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Caroline Mulliez | The Blue Kite | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryCaroline Mulliez: Helping luxury homeowners in India make a profit at The Blue Kite
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Caroline Mulliez: Helping luxury homeowners in India make a profit at The Blue Kite

Written by: Bindu Gopal Rao

(July 2, 2024) It was just in passing that Caroline Mulliez, CEO of The Blue Kite, had told her husband that there is a lot of potential in renting the homes that are being built by Vianaar Homes (his organisation) and that she would be happy to take on the challenge. That’s how The Blue Kite came into being and was started by Caroline herself. “As a joke I told Varun (my husband) one day when I’m pregnant I’ll help you rent the homes that you are building. There is a lot of potential there and that’s exactly what happened.

The Blue Kite, the hospitality arm of Vianaar (a luxury home developing company based in Goa) was created in 2017 to ensure homeowners could generate income from their holiday homes without having to worry about managing guests and maintenance themselves.

Caroline Mulliez | The Blue Kite | Global Indian

Caroline Mulliez

Early days

Mulliez was born in the North of France and moved to Belgium when she was six and went on to do her undergraduate studies Belgium, and as she couldn’t choose between Political Science and Economics did both Economics during the day and Political Science at night. She then spent six months in Baltimore in the USA and had an offer to do her masters in France at one of the top business schools or the London School of Economics (master’s in public administration). “I chose LSE as I wanted to make a difference in the world. During this time, I got an opportunity for an internship in Pretoria South Africa for GTZ, a development agency. I then went to Singapore for my second year of master’s and worked for Google for six months and I loved it.” From there, she worked at Bain & Company, which first brought her to India, after a two-and-a-half year stint in London. “After that, I decided to join Decathlon (a family business) in India as at that point they were trying to make sport accessible for all. It was very exciting as a project,” she says. After six years of growing Decathlon from four stores to 60 stores she had done it all.

Career cues

Working in South Africa, Singapore, London, France and India Mulliez admits that she has learnt the art of patience, trusted the process, and has a positive mindset about everything that life brings her way. It has also given her the ability to adapt to different people and different styles of working which comes in very handy. “As a fellow team member and the CEO of The Blue Kite, I dedicate 90% of my time into managing human or digital challenges. My focus spans across various technological aspects such as the apps for homeowners, the team app, our CMS, and different channel integrations. Time spent on Price Labs and other tools significantly enhances our efficiency, thereby helping us generate more revenue,” she explains.

The other significant portion of her time is devoted to addressing human challenges. She closely collaborates with the Head of Revenue and various Heads of Operations for different zones. “My involvement includes understanding how they are training and motivating their teams, measuring their success and results, and ensuring there are people in the pipeline ready to take on more responsibilities. This hands-on approach is crucial for maintaining our operational excellence and fostering a motivated and capable workforce,” she adds.

Staying motivated

Caroline Mulliez | The Blue Kite | Global Indian

The career trajectory of the different people who have worked with her is a motivator. She explains, “a team member joined us as a check-in agent and made an X amount of salary.  Today, they are managing a team of 10 people, 1-2 Cr of business. Making certain lakhs of profit for the company. Earn a certain amount of salary for themselves and their families. I have changed a little bit of their lives positively and that drives me. I want to give them more responsibilities and make them proud of what they do every day. Making them feel empowered to answer any problem that comes their way, be it a guest or homeowner, is very motivating for me.”

For someone who is constantly learning to overcome challenges, she admits that the best way to overcome challenges is to work together as a team. “Your first response is usually to freeze but as a team, you can sit down together with the problem. Brainstorm on possible solutions. Who is the best person to address the problem or who has a good idea of how to address it and eventually you will manage to overcome it,” she adds.

Corporate Path

Her varied roles have shaped her into the thorough professional that she is. Her role at Bain & Company taught her that there is no limit to how many hours one can put in to get the work done. “Every analysis is possible and every Excel formula can be found on the internet. I may need a lot of hours to do it but I know that everything is possible. On the other hand, Decathlon taught me a lot about human beings. Giving responsibilities to people and seeing them grow and knowing that the person closest to consequences- what we call Subsidiarity lets the person facing the brunt make the decision. When a guest has a problem every guest relation executive can decide if we are to give a refund/compensation or if the guest is being unreasonable. That person knows the best and they will come up with the best possible solutions,” she says.

Looking ahead

Caroline Mulliez | The Blue Kite | Global Indian

Mulliez plays one hour of sports every day, whether it is the acrobatic sport, Silk Aerial, kitesurfing, or swimming. “Sport is an important part of my life and it has shaped my personality. For example, if you can’t do something, then you train more and train harder until you finally learn how to do it and then you become better at it. Second, it has taught me teamwork and a spirit of leadership,” she says. That apart she loves to spend time with her two children and is also involved in my family business (Decathlon) as well. “I have recently been elected on a family board that decides where we will make investments for our future generations and who will sit on the board of each company. It is important to me as I want to leave it as a legacy for my children,” she says.

She plans to expand The Blue Kite to Delhi and other locations, have more team members, grow her team members in Goa, and give them more responsibilities. “One of the splendid things about India is that even when there is no hope there is always hope. If you keep fighting hard and you keep doing the right thing, eventually it will pay out. It might not be immediately, but being consistent in your efforts pays off. If you care about the people you work with and are consistent in your messaging you will succeed,” she concludes.

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  • Bain & Company
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Published on 02, Jul 2024

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The path of Messiah: How Christianity found its way to India

(December 25, 2022) Once upon a time, in AD 52, a battered ship - having covered thousands of nautical miles - touched land on a quaint afternoon. A strange place, covered with tall palm trees welcomed those onboard. As the travellers asked around, they were informed that they had landed on the shores of Muciripattanam - one of the busiest port cities located in the Malabar region of Kerala. Brought to the shore in that ship was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus - St Thomas - who not only chose to spend the rest of his life in India but also spread the message of the Messiah to its people. And thus - contrary to many beliefs - Christianity was brought to the shores of India, way before it ever made its way to Europe. Even today, Saint Thomas Christians, also called Syrian Christians of India, are counted among the oldest followers of Christianity in the world. [caption id="attachment_33155" align="aligncenter" width="649"] An old image of Syrian Christians from Kerala[/caption] With time the community grew and later as several European countries established their colonies in this part of the world, Christianity established itself as one of the major religions

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ans from Kerala[/caption]

With time the community grew and later as several European countries established their colonies in this part of the world, Christianity established itself as one of the major religions in India. Home to some of the most marvellous churches in the world, India has a vibrant Christian community. While the Christians living in the northeastern parts of the country take on the streets singing carols, few of those in the southern parts, fast from December 1 to the midnight mass service on December 24 to commemorate the birth of the saviour - making Christmas one of the most awaited festivals in the country. As the world celebrates the birth of Jesus today, Global Indian explores the roots of Christianity in India. Happy reading, and Merry Christmas!

Travellers from the West

Soon after the crucifixion of Jesus in the 1st-century Judea (approximately AD 30 or AD 33), the eleven apostles decided to take his message to faraway lands and undertook journeys through land and sea. When he was told that he had to travel to India, St Thomas is recorded to have responded with, “I am a Hebrew man; how can I go among the Indians and preach the truth." This chapter from the early third-century Biblical text, Acts of Thomas, is one of the strongest proofs of the birth of Christianity in India. Despite his initial hesitations, St Thomas crossed the mighty Mediterranean, Red, and Arabian seas, and made his way to the court of Indo-Parthian King Gondophernes. While there are a few who believe that the saint came through Afghanistan, there are no historic shreds of evidence to support the theory.

[caption id="attachment_33156" align="aligncenter" width="484"]Christianity | Global Indian St Thomas (c. 1611) by Peter Paul Rubens[/caption]

During his stay in Kerala, St Thomas preached the Gospel to the locals, and travelled to various cities and villages, now part of the southern states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu, inspiring people to join the church. During these travels, St Thomas is believed to have established seven churches at Kodungallur, Palayoor, Kottakkavu, Kokkamangalam, Nilackal, Kollam, and Thiruvithamcode. There are several families in these parts of the country, who trace their origins almost as far as the establishment of these churches. Interestingly, however, although their faith was born in the far west, the traditions that these families follow are quite similar to that of the local Indian communities, and so is their food.

[caption id="attachment_33157" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Christianity | Global Indian Shrine of Saint Thomas in Mylapore, 18th-century print[/caption]

In AD 72, two decades after he arrived in India, the saint was martyred near Chennai, and his body was interred in Mylapore. Eventually, his relics were taken to Edessa, Greece. The famous St. Thomas Cathedral Basilica in Chennai, which stands on the site of his martyrdom, was first built by the Portuguese in the 16th century, and later rebuilt in the 19th century by the British.

The Anglo-Indians

The arrival of various Europeans in the country, who became permanent residents, resulted in the inception of a new community in India - Anglo-Indians. While the term itself was in a state of flux for a major part of history, in the Government of India Act of 1935, an Anglo-Indian was formally identified as “a person whose father or any of whose other male progenitors is or was of European descent, but who is a native of India.” Mostly located in the urban parts of the country, the traditions and rituals of these families are quite similar to those followed by the Europeans.

[caption id="attachment_33158" align="aligncenter" width="529"]Christianity | Global Indian British Raj era Anglo-Indian mother and daughter[/caption]

The earliest known Anglo-India families trace their roots back to the arrival of Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama in 1498. As the Portuguese sailors conquered the city of Goa, Governor Alfonso de Albuquerque encouraged his men to marry the local women to help establish their colony on the Indian coast. Initially called Luso-Indians, the offspring of these naval officers moved from Goa to various parts of the nation taking their traditions where ever they went. Interestingly though, the British Raj contributed heavily to the flourishing of this community- especially their mouth-watering cuisine. Evolved over centuries as a result of assimilating and amalgamating ingredients and cooking techniques from all over the Indian subcontinent and Europe, the Anglo-Indian cuisine encompassed the rustic and robust flavours in the dishes.

[caption id="attachment_33159" align="aligncenter" width="612"]Christianity | Global Indian An Anglo-Indian family[/caption]

Over the years, many Anglo-Indians have migrated to the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, the United States, and New Zealand where they form part of the Indian diaspora. However, India is still home to over 1.5 lakh Anglo-Indians, who are mostly settled in Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolar Gold Fields, and Chennai.

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Shivali Bhammer: Blending East with the West through devotional fusion music

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Born in London to Gujarati parents, Shivali comes from a family that delves deeper into the philosophy of life. It was her great grandmother and great aunts who introduced her to spiritual music and at 15, she started making her own music. For the 35-year-old, her musical talent wasn't something that she discovered instead it was a gift bestowed upon her. "Singing comes naturally to me than anything else I do, to me it is like breathing. I can't separate it from who I am. I began nurturing it when I was 15 years old with my best friend Arjun. We didn't think of talent then, we just thought of what makes us happy and what we enjoy doing," she told a magazine. For the next few years, the duo kept making devotional music and titled their collection Basement Bhajans, however, not without adding a bit of zing with their fusion.

It wasn't until she was 22 that she dipped her toes into the world of music as a professional. Before exploding into the music scene, Shivali, a graduate in Economics and Philosophy, worked as an analyst for global investment firm Goldman Sachs, and even contributed articles to the Financial Times and other major publication. However, the 9 to 5 grind made her realise her true calling - music.

 

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A post shared by SHIVALI BHAMMER (@shivalibhammer)

While she loved devotional music, she wanted to layer it with new melodies and modern instruments in order to make it accessible to the youth. At 22, Shivali pitched the idea to Sony Music and this was the beginning of her musical journey.

A musician in the making

"I felt passionate about music, and about devotion, and that the two should merge and include more than just a harmonium. It was only when I was 22 that I got signed with Sony Music BMG and suddenly my work that I had called Basement Bhajans became The Bhajan Project and it changed my life," the singer said in an interview.

Her maiden album wasn't just a collection of mantras but a blend of beats and sounds from the genres of R&B, soul, rock and pop sprinkled with a generous dose of acoustic guitar. This fusion worked wonders for this talented singer who grabbed eyeballs with The Bhajan Project.

The album earned her two nominations at the Global Indian Music Awards at the age of 23, and soon she was listed among the Top 25 under 25 South Asian Artists in England. "When I look back on that it was a magical moment, where the universe did most of the just done the preparation and arrived on time,"
she added.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by SHIVALI BHAMMER (@shivalibhammer)

Blending East with West

Since then, Shivali has been busy perfectly blending Western instruments with her Eastern rhythm. The singer, who calls herself a blend of the East and West, believes that merging the two worlds come naturally to her as she is an Indian who grew up as a British girl.

Without any formal training in music, Shivali has managed to cast a spell on music lovers especially in the devotional music genre with The Bhajan Project and Urban Temple, both of which reached No 1 on the iTunes World Chart. In fact, the 35-year-old has made devotional fusion music quite popular in the UK. "London has a big Asian network and it really embraces people with a different sound. It is receptive of talented young artists – we see them sprouting every day," she told DNA.

The singer is also a motivational speaker who never misses a chance to talk about mindfulness and meditation. Interestingly, she is the only Indian artist to be invited to the prestigious De Doelen Theatre in the Netherlands to story-tell Hindu Mythological love stories. For her, music is art which is an expression of one’s creative love.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0WBjRsyceM

Her East meets West sound has put her music at the centre of the world fusion movement in the devotional genre. Her albums are a soothing reminder that devotion exists in every action, and that’s what makes her music appealing to most of the people. Her intention with her music has been to deliver a message with love. When Shivali stepped into the music world, she wanted to change the landscape of the devotional music industry and take it to new heights. And a decade after her first album, Shivali has been able to create a niche for herself in the music world.

  • Follow Shivali Bhammer on Linkedin and Instagram

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Taste of India in Israel – the story of Reena Pushkarna

(March 25, 2023) Earlier this year, chef and restaurateur Reena Pushkar received the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman from President Draupadi Murmu and EAM S. Jaishankar. Known as the 'Curry Queen', Reena Pushkarna introduced Israel to Indian cuisine and owns the country's most iconic Indian restaurant chain, Tandoori. Reena and her husband, Vinod, have been in the business for nearly four decades and operate restaurants across Israel and also in Singapore. In 2003, they established PRESKO Food Industries, making 'kosher Indian food'. Global Indian takes a look at Reena's remarkable journey and her contributions to India's soft power in Israel. [caption id="attachment_36581" align="aligncenter" width="628"] Reena Pushkarna receiving the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman 2023[/caption] Thaalis to chicken tikka In the early days, Ichakdana, Israel's first Indian restaurant, named after the famous Raj Kapoor film, Shri 420, remained empty, night after night. This was the early 80s and nobody knew India, or its vegetarian food. Instead, patrons flocked to the middle-eastern restaurant next door, for the kebabs and grills. In fact, that place was so packed, staff would stop by Ichakdana to borrow tables and chairs. Ichakdana's owners, Reena and Vinod Pushkarna, persisted. Slowly, the Indian community got wind of the place and began trickling

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ed to the middle-eastern restaurant next door, for the kebabs and grills. In fact, that place was so packed, staff would stop by Ichakdana to borrow tables and chairs. Ichakdana's owners, Reena and Vinod Pushkarna, persisted. Slowly, the Indian community got wind of the place and began trickling in at night, bringing their transistors with them to listen to their favourite Bollywood hits. Before they knew it, they were borrowing tables and chairs from the place next door.

The Tandoori legacy

One year later, they opened Tandoori, which has become the stuff of legend in Tel-Aviv. Reena knew the Israelis would love the "chicken tikkas and Nargisi koftas." She even handed out complimentary servings, and shrewdly got her friends to sit by the window, so passers-by would think the place was full. This was 1984. The place became so popular that it took over the lobby of the Commodore Hotel - it was a lively place, full of Bollywood music and dancing - Reena would bring professional artistes from India to perform.

The Pushkarna's renown grew exponentially and in 1990, in walked a very special guest -  Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was on a first date with Sara Ben-Artzo, the woman he would go on to marry. They took a seat at a corner booth - that green couch, "Table No. 8," Reena calls it. It was also the start of a lifelong friendship - Netanyahu and his wife are still regulars at Tandoori Tel-Aviv.

"I knew about it but I didn't tell anybody," says the Global Indian. Actually, it was Netanyahu who spilled the beans, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to visit. That night, the two leaders met at Netanyahu's home for dinner - and Reena Pushkarna had been asked to cater the special meal. During the evening, Netanyahu said to Modi, "I would like to tell you a secret. My first date was in Tandoori Tel-Aviv. It was so successful that I invited Reena Pushkarna and her chefs again to create that magical evening with India."

Today, Reena Pushkarna and her husband run eight Indian restaurants and seven fast-food places in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Herzliya Pituach. Reena is also the go-to person when an Indian delegation comes to visit. Each visit takes upto a month of preparation, from sourcing spices to creating menus that are in keeping with 'kashrut', the Jewish laws regarding food. In 2011, she expanded to Singapore, opening up Pita Pan in Marina Bay Sands - an all-vegetarian, Mediterranean restaurant.

Her own Cordon Bleu

Reena was born in 1958, to a Sikh father and an Iraqi-Jewish mother. In 1975, not long after her sixteenth birthday, she was married off, to 20-year-old Vinod Pushkarna. "He was  sailor, whom I first met when I was 12," she said. Vinod was in the Merchant Navy and when he became a Captain in 1977, Reena joined his seafaring life. "During the nine years on board, like all sailors' wives, I too was lonely. My interest in the kitchen became my 'Nine years of Cordon Bleu'. The chefs from different countries got me to learn their cuisines." Along the way, the couple decided they wanted to move to Israel and in 1983, opened up Ichakdana, where they served chaat and vegetarian thaalis.

Business was a struggle, until Reena persuaded her husband to start a non-vegetarian place. "I looked after cooking, catering to preferences of the guests, designing my kitchen, traning my chefs, restaurant decor and so on. But logistics and business, I happily left to him," she says.

Building an empire

In 2003, Reena and Vinod set up PRESKO Food Industries, which produced kosher Indian food. By this time, Israeli backpackers were flocking to India and the cuisine was well known. PRESKO was supplying meals to the Israeli army, the Indian Peace Keeping Force at Golan Heights, El Al Airlines, Korean Air, Air India, Unilever and around the world - the Pushkarnas had entered the big league.

The couple's two kids - Sarina and Kunal also pitched in to help. "Sarina, who is my best friend too, started working at our restaurants from the age of 14," Reena says. Sarina, who is now married with three children of her own, is based in Singapore and serves as Associate Director, Global Media Communications, Marina Bay Sands. Kunal also lived in Singapore for the better part of a decade before returning to Israel to work in the Tandoori Chain and launch his own venture, Tika Pika.

Tabling history

Benjamin Netanyahu's visit set the ball rolling for Tandoori. In October 2015, former Indian President visited Israel at the invitation of President Reuven Rivlin. Two years later, PM Narendra Modi landed in Tel Aviv, becoming the first Indian PM to visit Israel. And Reena Pushkarna was there on each occasion, as the chef - and unofficial ambassador of Indian cuisine in the Middle East.

That's not all. The famous 'table number 8' at Tandoori Tel Aviv was also witness to the Oslo Peace talks in 1993, the peace talks between Israel and Palestine facilitated by Norway. Any official designated to India begins his assignment with a visit to Tandoori or Kohinoor. Reena was also a member of the Israeli Prime Minister's first ever visit to India, during which she was introduced as the "most loved and respected Indian in Israel, who taught us all the meaning of Indian food." Celebrities like the ace Indian conductor Zubin Mehta, actor Sophia Lauren, former Israeli PM Yizhak Rabin and President Shimon Peres have all eaten at Tandoori.

[caption id="attachment_36582" align="aligncenter" width="620"] Reena Pushkarna with Zubin Mehta[/caption]

"I am proud of my heritage," Reena remarks. "Mine has been an effort to conenct people and in the process, I have also been witness to all the milestones in the evolution of the strong ties between India and Israel. She's the pride of the Indian community in Israel too - in 2023, she was congratulated by Kobbi Shoshani, Israel's consul general in Mumbai, who said, "For me and mylate father, you were the Taste of India for many years."

Promoting India's soft power

Reena has also been an integral pillar of Indian cultural relations in Israel. She faciliates and enables Bollywood productions in the country and was recognized in 2004 by the Israel-Asia Chamber of Commerce. She is also the Honorary President of the Central Board of Indian Jewish Organisations of Israel, the convenor of the Israel Chapter of the Overseas Friends of the BJP and a Board Member of the Indo-Israel Friendship Association.

Follow Tandoori on Instagram.

 

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Peace of mind at a click: Dr Amit Malik’s mental health app clocks 3 million downloads

(March 1, 2022) In February 2021, mental health platform InnerHour raised $5.2 million led by Lightbox. The app, a digital self-help platform gives users access to a range of services - methods to manage stress, anxiety, consultations with licensed therapists, etc. Life has come full circle for its Mumbai-based co-founder and mental health expert Dr Amit Malik, who had returned to India with the intention of bringing mental healthcare to a society where the very idea of seeking external help remains taboo.  The app is now clocking three million downloads highlighting the need for calm amidst the storm – pandemic or otherwise. [caption id="attachment_20499" align="aligncenter" width="750"] Dr. Amit Malik, founder and CEO, InnerHour[/caption] In Mumbai, as he navigated one of the most high-stress environments in the world, he only realised the growing need for adequate mental health services. India accounts for a third of the global burden of depression, addictions and suicides, while access to treatment remains either difficult, scarce or is outright shunned. Back in India, the mental health expert Dr Amit Malik took his two-decade-long career in psychiatry forward to tackle India’s mental health. Having worked with the NHS Foundation Trust in the UK, and serving as a

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Back in India, the mental health expert Dr Amit Malik took his two-decade-long career in psychiatry forward to tackle India’s mental health. Having worked with the NHS Foundation Trust in the UK, and serving as a member of the Council of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, the European Board of Psychiatry, and the standing committees of the European Psychiatric Association, he had the tools to move forward. A prolific writer, Dr Malik has also co-authored six textbooks, been published in several international academic journals, and even done a stint as a member of the editorial board for two reputed publications - International Psychiatry and International Journal of Social Psychiatry.

Returning to his roots 

“It was the urge to go to the grassroots, and solve mental health problems that brought me back to India,” says mental health expert Dr Malik, in an interview with Global Indian. “It's not just that India is close to my heart, it’s also a country where the problem is very large. Some 190 million Indians suffer from mental health ailments and around 90 to 95 percent of these never get help,” he explains.

Dr Amit arrived in the UK in 2001 for postgraduate training in psychiatry at the University of Nottingham. He then went on to become a member at the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Raised into a family of engineers, Dr Amit was born in NCR, and did MBBS at Kasturba Medical College, Manipal. “My mother’s sister was a doctor, and we were very close. Looking back, I have wanted to be a doctor as far back as I can remember, and she was an inspiration,” recalls the mental health expert. After medicine, he went on to do a master's in business administration from the London Business School, and also holds a diploma in geriatric medicine from the Royal College of Physicians in London.

‘Tech that’ 

“The situation in India intrigued me - I wanted to solve difficult problems in healthcare, working with issues like providing early access to people with mental health difficulties, how to break the stigma, and poor awareness barriers, and how to build large scale standardised services that could provide good quality treatment,” mental health expert Dr Malik explains.

[caption id="attachment_20500" align="aligncenter" width="707"]Mental Health Expert | Dr. Amit Malik | Global Indian Dr. Amit Malik[/caption]

Technology provided just the breakthrough and the idea for InnerHour. The startup aimed at leveraging technology in combination with high quality scientific clinical practices to provide awareness and timely access. “We created a model that would cater to an entire spectrum of needs, from access to receiving help, support in difficult times and providing ongoing support as well.” says the mental health expert.

A changing landscape 

Despite the taboos and challenges that India faces, InnerHour has been received with enthusiasm from clients and investors alike. What started out as an 18-member team grew to over 100 in the past year alone, Dr Malik says. “We do five times as many therapy sessions now than we did before. Our app is also nearing three million downloads, which is a threefold increase. We're also generating six to seven times the revenue compared with 2021. In 2021, we have been able to help more people than we did in the four years before that,” smiles the mental health expert.

[caption id="attachment_20497" align="aligncenter" width="808"]Mental Health Expert | Dr. Amit Malik | Global Indian InnerHour Team[/caption]

Awareness has grown tremendously. Explaining the exponential growth of his company, the mental health expert adds, “Celebrities like Deepika Padukone and Virat Kohli talking about mental health in public has worked, and the recent mental healthcare act has also gone a long way. I am happy to see that these problems are being given the spotlight. People are finally shunning the stigma, and accepting that mental health is as important as physical health. More than 60 percent of our clientele are from tier 2 and sub-tier 2 cities. We have a long way to go but the gap has narrowed,” says the founder-psychiatrist.

Looking to the future 

Online counselling, revolutionary though it has been, cannot compensate for offline treatment. People between the ages of 18 and 45 are very tech-savvy but need to be reached out to in person. "Those with severe and acute needs cannot be addressed with online, so we are in the process of opening offline centres in Delhi and Bengaluru, in the next three months,” says the mental health expert.

The doctor’s wife works in the financial services sector. He enjoys playing basketball and table tennis with his son. The psychiatrist turned entrepreneur is a voracious reader devouring at least a couple of books every fortnight. With family and friends all living nearby, his social calendar, he says, is rarely empty!

  • Follow Dr. Amit Malik on LinkedIn 

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2022 recap: The Indians who dominated the global art and culture scene

(December 31, 2022) Indian art and culture exploded on global platforms this year. Filmmakers, authors, actors and musicians have made their presence felt, showcasing Indian culture in all its richness and diversity. In this recap, we revisit some of Global Indian's top art and culture stories through 2022. Geetanjali Shree, winner of 2022 International Booker Prize India was in for quite a surprise, when on May 27, 2022, Indian author Geetanjali Shree's 'Tomb of Sand' has become the first Hindi novel to be awarded the prestigious International Booker Prize. Originally published as 'Ret Samadhi', the book has been translated into English by Daisy Rockwell. Speaking to Global Indian in an interview earlier this year, the author had expressed, "Ret Samadhi is the story of an 80-year-old woman who is depressed after her husband’s death. Actually, it was the image of a woman in a joint, orthodox, middle-class family, who was sitting with her back turned, that stayed with me for a very long time. Somewhere it made me wonder if she was turning her back to the people around her, or her life. It took me around seven to eight years to finish the book." Growing up in various towns of Uttar Pradesh in

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seven to eight years to finish the book."

Growing up in various towns of Uttar Pradesh in the late 50s and 60s with four siblings, the 64-year-old author reveals it was the vibrant culture of those towns and their language that gave her a foundation. While she attended an English-medium school, the scarcity of English-language children’s books turned out to be a “blessing in disguise” for her. “I used to read Chandamama and Nandad as a child, and that gravitated me towards tales from the Ramayana, Mahabharata, Arabian Nights, Panchatantra, Kathasaritsagara and Chandrakanta Santati. Had I not experienced this childhood, I am not sure if I would have been able to write these stories,” reminisced the author, adding, "My mother would narrate stories to us siblings. Also, since my father was a bureaucrat, we had several people working for us at our house. I remember listening to stories from those ladies as a child. I was mesmerised by how words could create a whole new world, which was so engrossing. Unfortunately, I do not have those stories though even I am curious to know what I wrote back then."

[caption id="attachment_21807" align="aligncenter" width="548"]Author | Geetanjali Shree | Global Indian Geetanjali Shree, author[/caption]

Shaunak Sen, filmmaker

In 2022, filmmaker Shaunak Sen's All That Breathes became the first Indian documentary to be screened at the Cannes Film Festival. It went on to win the “L’OEil d’Or, the Golden Eye award, which "goes to a film that, in a world of destruction, reminds us that every life matters, and every small action matters. You can grab your camera, you can save a bird, you can hunt for some moments of stealing beauty, it matters," the jury said in their note.

Nearly three years in the making, All That Breathes paints a "dystopian picture postcard of Delhi in the 1990s," Shaunak told Global Indian, shortly before he headed off to Cannes in 2022. “My first sense of tone was the sense we always have in Delhi, of gray, hazy skies and air purifiers humming everywhere. And in this all-encompassing grey, monotony, you can see birds flying around."

The film follows the lives of two brothers, Mohammad and Nadeem, who rescue and treat injured kites in Delhi. The 90-minute film was chosen by a jury comprising Polish filmmaker Agnieszka Holland, Ukrainian writer-director Iryna Tsilyk, French actor Pierre Deladonchamps, journalist Alex Vicente, and Moroccan writer-filmmaker Hicham Falah.

[caption id="attachment_24879" align="aligncenter" width="434"]Shaunak Sen global indian Shaunak Sen[/caption]

Khyati Trehan, graphic designer

The 94th Oscar Academy Awards had an august array of creative spirits. Among them was an Indian graphic designer whose 3D artwork was among eight creative people invited to contribute to the Oscars. 3D artist Khyati Trehan, a well-known fluid digital artist was no doubt thrilled to be selected, even wishing she had been invited to the ceremony. “I am still in disbelief,” shared Khyati, adding, "My concept was of the Oscar statue as a movie viewer amidst the action. It was a dream project and I drew inspiration from the immersive power of movies. I wanted to create an overwhelming sense of feeling. I just wished they has called us to the US for the ceremony when my design was selected."

The young designer, who was also among the 2022 Forbes ‘30 under 30’, started her designing journey from National Institute of Design (Ahmedabad). “While working on a project in college, looking for an image, I realised I was spending more time on searching for a photograph, than designing. I started exploring possibilities of making all the pictures, rather than hoping that someone had clicked an image suiting my requirements. That’s how I discovered 3D. It seemed like magic."

Khyati has worked for award-winning global design and innovation firm IDEO. The sky was the limit as she worked on projects with NYT, New Yorker Magazine, Apple, Adobe, Absolut, Instagram and Snapchat. The successful graphic designer won several awards and recognitions, including the Artistry Creator of the Year at Adweek’s Creator Visionary Awards and ADC Young Guns 19 – 2021.

[caption id="attachment_33390" align="aligncenter" width="693"] Khyati Trehan[/caption]

Manali Datar, actress

She made headlines in 2019 when she was selected to play the role of Rose Granger-Weasley in the theatrical production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. And earlier this year, Indian-Australian actress Manali Datar scored the part of Edna in the smash-hit musical sensation Fangirl at the Sydney Opera House. “It’s surreal. As an actor, I dreamt about getting to perform at the Opera house and now it is happening. I am still soaking in that I am going to perform at the venue,” Manali shares.

Born in Nashik, the actress moved to Australia at a young age, and fell in love with the stage while she was still in school. Calling the production of Harry Potter a “steep learning curve”, the actress revealed that it not only helped her improve her acting chops but also gave a sneak-peek into the theatre industry from the set. In 2022, Manali played the title role in the super successful White Pearl by the Sydney Theatre Company, which was a comedy about a skin-bleaching ad gone wrong. “I played the part of Priya Singh. The production helped me strengthen my relationship with India and realise my identity. I understood a lot about myself and my roots through that experience,” said the actress, who aspires to be on the silver screen.

[caption id="attachment_33391" align="aligncenter" width="549"] Manali Datar[/caption]

Aditya Rao, musician

In 2018, the actor R. Madhavan met Indian-American musician Aditya Rao and his wife at a ramen restaurant in LA. What began as a conversation on Instagram would turn into a serendipitous meeting for all of them, as Madhavan told them the story of a film he was working on - Rocketry: the Nambi Effect. Aditya's career was flourishing by that time - he had collaborated with the multi-Grammy and Oscar-winning music director A.R. Rahman, lending his voice to the hugely popular Aila Aila in the Vikram-starrer 'I'. He went on to sing in two more projects - Achcham Yenbadhu Madamiayada and Pele: Birth of a Legend and did two concerts with Rahman, one in Chennai and two in Las Vegas. In 2017, his Carnatic remix of Ed Sheeran's Shape of You, made in collaboration with Indian Raga, went viral on the internet with 11 million views as of 2022.

Aditya went on to make nine songs for Rocketry: The Nambi Effect. “I ended up singing nine songs, two in five different languages. It was a ridiculously amazing experience, working to get the tracks mixed and re-mastered," he told Global Indian. The final versions of Peruvali were recorded in his home studio. "It was one of the hardest songs I have ever done, not only because it was a difficult song to sing but also because the lyrics were written by Dr Nambi Narayanan himself."

[caption id="attachment_28106" align="aligncenter" width="563"]aditya rao Aditya Rao[/caption]

Aishwarya Balasubramanian, dancer

The disciple of renowned Guru Acharya Choodamani Anitha Guha, Aishwarya Balasubramanian began her Bharatanatyam journey at the age of five. As a child, she mesmerised her audience during the stage performances. Even so young, she stood out for the beauty of her facial expressions, clarity of footwork and her grace. Over the years, Aishwarya has developed a reputation as one of Chennai’s most loved Bharatanatyam dancers and is a guru herself, training pupils from the Indian diaspora in the USA. She has been given titles like ‘Singar Mani, ‘Nalanda Nritya Nipuna, ‘Kala Ratna’ and ‘Natya Chudar’.

Aishwarya runs her dance school, Arpanam in the USA, bringing the ancient wisdom of Bharatanatyam to new, young learners from among the diaspora. “Since I had very strong roots in dance back in India, it was not a challenge to continue my passion in the USA,” says the dancer who performs at significant events and dance festivals in the US.

[caption id="attachment_32082" align="aligncenter" width="525"] Aishwarya Balasubramanian[/caption]

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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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