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Fauja Singh during his 5km run with the Dubai Creek Striders. The 100-year-old was in Dubai as a guest of Sikh community group Sarbat Da Bhala. Image Credit: Oliver Clarke/ Gulf News Archive

Chandigarh: His marathons at the ripe old age of 100 may not have been recognised by Guinness World Records on technical grounds, but Punjab-born British citizen Fauja Singh says the only thing he cares about is to keep running.

In fact Singh, who will turn 101 on April 1 this year, says he has not even heard of Guinness. I don't even know the name of the Guinness book, so why should I bother about it, he said.

The marathon runner is currently in India on a visit to his village Beas Pind, near Jalandhar, and other places in Punjab.

"My job is to run and I will continue to do that. Recognition by any book or agency will not affect my spirit towards running.

"For the record though, you can check my British passport that states my year of birth as 1911. Even the Queen [Elizabeth] sent me a congratulatory telegram on April 1 last year [2011] on my completing 100 years," the Punjabi-speaking Singh, who is illiterate, said.

Guinness had refused to recognise Singh as the world's oldest marathon runner in October last year after he successfully completed the Toronto Marathon (42.195 km) in just over eight hours. Although Guinness officials came to witness his feat in Toronto, they refused to acknowledge him as the oldest man running marathons as he could not produce a birth certificate.

Bias

Chandigarh-based author Khushwant Singh, who wrote Fauja Singh's biography, Turbaned Tornado last year, says Guinness not recognising Fauja Singh as the oldest marathon runner showed a definite bias.

"In 1911, when Fauja Singh was born in a Punjab village, there was nothing like birth certificates. I feel that the rules of the Guinness book and other agencies in Western countries are quite biased against achievers from Asian countries. Would they question the British government, which ruled India at that time [1911], why it didn't have birth certificates at that time," Khushwant asked.

An e-mail sent to Guinness authorities regarding Singh's record did not elicit a response. Guinness had recognised Dimitrion Yordanidis, 98, from Greece as the oldest marathon runner in 1976. However, there is little evidence to prove that Yordanidis, born in 1878 in Greece, had produced his birth certificate.

Singh moved to London in 1992.

The death of his son Kuldip and earlier of his wife forced him to search for a worthwhile alternative in life.

At 89 years, he took seriously to running and ended up in international marathon events in London, Glasgow and Toronto.

When he first turned up for training at Redbridge-Essex with coach Harmandar Singh, he was dressed in a three-piece suit. Fauja ran his first race, the London Marathon, in 2000. Before that, his early memory of being a runner was, at best, limited to participating in village sporting competitions before the Second World War.