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"It's difficult to summarise in one sentence (what he meant to me). He was family to me, apart from, of course, me having absolutely cherished memories of the time that we spend together. I've learned a lot from him. And I'm just so thankful that I was fortunate enough to spend this kind of time with him and just be in his presence. He was a very special person," Farhan said.
"So just to be in that aura and to be in that energy and to be included in his family, to be welcomed with so much love, with so much warmth, and with absolutely open arms, I'm truly grateful and I feel very blessed."
Milkha Singh had many ups and downs in his life that saw his parents being killed during the Partition, him indulging in petty crimes to survive in refugee camps of Delhi, going to jail for those, and joining the Army after three failed attempts.
Farhan said it was an honour to represent someone like Milkha Singh on the big screen as he was somebody "who rose out of really the worst possible circumstances, who created an identity with his sheer will and determination, with working harder than anybody else".
"To go from somebody who had a lost childhood, who didn't have a place to stay, who had nothing to eat for a while and no shoes to wear, you know, to rise from there and be considered India's most legendary athlete... that journey in itself says so much if you just look at the two polar ends of it," the actor said.
Recalling their first meeting while he was training in Mumbai to play the sprinter in the 2013 Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra-directed blockbuster, Farhan said he was "absolutely amazed and in awe" to see him interact with other athletes, who had come from different parts of Mumbai to train there.