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Global Indianstory Global Indian ExclusiveIndore student Asmi Jain wins Apple Swift Student Challenge with groundbreaking healthcare app
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Healthcare entrepreneur

Indore student Asmi Jain wins Apple Swift Student Challenge with groundbreaking healthcare app

Compiled by: Team GI Youth

(June 15, 2023) “She’s already poised to make a profound impact on the world by helping people with their health, and we’re excited to see what she does next,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook, about Asmi Jain, a twenty-year-old developer from Indore, who is one of the three winners of the Apple Swift Student Challenge. Overnight, the quiet teen from Indore skyrocketed into fame, and the world learned Asmi Jain’s name. Cook was all praise for Jain, saying that the ioS developer community in India has always fascinated him, and that the young girl’s work exemplifies creativity. Jain’s app playground was declared one of three winners from 375 entries received from around the world.

Jain, who is a student at Medi-Caps University in Indore, found her call to action when a friend’s uncle had to undergo brain surgery. The procedure left him with misaligned eyes and facial paralysis. It stirred her to action and she began working on an app that can track a user’s eye movements as they follow a ball moving around the screen. According to the press note by Apple, “The playground’s purpose is to help strengthen the eye muscles, and though it was inspired by her friend’s uncle, Jain hopes it can be used by people with a variety of eye conditions and injuries.

Asmi Jain | Global Indian

Asmi Jain, winner of Apple Swift Student Challenge.

Driven by empathy

Jain is one of the three, first-time winners of the Swift Student Challenge, an annual competition organised by Apple during the Worldwide Developer’s Conference. The program is intended to provide young developers with a platform to showcase their coding abilities and creative ideas. The challenge requires participants to create interactive playgrounds and apps using Swift, Apple’s programming language.

Always driven to make a positive impact on society, the Global Indian found that the healthcare sector was the ideal place to put her coding skills to use. She had also spent years volunteering to help people in her community. She is also part of a forum at university for students to collaborate and work through coding problems.

“When you feel as though you’re part of something bigger, it motivates you and drives you to do better,” she remarked. “Coding lets me create things that help my friends and my community.” It also gives her a sense of independence, she says, which is “very empowering.”

Asmi’s plan involves getting feedback to make sure the app is “effective and user-friendly, then release it on the App store,” she says. “Ultimately, I want to expand it so that it helps strengthen all of the muscles in the face, and I hope it can one day serve as a therapy tool that people like my friend’s uncle can use at their own pace.”

Asmi Jain | Global Indian

Asmi is among a group of elite, AI-savvy young coders around the world who are harnessing cutting-edge technology to create social change. Developers like Asmi Jain are at the forefront of creating innovative solutions that address healthcare challenges. Technology has helped enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare systems, benefiting healthcare professionals and patients alike.

Through intuitive user interfaces and secure data handling, as is the case with Asmi’s app, patients are empowered to actively participate in their own healthcare, while healthcare providers can access critical information in real-time, leading to better decision-making and more personalized care.

What is the Apple Swift Challenge?

The Apple Swift Student Challenge is an annual competition organized by Apple during the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). It is specifically designed to provide young developers with an opportunity to showcase their coding abilities and creative ideas using Swift, Apple’s programming language.

The challenge invites students from around the world to submit their interactive playgrounds or apps created with Swift. Participants are encouraged to think innovatively and solve real-world problems through their projects. The entries are judged based on various criteria, including technical accomplishment, creativity, and the overall design of the project.

Winners of the Swift Student Challenge receive a range of exciting prizes, including a WWDC21 jacket and pin set, a one-year membership in the Apple Developer Program, and access to future WWDC events. Moreover, their projects are showcased on the Apple Developer website and in the App Store.

The Apple Swift Student Challenge not only recognizes the talent and potential of young developers but also provides them with a platform to gain exposure, connect with industry professionals, and kickstart their careers in app development and software engineering.

 

 

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  • app development
  • Apple
  • Apple Developer Program
  • Asmi Jain
  • Coding
  • Healthcare
  • Innovation
  • Medi-Caps University
  • Swift
  • Swift Student Challenge
  • WWDC

Published on 15, Jun 2023

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Chef | Naureen Shaikh | Global Indian

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Arnav Kamulkar

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Chef | Arnav Kamulkar | Global Indian

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Madhumitha K P

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Chef | Madhumitha K P | Global Indian

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Dev Mishra

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Chef | Dev Mishra | Global Indian

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Jui Khankari: Forbes 30 Under 30 teen making AI accessible through her nonprofit 

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38855" src="https://stage.globalindian.com/youth//wp-content/uploads/2024/08/jui1.jpg" alt="Jui Khankari | Global Indian" width="416" height="416" /> Jui Khankari[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_24897" align="aligncenter" width="550"]Jui Khankari | Global Indian | Indian American Jui Khankari is currently studying at Stanford University[/caption]

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqd9Ix0AU9w

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ht="354" /> Ritika Mukherji[/caption]

Ritika was 19 when she was selected a Rhodes Scholar 2022, making her the youngest Indian to win the prestigious scholarship. She is one of the five winners from India. "I am interested in sleep physiology and the metabolic level studies of sleep patterns and related states," she told Rediff.com

She's currently working on a project that "studies sleep patterns of Northern elephant seals who come to breed on the beaches of California." The project is in collaboration with a team at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Encouraged by her teachers at Miranda House, along with a host of mentors and seniors, Ritika learned her academics and a set of professional work ethics, too. She is also the founder of InVoIMEnt (Internships, Volunteering, Mentorship, Entrepreneurship), to create opportunities for Indian undergraduates to be exposed to quality work experience. The young researcher intends to return to India and continue her study of interspecies sleep differences and hopefully, make a positive impact on animal conservation efforts.

Follow Ritika on Twitter

Varad Puntambekar 

[caption id="attachment_17321" align="alignright" width="379"] Varad Puntambekar[/caption]

Varad joined the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in 2015, with an all-India rank of 15 in the entrance exam. After completing his MBBS, Dr Varad Puntambekar chose to work with community healthcare, becoming a public health fellow at SEARCH, instead of the tried and tested route through private hospitals.

He became part of NIRMAN, a programme under Society for Education, Action and Research in Community Health and arrived in Gadchiroli, Maharashtra for the first time. It was his chance to work at the grassroots and better his understanding of solving issues at the community level.

 As a public health fellow, Varad has been part of preparing community guidelines for Covid-19, improving vaccine coverage in rural areas, providing clinical services in OPD and IPD, helping improve the quality of mental healthcare and training community health awareness on de-addiction in villages. He believes that working at the grassroot level is crucial for every doctor, in order to explore healthcare challenges in remote locations.

 Varad has developed an innovative device to help screen congenital heart defects and hopes to pursue research on interventions for maternal and infant well-being at Oxford.

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Maya Burhanpurkar

(Featured in the banner photo. Picture courtesy: Maya Burhanpurkar / Popular Science )

In November 2015, 400 PPM, a documentary on climate change, saw a quiet-ish online release. The narrator, Maya Burhanpurkar, then still in her teens, stands beside an ice fjord in the Arctic, capturing it melt on camera. The film also featured prominent Canadians like author Margaret Atwood, former astronaut Colonel Christopher Hadfield, the explorer Wade and Nobel Laureate Dr Brad Bass. The documentary was awarded the international Gloria Barron Prize and has been seen by over two million students around the world.

Today, at 23, Maya Burhanpurkar will head off to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar this fall. The news came in late 2021, along with a congratulatory call from the prize committee, which included Donna Strickland, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics. Maya graduated summa cum laude with highest honours, a Technology and Innovation Fellow at Harvard Business School. She has also worked in investing, from early-stage VCs to public global macro and her academic background includes machine learning, autonomous technology, theoretical physics and fair AI.

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At Oxford, Maya plans on doing two master's degrees, one in Advanced Computer Science and the other in Philosophy of Physics.

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Adrija Ghosh 

[caption id="attachment_17319" align="alignright" width="312"] Adrija Ghosh[/caption]

A student of National Law University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata, Adrija Ghosh works as a research consultant on projects related to the death penalty at Project 39A, part of the National Law University Delhi. Her areas of interest include equality law and human rights law. Her research has involved the constitutionality of the marital rape exemption and the culture-based justifications for its retention. She also worked on citizenship rights issues, focussing on the Foreigners' Tribunals in Assam.

Adrija always knew she was academically inclined, she says in an interview. ( https://www.scconline.com/blog/post/2021/12/20/in-conversation-with-adrija-ghosh-on-winning-rhodes-scholarship/ ). At law school, she enjoyed research and writing, engaging logic and reason to build arguments.

She hopes to build on the research she has undertaken in India and on her skills as a lawyer, to use as tools to protect the rights of individuals and minorities.

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Aditi Sriram

[caption id="attachment_17320" align="alignleft" width="199"] Aditi Sriram[/caption]

Growing up in North York, Ontario, in what Aditi has described as "a racialised community in Toronto," she would see the disparities between the schools in her neighbourhood compared with others. As a child of immigrants, it was plain to her that their community fell short in terms of amenities. It stoked her interest in financial regulation and economic policy. This October, the Indian-origin scholar will head to Oxford University, one of 11 Canadians selected for the Rhodes scholarship. There, Sriram is looking at a masters of Public Policy and a master’s of science in public policy research at Oxford.

Currently an analyst at Good & Well, an impact investing firm, Aditi graduated from the University of British Columbia's Global Resource Systems Programme in 2016 as a Scace Loran Scholar. During her time at UBC, Sriram helped implement a mental health programme on campus, worked with non-profits in Africa and the UK, engaging with sex workers and injection drug users. She also travelled to France to study French and attended the International Students Summit on Food, Agriculture and Environment.

"I was initially interested in our education and social welfare systems and why those systems were failing our most vulnerable," she told the Loran Scholars Foundation. "The realisation that there is a strong profit motive for inequality to persist is my motivation to study public policy."

Sriram hopes to use her knowledge of economics and public policy to streamline the distribution of financial benefits across socioeconomic classes both locally and internationally.

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Extreme sports: Prajwal Pingali’s life as a mountain biker

(March 23, 2024) Prajwal Pingali loves to challenge his lungs and limbs, 24x7. Each time the youngster bounces his way down the rutted trails and rocks on his mountain bike, he’s on cloud nine. He has had his share of nasty falls and close shaves, but that hardly comes in the way of his next big adventure. “I love the feeling that no matter how hard you prepare for the race, you will always be bested by the mountains. They are brutal to everyone and especially those who set out to win,” smiles ace mountain biker and cyclist Prajwal Pingali, as he settles down for an exclusive with Global Indian. Racing life From the US to India and Belgium to Germany, the 22-year-old has been riding non-stop in the last few years, participating in one event after the other, both nationally and internationally. “Mountain biking really requires very little to get in. You need a bike, safety gear, and a positive attitude,” says Prajwal. The youngster has been cycling since his days in the US, where his family had shifted for four years, since 2001. “But I only started cycling as a sport around 2012 after moving back to Hyderabad when a

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internationally. “Mountain biking really requires very little to get in. You need a bike, safety gear, and a positive attitude,” says Prajwal.

The youngster has been cycling since his days in the US, where his family had shifted for four years, since 2001. “But I only started cycling as a sport around 2012 after moving back to Hyderabad when a friend of mine rode 66 km on his cycle with his dad for Independence Day,” he recalls.

That sparked something in Prajwal Pingali and he knew he had to give it a try. He joined his friend for a couple of short rides ranging from 2-5 km and decided to train up for the 100km Republic Day Ride. “It took a bit of time to build up the confidence and strength to undertake such a ride. Finally in 2014 I completed my first 100km ride with my friend on Republic Day.”

Long rides

Things developed quickly from there. In 2014, Prajwal rode 500-km from Hyderabad to Sevagram within three days. Thereafter, he kept riding the Ultra-endurance rides with different groups. In 2016, he met riders and the owners of The Bike Affair, a specialty bike store in Hyderabad. “They were extremely friendly and welcoming. I bought my first road bike at the end of the same year for an 800 km ride from Chikmagalur to Gokarna. It was with this same group that I enrolled for my first road race in December 2016,” he says.

But that turned out to be an unpleasant experience for Prajwal as he couldn’t keep up and didn’t finish the race in the end. “That was not going to pass with me. I was determined to race and win,” informs Prajwal, who then stepped up the focus and preparations which led him into full time racing.

First win 

In 2017, he began participating in several cycling championships in Hyderabad and Bangalore. In October that year, Prajwal won his first Stage Race, Tour of Glory (a road race that takes place over multiple days with winners for each stage and an overall winner.

Around this time, two of his school friends who were also cyclists, convinced him to get a mountain bike (MTB) and join them on the trails. Prajwal’s first ever road racing bike was a Merida Scultura 200 2017 and his first ever mountain bike was a Merida big seven 20D. He now owns four bikes, all for different purposes and uses, which includes Specialized Tarmac SL6 2018 (road racing),  Specialized Epic 2019 (Cross Country Racing), Merida Scultura 200 2017 (general purpose) and 4. Commencal Meta 29 AM 2021 (Enduro and Downhill race bike, his current primary bike).

The year of racing

The year 2018 was the year of racing for Prajwal. He would spend one weekend every month travelling to Bangalore to participate in races followed by a summer in Belgium to race there and upon his return, it was right back to travelling from location to location across India to race.

In 2018, he won the Inter-district Mountain Bike meet in U-18 category and set the fastest time of the track in all categories. He stood 2nd in the Inter-district road race (U18) and at the MTB Nationals, he placed 6th in the XCO (cross country olympic) and 9th in the XCT (Cross Country Timed). “To wrap up the year, I raced in the International Race, MTB Kerala, organised by the Cycling Federation of India and the Union Cycliste Internationale,” he informs.

Since then, Prajwal Pingali has been racing countless races in Road and MTB in many places across India. “I now race Enduro and Downhill races,” he says.

Competing in Belgium

Belgium is a world apart in terms of difficulty and competition, feels the young mountain biker. “Like many European nations, sports is an extremely important aspect of daily life and the culture around cycling is very supported there,” he says.

Prajwal rode shoulder-to-shoulder in a group of 60-100 at speeds between 30-80 kmph. He participated in nine races but could finish only two. “Racing in Belgium was quite difficult and required a lot of effort,” recalls the youngster.

Tough race 

Prajwal’s personal pick for his toughest race is Monduro, a race held in Tawang, Arunachal Pradesh, organised by the Tawang Cycling Association in 2023.

The two-day Enduro race takes place at an altitude of 4000m above sea level, the highest enduro race in the world.  “As this race takes place on herding trails, the trails have a raw feel to them, very chattery and bumpy and they stretch on for what feels like eternity,” says Prajwal.

The rock gardens are massive and technical and above all, the competition has strong riders from across the world. “Monduro has my heart. Apart from the race, it is the location and the kind and friendly people there that make me want to return to the place,” says the champ.

Hyderabad to US

Born in Hyderabad in September 2001, his family shifted to Philadelphia, US for about 4 years. Prajwal was just nine months old then.

In his growing up years, Prajwal was interested in many sports, physics, history, acting and theatre productions. His father, Pratap Pingali works as a Mentor for startups and businesses in T-Hub (Telangana Hub) while his mother runs the HUFT (Heads Up For Tails, Hyderabad) store chain.

Prajwal studied in no less than four different schools — Sloka (primary), Parkwood School International (primary), Glendale International School (middle), and Sancta Maria International School (high).

Work outs

Racing requires a lot of practice and working out, on and off the bike. Prajwal’s normal routine would include between 5-6 days of working out, ranging from on-bike high intensity interval training, on-bike endurance, skills sessions, fun trail rides, as well as off-bike strength training, Off-bike high intensity interval training, and muscle activation/engagement exercises.

Prajwal Pingali is not a strong advocate for strict diets unless there is a specific reason and it is monitored by a medical expert. The rule for him is simple — “everything in moderation. If you eat it, you have to burn it.”

Destination Dirt

In Hyderabad, Prajwal Pingali is part of a Mountain Biking group called Destination Dirt where the members build trails, organise meetups and rides, as well as host beginners to MTB workshops and teach people to safely ride trails and enjoy themselves. “We have riders of different levels and backgrounds.”

The dangers of the sport

Prajwal Pingali | Mountain Biker

Unfortunately, says Prajwal, cycling in any form is very dangerous in India. “MTB is in my opinion safer than commuting or road racing since the chance of a two-ton vehicle slamming into you is basically non-existent,” feels the MTB champion adding that all the risk in MTB is in the hands of the rider and not someone else.

In 2019, Prajwal had a major accident when a car crashed into him as he was cycling around Araku Valley with his team.  “I suffered injuries to my head and leg. The impact was such that I was briefly sent flying and landed close to the edge of the hill, luckily there were barriers,” he recalls.

The mountain biker has had crashes before but none this serious. “I was hospitalised and had to get a skin graft. I was wheel-chair bound for one month,” says Prajwal, adding almost  98% of his falls have been injury-free or barely anything serious.

This experience shaped his life. “The way we build our cities and roads must change to prevent needless deaths due to a split second mistake or a distracted driver. Our safety should not be entrusted in others’ hands,” he says.

What does mountain biking take?

“You will fall from time to time, you will not be racing at the pro level immediately, you will make mistakes and sometimes parts will break, but if you don’t fuss and whine about every issue and actually believe in yourself, then you can easily become a mountain biker,” says Prajwal.

Prajwal Pingali | Mountain Biker

Life outside of cycling

Prajwal says he deals with ADHD and is neuro-divergent. “I tend to have a vast multitude of passions and hobbies that I take up and add to my skill set, like tools in a box,” he says.The youngster has a keen interest in History and Physics, likes playing the bass guitar, drumming, action photography and videography. He loves camping and hiking, blogging, theatre and acting, dance and even typewriting.

Prajwal Pingali always wanted to become a pilot. “Covid-19 badly affected the plan. Although the dream is alive and burning strong, it must sit on the backburner till the moment is right,” says the cyclist, who is currently helping his family run their franchisee, HUFT in Hyderabad.

Currently, he is applying to many colleges in Germany for a BSc in Geography with a focus on Urban Planning.  “I chose Germany as I have lived there and like the access to mountain biking trails and resources that I have. It is also beneficial that I can speak in German.”

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Japanese language expert Gautam Kumar is gifting knowledge through ‘Puraskaar’

(May 31, 2023) Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) conducts Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) within Japan as well as in select countries outside the country to evaluate and certify language proficiency for non-native speakers. Brajraj, a native of Bodh Gaya in Bihar, with no exposure to the language and lack of training facilities in the small town was able to clear the foundation level of JLPT assessment. He attributes his success to Puraskaar’s initiative - to make knowledge accessible free of cost in far flung areas.   Just like him, Pammy too tasted success. She was able to crack the JNU entrance test crediting her feat to Puraskaar. Like Brajraj and Pammy, there are 1500 learners across India who are registered with the NCR based non-profit which is helping them fulfill their life goals.   "I can proudly say that the volunteers, who devote their time to Puraskaar’s initiatives helping learners in diverse subjects, are the reason behind the non-profit’s exponential growth,” remarks its founder Gautam Kumar in an interview with Global Indian.   [caption id="attachment_30586" align="aligncenter" width="758"] Gautam Kumar, founder, Puraskaar[/caption] The 150 volunteers, who teach at Puraskaar, are students of top Indian academic institutions including the IIMs, DU,

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[caption id="attachment_30586" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Indian Changemaker | Gautam Kumar | Global Indian Gautam Kumar, founder, Puraskaar[/caption]

The 150 volunteers, who teach at Puraskaar, are students of top Indian academic institutions including the IIMs, DU, JNU, Amity, and Punjab University as well as senior professionals working in MNCs and also homemakers wanting to do their bit for the society. Together they impart education in close to 25 subjects which are both academic as well as non-academic in nature.

How is Puraskaar helping

Puraskaar provides free coaching facilities in a wide array of subjects starting with science and math to painting, yoga, dance, music and more. Regular interactive sessions and group discussions, career counseling, motivational webinars, quizzes and personality development sessions are also organised.

Since Gautam holds a five-year integrated degree from JNU in Japanese, he takes care of the foreign languages department of the non-profit. “Today we are imparting training in seven languages - Spanish, French, German, Chinese, Korean and English,” he says.  

“I believe that learning a foreign language makes students more confident in life. Learners from financially-weaker sections especially love the concept because they cannot afford learning such languages like students studying in private schools.”

Though the main focus is on providing support to the underprivileged, in the peer learning model of Puraskaar anyone who wants to be associated with the non-profit is welcomed. "Learners of Puraskaar are as young as primary school kids to as old as fifty-year-olds," reveals Gautam. While 80 volunteers teach academic subjects, 70 are engaged in imparting knowledge in non-academic subjects.  

[caption id="attachment_30587" align="aligncenter" width="1166"]Indian Changemaker | Gautam Kumar | Global Indian Gautam celebrating his birthday with underprivileged children at DLF mall, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi[/caption]

The classes are held mostly in the evenings and the volunteers are more like mentors. “They teach just like any ‘bhaiya’ or a ‘didi’ would teach in a home environment.” Though the classes are largely conducted online, offline classes have been started in some places in Delhi and Patna’s slum areas. “The volunteers of Puraskaar are a wonderful set of people who use novel techniques to keep learners’ interests intact. Perhaps this is the reason why an initiative that was taken during the pandemic is still in momentum,” says the founder for whom Puraskaar is a 'dream project'.

The non-profit also dedicates a campaign every month to topics like women and hygiene to spread awareness in society on vital issues.

How did it start…

After passing out of JNU, Gautam worked in one of the corporate houses as a translator and then switched to teaching optional Japanese language courses in institutions like Amity University Gurgaon and Manav Rachna University. When the pandemic struck, seeing him teach online, his maid requested him to teach her kids as well.  

One of her children was in class nine while the other studied in class eleven. Her request gave Gautam an impetus to turn online teaching into a social work project, involving his students. Together they decided to teach a group of underprivileged children instead of just the maid’s kids.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kho6XCeyi9U

 

Over the course of time, LinkedIn and WhatsApp played a crucial role in spreading awareness about their initiative, attracting both learners and volunteer teachers. Later, Gautam and his team formally registered Puraskaar as a non-profit organisation.  

“The designation of the ‘founder’ is just for the namesake. My core team members who have been there with Puraskaar since the beginning have played an equal role in making the initiative reach where it is today,” remarks Gautam who received Indian Achievers' Forum's Shiksha Bharthi Award for the year 2021-2022. “Starting with a handful of students and four volunteers the exponential growth in the number of learners and volunteers is all thanks to them,” he adds. “It’s a collaborative effort.” 

Love for Japanese

Growing up in Bihar, Gautam was fascinated by the story of a cousin’s friend who had studied Japanese and was earning well after completing his studies. Inspired, he too dreamt of studying Japanese to afford a comfortable life. After passing out of school, much to his happiness, he was able to crack JNU’s entrance exam for a five-year integrated course.  

Gautam still considers himself a learner who is picking up nuances of Japanese culture through its language. “It’s a lifelong process,” tells the Puraskaar founder who is nurturing his next dream - to present Puraskaar’s initiatives at the august platform of UNESCO someday. As far as earning a living is concerned, Gautam is now into interpretation and consultancy.

  • Follow Gautam Kumar on LinkedIn 
  • Follow Puraskaar on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and its website

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Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

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