



The children’s voices are growing louder as the sun sets on this remote Indian village.



They are chanting, focused.



Their fists pump. The older, taller kids hold painted signs in front of the crowd while the youngest and smallest reach their hands into the air and jump. They are frenzied, chanting — screaming at the top of their lungs — while dressed in what would pass for summer clothes in Winnipeg.



“GO JETS GO!”



A few of the boys are dressed in T-shirts — others sport long sleeves, hoods or polo shirts. The girls wear loose-fitting pants called salwar and tunics called kameez, with lightweight scarves called dupatta draped around their shoulders. Some cover their hair.



“GO JETS GO!”



The grass is yellow-green underneath sandal-clad feet.



“GO JETS GO!”



The Waris Shere Coaching Center in Katauna, India, is beautiful and brightly lit, even as...