Ankita Konwar becomes first Assamese woman to complete English Channel Relay Swim
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Fitness enthusiast Ankita Konwar has etched her name in history by completing the English Channel Relay Swim, becoming the first Assamese woman and the first woman from North East India to accomplish the iconic crossing. She completed the feat as part of a six-member international relay team, battling freezing waters, powerful tides, and unpredictable currents before successfully reaching the French coast.
A Promise Kept
Konwar shared the milestone on Instagram on Saturday, revealing that the swim was the fulfilment of a personal vow made on her birthday the previous year. During a hike to the English Channel swim start, she had promised herself she would one day swim in it. 'Swam the English Channel in a relay yesterday!!! I kept a promise to myself,' she wrote in her post.
The achievement carries added significance: the crossing coincides with the 100th anniversary of Gertrude Ederle's historic solo channel crossing — Ederle was the first woman in the world to complete the feat. Konwar noted the parallel with evident pride.
From Learning to Swim to Crossing the Channel
What makes Konwar's achievement particularly remarkable is the timeline. She only learnt to swim three years ago, and the English Channel crossing marks a dramatic acceleration in her aquatic journey. 'I'm so proud of the girl in me, who decided to learn how to swim 3 years ago. She and I have come a long way since then,' she wrote.
Her path to the channel was not without setbacks. Earlier this year, she sustained an injury from a fall, which threatened to derail her preparation. She credited her coach Arjun Kawle for keeping her on track through the recovery. 'Thank you to my coach @arjunkawle for always believing in me, even when I was injured from a fall this year. For showing up on the days that I sometimes didn't want to,' she said in her post.
Milind Soman's Role in the Journey
Konwar reserved special gratitude for her husband, fitness icon Milind Soman, describing him as 'the biggest support a partner can ask for.' The couple are widely recognised for their shared commitment to endurance sports, long-distance running, and fitness advocacy. Soman's encouragement, she said, was a constant throughout her preparation and the swim itself.
What This Means for North East India
The crossing is a landmark moment for Assam and the broader North East India region in open-water swimming. Konwar has also set herself a future target — a solo English Channel crossing — signalling that this relay is only the beginning. Notably, the English Channel Relay Swim is considered one of the most demanding open-water challenges in the world, requiring teams to navigate one of the world's busiest shipping lanes under often brutal weather conditions.
Konwar's achievement is expected to inspire a new generation of swimmers from the North East, a region historically underrepresented in endurance aquatic sports at the international level.