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Global IndianstoryEast is East: Ashutosh Mehndiratta’s retelling of India’s 5,000-year history
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East is East: Ashutosh Mehndiratta’s retelling of India’s 5,000-year history

Written by: Darshana Ramdev

(June 18, 2024) A decades-long quest to understand his own identity culminated, for Ashutosh Mehndiratta, in his debut book, India and Faraway Lands: 5,000 Years of Connected History. The magnum opus has been condensed into a 386-page, imminently readable history of India and the world. It was a journey that began when he first moved to the US in 1995 as a student, where he remained for the next decade or so.

“When you’re living in India, you don’t think of yourself as Indian. When you step out of the country, you become very aware of your identity – you’re Chinese, Sri Lankan, or Indian. It’s a very simple but unique distinction Indians living in the country may not appreciate,” Ashutosh tells Global Indian, as he connects with me from his home in Eastern Canada.

Finding inspiration 

Growing up, Ashutosh Mehndiratta would listen to his father tell stories of the Partition – both his parents were born before in pre-Independence India, in what is now Pakistan. When the partition took place, his parents’ families were among the millions who braved the bloodshed to travel to India, huddled in crowded trains, praying for their lives. “My mother was too young to remember but my father would tell me stories,” he says.

“We grew up reading Amar Chitra Katha and hearing stories about how India was IT – the golden bird. But today, we can see that other countries are far more developed and wealthier in many ways. If India had such a glorious past, when did it change,” asks Ashutosh, as he joins me for a chat from his home in Canada, where he now lives with his wife. How did this change happen – was it gradual or sudden?

Ashutosh Mehndiratta

Ashutosh Mehndiratta

The identity question 

When he left India, he became aware of his identity as an Indian, which left him with many questions. How did India rise to greatness and what led to its fall? Some experts suggest geography, others say religion – Ashutosh, who naively believed he could read a few books and find an answer, realised, through years of research, that there was no one clear reason. Countless influences act upon a country, from within and without, to determine its transition to wealth or poverty.

“Over the years, I gathered so many notes and books that I thought, ‘Why don’t I write a book of my own?’ I started about six or seven years ago.” He was living in New Zealand at the time and in this case, geography really was the answer. “Living outside India was a good thing – there were fewer distractions. I lived close enough to the office to walk home as well, so I had time on my hands.”

Catching a break 

Ashutosh Mehndiratta came back to India in 2017, where he headed Cisco’s Bengaluru’s account. In 2018, he attended the Bangalore Literature Festival, where the Lit Mart, a platform for aspiring authors to make pitches to major publishing houses, is a big draw. It can mean a big break for first-timers – “There is a 99.9 percent chance you won’t hear back from a publisher unless you are an established academic or Bollywood star. A history enthusiast without a pedigree rarely stands a chance,” Ashutosh admits.

Lit Mart did in fact open those doors for the techie-turned-historian, who met a representative from Manjul Publishing House. “I wrote to Rashmi and her editorial team liked the idea, so we began the editing process. That is a long journey – as a first-time author you don’t know the scale of effort that goes into editing.”

Ashutosh Mehndiratta | Indian and Faraway Lands

India: A History 

The book gets off to a surprising start – it begins in the present and moves backwards. “History books begin in the past and move to the present but I personally feel it is not logical. The present is more familiar and relatable. I grew up in the ’80s and ’90s, I saw history being made when India won the World Cup. That resonates more than the Indus Valley Civilisation.” He wanted the subject to fascinate his reader as much as it did him, so he decided to go backwards, starting out with the 1930s, Independence and Partition.

“We have all grown up hearing that Gandhi’s peaceful protests got us independence,” Ashutosh remarks. “But the British empire itself had vanished – the country had gone bankrupt and London was destroyed. They had no will or resources to maintain a colony. In 1946, as Britain was left devastated by World War 2, came the Royal Indian Naval Mutiny. It was a failed insurrection but scared the British, nonetheless. For the first time, they realised the might of Indians bearing arms against them. The US had also come out of the Roaring Twenties and domination meant having to dismantle what was left of the Empire. The Japanese had also weakened the colonialists, forcing them to surrender in Singapore. Subhash Chandra Bose had also been running his propaganda war through a radio show he did from Germany.

Imagine there’s no country

During his study of Indian historians, Ashutosh found they were all confined to the boundaries of India. “Their story begins in 1608, when the first ship landed in Gujarat. They don’t ask why someone in a small island nation would get on a boat, go around Africa and travel 18,000 km to reach India. What was their motivation?” He discovered that a year earlier, in 1607, they had landed in Jamestown in America. “So, I thought, let’s take a break from India and see what was happening in London at the time.” He learned that London was a small city trying to enter the merchant trading business, attempting to compete with the Portuguese who had become rich through trade, bringing in silk from China and spices from India.  He couldn’t just study India in isolation, everything is linked to everything else.

What’s more, when the British first arrived to trade with India, they were welcomed. “That was boom time,” Ashutosh says. “Like Bangalore is now – big tech is pumping money into the city. Of course, it would be a different story if big tech took control of the government but until then, we all love the millions we receive!”

A story of interconnectedness 

“I wanted to focus on the interconnectedness of history,” Ashutosh says, adding that the cost was sacrificing depth to cover 5000 years in less than 300 pages. Instead, all his years of reading go into a voluminous bibliography. “The idea is to invoke curiosity in the reader,” he says.

The stories are remarkable – Ashutosh Mehndiratta tells a couple to appeal to the Bangalorean in me. For instance, “My job was Bangalored” is a common dotcom era joke in the US but there was another period of close ties between Bengaluru and America, back in the late 1700s, when Haider Ali, of all people, was a household name on the other side of the world. “The Americans were fighting the British, as were Ali and the French. The Anglo-Mysore wars made it to American newspapers and Haider Ali became “Haider Ally”. They would talk about his son, Tipu, the prince using rockets in war.”

When America won its freedom in 1783, it was a young country with lots of land and no money. “They sent their first ship to India,” Ashutosh says. “The ship arrived in Pondicherry, had a flag and was called the ‘United States’. That’s how they began their trade and eventually grew into a superpower.”

Drivers of progress 

Could he identify trends that result in progress more than any other? “Any country that allows freedom of expression has progressed,” he says. “If you can express, debate and critique freely, it brings out the best in people. Trade is also important and because of that, places near calm oceans or rivers tend to thrive.”

Ashutosh Mehndiratta hopes his book, with all its fascinating anecdotes, will inspire his audience to read more, to learn about their Indian identity. “It’s not something that Indians at home are aware of but it comes up when you’re abroad,” he says. Since his wife works for an immigrations company, even their dinner table talk is diverse and multicultural. “Meeting people from other cultures, compels you to learn about the world and yourself. Diversity really brings out the best in you.”

Follow Ashutosh on LinkedIn.

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  • Cisco
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  • India and Faraway Lands: 5000 Years of Connected History
  • Indian Diaspora
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Published on 18, Jun 2024

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Story
Breaking barriers: Dr. Kavitha Das’ journey to champion health equity and empowerment

(May 1, 2023) It takes a strong woman to raise a strong woman and as Dr Kavitha Das was raised by three of them, she understands what it takes to smash the glass ceiling. Dr. Kavitha P. Das has dedicated 15 years to disrupting the healthcare system and promoting interdisciplinary research for equitable access to care. Based in New York City, the dentist, researcher, academic, and healthcare innovator has collaborated with renowned institutions and leads a health equity-focused organization. Currently the Chair for Health Policy and Advocacy in New York City and health policy statements for the New York State Public Health Association, Dr. Das focuses on preventing chronic diseases in diverse urban communities and engages with various stakeholders to create impactful action plans. She's also a seasoned academic, who has worked in infectious and chronic disease mitigation and research at NYU, Columbia University, Yale University and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.  Kavitha was born and raised in Bengaluru, in a large family of hard-working, kind and loving people, she recalls. Her aunt Slevie Das, who partly raised her, went to the US in the 1950s, where she completed her PhD before returning to India and going on

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ard-working, kind and loving people, she recalls. Her aunt Slevie Das, who partly raised her, went to the US in the 1950s, where she completed her PhD before returning to India and going on to become the first and the only Vice Chancellor of Mysore University. Her father, Dr Parangusa Das, was a plastic surgeon, specialising in trauma and burn cases. She would accompany him to work as a child, and the hospital became a familiar place to her. In those days, she travelled extensively – globetrotting with her mother, Thulasi and her father, as well as locally with her aunt, who was the Director of Collegiate Education for all higher education institutions in Karnataka." 

Embarking on a Journey to the US 

"I thought hospitals were normal places to be as I used to visit my father often at his place of work," Kavitha tells Global Indian. She was inspired by her father and her aunt, and wanted to emulate them. "I chose dentistry as I thought it had a better work-life balance even though my Dad tried his best to convince me to go to medical school," she adds.   

In 2001, Kavitha embarked on her journey to the US to further her education, remarking, "I went to the USA to study Social and Behavioural Sciences and International Health, a degree in public health after I graduated from dental college in Bangalore." She then trained as a prosthodontist at Columbia University College of Dental Medicine.   

Kavitha's passion for academia and public health saw her complete a master's degree in Social and Behavioural Sciences and International Health from Boston University, as well as certifications in health management. She boasts an impressive academic background, having worked in infectious and chronic disease mitigation and research at prestigious institutions such as NYU, Columbia University, Yale University, and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. 

She has undertaken research projects relating to health disparities, access to care, diabetes, heart disease, oral health, and oral cancer in the NYC populations. Kavitha has also played a significant role in steering health policy and management for New York City at the state public health associations.  

Health Policy and Community Work 

Right now, I have two very distinct roles, one is as a senior/Executive Director for research and the second is as the chair for health policy and advocacy in New York City and health policy statements for New York State for the New York State Public Health Association," Kavitha explains. In addition to her leadership roles, she also teaches postdoctoral dental residents, stating, "My lectures are used to teach in some local institutions." 

Kavitha's dedication and passion for her work led to her receiving the National Health Equity Award by DentaQuest in 2022, a testament to her commitment to championing equitable access to oral care and optimal overall health.

"I was taught to cater to the needs of disenfranchised populations from childhood," Kavitha says, reflecting on her upbringing. She recalls her early exposure to poverty and how it deeply impacted her, stating, "The slums that lined the streets of the international airport in Bombay… I vowed to give back as much as I could." 

Driven by her family's example, Kavitha co-founded Purpose Med Solutions in 2021, a health equity-focused community-based organisation aiming to improve community well-being through both social and commercial determinants of health. "One of my dreams definitely came true. I am working with populations worst hit by the pandemic and it brings me joy to be able to adopt a comprehensive approach to wellness," she says.   

Empowering Women and Giving Back 

Kavitha's goals centre around changing the inevitability of chronic disease (diabetes, heart disease, oral diseases, and oral cancer) for children and families. She engages in community work and public policy, collaborating with school and community leaders to create action plans that build trust and engagement within local communities. "I love that dentists and doctors can reduce pain and help in healing diseases but what I dislike is that we have not done a good job of prevention education," she says. 

Kavitha also takes part in initiatives for women, having helped put together the UN Secretary Ban Ki Moon Women's Empowerment Award. "I know a few key players in the UN, and they supported my vision to set up this award," she says. She enjoys writing, expressing that it brings her peace, and is a deputy editor for a peer-reviewed national medical journal in the USA. Kavitha also devotes time to planning fun fundraisers for various organisations she supports, including fashion shows, salsa dancing classes, and art shows. She has also planned events featuring the work of Indian designer Masaba Gupta, raising funds for initiatives like Lend A Hand India.  

Outside her professional and philanthropic pursuits, Kavitha finds solace in her personal interests. "I am also a deputy editor to a peer-reviewed national medical journal in the USA, and writing brings me peace," she shares. She attributes much of her success to her mentors and guides, acknowledging, "I have worked with incredible people, and everyone has a good lesson to teach."   

Kavitha's story is one of persistence, perseverance, and faith. She firmly believes in the power of intention, stating, "I am more spiritual than religious, but I strongly believe that if you want to make an impact, the universe conspires to make it happen." Her journey demonstrates how an unwavering commitment to her values, coupled with a passion for public health and giving back to society, has helped impact communities both in the US and beyond. 

Follow Dr Das on LinkedIn    

 

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Story
Satish Gupta: The ‘accidental’ sculptor whose work adorns Ambani home, Isha Foundation

(August 26, 2024) About 25 years ago, Satish Gupta fell from the roof and broke his wrist. The doctor misaligned the bones, put the plaster incorrectly, and eventually had to insert a rod to get it functioning. This whole ordeal took over six months, during which the versatile artist couldn’t paint at all, which was frustrating. Around that time, while travelling to a studio in Gurgaon from New Delhi one day, he came across iron smiths who were repairing and welding household articles. It fascinated him. Days later, he gathered objects, including large nails and a few oil lamps (diyas), and fashioned a six-inch flower, which was welded together. Thus, his first sculpture was born. “I never studied sculpture in school or college. I am an accidental sculptor,” smiles word renowned sculptor Satish Gupta, in conversation with Global Indian. With expertise in painting, sculpture, poetry, writing, murals, calligraphy, design and ceramics, Gupta’s art exudes a meditative quality, providing viewers with a serene detachment, showcasing the artist as both the participant and the observer of his life. [caption id="attachment_54573" align="aligncenter" width="433"] Sculptor Satish Gupta[/caption] Ambani connection While he has designed and created stunning pieces of art, Gupta’s gigantic “Vishnu sculpture” and a magnificent “golden tree of

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nt/uploads/2024/08/satish.jpg" alt="Satish Gupta | Sculptor | Global Indian" width="433" height="690" /> Sculptor Satish Gupta[/caption]

Ambani connection

While he has designed and created stunning pieces of art, Gupta’s gigantic “Vishnu sculpture” and a magnificent “golden tree of life” for the Ambani family, now housed in their iconic home, Antilia, gained significant attention on social media during the recent wedding of Anant Ambani and Radhika.

Nita Ambani happened to visit one of his art shows and asked him what he would create for her. “I suggested an 18-foot Vishnu, but it ended up being 22 feet high by 22 feet wide,” smiles Gupta, whose works were also acquired by The Museum Of Sacred Arts, Brussels.

The inspiration, he says, came during a sail down the Nile, where he saw the giant heads of pharaohs gazing at the stars, linking him to the omnipresent and timeless Vishnu. “I wanted to capture Vishnu’s immense power, bursting with energy like a supernova, while maintaining his calm and serene expression. The sculpture took two years to create, with a team of 20 assistants working 24/7.”

Studying a feather from the Crown Eagle inspired Gupta to create Vishnu’s Garuda. “I incorporated his five attributes: Strength, Devotion, Wisdom, Progress, and Knowledge. The sculpture represents his immense strength and humility, with his hands folded in reverence and wisdom to remain with Narayan in complete surrender.”

[caption id="attachment_54575" align="aligncenter" width="471"]Satish Gupta | Vishnu The Radiant One | Global Indian Vishnu, The Radiant One. Photo: Satish Gupta[/caption]

He says it would have been impossible to achieve such a work without the active cooperation of The Lord himself. “This is a Swayambhu, I did not create it.”

For Nita Ambani’s 50th birthday celebrations, she asked Gupta to create a Tree of Life. “I crafted a golden tree with the fruits of life and silver birds perched on its branches. It was the most opulent sculpture I have done, fitting for the occasion,” says Gupta. It was displayed in the central cupola of Umaid Bhawan and now proudly stands in Antilia.

Zen sculptures 

In his initial days as a sculptor, Gupta created a series of Zen sculptures and held a show. After seeing this show, the owners of a business house asked if he would create a group of five sculptures for their corporate office.

“I accepted the challenge without hesitation. The project had to be completed in two years—enough time for me to learn the art of sculpture and create it, I thought. The installation of the five sculptures I proposed represented the five primal elements and ranged in height from 11 to 32 feet.”

For a year, he traveled the world studying monumental sculptures to learn from them. While his studio in Gurgaon was under construction, Gupta stacked plywood boxes in his gallery space to get a sense of volume, as the sculptures were enormous.

Torso & shock

He created the first sculpture maquette traditionally in clay — a 20-foot torso of a man flying. His clients saw the work and loved it. The next day, the maquette was to go for casting in bronze. “However, when I arrived at my studio, I was shocked to find that the caretaker and laborers, instead of removing the plywood boxes, had destroyed the sculpture and were dancing with the broken parts!”

After recovering from the shock, Gupta called the clients, informed them that he could create something better, and proposed to meditate and create the sculptures on-site. “I had no clear plan but was certain that with the time constraint, I couldn’t create five monumental sculptures in the traditional, time-consuming way,” he recalls.

[caption id="attachment_54576" align="aligncenter" width="556"]Satish Gupta | Worshipping Garuda | Global Indian 'The Worshipping Garuda' by Satish Gupta.[/caption]

After a week of meditation and living on-site, Gupta still had no solution until one night, inspired by a terracotta pot and some torn newspaper, he had a breakthrough. “It started drizzling, and I stuck a moist piece of newspaper on the pot. This was my Eureka moment! My technique of welding square copper pieces, which I call the "accidental sculptor" method, was born out of necessity,” smiles the multi-faceted artist.

Without formal training in sculpture, he was free to think outside the box and break all the rules.

Spiritual experience

When working on his first major sculpture, ‘Kalyansundara’—the 11-foot high head of Shiva— Gupta had an intense spiritual experience.

His technique involves first molding the armature in copper, then welding ‘the skin,’ composed of thousands of one-inch square copper pieces, like a mosaic on the structure, starting from the top of the head. This process can sometimes take months. “When I had just welded the pieces on the eyes, the sculpture seemed to smile, and from that point on, it took over and rapidly created itself. In just three short weeks, working around the clock, the sculpture was complete. It is a SWAYAMBHU, the self-created, I merely facilitated its birth.”

He says the intense energy passing through his body was overwhelming. “I almost lost my sight. A friend told me that Shiva’s energy absorbs your own, like a black hole, and to balance it, you need to create a Vishnu, akin to a supernova,” says the septuagenarian.

Eclectic themes

Sanjay Gupta’s themes are eclectic. “I don’t restrict my creativity and always express myself in the medium, form, and scale that the artwork demands at that moment. I strive not to be a prisoner of my persona, which can confine creativity,” says the world renowned sculptor, who also collaborated with Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the charity auctioned sculpture painting “Om Namo Shivaya” at Sotheby’s.

Even though a developed style can become a signature, it is challenging to break out of it and surprise oneself. The common thread linking his realistic and abstract works is a sense of serenity, whether it’s from his art work ‘Kasim’ from the Eyes of the Thar series or ‘The Cosmic Wave.’

Once Sadhguru visited his studio, saw Gupta’s sculpture of Ganesha, and blessed it. “He then asked me to create the utsav murti of Linga Bhairavi. Despite the short timeframe of three months, I was honored that the sculpture resides in the Isha temple in Coimbatore and is revered by millions,” says the renowned sculptor, whose works were exhibited in the show “Forms of Devotion” in Thailand and the Shanghai Museum of Modern Art.

[caption id="attachment_54577" align="aligncenter" width="636"]Satish Gupta | Sculptor | Global Indian Photo: Isha Foundation[/caption]

Noble metal 

Gupta primarily uses copper for his sculptures. He describes it as a noble metal, hard yet soft, and develops a beautiful patina as it ages. “I love working on a grand scale, but scale alone is not enough. Even my first six-inch sculpture has a monumental quality, while some large sculptures can appear toy-like,” explains Gupta, who rarely creates smaller models before enlarging them. Instead, he works directly on the final scale, allowing the creation to flow naturally and guide itself.

By staying open to the possibilities that the work offers, magical transformations can occur, says Gupta, whose works are often gigantic and are displayed in museums, airports and hotels.

Born in 1947, Satish Gupta studied at the College of Art, New Delhi. In 1970, he studied graphics in Paris on a scholarship for two years. While there, he encountered a Zen book that became pivotal in shaping his spiritual reflection, evident in his works.

His works 

“MA” was one such painting, which was 1.6 kilometres long on the beach in Puducherry, perhaps the longest in the world. He also has a 23 feet sculpture in Copper “The Buddhas Within” in the permanent collections of the Prince Of Wales Museum and CSMVS in Mumbai. His sculpture on The Sun God is at the International Airport in New Delhi and created a 30 feet long mural for the Bengaluru International Airport.

Another monumental 5 piece metal sculpture ranging from 11.5 feet to 35 feet in height and weighing over 22,000 pounds inspired by the five primal elements, is located at the Jindal Center in New Delhi. Satish Gupta has exhibited at more than 37 solo shows at important art galleries within the country and abroad.

His zen works were exhibited in the Ethnographic Museum in Slovenia. Besides, they have also been exhibited at the Venice Biennale and Art Laguna, Arsenal and at The Deborah Colton Gallery in Houston in 2017. Gupta sculpted the Utsav Murti of ‘Ling Bhairavi’ for Sadhguru’s Isha Ashram in Coimbatore.His most expensive piece to date is the ‘Eternal Flight’ group of sculptures, costing 15 crores.

Satish Gupta | Sculptor | Global Indian

Inspiration 

Ask him what was a major influence in his sculptural pursuit, Gupta says he is open to life and draws inspiration from everything — from observing a lotus opening its petals to the waves rushing over timeless rocks.

“Inspirations include Kailashnath Temple, Chola bronzes, the frescoes of Pompeii, and a painted stone idol of Ganesha by the roadside in Rajasthan. The list is endless,” says Gupta, who authored a book ‘Zen Whispers’  which was released at the Jaipur Literature Festival in 2018.

Future plans ? “I do not plan the future. Instead, I focus on being aware of each moment and living it intensely.”

  • Follow Satish Gupta on Instagram and his website. 
Story
In the footsteps of Guru Nanak, turban traveller Amarjeet Singh, 61, drove 40,000 km across 6 countries

(April 28, 2022) Age is just a number - the adage perfectly fits this “61-year-young” retired garment exporter Amarjeet Singh Chawla who travelled from Delhi to London by car at an age when most hang up their boots. The passion to travel the world in his gaadi took him on a journey across 33 countries, and earned him the moniker of the Turban Traveller. “It was a life-changing journey. Everyone has dreams, but not many fulfill them as they don’t have the keeda (urge). I knew I had to do it, and it changed my perspective on life. Such journeys change you within, and what is life without growth,” Amarjeet tells Global Indian. As a youngster, he wanted to go backpacking around the world. Yet the 70s were different. So, he put his dream on the back burner, for when he retired. At 59, he decided to take a journey that not many take – he drove 40,000 km across the world. “I think 45 is an apt age for retirement. You are healthy enough to travel. I retired late at 58. But being on your own, interacting with the locals, and chasing your dreams at that age. It is

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travel. I retired late at 58. But being on your own, interacting with the locals, and chasing your dreams at that age. It is worth the wait,” adds Amarjeet who has been on several spiritual journeys in the past few years spreading the message of Guru Nanak Dev and Sikhism.

[caption id="attachment_23799" align="aligncenter" width="593"]Turban traveller | Amarjeet Singh Amarjeet Singh[/caption]

A chance meeting changed it all

Born in 1959 in Kanpur to a businessman father, and homemaker mother, the Delhi-based Amarjeet was raised by his maternal grandfather. Passionate about cars since childhood, he loved bribing his driver with his meagre pocket money to let him drive at just nine. “I had my first accident at 13,” laughs Amarjeet whose love for adventure saw him hop on his Royal Enfield to the mountains. A chance encounter with a couple from Holland changed his perspective. “In 1979, I met a couple who was backpacking across the world and were in Faridabad. Their adventurous journey triggered something. So, with my best friend, I decided to travel the world on a bike. But bauji (grandfather) nipped my dream in the bud saying, “Puri zindagi hai dream pure karne ke liye. Abhi kaam karo (you have your whole life to accomplish your dream, now it’s the time to work),” reminisces Amarjeet who listened yet the dream was alive in his heart.

“Life went on. I got married in 1981 and started a family. I travelled the world, did cross country in rented cars, yet that dream to travel the world kept nagging at me,” says Amarjeet.

Turban traveller | Amarjeet Singh

Chasing his dream at 59

After retiring from his garment business in 2018, Amarjeet resolved, “I had this paagalpan (madness) to fulfill my dream. I think one should try to do everything they couldn’t, and tick their bucket lists,” adds Amarjeet. Jumping into his Toyota Fortuner, four months of preparation later - visas, permits and permissions, he was ready to rev on a journey of a lifetime. “I make short films, and decided to make a web series, and explore the route from Patiala to Paris. I knew this was the best opportunity to fulfill my dream,” says Amarjeet, who obtained seven visas from India. “It’s better to plan from India as getting permissions and visas is a tedious job,” adds the turban traveller.

In July 2018, he kickstarted his journey from Delhi and moved through Nepal, China, and Uzbekistan to Russia, Poland, Estonia to Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, and France to reach London in January 2019 which cost him between ₹35-₹40 lakh. “Those 145 days on the road changed me. Travelling by road throws you out of your comfort zone, and that’s when growth happens,” says Amarjeet who befriended many, stayed with locals, and shared meals.

Yet, the reunion with the couple from Holland tops his memories. He had tried contacting Judia on social media – and found her in the Netherlands, “It was such a surreal experience and so emotional,” says Amarjeet who thrilled to meet his inspiration 40 years later.

His turban and his car with personal messages scribbled all over purred across Europe and Asia. Onlookers were undoubtedly curious. Infact, leaving Delhi, his father scribbled his blessing on the car. Slowly, others scribbled in, and today, it’s an art and blessing cornucopia on wheels. Overwhelmed with the love, he believes he carried those well wishes on the journey as well. “Europeans care about dreams, so they were mesmerised,” adds the Sardar who wryly admits that his turban and car grabbed eyeballs. “My colourful outfit and turban invited many inquisitive souls,” says the turbaned traveller who met Hollywood actor Arnold Schwarzenegger in Budapest.

 

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From adventure to spiritual

His spiritual journey is inspired by Guru Nanak Dev’s four udasis (travels). “Guruji travelled by foot for 28 years, we just did the same journey by car. It coincided with his 550th birth anniversary, and I wanted to pay him a tribute. I travelled 44,000 km across 29 states including six countries - Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in his footsteps,” says Amarjeet who has stacked 245 episodes that were telecast on a Punjabi TV channel, adding, “It was a symbolic journey to spread the message of brotherhood, equality, peace, and love.” On song, he took two more spiritual journeys across India with his wife Sweety. “I realised that jeene ke liye sirf roti and chhat chahiye (to live, one only needs food and shelter). Rest is luxury,” smiles the travelling Sikh. When a German reporter asked, “a world tour? Yet, had I seen India?” So, the turban traveller decided to go desi too. Originated in the 15th century, Sikhism preaches devotion, truthful living and equality of mankind. And Amarjeet is keen to spread this across as much as possible through his journeys.

[caption id="attachment_23800" align="aligncenter" width="703"]Turban traveller | Amarjeet Singh Amarjeet Singh with his wife Sweety[/caption]

“Every journey is a life lesson, and learning,” says the turban traveller who is in the US to buy a caravan for his upcoming big trip - Patiala to Paris in 2023.

An inspiration to any dreamer, “Junoon (obsession) is what keeps a dream alive. Nothing is impossible. The water doesn't boil at 99°C, it needs that 1°C. 99 percent is 100 percent failure. So go for that 1 percent,” advises Amarjeet the travelling Sikh who declares, “go chase your dreams. The world awaits.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5jHYrrkipc

Vroom across the globe:

1. Get visas in advance from India, it saves time and helps at borders.

2. An international driving license is a must. Get it by submitting passport, visa and a form at the Regional Transport Office (valid for a year).

3. Rented or borrowed cars require a letter from the owner.

4. International car insurance is a must. While you cannot apply from India, it can be done at a country’s border.

5. Carry tents to save on lodging.

  • Follow Amarjeet Singh Chawla on Instagram, Facebook and YouTube 

Reading Time: 6 min

Story
Amit and Shilpa Singhal: NRI couple transforming lives of underprivileged kids

(June 28, 2023) Living in a mud house in Rajasthan's Jodhpur, 18-year-old Kusum Chaudhary comes from a family of farmers, but with no land to call their own. This mostly meant money constraints and even cast an eclipse on her future as the family had no means to support her education beyond Class 12. But things took a turn for the better when in 2016 her uncle asked her to fill out the form of Sitare Foundation. She sat for an entrance exam and qualified for a full scholarship. Five years later, with a visa in her hand, she was ready to fly to Maryland University in the USA to pursue a four-year undergraduate degree in computer science, thanks to an NRI couple. Joining Sitare Foundation, a nonprofit that helps children from low-income household's access quality education in private schools, and find opportunities to study abroad, changed Kusum's life forever. But she isn't the only one to have benefitted from it, hundreds of children have been empowered through education by NRI couple Shilpa and Amit Singhal, who founded Sitare Foundation in 2016. The couple, who quit their cushiony jobs in the US to return to India, believe in the power

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uple, who quit their cushiony jobs in the US to return to India, believe in the power of education, and hence, provide all financial support — school fees, travel, accommodation, food, and more — for seven years of a child’s education, from classes 6 to 12.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZn0BQ16ZvQ

"We believe in the power of education and its potential to change lives, communities, nations, and the future of our planet. Our vision behind Sitare was not limited to educating underprivileged children but also nurturing them to become world-class professionals and great humans so they could become a beacon of hope for their community and millions of other underprivileged children," Amit said in an interview.

The power of education

Coming from a humble background, Amit's great-grandfather used to repair bicycle punctures on the roadside in UP's Bulandshahr. The only thing that he could give his son was permission to study, and after earning a BA in English, Amit's grandfather joined the post of teacher. He passed on the importance of education to his son (Amit's father) who attended IIT Roorkee and became a civil engineer.

Growing up, Amit too was bent towards studies, and after pursuing a bachelor's degree in Computer Science from Roorkee, he did his master's from the University of Minnesota Duluth and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. "I left the country with only a few hundred dollars and two suitcases. The only thing every generation gave the next generation was education and no money," the Global Indian told Better India.

[caption id="attachment_40775" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Amit and Shilpa Singhal | Global Indian | NRI Amit and Shilpa Singhal founded Sitare Foundation[/caption]

It was education that took him to the US, and got him a job at Google, where he worked for 15 years and even provided for a good lifestyle. This was enough for him to realise the power of education, and nudged him to do the same for underprivileged children. "Fundamentally, education is the only sustained way out of poverty. And education is near and dear to our hearts," he added. His wife Shilpa, who has a master’s degree in Physics from Binghamton University, and in Computer Science and Engineering from Cornell University, too joined him in the venture.

Looking for bright stars among low-income families

The NRI couple was keen to give back to society by empowering and uplifting underprivileged children through education. "The only useful thing that one could do with their money is to improve some lives," said Amit, who spends an average of $2000 per student per year from his savings.

This led to the setting up of the Sitare Foundation, but their foremost and biggest challenge was to find bright students to whom they could offer help. They only received 240 applications in the first year, out of which 50 were selected to join the foundation. But over the years, the word spread, and more than 70,000 applications reach Sitare Foundation each year, of whom 100 make the cut for the programme. Currently present in five cities across Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh - Jodhpur, Jaipur, Ajmer, Bhopal, and Indore, Sitare Foundation has partnered with private schools to provide quality education to bright underprivileged kids.

Amit and Shilpa Singhal | NRI | Global Indian

Giving children wings to fly

"Besides education, we support them with food, clothing, books, school supplies, and transportation. Additionally, we have a fully residential programme for students to focus on their college admissions," Amit told Your Story. Post completing Class 10th, the students are enrolled in a residential programme where students live in hostels and focus on studying for exams like JEE, NEET, and CLAT, depending on the subjects they’ve chosen, and at the same time, preparing their applications to study in the US.

However, the biggest challenge for the NRI couple has been to change the perspective of the parents, especially of a girl child, towards education. Since the parents are not educated, it's hard for them to understand the importance of education. "Girls are disproportionately impacted by the home environment in India. They are often required to work, help their mothers at home, take care of younger siblings, and go out with their mothers to help them on the farms," revealed Amit, who says child marriage is another factor that derails the progress. Often NGOs counsels these children and their families to get them back on the path of learning.

Sitare Foundation

As of now, Sitare Foundation has educated over 400 underprivileged students, with five of its Class 12 students — Kusum Chaudhary, Mahendra Kumar, Milan Ramdhari, Nisha Chaudhary, and Tanisha Nagori - securing admissions in multiple US' top universities, including the University of Maryland, University of North Carolina, University of Minnesota, Ohio State University, University of California, Case Western Reserve University, and Arizona State University. "Our mission is to transform fifty thousand lives through education by 2050.”

  • Follow Sitare Foundation on Instagram
  • Follow Amit Singhal on LinkedIn

Reading Time: 5 min

Story
Creating history: Author Priya Satia’s novels narrate the tale of India under the British Raj

(January 11, 2023) For the past several generations, British historians have deconstructed and reimagined world history to suit the Empire's narrative. Their tales of development in various colonies of the empire across the globe - including India, the Middle East, Africa, and the Caribbean - licensed the brutal suppression of the colonial rebellion by imperial governance. While these narratives still echo in world history, author Priya Satia's latest release, Time's Monster: History, Conscience, and Britain's Empire, examines how the British historians not only twisted the fate of colonial politics but also shaped the futures of generations to come. [caption id="attachment_33728" align="aligncenter" width="526"] Priya Satia, author[/caption] "It shaped my family’s history and so much of the world, and I felt I could contribute – and correct influential myths – from the United States," the author shared during an interview while answering why it was important for her to write this book. The award-winning author of Empire of Guns: The Violent Making of the Industrial Revolution and Spies in Arabia - Priya compels her readers to look into the parts of world history that generally are never discussed. The Raymond A. Spruance Professor of International History and Professor of British History at

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t I could contribute – and correct influential myths – from the United States," the author shared during an interview while answering why it was important for her to write this book. The award-winning author of Empire of Guns: The Violent Making of the Industrial Revolution and Spies in Arabia - Priya compels her readers to look into the parts of world history that generally are never discussed. The Raymond A. Spruance Professor of International History and Professor of British History at Stanford University, the Global Indian regularly writes for various media outlets including Financial Times, The Nation, and Washington Post.

The Arabian conquest

A Ph.D. scholar from the University of California, Berkeley, Priya grew up in Los Gatos, amidst a lot of books. An avid reader, she was always curious to know about the past of the nation to which she belongs - India. And it was this passion which led her to write several books on the British Raj in the country. In 2008, Priya released her first book, Spies in Arabia: The Great War and the Cultural Foundations of Britain's Covert Empire in the Middle East, which was well-received not just by the audience, but also by the critics.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaG_JMxQ9eI

In a recent interview, the author discussed why she chose to write about events in the Middle East. "I had an interest in South Asia before I had an interest in the Middle East. I was looking into the Indian Army, which did most of the fighting in Iraq during World War I, and became distracted by the Indian Army’s British officers. They arrived thinking that they were in the land of the Arabian Nights, that this place was mysterious and unknowable. But they were there to perform very practical tasks. I became curious how their cultural outlook shaped what they did and how they did it."

Uncovering several conspiracy theories, the author shares how off-base the British were and how outlandishly exaggerated their theories. "When I wrote Spies in Arabia, I was so sure that the British were so wrong in what they assumed about native inhabitants that I didn’t pay enough attention to their actual interactions. This dimension comes out more in my current work on global anticolonial networks than it did in Spies. I’m now looking at the conspiracy theory chapter from the other side, in a sense," she said.

The bloody history of India

While it is not talked about or portrayed in world history, that the British were barbaric towards Indians is a truth that needs no further proof. And yet, everyone seems to have turned a blind eye toward the actual events of the time. Priya, however, shares that it was very important for her to uncover this part of history and present it to the world. “In public memory, redemptive myths about colonial upliftment persistently mask the empire’s abysmal history of looting and pillage, policy-driven famines, brutal crushing of the rebellion, torture, concentration camps, aerial policing, and everyday racism and humiliation,” the author explained in the book Empire of Guns, adding, "To be sure, there is a story about the ‘banality of evil’ to be told— about the automatic, conformist ways in which ordinary people become complicit in inhumanity. But in the case of the British Empire, the bigger story is perhaps that of inhumanity perpetrated by individuals deeply concerned with their consciences, indeed actively interrogating their consciences."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHldSyL8ouo

The book earned Priya the 2019 Pacific Coast Conference on British Studies Book Prize, the Wadsworth Prize in Business History, and the AHA's Jerry Bentley Prize in world history. "Empire of Guns told the story of a very important eighteenth-century gunmaker named Samuel Galton. As a Quaker, he was forced to defend his gun-making to fellow Quakers who felt it violated the sect’s pacifist commitments," shared the author, who was also the finalist for the LA Times Book Prize in History and shortlisted for the Laura Shannon Prize in Contemporary European Studies and the PEN Hessell-Tiltman Prize.

The author, who is also the curator of several tailored history seminars, wants young people to read and understand history from an unbiased point of view. "To those hoping to enter the world of history, I would suggest coming in with a strong, uncompromising sense of the purpose of that entry, else the academy will instill its own values of personal professional advancement, which are designed to perpetuate institutions as they exist now," the author shared during a class.

  • Follow Prof Priya Satia on Twitter

Reading Time: 6 mins

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About Global Indian

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. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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