In a rare and evocative fusion of sport, culture, and civilisational memory, Hanuman Ji was officially unveiled as the mascot for the 25th Asian Athletics Championships held in Bangkok, Thailand, from July 12 to 16, 2023. The championship also marked the 50th anniversary of the Asian Athletics Association (AAA), making the choice of mascot both symbolic and deeply reflective of Asia’s shared spiritual heritage.
For millions who follow Sanatan Dharma, Hanuman Ji is not merely a mythological figure. He is the living embodiment of bal (strength), buddhi (wisdom), vega (speed), and above all, bhakti (devotion). His presence as the face of Asia’s premier track and field event struck an emotional chord across India and Southeast Asia, reminding observers that true power is rooted in self-control and service.
In the Ramayana, Hanuman Ji is the force that moves mountains, crosses oceans, and defeats arrogance, not for personal glory, but in complete surrender to dharma and to Shri Ram. His strength is never reckless; it is awakened only in service of righteousness. His speed is legendary, yet always purposeful. His courage is unmatched, yet free of ego.
This balance makes Hanuman Ji uniquely relevant to athletics. In Sanatan Dharma, physical power divorced from discipline is considered hollow. Hanuman Ji teaches that the highest form of strength is restraint, and the greatest victory is over one’s own limitations. For athletes pushing their bodies and minds to the extreme, this philosophy resonates far beyond medals and records.
Explaining the decision, the Asian Athletics Association stated that Hanuman Ji was chosen for the qualities he represents, qualities that define elite sport. On its official platform, the AAA noted that Hanuman Ji’s feats in the Ramayana symbolise speed, strength, courage, wisdom, and unwavering loyalty.
“As Hanuman exhibits extraordinary abilities in (Lord) Rama’s service, including speed, strength, courage and wisdom… Hanuman’s greatest ability is, in fact, his incredibly staunch loyalty and devotion,” the AAA said in a statement published on its official platform.
The tournament logo and visual identity, unveiled alongside the mascot, were designed to symbolize skill, teamwork, athleticism, dedication and sportsmanship, values organizers said the choice of Hanuman beautifully represents.
While Thailand is predominantly Buddhist nation, Hanuman Ji occupies a revered place in Thai cultural consciousness through the Ramakien, Thailand’s classical retelling of the Ramayana. In Thai murals, temple art, royal court performances, and traditional dance dramas, Hanuman Ji appears as a heroic and beloved figure, brave, witty, and fiercely loyal.
This shared reverence made the mascot’s unveiling a cross-cultural bridge rather than a religious anomaly. Thai organisers emphasised that the choice honoured Asia’s interconnected civilisational roots, where stories, symbols, and values flowed freely across geography long before modern borders existed.
The Asian Athletics Championships brought together hundreds of elite athletes from across the continent, including contingents from India, China, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, and host Thailand. Events ranged from sprints and hurdles to long jump, shot put, and endurance races.
Indian athletes such as shot putter Tajinderpal Singh Toor and long jumper Murali Sreeshankar were among the prominent names, carrying forward India’s strong presence on the continental stage, an echo, some observed, of Hanuman Ji’s own role as the strength behind a larger mission.
Beyond sport, the selection of Hanuman Ji was widely viewed as a moment of cultural soft power. It demonstrated how figures rooted in Sanatan Dharma can transcend religious labels to express universal values, discipline, courage, humility, and devotion on a global platform.
For many, it was also a quiet assertion of civilisational confidence: that ancient symbols need not be confined to temples or texts but can stand proudly in modern, international arenas.
Significantly, this was not the first instance of Hanuman Ji serving as a sporting mascot in Thailand. He was earlier featured as a mascot during the 2009 Asian Martial Arts Games in Bangkok, underscoring his enduring association with physical excellence, warrior discipline, and ethical strength in regional sporting culture.
That recurrence only reinforces what Sanatan Dharma has long taught: Hanuman Ji is timeless. Whether on the pages of the Ramayana or on the track of an international stadium, he remains the eternal reminder that true power flows from devotion, discipline, and dharma.
Sports journalists noted that this was not the first time Hanuman had appeared as a sports mascot in Thailand; he also featured in the 2009 Asian Martial Arts Games hosted by Bangkok, showing his recurring presence in regional athletic culture.
The story has gained renewed relevance at this moment because the Asian Athletics Championships’ choice of Hanuman Ji as its official mascot is being revisited and discussed widely amid growing debates around cultural representation, symbolism, and identity in global sporting events. At a time when international sports bodies are increasingly cautious about civilisational references, the continued acceptance of a deeply rooted Asian cultural symbol as a mascot highlights a contrasting trend, one that embraces heritage rather than erasing it for the sake of neutrality.


















