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          Patna, Nov 1 (IANS) Neighbours have suddenly become courteous,   shopkeepers are eager to help and long-forgotten friends have started calling   again -- the family members of Sushil Kumar, the first contestant to win Rs.5   crore (Rs. 50 million) on "Kaun Banega Crorepati", are trying to make sense of   all that is happening around them.
 
 |  Life has not been the same since Sushil Kumar, a 27-year-old computer operator   and tutor who earns Rs.6,000 per month, won the top prize in the show hosted by   megastar Amitabh Bachchan. The episode will be aired on Sony Entertainment   Television Wednesday.
 Sushil's father Amarnath Prasad is the first to   notice the change.
 
 "All visitors respect me and are touching my feet for   my blessings. It was not the case four-five days ago. I was just another poor   man for most people here," Prasad told IANS on phone from Motihari in East   Champaran district of Bihar, some 200 km from here.
 
 "Thanks to Sushil,   people now respect and honour me. It is money that matters, not me," he   added.
 
 Prasad, who candidly admits to not having seen "even Rs.1 lakh in   cash" in his life, said a wide assortment of people -- from bankers to   businessmen and even complete strangers -- have started dropping in and   enquiring about when Sushil will be back and what he will do with the   money.
 
 Even happier is Sushil's father-in-law Krishna Prasad, who runs a   small shop selling litti-chokha (a traditional Bihari dish).
 
 "With my   son-in-law suddenly becoming a millionaire, my status has increased in society.   People who used to neglect and sideline me due to my poverty earlier are now   giving me respect and honour," he gushes.
 
 Krishna also prides himself on   selecting Sushil for his daughter Seema.
 
 "Only a goldsmith can identify   the real diamond," he explains.
 
 Sushil's elder brother Sunil said his old   friends and relatives who have kept a safe distance from the family now   congratulate him.
 
 "Everything has changed for me. Now people recognise me   and want to talk to me," Krishna told IANS.
 
 Sunil said that after some   local Hindi dailies reported that his mother Renu Devi wanted to construct five   houses for her five sons, builders and contractors have started approaching   him.
 
 "They visited us and assured us of quality work if given the   opportunity," he said.
 
 At present, Sushil's joint family lives in a small   house in Henry Bazar in Motihari.
 
 Officials of several government and   private banks too are visiting the family. "But it is for Sushil to decide how   to invest and spend his money," he said.
 
 Not only that, the family has   for the first time received many gifts on Diwali this year.
 
 "I was   stunned that we were flooded with sweets, a first for us," Sunil   said.
 
 Sushil, who married recently, will return from Mumbai after around   10 days, his family said.
 
 To a hero's welcome no doubt, and to the   inevitable comparisons with "Slumdog Millionaire", the fictional tale of Jamal   who rose from the slums to win a KBC styled show. Sushil and Jamal - truly a   story that blurs the lines between fiction and fact, reel and real.
 
 
 
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