Matthew Hayden says he has a "special connection" with India; slams world media for passing judgements

Matthew Hayden had penned down a blog in support of India battling the second wave of COVID-19.

Matthew Hayden | GETTY

Former Australia batsman Matthew Hayden feels a special connection with India and he said the country has taught him many lessons over the years. He had recently penned an emotional note for India as the country battles the second wave of COVID-19.

Hayden urged the world media to be easy on India without understanding the challenges that come with the successful implementation of any public scheme in a country with a huge population. 

“I just felt sympathetic to a country that has personally given me so many lessons more than anything,” Hayden told CNN-News18 in an exclusive interview. 

“I have often described to people all over the world that whenever I am in India, there’s this special connection that I have with the broader community of people, not just cricket lovers but people right across (India) that have this vibrancy and this life and commitment to excellence.”

“Coming from that place, I felt so upset and also frustrated. Some of the challenges that India were facing (compared to other countries),” he added.

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Hayden, while writing his blog, hoped to bring some positivity while India fights the COVID-19 pandemic. He was struck by the sudden disturbing situation in the country.

“All this life of just extreme intensity of humanity and then all of a sudden an eerie silence in response to covid and I also had extraordinary respect (as to) the people were listening. It was just an opportunity for me to just to pen down what I was thinking and feeling at the time and hoping it would shift in a positive direction,” the 49-year-old said.

Hayden didn't like the judgemental comments on India's way of handling the pandemic saying they don't understand the complexities. “India is a comprehensive society with so many layers to it, Language, religion, different foods even. Simply just throwing stones with limited understanding, I felt very strongly about it. 

"But I also understand that coming from this side of the fence that it is very difficult to understand until you have seen and I just feel privileged to have been in India as a traveler and as a brother and sister for almost three decades. I have a privileged position on that,” he said.

He continued, “It’s amazing how words can be a weapon but can be positive as well. We as a community are linked through our consciousness and our ability to process that how we will be able to live in a new normal world of covid. One of the great and powerful words is empathy.”

Hayden further added that India and Australia have a special connection that goes beyond cricket. “As Australians, we are very much brothers and sisters of India. We have 7,00,000 families living in Australia. I believe we have delivered somewhere close to 15 tonnes of medical supplies to India, 3,000 ventilators and a hundred Oxygen ventilators. There is a fantastic linkage. It started with our common ground for the love of cricket but it goes well beyond that. Hopefully my words were helping,” he said.

(With CNN-News18 Inputs)

 
 

By - 21 May, 2021

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