lived up to the reputation and brought laurels to the country at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

"I used to play football then and I could see the passion in her to do something. She gradually went on to join weightlifting," Sanatomba, a state level footballer at junior level, said. "She always has the passion to achieve big. She never put her under pressure and is always ice-cool, something that was evident in her flawless lift."

 

Mirabai smashed the Commonwealth and the Games record in snatch, pulling off clean lifts in all her three attempts (80kg, 84kg and 86kg) to secure India's first gold. Miles away her family along with about 15 village folks sat glued to the TV in the morning to watch Mirabai in action. "I could see tears of joy dropping from my father (Saikhom Kriti Meitei) and mother (Saikohm Ongbi Tombi Leima). They were speechless for a moment," he added.

The villagers came in and took her mother to celebrate with a traditional folk dance -- Thabal Chongba -- and smeared colours on each other's face, dancing in a circle. An Army sepoy posted in Sringar, Sanatomba is on a holiday for his son's feeding ceremony (Annaprashan).

"It will be a double celebration tomorrow, we will make Mira's favourite food -- Kangsoi (a Manipuri stew delicacy). Sweets were being distributed since morning today and you could still hear the firecrackers late into the evening."

 

Mirabai's father is a lower level employee at the Pubic Works Department in Imphal, while her mother runs a small shop at their village. "There was a lot of financial crisis for her and they could hardly support her. Despite all the hardships, she has reached a stage we never thought of... All these brought tears to my father and mother," Sanatomba said.

Things, however, have changed since the success of Mirabai, a silver medalist in CWG Glasgow 2014 and a gold medallist in the Commonwealth Championships in Australia in July last year. Their family now hope that Mirabai is offered a Deputy Superintendent of Police post after the CWG success. "All the people of the region have written to the authorities requesting DSP post for her. Now we hope she will get her dues," he signed off.