“One day I want to win a medal for India in the Olympics,” she says, still catching her breath after a long running drill on the tar road that goes past her sports academy. Her tired and injured bare feet are finally resting on the ground after four hours of arduous training.
This 13-year-old long-distance runner is not barefooting on some modern-day fad. “I run that way because my parents can’t afford to buy expensive running shoes,” she says.
Varsha Kadam is the daughter of Vishnu and Devshala, agricultural labourers from Parbhani, one of the state’s poorest districts in the drought-prone Marathwada. Her family belong to the Matang community, listed as Scheduled Caste in Maharashtra.
“I love running,” she says, her eyes shining. “The five-kilometre Buldana Urban Forest Marathon was my first [run] in 2021. I felt very good when I came second and won my first medal too. I want to win more competitions,” says the determined teenager.
Her parents recognised her passion when she was only eight. “My mama [maternal uncle] Paraji Gayakwad was a state-level athlete. He is in the Army now. Seeing him I also started running,” she adds. In 2019, she secured a second rank in the four-kilometre cross-country running at the interschool state-level competition and, “that gave me more confidence to pursue running.”
















