It's been like a dream so far: Das

| | New Delhi

India's Hima Das created history by winning the Gold medal in the women's 400 metre event at the IAAF World U20 Championships at Tampere on Thursday.

Hima registered a time of 51.46 seconds in the final at the Ratina Stadium to become the first Indian athlete to win Gold in a world championship across all age groups.

I am living a dream", said Hima Das as she tried to put in words her remarkable journey from being a stubborn footballer in a nondescript Assam village to becoming the first Indian woman world champion in athletics.

The 18-year-old Das, daughter of farmer parents at Kandhulimari village at Nagaon district, has become the toast of the nation after she won a Gold at the IAAF World U-20 Athletics Championships in Finland on Thursday.

She is also the first Indian - male or female - to have won a Gold in a track event at the world level.

She joined Neeraj Chopra who won a Gold in javelin - a field event - in the IAAF World U-20 Championships in the last edition in 2016 in Poland.

Her father Ronjit Das has a 2 bigha (0.4 acres) plot of land and her mother Junali is a housewife. The small piece of land was the only source of income for a family of six.

"I know my family's condition and how we struggled. But the Almighty has something for everybody. I am a positive person and I want to look ahead in life and do something for my parents and for the country," Das said from Tampere on Friday.

"But it has been like a dream so far. I am now a world junior champion," she added.

Das is the eldest of four siblings. She has three younger sisters and a brother.

"She is very stubborn, if she wants to do something she will not listen to anybody but she will do it with aplomb. She is a strong girl and that is why she is coming up to achieve something. I hope she will do something for the country," her father Ronjit said from his village in Assam.

"Physically also, she is very strong. She can kick football like any of us. I told her not to play football with the boys but she did not listen to us," her cousin Joy Das said.

It is a tough life for her parents given the meagre income but at this moment, they can't stop celebrating.

"...We are happy that she chose sports and she is doing well. Our dream is for Hima to win medals in Asian Games and Olympic Games. Since this morning, the whole village is celebrating her Gold medal. A lot of our relatives have dropped in to our place and we are distributing sweets."

Das, though, is not thinking too far ahead and wants to just run faster.

"I don't go out on the track thinking that I will win a medal. What I think is about running faster and faster and I believe that will translate into medals," she said.

"I don't have any target as of now, like I will win a medal in Asian Games or Olympics. I am just happy that I am doing something, bringing laurels to the country."