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As Kolkata Gears Up for Durga Puja, a Rift Between Idol Makers

Shiv Shankar Paul, 60, working on clay models in his shop in Kolkata, West Bengal on July 16.Courtesy of Sean McLainShiv Shankar Paul, 60, working on clay models in his shop in Kolkata, West Bengal on July 16.

KOLKATAâ€"On a hot and humid July afternoon in Kumartuli, Kolkata's historic potter's district, Shankar Kumar Paul was playing absentmindedly with a ball of clay, turning it first into a swan and then into an elephant.

“This is God's work,” he said.

Mr. Paul was experimenting with designs for this year's Durga Puja festivities, for which he and other artisans would sell 3,000 idols. “It's just like when you cook - you don't know if it's good until you taste it; you don't know how good an id ol will be unless you model it,” he said.

The festival, which begins Saturday, marks the goddess Durga's descent to earth with her children, and devotees in Kolkata will see for the first time the handiwork of Kumartuli's artists for this year's celebration. Priests will bless the pandals, or idol displays, and the Durga idol's face will be revealed to the beat of traditional drummers. Women compete in cooking contests called anandamelas, and the city will be thronged with families touring the thousands of displays until late in the evening.

“Puja is a competitive sport in West Bengal,” said Mr. Paul. Every year, thousands of neighborhood associations, clubs and wealthy families construct elaborate, often themed pandals and compete for awards and prizes. The best pandals receive corporate sponsorship.

Like many of the idol makers in Kumartuli, Mr. Paul believes his work is sacred. “While we make Durga thakur [idols], we don't eat meat or drink alcohol,” he said. Mr. Paul did confess to having the occasional cigarette, explaining, “I can't give up everything.”

Kolkata's idol-making industry is dominated by a few families, and many of the businesses are handed down father to son. But men like Mr. Paul are a dying breed â€" not only are their numbers dwindling, but their traditional methods are being pushed aside for more modern ones.

An idol of goddess Durga at a workshop in Kumartuli in Kolkata, West Bengal on Oct. 17.Saurabh Das/Associated PressAn idol of goddess Durga at a workshop in Kumartuli in Kolkata, West Bengal on Oct. 17.

Ironically, it was the increased success of the Kumartuli sculptors that is leading to their decline. As puja celebrations became increasingly popular, the fortunes of these families increased, which meant the children of idol makers were sent to school instead of learning the trade. That has led to a decline in the overall numbers of idol makers. From around 350 master sculptors, the number has fallen to around 150.

“If their children get educated, they choose other professions with steady work instead of this seasonal work,” said Kaushik Ghosh, 37, the son of the famous Kumartuli sculptor Amar Nath Ghosh.

Mr. Ghosh and his father broke with tradition a decade ago, a move that is dividing Kolkata's idol-making community. They took their business online and began making fiberglass versions of the idols.

A Durga Puja idol made by Amanath Ghosh & Son's.http://www.amarnathghoshandsondurgaprotima.com/A Durga Puja idol made by Amanath Ghosh & Son's.

Traditionally, a Durga Puja idol is taken to the water at the end of the 10-day holiday, submersed in water and allowed to float away. But there is little need for Bengali communities outside of India to purchase clay idols, since their local antipollution laws prevent them from submersing their idols in water. Instead, they keep them to worship year after year. Fiberglass, which is hardier and retains color better, is a sounder investment.

Fiberglass is also less prone to damage and far lighter than clay idols. A typical seven-foot-tall clay idol weighs around 1,000 pounds. A similar-sized fiberglass idol weighs one-tenth of that.

Babu Pal, the secretary of the Kumartuli Potters Cultural Association, said that the business from overseas is growing rapidly. “Last year there were about 30 idols sent abroad; this year it's 44. By next year it should be even more,” he said.

The Ghosh family dominates the international market for Durga idols. Of the 44 idols sent abroad from Kumartuli this year, 30 were made by the Ghosh family. “You would be hard pressed to find an idol in the States not made by us. All the New York idols are ours,” Mr. Ghosh said.

Other famous sculptors have begun following in Mr. Ghosh's footsteps and have taken their business online, including the Gora Chand Paul family and the Badal Chandra Paul family.

West Bengal, which recently banned the submersion of idols to cut down on water pollution from the lead-based paints used on clay idols, is also seeing some, albeit few, Bengalis switch to fiberglass idols as well. Kolkata is in the middle of a construction boom, and high rises are popping up everywhere. Middle-class families who want to hold a family puja would be hard pressed to get an idol weighing half a ton into their apar tment, but fiberglass versions can be easily carried by a few people.

Mr. Paul has few kind words for his colleagues who are switching to fiberglass.

Across the narrow alleyway from his workshop is a rival that this year decided to abandon clay for fiberglass. While Mr. Paul sat waiting for customers, he watched as idols were carried out his rival's door. “He's not a real artist. He uses machinery and laborers,” he said.

He admitted, however, that he will find it hard to compete if fiberglass continues to grow in popularity.

“What work we do in 160 days, they do in six days,” he said.

Sean McLain is a freelance journalist based in New Delhi. You can follow him on Twitter @McLainSean



Image of the Day: Oct. 18

A wholesale flower market in Kolkata, West Bengal. The upcoming festival of Durga Puja has raised the demand for flowers, which are now being sold at higher prices.Dibyangshu Sarkar/Agence France-Presse - Getty ImagesA wholesale flower market in Kolkata, West Bengal. The upcoming festival of Durga Puja has raised the demand for flowers, which are now being sold at higher prices.

He Was Cambodia\'s King, Yes, but What He Really Wanted to Do Was Direct

Video recorded in Phnom Penh on Wednesday as the body of Norodom Sihanouk, the former Cambodian king, was returned to the city.

As my colleague Thomas Fuller reports from Phnom Penh, the body of Norodom Sihanouk, the former Cambodian king, was returned to his homeland in style on Wednesday:

The king's elaborate coffin, draped in a blue royal flag and festooned with flowers, was placed on a gilded carriage shaped to represent a mythical birdlike creature. Mourners clutched incense sticks and lotus flowers. They remained quiet and reverential, many kneeling, as the carriage wheeled past.

Several mourners managed to record video of the gilded ceremony, which was also broadcast on Cambodian television. Given that King Sihanouk loved cinema and devo ted much of his time to directing his own films, it seems quite likely that the man Spalding Gray memorably described as “that happy, sexy, sax-playing prince” would have enjoyed the gaudy pageant.

Clips from his films, and of the king directing and acting in them, can be seen in the documentary “Norodom Sihanouk, King and Filmmaker,” directed by Frédéric Mitterrand, France's former culture minister.



Sixteen Nominees for South Asian Fiction Award

The sponsor of the Jaipur Literature Festival announced a “long list” of the best recent South Asian fiction this week, dominated by Indian and Indian-origin authors.

The 16 writers on the list, released Tuesday, hail from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Britain, and four are first-time novelists. Topics range from opium addiction to an unlikely relationship between a courtesan and a wrestler.

The award, introduced by the infrastructure company DSC Limited in 2010, is for fictional work in English that is about South Asia, but is not limited to South Asian writers. The cash prize of $50,000 has quickly made it a coveted award, with more than 80 writers entering the contest this year.

The Indian poet K. Satchidanandan, who led this year's five-member jury, said there was “an unprecedented response” worldwide to the call for submissions.

Mr. Satchidanandan said that even though the authors came from “different linguistic and cultural backgrounds,” they demonstrated a deep understanding of South Asia in their work.

The jury will announce a short list of five or six writers on Nov. 20, and the winner will be announced in January at the Jaipur Literature Festival.

The final list of the 2013 Man Booker International Prize will also be announced at the festival. That winner of that prize will take home 60,000 pounds ($97,000).

When it is not sponsoring literary events and awards, DSC spearheads heavy-duty rail and road projects in India, including building the Delhi-Gurgaon Expressway. (That's right - the very highway that Jaipur Literature Festival attendees coming from Delhi will take.)

Here is the long list:

    Jamil Ahmad: The Wandering Falcon (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin India)
    Alice Albinia: Leela's Book (Harvill Secker, London)
    Tahmima Anam: The Good Muslim (Penguin Books)
    Rahul Bhattacharya: The Sly Company of People Who Care (P icador, London)
    Roopa Farooki: The Flying Man (Headline Review/ Hachette, London)
    Musharraf Ali Farooqi: Between Clay and Dust (Aleph Book Company, India)
    Amitav Ghosh: River of Smoke (Hamish Hamilton/Penguin India)
    Niven Govinden: Black Bread White Beer (Fourth Estate/ Harper Collins India)
    Sunetra Gupta: So Good in Black (Clockroot Books, Massachusetts)
    Mohammed Hanif, Our Lady of Alice Bhatti (Random House India)
    Jerry Pinto: Em and the Big Hoom (Aleph Book Company, India)
    Uday Prakash: The Walls of Delhi (Translated by Jason Grunebaum; UWA Publishing, W. Australia)
    Anuradha Roy: The Folded Earth (Hachette India) Saswati Sengupta: The Song Seekers (Zubaan, India)
    Geetanjali Shree: The Empty Space (Translated by Nivedita Menon; Harper Perennial/ Harper Collins India)
    Jeet Thayil: Narcopolis ( Faber and Faber, London)


When Reporting Rape in India, a Focus on \'Shame\'

Several particularly hideous rapes in Haryana recently brought the issue of sexual assault on women, an all-too-common occurrence in India, back to the front pages of India's newspapers and news websites.

Many news outlets were quick to highlight a “blame the victim” mentality prevalent among police, politicians, schools and officials in India. Several also reported extensively from villages in that north Indian state and ran editorials decrying India's conviction rate for rape, which has actually declined as reported rapes increased, as shown in this report by The Hindu.

But focusing on the shame brought to the woman, rather than the illegality and brutality of the men's actions, seems to be pervasive, even in some Indian newsrooms. In the presentation of many of these articles, the emphasis still appears to be on the disgraced victim.

Just take a look at the illustrations and “rubrics,” (also known as “bugs” or â €œD.O.G.'s” for digital on-screen graphics), in common use. Rubrics are the little drawings or photos that are used over and over again to indicate that an article is part of series, or to quickly tell a reader what the story is about. The New York Times's “India's Way” series, for example, carried a rubric of an elephant with buildings on its back.

Sexual assault is so common in India that news outlets often use a rubric to go with articles about rape, or reuse an illustration, photo or “bug” whenever a rape story comes up. Often these seem to have a common theme.

No, it's not a gang of a dozen drunken men, grabbing a woman, as happened in Haryana recently, or one of men luring a little girl with candy to sexually assault her, as also actually happened, or even a more generic drawing or photo of a looming and lecherous man or group of men. Instead, almost inevitably, the art to go with a story about rape depicts a “shamed woman.” Sometimes, this wo man also happens to be somewhat scantily clad.

A screenshot of an image on the Times of India Web site.A screenshot of an image on the Times of India Web site.

The Times of India: A drawing of a woman, back to the reader, who is wearing nothing but a sari blouse on top, sitting and looking down, hands in her lap. She appears to have a black eye, and the floor nearby is strewn with refuse. The illustration was used to accompany this Oct. 16 story about khap panchayats who blame chow mein for rape, among other articles. (A cached version of the web page with that article is here.)

A screenshot of an image on the First Post Web site.A screenshot of an image on the First Post Web site.

First Post: An image of a curly-haired woman, head in her hands and face turned from the reader, wearing nothing but a spaghetti-strap top, has become one of First Post's go-to images to illustrate rape stories, as in this October 17 article about a West Bengal minor who was gang-raped and then set on fire. (See a cached version of that page here.)

Photos of the covered head of the Dalit teenager from Hisar, who was raped by several men from her neighborhood, have become another common First Post illustration for rape. The photo itself has been enlarged to just show the bowed, dupatta-covered head of the victim to illustrate articles that are only peripherally related to her case, like this October 16 essay about rape being an unpl easant reminder of the “old India.” (See a cached version of that page here.)

A screenshot of a photograph on the Mid Day Web site.A screenshot of a photograph on the Mid Day Web site.

Mid-day: A photo (clearly marked “representational pic”) which shows a young, thin woman, face in her hands, wearing a shirt, tight jeans and socks but no shoes, huddled in a corner in what appears to be an upscale home or business, was used to illustrate this October 15 article in which a politician tries to explain the Haryana's rape problem. (See a cached version of the article here.)

A scan of the Hindustan Times newspaper from Oct. 10, 2012.A scan of the Hindustan Times newspaper from Oct. 10, 2012.

The Hindustan Times took a different approach. The paper put all its rape coverage on one page Wednesday with the headline “India Shamed.” The rubric for the page, which also appeared on the paper's front page, is a male gender symbol, the circle with the arrow, with cartoon-ish devil horns drawn on it, which looks a bit like a Halloween invitation.



Push for Leniency as an Ex-Goldman Director Faces Sentencing

Federal prosecutors want Rajat K. Gupta, once one of the world's most prominent businessmen, to spend as much as 10 years in prison for insider trading.

Mr. Gupta's defense lawyers would rather he spend time in Rwanda.

It is just the latest intriguing twist in the case of Mr. Gupta, who was convicted of leaking boardroom secrets about Goldman Sachs to the hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam.

On Wednesday, prosecutors and defense lawyers filed sentencing memos to Judge Jed S. Rakoff, who is scheduled to sentence Mr. Gupta on Oct. 24 in Federal District Court in Manhattan. Mr. Gupta is the former head of the consulting firm McKinsey & Company and the most influential of the 69 individuals convicted in the government's sweeping insider-trading crackdown.

Mr. Gupta's lawyers have pleaded for a lenient sentence of probation, accompanied by an order that he perform community service. Gary P. Naftalis, a lawyer for Mr. Gupta, made an unusual request in reco mmending that Mr. Gupta, who has played a leadership role in a variety of global humanitarian causes, be sent to Rwanda.

Multimedia: Insider Trading

“The Rwandan government has expressed support for a program of service in which Mr. Gupta would work with rural districts to ensure that the needs to end H.I.V., malaria, extreme poverty and food security are implemented,” Mr. Naftalis wrote.

Mr. Gupta is hoping that Judge Rakoff is swayed by the more than 400 letters of support submitted on his behalf, including one from Bill Gates, the Microsoft billionaire and philanthropist, and Kofi Annan, the former United Nations secretary-general.

The letters depict a man who, but for his insider-trading conviction, has led an exemplary life.

Miles D. White, the chief executive of the pharmaceutical giant Abbott, wrote, “Rajat's contributions to global welfare - in business, in philanthropy, in education, in civil societ y - have been rivaled by very few people.” Mr. Gupta's leadership on global health issues has “made a real difference in the lives of literally millions of people around the world,” Mr. Gates wrote.

The government, however, is asking that Mr. Gupta be sentenced to between 8 years and one month to 10 years and one month, a range based on a formula in the federal sentencing guidelines. “Gupta's crimes are shocking,” wrote Richard Tarlowe, a federal prosecutor. “Gupta had achieved extraordinary personal success and was at the pinnacle of a profession built on protection client confidences.”

Mr. Gupta's misconduct is “particularly troubling at a time when there is widespread concern about corruption, greed and recklessness at the highest levels of the financial services industry,” Mr. Tarlowe wrote.

In June, a jury found Mr. Gupta, 63, a former director of Goldman, guilty of divulging confidential discussions about the bank to Mr. Rajaratnam, including Warren E. Buffett's planned $5 billion investment in Goldman in the depths of the financial crisis. Mr. Gupta, who also served on Procter & Gamble's board, was acquitted on a count related to giving Mr. Rajaratnam advance word of the financial results of the consumer products giant.

Mr. Gupta, a resident of Westport, Conn., plans to appeal his conviction.

Mr. Rajaratnam, the former head of the Galleon Group hedge fund, is serving an 11-year prison term for orchestrating a seven-year insider-trading conspiracy. He had a vast network of informants, including traders, lawyers and bankers, but none was more prominent than Mr. Gupta.

A native of Kolkata, India, Mr. Gupta came to the United States to earn his graduate degree at Harvard Business School. He spent his career at McKinsey, the consulting firm, and was elected its global head in 1994. After running McKinsey for a decade, he was highly sought after as a board member, landing plum directorships at several public companies. He also devoted much time to philanthropic pursuits, becoming a trustee at the Rockefeller Foundation and an adviser to President Bill Clinton's philanthropy.

But after leaving McKinsey, Mr. Gupta also took on a variety of roles on Wall Street, including raising money for Mr. Rajaratnam at Galleon, then one of the world's most highly regarded hedge funds.

Mr. Gupta's lawyers argue that a lengthy prison term is unnecessary because Mr. Gupta has already paid a terrible price. They said that his reputation is in tatters given the intense media attention surrounding his trial. “This is the quintessential case of a monumental fall that is, in and of itself, severe punishment,” said the defense.

In letters sent to Judge Rakoff, Mr. Gupta's wife and four daughters, who attended Mr. Gupta's monthlong trial nearly every day, described the strain of the case on their lives.

One of his daughters, Aditi Gupta, a recent graduate o f Harvard Business School, described being harassed on campus because of her father's legal troubles. She said that news articles about her father's case “magically appeared” in her on-campus mailbox. An e-mail circulated calling for Harvard Business School to cut all ties with Mr. Gupta, who served on the school's advisory board. She said that she could not bear to tell her father about these incidents.

“Nor did I tell him about the well-intentioned professors who suggested I take a year off to wait for everything to ‘die down,' or what it was like to try and maintain my composure in a class of 90 people when Preet Bharara” - the United States attorney in Manhattan whose office brought the case against Mr. Gupta - “arrived to speak in one of my first year classes,” she wrote.

Mr. Gupta's sentencing will be closely watched in legal circles. The roughly eight- to-10-year term requested by prosecutors is based on guidelines that are nonbinding. The ru les are supposed to give judges direction when meting out sentence.

Judge Rakoff has been one of the most outspoken critics of the guidelines. In 2006, he sentenced a former corporate executive to a 3 1/2-year prison term for accounting fraud when prosecutors, hewing to the guidelines, had sought 85 years.

There can be, wrote Mr. Rakoff, an “utter travesty of justice that sometimes results from the guidelines' fetish with abstract arithmetic, as well as the harm that guideline calculations can visit on human beings if not cabined by common sense.”

Prosecutors gave some credence to Mr. Gupta's accomplishments, but emphasized his “callousness and above-the-law arrogance” in repeatedly leaking secret corporate information to Mr. Rajaratnam over a two-year span. “Although Gupta's criminal conduct appears to represent a deviation from an otherwise law-abiding life,” said prosecutors, “Gupta's crimes were not an isolated occurrence or a momentary la pse in judgment.”

On Wednesday, the team of government lawyers and F.B.I. agents that led the prosecution of Mr. Rajaratnam, Mr. Gupta and other insider-trading defendants were in Washington to receive a distinguished service award from Attorney General Eric H. Holder.

This post has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 17, 2012

An earlier version of this post misstated the middle initial of the attorney general of the United States. He is Eric H. Holder, not Eric S.



No Charges For Tamil Leader

Sri Lanka: No Charges for Tamil Leader

The leader of Sri Lanka's defeated Tamil Tiger rebels, who is wanted by India on suspicion of helping plan the assassination of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991, will not face criminal charges, Sri Lankan authorities said Wednesday. The leader, Selvarasa Pathmanathan, will be allowed to continue his work running a nongovernmental development organization in the north of Sri Lanka, they said, despite being on Interpol's wanted list. Lakshman Hulugalle, head of the Defense Ministry's media center, said, “It's a victory for us, because a Tamil leader who fought against the government is now working for the country's development.” Neither official gave any details on why Sri Lanka was apparently ignoring Interpol's arrest warrant, which was instigated by India.

A version of this brief appeared in print on October 18, 2012, on page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: Sri Lanka: No Charges for Tamil Leader.

Can Pujara Step into Rahul Dravid\'s Shoes?

Cheteshwar Pujara at a training session in Rajkot, Gujarat, in this 2011 photo.Courtesy of Haresh PandyaCheteshwar Pujara at a training session in Rajkot, Gujarat, in this 2011 photo.

One of the features of India's recently concluded cricket series of two five-day test matches against New Zealand was Cheteshwar Pujara. Out of the national team for more than a year because of a knee injury sustained during the fourth Indian Premier League season in 2011, he celebrated his return to test cricket in August with a brilliant innings of 159 in Hyderabad, followed by an important innings of 48 at a crucial juncture, when India was chasing a victory target of 261 runs, in Bangalore.

India's captain, Mahendra Singh Dhoni, too, hailed Pujara's pe rformance and expressed hope that the young man would continue to score runs with a fair degree of regularity. Dhoni said good batting by Pujara and Virat Kohli was one of the major factors in India's decisive wins in both test matches.

Pujara, 24, said he wants to make up for the opportunities missed. “Of course, you can't help illness and injury,” he said in an interview at his home in Rajkot in the western Indian state of Gujarat. “But I still regret having missed important tours of England and Australia. Now that I've made a comeback, I want to score plenty of runs and help India win more and more test matches.”

He said he was confident that his previous knee injury won't affect the intensity of his effort.

“Having suffered injuries more than once, and being out of Team India for a bit too long because of them, I'm obviously very careful not to get injured again,” he said. “But then you don't think of injuries for the sake of your team. When you're fielding, you've to try your best to stop the ball, to save every run and to take the most difficult of catches regardless of the possibility of getting injured while doing so. Cricket is a team sport, not an individual one, after all.”

He has maintained the good form with the bat, which he showed against New Zealand and in plundering runs in India's domestic season. He scored 78 runs in his only innings while serving as captain for the Rest of India in the annual Irani Cup match against the Ranji Trophy (India's national cricket championship) winner Rajasthan at Bangalore in September.

Pujara then went on to dominate the 50-overs-a-side N.K.P. Salve Challenger Trophy in Rajkot with his spectacular performance, both as a batsman and as captain of India B earlier this month. He scored 158 not out, 124 not out and 79 and played a pivotal role in winning the title for India B.

Cheteshwar Pujara.Courtesy of Haresh PandyaCheteshwar Pujara.

Considered a possible heir to India's most compact and dependable middle-order batsman, Rahul Dravid, who has now retired, Pujara's success against New Zealand has led many to believe that he may have filled the void. But Pujara disagreed: “I can't even dream of replacing a truly great batsman like Dravid. Nobody can replace him or fill the gap he has left. Dravid has been a legend. I've a long way to go and a lot to prove. I want to be just myself â€" always â€" and bring laurels to my country in my own humble way. But it's a big motivation for me that people compare me with Dravid.”

Dravid himself praised Pujara after his stellar performance in Hyderabad. Pujara said the text message from the cricket star read: “Congratulations! You're doing very well. Keep it up.”

It's clear why Pujara is invariably compared with Dravid. Pujara, too, is endowed with classical technique and sound temperament, which enable him to bat correctly and confidently against fast as well as spin bowlers. Dravid was famous for his Promethean determination and penchant for making big scores as a batsman. And opponents have already begun fearing Pujara's concentration, steely resolve and hunger for success.

“You don't have to watch Pujara long to judge how technically perfect he is,” said the former Indian wicketkeeper Nayan Mongia. “He has a large repertoire of shots and plays all of them so well that it's hard to single out a particular one and say it's his best.”

Pujara had been marked as India's future batting star since his junior cricket days, having played innings of 138 and 306 not out against Mumbai and Baroda, respectively, in th e West Zone Under-14 tournament in 2000-01. After his terrific success in the Afro-Asia Cup and the Under-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka in 2006, where he made 97 against West Indies and 129 not out versus England, no one was in any doubt about his talent.

He continued scoring consistently heavily when he graduated to first-class cricket and began representing Saurashtra, West Zone and India A. He had been scoring centuries, double centuries and even triple centuries and it was only a matter of time before he was called for national duty. In his India debut, he played an invaluable innings of 72 when India successfully chased a target of 207 runs after a few early hiccups in the second test against Australia at Bangalore in October 2010.

Though he did not score prolifically in his next two tests on the following tour of South Africa in 2010-11, he was one of the few Indian batsmen who impressed with his patience and perseverance, technique and temperament, against Dal e Steyn of South Africa and other hostile fast bowlers. Despite not being conspicuously successful in purely statistical terms, Pujara won rich encomia from those who matter in world cricket.

“Pujara may not have scored too many runs against South Africa, but I was most impressed by the right application and character he showed against a formidable team on a foreign soil,” said Gundappa Viswanath, the former batting great and former chairman of selectors. “He looked like he belonged, and you couldn't say this about many other Indian batsmen, howsoever experienced.”

Pujara's father, Arvind, a former Indian railways employee who represented Saurashtra in the Ranji Trophy, is his only coach. “I still train under my father whenever I'm free and in Rajkot,” said Pujara, an only child. “Even when I'm away and playing, I keep in touch with him and we regularly discuss my cricket. He has dedicated his life to my cricket. My mother, who succumbed to cancer i n 2005 when I was playing a match away from Rajkot, always wanted me to play for India. It was her dream, even obsession, that I represent India. She would obviously have been delighted today.”

Regarded as a test match specialist, Pujara is not part of India's team for One-Day Internationals and Twenty20 matches. India is scheduled to play four tests against England at home from Nov. 15 to Dec. 17. The much welcome rest should do Pujara a world of good, for he has had a grueling cricket schedule.

But he is eager to cement his place in Team India. “I'm keen and determined to score plenty of runs against England and help India win the test series,” he said.