| His rags-to-riches story gives every Indian youth the right to dream. Abhijeet Sawant, who was a Maharashtrian working-class boy till a few weeks ago, has become famous overnight as the first Indian Idol. | |
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| You are the first Indian winner of this global show. Yes I'm the first Indian Idol and I see that makes me doubly responsible. People do have great expectations from me, I'm aware of that. The only thing I know how to do is sing. I want to give people good songs that they can hum, just like the songs I grew up humming by Rafi Saab, Lataji, Mukesh Saab and the other singing legends. But you've gained popularity on television by singing well-known film songs! I don't think that should be a problem. I had mentally prepared myself to sing fresh original compositions later on. If it wasn't Indi-pop it would have been film songs, but still my own. I just wanted to make my way ahead in life. You've now become an icon for the middleclass. I am a boy from the middleclass. My father works in the Mumbai municipal corporation. My mother is a housewife. I've a younger sister. After completing my graduation I started my struggle as a singer. But there were no open doors for me in the film industry. I had braced myself for a long period of struggle. Finally there were just you and a boy named Amit Sana fighting to be the Indian Idol. How did the competition seem at that point? We were both good friends and good singers. We never felt like competitors. Both of us were in competition with ourselves, trying to better our own performance with every step upwards. I made lots of friends. And when the contestants starting getting eliminated, I felt very dejected. It was like friends departing at the railway station. I used to cry for them. You're from the middle class. Are you comfortable being projected as a pop icon? I grew up listening to and singing film songs. The whole experience of being an Indian Idol was a culture shock to me. When I came into this competition I had prepared for huge changes. I didn't want to look self-conscious at any stage of the competition. I think it's very important to rise to the challenges that life throws your way. What's is your advice to youngsters like you with dreams? To be part of an event like Indian Idol is a bonus. But success comes primarily from hard work. I know success doesn't always come to the deserving. Destiny plays a great hand in one's life. You must have people to look up to. |