First, the stereotype. He was 16 when his parents bought him a used motorcycle as a Christmas gift. Learning to ride in the paddy fields of Shoranur, his hometown in Kerala's Palakkad district, the teenager was impressed by a bunch of riders practising for a race on a dirt track. A week later, Harith Noah was competing in his first race. Despite a good start, he came last. But the plot had turned. Two years later, at 18, Noah had won the first of his five national supercross championships. On January 19, 2024, he finished the world's toughest rally raid, the Dakar, in 11th position, the highest-ever ranking by an Indian. He did not know that he had come first in the Rally2 category in which he was competing.
A Master's Mindset
Noah does not follow his timings or his daily positions when he is racing. "My mental trainer and I believe it is best for me to not know," he says, speaking to INDIA TODAY from Shoranur, two days after his 30th birthday. "The Dakar is such a long race, there are so many things that can go wrong.
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He gave the beat to the world
He would pick up the rhythms of each experience of mobility and weave them into his taals. Thus it was that he reflected joy and laughter in rhythmic cycles...such was the magic of Zakir's fingersText and photographs by Raghu Rai
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