Three days later

Han Mo returned to India again. This time is completely different from the last time.

The first time he came to India was to make a film. Han Mo didn't know what the film would face, whether the mahavia he was about to see was really the same as he expected, and whether his daughters had the same talent for wrestling.

Han Mo admires these girls who practice wrestling hard and mahavia who works hard against great external pressure for the future of his daughters.

However, only when the girls have made achievements can they really succeed and be recognized by the outside world. The superiority of men over women in this nation has been deeply rooted, the silver medal is bound to be forgotten, and only the gold medal will become a model.

This time Han Mo came to India, his mood was completely different, because he firmly believed that mahavia and his daughters would shock the whole of India.

Han Mo doesn't like too many rituals, even in his own territory. Moreover, in India, he didn't accept an interview and had nothing to say. What the film expressed is what he wanted to express.

After a brief press conference, the film officially began.

What Han Mo didn't expect was the attendance of the film.

He originally thought it was a film about women's rights after all. Even if Gita had some supporters, he really asked everyone to spend money to buy tickets to see the film. Maybe the mainstream fans were unwilling. After all, the patriarchal thought has been deeply rooted and can not be reversed at once.

Han Mo's psychological expectation is 80% attendance.

But when entering the premiere, the audience lined up to enter. With the dark flow of people, they slowly poured into the cinema. Han Mo had a little accident.

100% attendance at the premiere!

Moreover, there were contradictions with the staff outside the cinema because they didn't get the premiere opportunity. Because the previous calculation was wrong, the media reporters occupied several more positions, which means that some viewers lost their position and couldn't enter the cinema.

Finally, in order to calm the anger of the audience, we invited more media reporters out and made some promises for them, so that we could make room for the audience.

The audience was quiet and the lights dimmed.

The film officially began.

Mahavia is a wrestler. His lifelong dream is to win a gold medal of the world wrestling champion for his country.

But for some reasons, he didn't realize his wish. He retired early, found a job and got married.

If he didn't, mahavia placed his hope on his son. He hoped that his wife would give birth to a son for him and complete his unfinished dream.

But his wife gave birth to four daughters in a row.

Mahavira has felt that his dream can no longer be realized.

But one day his daughter beat the two boys black and blue, and the parents came to the door, and mahavia rekindled her fighting spirit.

He suddenly realized that a gold medal is a gold medal, whether it is a boy or a girl.

From that day on, mahavia decided to train her daughters to become world champions.

Everyone thought he was crazy. He withstood all the pressure for the future of his daughters. He told his daughters that they were not fighting alone. They were an example for all girls who didn't want to wash and cook all their lives.

Mahavia not only taught her daughters how to wrestle, but also how to win the game.

Opportunities are fleeting. Opportunities are fleeting. You should strive for them with every drop of sweat. You should firmly believe that you will get more, and fate will succumb to your unremitting efforts.

He would say that Dad can't protect you all the time. Dad only teaches you how to fight. You should overcome your fears and try to save yourself.

He also blamed himself for watching his daughters' hard training, rain or shine. As a father, he felt deeply distressed. He felt that he did not deserve to be a father, but he had no choice, because as a coach, he had to do so. He had to forget his father's identity when he decided to train his daughters to become professional wrestlers.

When the whole village was laughing at him and the neighbors were laughing at him, mahavia withstood the pressure and carried all the external difficulties alone. He just hoped that his daughters could concentrate on training.

But the daughters didn't understand him. The daughters felt that their father was forcing them to do things they didn't like to do.

They cried to the girl next door, "how can a father force his daughter to become a wrestler? Let them run at five o'clock and work like slaves. If you resist, cut off their hair. God will no longer give anyone such a father. "

The girl next door said helplessly, "I wish God would give me such a father. At least he cares about you. Otherwise, our reality is like this: from the moment of the birth of our daughter, we are destined to be with pots and pans. He does housework all day. When he gets old, he will marry a woman. In order to get rid of his burden, he took his hand and walked to her bridegroom. It's all her mission to teach her husband and children for the man she's never met. At least, your father regards you as his own children. He sheltered you from wind and rain. He endured humiliation and burden for you. He just wanted you to have your own future and life. What's wrong with him? "

The daughters gradually understood their father's painstaking efforts and understood that every battle they fought was not just to defeat their opponents on the field. Each victory was not enjoyed by one person, but won with them by millions of girls behind them. All the girls who were considered inferior to boys, all the girls who were forced to do cumbersome housework, and the girls who were married to have children. Gita and babita did not defeat their opponents, but those who discriminated against girls.

They should use their achievements and victories to prove those people's mistakes.

Gita and babita did it. They used their own efforts to tell everyone that they were no worse or even stronger than boys.

"I'm proud of you!" Mahavia said to her daughter.

Warm applause broke out in the cinema, and tears filled the eyes of every audience. They may still have a skeptical attitude towards mahavia's practice before watching the film, or they may think that girls should not practice wrestling, or they may just have a state of mind of watching the excitement.

However, when the practical and more shocking picture that was originally familiar to them was presented in front of them, no one could stop a surging heart.

Gita in the film finally won the gold medal in the Commonwealth Games. The picture of the game is very real.

The audience stood up at the moment when the national flag was raised. Without any organization or preparation, all the audience sang the national anthem with tears.

At this time, the subtitles at the end of the film that would have appeared on the big screen did not appear.

Instead, the picture of the wrestling field.

The audience was stunned and didn't react. At this time, someone suddenly shouted, live broadcast, live broadcast of the game!

Gita, that's Gita!

I saw a girl wearing a national wrestling team uniform, with a gold medal on her neck, with a solemn expression and full of respect.

At this time, the Indian flag really rose slowly, and the National Anthem echoed in the whole stadium, over the cinema, and in every household in India.

Mahavia did it.

Geeta did it.

Girls use their own efforts to tell the world that she is an example for millions of Indian girls. She can control her own destiny, and so can they.