Santhi turns to coaching after suicide bid

CHENNAI, India, (Reuters) – Distraught after a failed  gender test that led her to attempt suicide, Indian athlete  Santhi Soundarajan has turned to coaching and transferred her  dreams to her new charges.

“One of my students will win a medal in the 2014 Asian  Games,” Santhi told Reuters in an interview. “That’s my dream,  that’s what I am working towards.”

Santhi was stripped of her women’s 800 metres silver medal  in the 2006 Asian Games after failing a gender test and was  admitted to hospital last September following a suicide bid.

“I was shattered by the failed test,” she said in Tamil.  “The Athletics Federation of India did not support me, did not  fight my cause. I was hoping they would. I was depressed.

“I felt like I had lost everything. It still hurts. I loved  the sport so much. My dream broken, I attempted suicide.”

The 28-year-old athlete found hope in coaching as she  struggled to recover from the traumatic experience.

“My sports career had ended, but I wanted to stay in the  only thing that I know — athletics. That’s the reason for my  re-entry,” she said.

Two months after her suicide attempt, Santhi launched her  own academy in her home town of Pudukkottai in the southern  Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

“I have 68 students at the academy,” she said, pride filling  her eyes. “I run a hostel for 10 talented boys. I’ve taken a  house, provide food and also stay with them.”

POOR FAMILIES

One of her pupils won the Chennai marathon and another  finished third in the event, she said.
Santhi, who is also an athletics coach with the regional  government, said she was looking for a government grant to help  her run the hostel.

“I won’t be able to continue it on my own for long,” she  said. “It costs 10,000 rupees ($212) a month to run it. I put in  some of my money and some people help.

“I try and provide kit and food for all the children at the  academy. They come from poor families and only if we provide  these facilities will they come.”

Santhi, like many Indian track and field athletics, took up  sport to find a secure job and escape grinding poverty.

One of five children of brick-kiln labourers she overcame  malnutrition as a child to become a middle-distance runner.

“I know what poverty feels like. I have begged…food as a  child,” said Santhi.
“As a kid, my coach arranged for food for me. I want to do  the same for these needy children.”