Like thousands of other cricket-crazy Indians, I am making a pilgrimage to Wankhede stadium this week to watch Sachin Tendulkar play his last game in India colours. Unlike many, I won’t be holding a ‘god’ placard. In a country where godmen notoriously have feet of clay, I remain deeply suspicious of human divinities. I have travelled to bid farewell because I genuinely believe, with Tendulkar, we are in the presence of sporting greatness. To be in the crowd will be to share in the collective joy of being part of a city, a community, indeed, a nation, which has lived almost vicariously through the achievements of a little boy from Sahitya Sahwas who has become a true legend. A sapling we saw flower in the maidans who has grown to be a banyan under which we all now seek shelter from the big bad world.