
Turbaned Tornado
On Oct 13 that year, at a meet in Toronto, he set eight world records for the 95-plus age group in events ranging from 100m to 5,000m.
Doug Smith, the co-chair of Ontario Masters Athletics, called it the 'most astonishing achievement' he had ever witnessed.
'He rested between the events by sitting down and having a few sips of tea,' Smith said in an interview for this obituary in 2017.
'He was actually running – both feet off the ground. He was amazing.'
Three days after the track meet, Singh performed yet another rousing feat. He became the first reputed centenarian to complete a race of 42km by finishing the Toronto Waterfront Marathon in 8'25:16. His actual running time was 8'11:05, but in the throng of runners, it took him 14 minutes to reach the start.
There were two complications. Fauja received assistance in crossing the finish line, statisticians said.
More troubling, he had a passport but could not produce a birth certificate for race officials or Guinness World Records to verify the authenticity of his achievements.
Fauja died on July 14, his startling accomplishments of 2011 both celebrated and unconfirmed.
He was hit by a car while on his daily walk in his home village of Beas Pind in the Punjab region of India and died in a hospital, his former coach, Harmander Singh (no relation), said in a phone interview from London.
He had returned to India to live during the pandemic.
Fauja jubilates as he completes the 2011 Scotiabank Toronto Waterfront Marathon on Oct 16, 2011, at the age of 100. — AFP
Fauja Singh gave his birth date as April 1, 1911, and said he was born in Beas Pind. The country was ruled by Britain at the time, and birth certificates were not regularly issued in villages. His parents were farmers.
Fauja's case became emblematic of the difficulties race officials faced in determining the ages of elderly runners, especially when the athletes were born in places where birth certificates were unavailable or lost during tumultuous times.
Still, Fauja Singh had his supporters among fans and officials. Smith, the Ontario Masters official, said, 'As far as I'm concerned, he was legit.'
But, he added: 'They just can't start allowing world records when there is no birth certificate. It opens a whole can of worms.'
For his part, Fauja said in 2016 that he did not begrudge officials for not ratifying his achievements.
'I've done everything openly, nothing in secret,' he said by telephone from London, with his coach serving as an interpreter.
'If it makes some people happy to question it, it has made a lot of other people happier who believe it.'
Fauja did not walk until he was five and was given the nickname Stick because of his weak and spindly legs, according to an ESPN profile of him in 2013.
Rather than attend school, he worked on a farm, feeding cattle and growing corn and wheat. He eventually married and had six children.
Fauja's wife, Gian Kaur, died in 1992, according to Harmander. His youngest daughter then died in childbirth, and a son was killed in 1994 when struck in the head by a sheet of windblown corrugated metal during a storm.
As Fauja was reeling from these tragedies, he said, his masters running career began in 2000, when he was said to be in his 80s.
'Running gave him a new focus in life, made it worth living,' Harmander said, adding that Fauja moved to London after his wife's death to live with a son.
Fauja's first marathon was the 2000 London Marathon, which he finished in 6 hours 54 minutes.
He ran other marathons in London, New York and Toronto and was featured in an advertising campaign by Adidas.
A Sikh, he was called the Turbaned Tornado and was described as the world's oldest marathon runner by journalists.
'The first 32km are not difficult,' he told reporters. 'As for the last 10km, I run while talking to God.'
By 2016, his marathon days were over, but Fauja continued to walk up to 16km a day in Ilford, in East London, his coach said.
He ascribed his longevity to a vegetarian diet and abstinence from tobacco and alcohol. His last race, a 10k event in Hong Kong, was in 2012.
'Once I started to overcome the tragedies in my life, I started getting recognition,' said Fauja.
'That and support motivated me to carry on. It made me more disciplined to stick to a routine. I could forget my problems and remain happy and avoid negativity.
While his records were not ratified, his efforts reflected perseverance and resilience among the aging. Queen Elizabeth II had sent Fauja a telegram on his supposed 100th birthday in 2011 and another when he was said to have turned 105.
While he could not verify Fauja's age, Harmander said that, presuming the British government did its due diligence in giving him a pension, 'I imagine it's good enough for me.' — NYT
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
15 hours ago
- The Star
A place at the table
A group of Iraqi women who live with disabilities train three times a week preparing for an upcoming tournament that could qualify them for the national Paralympic team. — AFP IRAQI table tennis player Nur al-Huda Sarmad adjusts her wheelchair before striking the ball into play, braving sweltering heat, social stigma and inadequate facilities as she dreams of taking her team to the Paralympics. Sarmad and seven other Iraqi women who live with disabilities train three times a week at a community centre in the southern city of Diwaniyah, preparing for an upcoming tournament that could qualify them for the national Paralympic team.


The Sun
16 hours ago
- The Sun
Noah Lyles and Jefferson-Wooden dominate US trials with world-leading performances
NOAH Lyles delivered a statement performance at the US trials, winning the men's 200m in a world-leading 19.63 seconds, while Melissa Jefferson-Wooden secured a sprint double in the women's events. Lyles, the reigning world champion in both 100m and 200m, surged past Kenny Bednarek in the closing stages, crossing the line in 19.63s. The race ended with tension as Lyles turned to stare at Bednarek, who responded with a shove post-finish. 'Under coach's orders, no comment,' Lyles said, while Bednarek criticized the gesture as 'unsportsmanlike.' Jefferson-Wooden continued her dominance, adding the 200m title (21.84s) to her 100m victory. Olympic champion Gabby Thomas narrowly secured third place, earning her spot for the World Championships in Tokyo. Elsewhere, Rai Benjamin (400m hurdles) and Dalilah Muhammad (women's 400m hurdles) booked their Tokyo tickets with commanding wins. Donavan Brazier marked his comeback with an 800m victory (1:42.16), while 16-year-old Cooper Lutkenhaus set a new under-18 world record (1:42.27). Sha'Carri Richardson missed the 200m final after her recent arrest, limiting her to the 100m in Tokyo. - AFP


The Sun
16 hours ago
- The Sun
De Minaur battles past Tiafoe into Toronto Masters quarter-finals
ALEX de Minaur continued his strong form by defeating Frances Tiafoe 6-2, 4-6, 6-4 to advance to the quarter-finals of the ATP Toronto Masters. The Australian, fresh off his Washington title win, extended his winning streak to seven matches in a gruelling encounter lasting just under two and a half hours. De Minaur, the ninth seed, will next face the winner of the match between Italian Flavio Cobolli and American fourth seed Ben Shelton. Despite the victory, the Australian voiced concerns over the new 12-day Masters schedule, which has disrupted player routines. 'I didn't enjoy having so much time off. The body is used to going and going,' he said. The match saw nearly 50 unforced errors from Tiafoe, with De Minaur overcoming a mid-match slump in the second set. 'It was never gonna be easy. He's got the ability to switch it on whenever he wants,' De Minaur admitted. 'I was just happy to sneak away with this win.' Meanwhile, sixth seed Andrey Rublev secured his 14th Masters quarter-final after Spaniard Alejandro Davidovich Fokina retired at 6-7 (3/7), 7-6 (7/2), 3-0 due to possible cramping. Rublev, last year's runner-up in Montreal, will face either Jiri Lehecka or Taylor Fritz next. - AFP