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Entrepreneur | Rahul Jain | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryRahul Jain: India-born entrepreneur changing digital payment scene in South Africa
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Rahul Jain: India-born entrepreneur changing digital payment scene in South Africa

Written by: Charu Thakur

(October 14, 2022) If Mastercard’s New Payment Index 2022 is to be believed, 95 percent of consumers in South Africa used at least one emerging digital payment method in the last year and 67 percent of consumers have purchased from an online marketplace. The purpose with which India-born Rahul Jain set up Peach Payments in South Africa in 2013 has now come to fruition, as a decade later, he is happy to be making digital payments easier in the country. “With Peach, we believe that we are building a potential 100-year business. Digital commerce is the future and we’re building the infrastructure on which this future is being built. As opportunities are seized by entrepreneurs across Africa to build digital businesses, we want to be the preferred payment platform to enable their success,” Rahul tells Global Indian.

Entrepreneur | Global Indian | Rahul Jain

Rahul Jain is the founder of Peach Payments in South Africa.

When Rahul moved to Cape Town from Boston, his focus was South Africa, but Peach Payments has now expanded to Kenya and Mauritius, as “digital commerce has helped democratise many industries.” For someone who is a regular at Youth Pravasi Bhartiya Divas, Africa FinTech Festival, ECOM Africa, and Seamless Africa, Rahul has enabled many businesses to scale, “often from a rough idea into incredible success stories.” Peach Payments was just an idea in 2011 which took a few years to translate into reality. However, it is currently thriving, and how! “We’ve seen apps being built to make it easier for people to buy insurance. New ways of providing credit such as Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) have helped democratise access to credit. Most of these new insurtechs and BNPL players have used Peach to build their businesses. We see our role as enablers and catalysts in helping people solve problems,” adds the entrepreneur.

An internship that changed it all

Born and raised in a business family in Delhi, entrepreneurship runs in his blood. While his paternal family loved carving out watches in India under the Jayco brand, his maternal grandfather pioneered ceramics in India. As a kid, he heard the dinner table conversations and somehow it kind of got “ingrained” in him at a young age. “I always knew I wanted to do something of my own,” he says. This passion led him to pursue an MBA degree from IESE Business School in Barcelona, after completing his degree in engineering from Visvesvaraya Technological University. But little did he know that a summer internship at a boutique venture capital fund in Pretoria, South Africa would introduce him to his German friend, Andreas Demleitner, with whom he would someday launch his own startup.

Entrepreneur | Rahul Jain | Global Indian

Andreas Demleitner and Rahul Jain are the co-founders of Peach Payments

The two stayed in touch, but life had other plans at that time. Always the first to grab an opportunity, Jain moved to Boston as part of an exchange program at Sloan School of Management at MIT and stayed at the state capital for two years where he worked with a strategy consulting job advising large retailers and airlines about e-commerce and marketing. It was in November 2011 that Rahul got a call from Andreas asking him to join hands in “starting a digital payments business in Africa.”

Taking the risk

It was the perfect chance to dip his toes in entrepreneurship, and that’s when he decided to move to South Africa to start Peach Payments. “We were also accepted into a startup incubator called Umbono that Google was running in Cape Town. We were one of the nine startups in that program. It was a great opportunity and one that was hard to pass up,” explains the entrepreneur. They joined forces with the ambitious goal of revolutionising the online payment space in South Africa. For someone who had lived in Barcelona and Boston, Jain was willing to take the challenge of moving to Cape Town.

Though he feels that he is on the other end of the world and “a trip to India takes 16-17 hours at a minimum,” he is sailing through. “All my family and friends are in India. My wife is from Nepal and her family is also based in the subcontinent. So for us, the distance is something we feel all the time,” reveals the entrepreneur. Moving to a new city and starting a new life with new friends was formidable on a personal front.

Even professionally, it was a challenging task. While Jain’s dream of becoming an entrepreneur was translating into a reality, raising money was an initial hurdle. After one of the seed-funding rounds collapsed at the last moment, they had their backs against the wall. So much so that Jain and his business partner were paying salaries through their savings. “We have faced several challenges. Some of them relate to being a foreigner in a new country and trying to start a new business. I had no networks here and no one knew us,” reveals Jain. However, the entrepreneur remained focused on growing sales and revenues, and it was the small victories that led them to solve the cash crunch.

Entrepreneur | Rahul Jain | Global Indian

Rahul Jain moved to South Africa to start Peach Payments

The ’gamechanging’ pandemic

In the last decade, Peach Payments has rapidly expanded its suite of tools to help online businesses scale. The risk of moving continents for the startup paid off as it provides online payment solutions to any enterprise selling a product through websites, apps, email, and SMS. Currently active in South Africa, Kenya, and Mauritius, Peach Payments “will be expanding to two more countries by the end of the year.” The pandemic led to a fundamental shift in consumer behaviour towards digital commerce, which Jain calls a “gamechanger”. People were suddenly forced to buy online during the lockdown, and it inspired them to see the benefits of digital commerce and the convenience it brought with itself.

“The business mindset also changed at an incredible pace. Businesses that previously were only considering e-commerce are suddenly going online in a matter of days. At Peach Payments, we saw record numbers of new accounts in 2020. Across market segments – from retail, digital learning, fitness, and even traditional financial services – we’ve onboarded new clients in almost every vertical in the past two years,” explains Rahul, who reveals that the transaction volumes grew 4.5 times since the start of the pandemic.

When Jain started Peach Payments, it took him a year to convince the first bank in South Africa to work with them. But the funding landscape is changing now. “It was incredibly hard to raise any venture capital during the first few years. Africa was not where venture capitalists were investing. This has only really changed in the past two years now. Today, you are seeing unicorns emerge in Africa and startups regularly raising funding rounds of more than $100 million. Back in 2014-15, it was incredibly hard to raise even $100k in funding. So, we were forced to bootstrap the business to a large extent.”

Indian diaspora’s help

It was the Indian diaspora largely that helped him travel and integrate with ease across various countries in Africa. He says that Indians are well-respected across the subcontinent, and the diaspora in Kenya especially plays a major role in the local economy and welfare. Jain, who sees a big opportunity in Indian companies, is of the firm belief that such startups should look to expand in Africa. And he has a plan too. “One of my goals is to make it easier for Indian companies to sell in Africa. At Peach, we can process and collect payments for them and repatriate their funds to India making it much easier for them to grow in Africa. I genuinely believe in this and trying to play a role in helping build on this from a digital commerce perspective. I have also recently helped kick off the JITO initiative in South Africa,” adds the entrepreneur.

Rahul, who enjoys the outdoors in Cape Town, spends time in the Winelands, hikes, and plays a sport. “Besides spending time with my 5-year-old daughter, I am passionate about padel, an up-and-coming racquet sport that originated in Mexico and is very popular in Spain and now starting to grow in South Africa as well,” he adds.

Peach Payments has changed the way digital payments are seen in Africa, and it has brought its share of learnings. “Starting and growing Peach Payments has taught me that nothing comes easily. Being a successful start-up is all about grinding away at big obstacles and acknowledging that progress takes time,” the entrepreneur signs off.

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2 Comments
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Pradeep Jain
Pradeep Jain
October 15, 2022 4:31 pm

Great going. Very proud of you. Keep working with Deligence and Integrity. Honesty is key to success.

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Rajni
Rajni
October 15, 2022 5:11 pm

Amazing work dear Rahul.May you always succeed in your life. Best of luck

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Reply
  • Digital Commerce
  • Digital Payment
  • Entrepreneur
  • Global Indian
  • Indians in South Africa
  • Peach Payment
  • Rahul Jain
  • South Africa

Published on 14, Oct 2022

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Atul Koul Randev: Tech executive to bestselling Indian author

(May 22, 2023) Atul Koul Randev, a tech industry executive at Signicat, has found success with his debut novel 'The Hundred Million Bet.' His book found a spot on the WH Smith Fiction bestsellers list and is a bestseller on Amazon, with a 4.6 rating. Global Indian looks at the Oslo-based techie's journey to becoming a bestselling Indian author ...  Most of Atul Koul Randev’s childhood was spent reading books: Enid Blyton, C.S. Lewis (The Chronicles of Narnia), JK Rowling (Harry Potter) and Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time. He would wander around in the library for hours, picking and reading whatever he liked. After all, his mother was a librarian and a writer of short stories. All of this reading started to flow into his school essays. Atul started writing some short poems and stories, which were appreciated at school and home. He left the country to study and work, going to France and Norway, but never stopped writing. “I’m a dreamer, writer and a poet, in the guise of a techie,” smiles Atul Koul Randev, author of the best seller ‘The Hundred Million Bet’ in an exclusive chat with Global Indian. [caption id="attachment_39013" align="aligncenter" width="554"] Indian author Atul Koul Randev[/caption] Atul, who

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ian.

[caption id="attachment_39013" align="aligncenter" width="554"]Atul Koul Randev | Indian Author Indian author Atul Koul Randev[/caption]

Atul, who is the Chief Strategy and Mergers & Acquisitions officer at Signicat, a tech firm in Oslo, Norway, describes his book as a crime thriller at heart with strong doses of romance and philosophy. “We have a survival storyline combined with a heist where the hero (Caesar) stands to win or lose 100 million euros,” says the author about his book, which has been a bestseller on Amazon, rating a good 4.6, and has peaked at No.3 on WH SMITH Fiction best sellers list.

The Hundred Million Bet

Caesar, elaborates Atul, wins the money to begin with but the mafia boss that he’s beaten, wants his money back and would go to any lengths to get it.

“Life is never just action, it is never just a chase. There is a lot of thinking, questioning, and loving that we do in our lives, and Caesar is no different,” feels Atul, adding that the hero of his book needs to face and answer some questions related to what he values and why he exists before he’ll be ready to face the antagonists.

The response to the book has been very humbling, he says. “People liked the grey characters and found them relatable even though these people are living in the high-stakes world of 100 million poker games,” says Atul, who received most appreciation for the structure of the story told through several different timelines, characters, and in different cities.

“I planted a lot of easter eggs in the book, and a few astute readers have caught those and appreciated them,” smiles the 33-year-old, who has written a few short novels in the past.

The Hundred Million Bet Book by Atul Koul Randev

The techie life

Born in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, Atul’s school days was all about reading books, playing table tennis or cricket. An above average student when it came to academics, Atul studied mechanical engineering in YMCA University of Technology and Science in Faridabad.

He then worked as a software developer with Tata Consultancy Services, which took him to Oslo, Norway for a project in 2014. Thereafter, he moved to France did his MBA from HEC Paris in 2016. He returned to Oslo and worked with a Norwegian boutique consulting firm called Arkwright. Thereafter, he joined Bain & Company, one of the leading strategy consulting firms in the world, as a management consultant.

“At Bain & Company, I got the opportunity to work on key projects with some of the leading companies across the globe,” says Atul, who joined Signicat in May 2021 and rose to the position of Chief Strategy and M & A officer in April 2022.

Signicat is a Tech company bringing Digital Identity and Fraud management solutions to our customers which are mostly Banking and Financial services institutions.

“We are backed by a fund that gives us capital to invest in smaller companies. I lead a team that executes on that,” informs the techie, who has fairly intense workdays, which usually involves a few meetings with other companies that they may want to acquire at some point besides internal meetings and aligning with various teams on their views on these companies.

Life in Norway

Atul loves his life in Oslo. “I love food, so spend a lot of time in the kitchen with a glass of wine, and a cricket game on, cooking butter chicken or something else,” says the huge cricket fan, who does not miss a single game when India is playing.

Otherwise, he reads and writes a lot. “When it comes to reading, my guilty pleasure is fantasy,” informs Atul, whose favourite authors include Robert Jordan, Brandon Sanderson, James Islington and J.K. Rowling. He also likes to read philosophers like Spinoza and Schopenhauer.

“Reading a good book is same as traveling for me. When I read fantasy, I get to step into a magical world,” says Atul, who is a fitness freak and loves working out on a gym regularly.

 

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A post shared by Atul Koul Randev (@atulrandev)

Future plans

“I’m working on a couple of other projects right now, that would likely come to life in one form or another over the next couple of years,” informs Atul, who is presently working on a short non-fiction project with his wife. In addition, he is in the early stages of writing his next book. “It would not be a crime thriller but would hopefully be a thrilling book anyway,” says the author, who binge watches slow-burn but high-intensity TV shows. Some of his recent favourites have been Succession, Severance, Dark, and The Haunting of hill house.

Atul Koul Randev makes it a point to visit India twice a year. “Now that my parents are retired, I try to get them to spend more time with us in Oslo,” says the techie, who, was among the scores of people who escaped death during the flash floods in Kedarnath, Uttarakhand in 2013. “Everything was destroyed and I had to sleep on the floor of a police outpost for 10 days in the middle of a valley. We had to hike through about a hundred kms of broken mountains to get home,” he recalls.

Follow Atul on Instagram.

 

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Saurabh Netravalkar: India-born AI engineer who led USA to Super Eight in T20 World Cup

(June 28, 2024) The USA cricket team made history by qualifying for the Super Eight stage of the ongoing T20 World Cup in their very first appearance in the tournament. Achieving a remarkable victory over the previous edition's finalists, Pakistan, they showcased stunning sportsmanship. India-born cricketer and Oracle engineer Saurabh Netravalkar played a pivotal role in Pakistan’s defeat during a thrilling Super Over clash. Oracle congratulated him, tweeting, "Congrats USA Cricket on a historic result! Proud of the team and our very own engineering and cricket star Saurabh Netravalkar." In another tweet, Oracle highlighted, "He is one of our AI engineers and a USA cricket star." [caption id="attachment_52694" align="aligncenter" width="590"] Saurabh Netravalkar[/caption] Later, the left-arm pacer showcased his composure and skill under pressure by dismissing both Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli in the USA vs. India game. Facing many of his former teammates, Netravalkar described the game as an "emotional moment," having once played for India’s Under-19 team before pursuing his American dream. Despite the USA not qualifying for the semifinals, Saurabh Netravalkar stood out and emerged as the face of USA cricket. Juggling two demanding careers We seldom come across a successful professional cricketer who has an equally successful

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emotional moment," having once played for India’s Under-19 team before pursuing his American dream. Despite the USA not qualifying for the semifinals, Saurabh Netravalkar stood out and emerged as the face of USA cricket.

Juggling two demanding careers

We seldom come across a successful professional cricketer who has an equally successful career outside the realm of sports. A principal member of technical staff at Oracle, Saurabh Netravalkar is one such rare cricketer. A left-arm medium-fast bowler, Saurabh has has even captained the USA national team, representing the United States in international cricket. He juggles his corporate role and also plays for the Washington Freedom, an American professional Twenty20 cricket team that competes in the Major League Cricket (MLC).

It’s not easy to excel in two very demanding jobs. Saurabh works odd hours on tours and even on his team bus to meet his corporate responsibilities. 

 

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A post shared by Washington Freedom (@wshfreedom)

Not new to outstanding performances, Saurabh has been India's highest wicket taker in the 2010 Under 19 World Cup in New Zealand, and was the man of the series in the tri-nations U-19 tournament in South Africa. The Mumbai-born was also named the best junior cricketer in India in 2009/10. 

When his cricketing career was just taking off in India, he had moved to the US to pursue his higher studies. 

Choosing academics over sports 

When someone possesses a brilliant academic record in computer science engineering from one of the nation’s premier institutions, lucrative and stable employment opportunities abroad provide a constant allure. This led Saurabh, an alumnus of the Sardar Patel Institute of Technology in Mumbai to pursue his masters abroad, that too at an Ivy League school, and subsequently bag a lucrative job at Oracle. 

However, the cricketer in him was not able to stay away from the sport for long. With his dedication, coupled with luck, he has become a prominent cricketer in the United States in a short span of time. Saurabh has been efficiently giving action-packed performances with his ability to effortlessly swing the ball in both directions. 

[caption id="attachment_52693" align="aligncenter" width="522"]Indian Cricketer | Saurabh Netravalkar | Global Indian Saurabh Netravalkar in action[/caption]

The hard decision 

He was 23 when he had to take the crucial decision regarding his career path. The Mumbai boy, who had already proven his mettle as a skilled left-arm pacer, ultimately opted to prioritise further education in the United States, relinquishing his aspirations of a cricketing career in India. This decision came two years after his inaugural match in the Mumbai Ranji Trophy back in 2013, where he played against Karnataka, a match that also featured his former India Under-19 teammate, KL Rahul. 

“It was a very emotional decision for me to leave cricket behind and come to the US to pursue higher education,” the Mumbai-born cricketer said in an interview. 

Unforgettable experiences 

For Saurabh, his experiences in his short but successful cricketing career in India are significant. Those experiences have helped him to charter a fresh path in the world of U.S. cricket. 

 

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He cherishes participating in the BCCI Corporate Trophy as a member of the Air India team under the leadership of the renowned Indian cricketer of that era, Yuvraj Singh. Other present-day Indian cricket stars like Suresh Raina were also part of the tournament. “My performance in that competition was commendable, and it played a pivotal role in my selection for the India Under-19 squad,” he shared. He had made his first-class debut for Mumbai in the 2013–14 Ranji Trophy. 

While K.L. Rahul, along with fellow participants of the 2010 U-19 World Cup such as Mayank Agarwal and Jaydev Unadkat, embarked on their journey towards representing the senior Indian cricket team and securing IPL contracts, Saurabh went on to pursue a master's degree in computer science at Cornell University. 

Once a sportsman, always a sportsman 

After completing his masters and entering the corporate world, the software engineer has been able to find a foothold in the United States team, and play with some of the current top players. “It was always a dream to play against top international players and test my abilities. I am really grateful to get that chance finally," said the Global Indian who loves singing to the tunes of his guitar. 

 

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A post shared by Saurabh Netravalkar (@saurabh_netra)

Saurabh has been balancing his passion and full-time job successfully. “I am a software engineer, so I have to mostly code. The timings are flexible, which is a good thing about this profession. So, I can work at my own time,” he remarked. “My goal in cricket and life is to keep on scaling up and to be consistent,” he added.

In Saurabh Netravalkar, cricket enthusiasts and the diaspora find a remarkable example of someone representing India's beloved sport on an international stage.

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Aamandbasil: Celebrating love, food, and cultural blends on Instagram

(July 27, 2023) What do Italians and Indians have in common? Quite a lot, going by Suprateek Banerjee (aka Mango) and his wife, Daniela Barone (basil), the content-creator couple behind @aamandbasil on Instagram. For starters, they "both wake up in the morning thinking about what they're going to eat," as Daniela puts it. Close family ties are another similarity - Suprateek was thrilled to learn that Daniela's grandmother lives at the family home in Naples - "I was like, wow, this is just what we do. Our grandparents live with us in India as well, and we love them like crazy." In the early days of their relationship, Daniela checked out Suprateek on Facebook and was bowled over by the fact that he had his parents on his cover photo. Their relationship has been a mutual discovery of each other's cultures, and the heartwarming realisation that Indians and Italians have a lot in common. Daniela and Suprateek join me on a video call from Germany, where they now live. Our conversation goes well past the intended time – the couple are even more fun in real life than they are on Instagram. They refer to their Insta personas as “characters.”

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even more fun in real life than they are on Instagram. They refer to their Insta personas as “characters.” Why, I ask. “Because we’re different in real life. I would never annoy Daniela that way,” says Suprateek. “And she’s definitely not such an angry person!” Their little skits are full of good-natured squabbles, celebrating their cultural differences with humour and understanding. The page is less than six months old but has already gained over 60k followers (and counting).

 

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A post shared by Mango and Basil | Comedy Creators (@aamandbasil)

Mind your language! 

So how does a "small-town guy from Benaras," as Suprateek describes himself, meet and fall in love with a young woman from rural Naples? For Suprateek, the story begins in Benaras, when he decided to study abroad. Meanwhile, in Italy, Daniela was thrilled to learn that her PhD programme offered her a stint in Heidelberg. And so, the couple landed up in Germany, around the same time, each to study. However, their paths didn't cross.

As he grew fluent in German, Suprateek wanted to test his flair for languages. He signed up for Italian lessons on Duo Lingo. Daniela, on the other hand, returned to Naples after completing her PhD, and was trying to find work. She was simply too overqualified to continue living the rustic life of rural Italians and leaving home seemed the only option. That meant learning English. They both knew that the best way to learn a language is having someone to talk to. That's how both of them ended up on Tandem, in search of friends to speak to in Italian and English.

"It's hard to find a partner, even on Tandem," says Daniela. "I would chat with different people every day, they would come and go very fast. I needed someone to stay because I had an exam to write." And one day, Suprateek arrived. Daniela expected him to say hello and disappear. They began writing to each other and realised that they had a connection.

Suprateek felt the same way too. "I saw her profile and knew that she is a very simple person. As soon as we started speaking, I told her I wanted to meet her. She said no."

Love, actually

 

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A post shared by Mango and Basil | Comedy Creators (@aamandbasil)

After a while of waiting, Daniela agreed to let Suprateek visit her in Naples. Daniela spent a sleepless night before their first meeting, pondering the traditional Italian hug-and-kiss custom. The dilemma showed plainly on her face as Suprateek walked out of the airport. "She was so nervous, chewing on her nails," he smiles. When she saw him, however, her worries fell away - "she came straight up to me and hugged me," Suprateek recalls. Daniela showed him around Naples and by the end of that trip, their feelings were clear.

They knew they wanted to be together, but life still had some challenges in store. Daniela wanted to move to Germany to be with Suprateek but was still looking for work. "I was feeling completely useless at home,” she says. Daniela's frustration grew into self-doubt, despite being a top STEM student with a PhD. Suprateek stood by her, helping her write her CV and drafting the perfect cover letter.

Finally, an opportunity came her way, but with a catch. The job was in Ireland. Daniela wasn't sure but Suprateek urged her to go. So she went, and the couple made plans to meet every weekend. In 2020, Daniela finally found a job in Frankfurt, where Suprateek was living. After several years trying to make it work, the couple were finally in the same city. As they braved the pandemic together, they decided to marry. The couple wanted a small wedding anyway, and went to Denmark to tie the knot.

Aam and Basil

"Happiness is never grand," remarked the writer Aldous Huxley. That was the case with Daniela and Suprateek, who fell into the routine of their daily lives, going to work, coming back home and watching something on TV. "But we wanted to do something creative," says Suprateek. "We were in a unique situation where we come from two different cultures and life experiences, so we thought about sharing our story with people to make them smile."

In February 2023, they began @aamandbasil and have already gained some 60,000 followers (and growing). Daniela had a natural flair for acting, and the two threw themselves into the process, creating characters that are just slightly larger than life. They share the work, taking it in turns to write, act and edit, depending on who came up with the idea. "We share everything. Sometimes she cooks and I edit, at other times, she edits and I cook," Suprateek smiles.

 

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A post shared by Mango and Basil | Comedy Creators (@aamandbasil)

The couple's message is simple. "There are many people don't know about my culture, or understand how similar we are. There are differences too but those can be explained with humour," says Daniela. "We want to show everyone that we are citizens of the world. We are not all that different, really, two cultures can blend and you can have fun during the learning process."

Daniela even felt instantly at home in India the first time she visited. "And I took her to Benaras!" Suprateek adds. "There is something very deep about Indians. You can find some roads that are full of chaos - there's a guy dragging a mattress, a woman trying to get her kids across the busy road, the horns are blaring. But even then, they are so chilled out," says Daniela. The feeling of "chill in chaos defines Benaras," Suprateek laughs. "Our food culture is also similar," Daniela explains. "At 9 am, my grandmom knocks on the door to ask, 'what shall we eat for lunch'?"

The ties that bind

It's the closeness of family bonds that holds them together most. "In Germany, people are very practical. Putting aged parents in an old people's home is a no brainer here," says the Global Indian. Neither he nor Daniela would ever consider that - "My grandma is 92 and she lives with us at home (in Naples)," says Daniela. Suprateek, who lost both sets of grandparents, makes the most of his time with Daniela's grandmothers. "Her grandmother speaks Napolitana, I can't even understand what she says but I can sit there and listen to her anyway."

https://youtube.com/shorts/Q977lkde-tA?feature=share

Our conversation has run well over time and they sign off with a word of encouragement for other couples like themselves. "Give the other person a chance, enjoy the differences," they say. "One thing is for sure, your life will never be boring!"

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r athletes from underprivileged backgrounds, is the most satisfying part of this journey,” he reflects. “It’s not just about winning medals—it’s about how sports can change lives.”

[caption id="attachment_57520" align="aligncenter" width="532"]Indian sports coach | Abhishek Dubey | Global Indian Abhishek Dubey[/caption]

Falling in love with Taekwondo

Growing up in the suburbs of Chembur, Mumbai, the celebrated Taekwondo coach spent his childhood immersing himself in the offerings of the sports club at RCF Colony. In 1991, when he was 11, a newly established Taekwondo club at the sports facility caught his eye with its crisp uniforms and disciplined training sessions. What began as a mere curiosity quickly evolved into a lifelong passion. Under the guidance of Master Sunil Saxena and Late Rajesh Menon, Abhishek embarked on a journey in Taekwondo, eventually representing India at international events and winning numerous medals.

Abhishek’s expertise and deep passion for the martial art not only shaped his own life but also had a great impact on the athletes he coached, many of whom have gained international recognition and rankings in Taekwondo. His dedication to the sport also led to a lasting connection with South Korea, where he continues to work professionally in the field of Taekwondo. He is also pursuing a PhD at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies in Seoul, focusing on sports as development tool in empowering women.

From athlete to coach

As an athlete, Abhishek Dubey’s achievements speak volumes. From participating in the SAI Open Nationals in 2001, narrowly missing a medal at the Korea Open in 2012, to winning gold and the Best Poomsae Athlete Award at the 2013 Korean Ambassador’s Cup, his career is filled with moments of personal triumph. Yet, he humbly acknowledges that his most significant accomplishments lie not in his individual accolades but in his role as a coach.

[caption id="attachment_57523" align="aligncenter" width="748"]Indian sports coach | Abhishek Dubey | Global Indian Coach Abhishek during the training for the 8th Asian Taekwondo Poomsae Championships in Vietnam[/caption]

He has nurtured medalist for India at the 2024 Asian Taekwondo Championships, Australian Open, Oceania Open, WT President Cup Oceania, WT President Cup Europe, Croatia Open, XIII South Asian Games, VI Commonwealth Taekwondo C'ships Scotland, 2015 Korea Open, and the 2010 Yeongcheon Open.

The Indo-Korean Taekwondo Academy in Mumbai, which he co-founded with his childhood friend Chakrapani Koirala at the age of 20, just before graduating from university, embodies his commitment to the martial art. “What began as a part-time club has blossomed over the last 24 years into a training ground for elite athletes. Above all, it is a place for good Taekwondo practitioners with rich human values,” he says.

Watching his athletes gain international success

His greatest fulfilment as a coach comes from watching his athletes achieve international success. Some of his proudest moments include Ishee Pardeshi’s victory at the Yeongcheon Open in 2010, her triumph at the 2014 Commonwealth Taekwondo Championships, and her strong performances at the Croatia Open and the Asian Championships.

“The journey has been fulfilling every day," he reflects. Recently, seeing one of his athletes, Rupa Bayor, win India’s first Asian medal in Taekwondo Poomsae has been especially satisfying for him. “Considering the challenges she faced, coming from a background where opportunities are scarce, her success is even more meaningful. When she first arrived in Mumbai on our scholarship program, she wasn’t ranked in the top 500 WT World rankings, and today she’s ranked 9th in the world and 2nd in Asia, becoming the first Indian to come in Top 10 World Rankings. It’s incredibly rewarding to see how sports can serve as a means of intervention, helping to shape a young athlete’s career and life,” he mentions.

[caption id="attachment_57521" align="aligncenter" width="657"]Indian sports coach | Abhishek Dubey | Global Indian Coach Abhishek Dubey with Athlete Rupa Bayor[/caption]

Special connection with Korea

Abhishek has been traveling to Korea since 2007 for international Taekwondo championships and sports education, continuing until 2015.

Then in 2015, he received a full scholarship from the Sports and Culture Ministry of the Republic of Korea to pursue a Master's in Global Sports Management, which opened new doors in sports research and management. “Since then, I’ve been involved in research work on sports for development. So yes, it’s been 18 years of going back and forth between Korea, and now I’ve been pursuing my Ph.D. since 2020," he says.

Abhishek is writing his thesis on the impact of sports development programs in empowering women in India. “It’s been overwhelming and time-consuming. At times, my professional commitments have derailed my Ph.D., but seeing young athletes grow in the sport brings me immense joy,” says the coach who frequently returns to India to nurture elite athletes who represent the country.

It’s exhausting at times - managing the academy and athlete development in India, and my research and other professional engagements in Korea - but I continue my PhD without neglecting my duties towards Taekwondo because I believe that while there are plenty of PhD scholars in India, there is yet to be a world champion in our sport. That’s my quest: to create one in the near future.

Abhishek remarks

Celebrating Taekwondo and its Korean heritage

Taekwondo is more than just a sport in Korea; it is a national treasure. It promotes perseverance, respect, humility, and integrity in practitioners who are taught to uphold these values in their daily lives. The sport is often integrated into school curricula, emphasising its importance in the formation of character and discipline by training the body and mind of the youngsters.

[caption id="attachment_57522" align="aligncenter" width="1024"]Indian sports coach | Taekwondo Star | Global Indian Abhishek Dubey at the International Referee Seminar conducted by the World Taekwondo Federation where he became the first Indian Taekwondo Referee to win the coveted Best Participant Award for Kyoroogi in South Korea[/caption]

Taekwondo is one of the oldest martial arts of the world, originating in Korea over 2,000 years ago. The name reflects its essence: Tae (foot), Kwon (hand), Do (art). Its roots can be traced back to ancient Korean martial arts, including Taekkyeon and Hwa Rang Do, practiced by warriors and royal families. Taekwondo began to take shape as a unified martial art form under the influence of various masters who sought to promote Korean culture and heritage after the Korean war (1950-53). In 1955, the term ‘Taekwondo’ was officially adopted, and the sport quickly gained popularity both in Korea and internationally.

Translating to ‘the way of the foot and fist,’ Taekwondo has become a global phenomenon, and Abhishek is proud to play his part in it. “It’s been a beautiful experience. Will always be indebted to the love, knowledge, friendships and bonds that have been built through the sport of Taekwondo in Korea,” he remarks.

Life in Korea 

Abhishek has worked as a researcher with the Seoul Olympic Museum, served as a Communication Manager for the Gangwon 2024 Youth Olympic Games, and worked as a Research Assistant at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, describing it as “an experience of a lifetime.” He shares, “I cherish every opportunity that my 18 years of travel in and out of Korea have brought to my life, and I love engaging with the sport and culture here.”

[caption id="attachment_57526" align="aligncenter" width="720"]Indian sports coach | Taekwondo star with Kukkiwon President Grandmaster Man Soon Jung in 2014 | Global Indian Abhishek Dubey with Kukkiwon President Grandmaster Man Soon Jung in 2014[/caption]

The coach and researcher can communicate in Korean, having studied the language during his university days in Korea. “I am still trying to learn more,” he remarks.

An ambassador of India in Korea

The Indian community in Korea is diverse, consisting of professionals, students, and skilled workers who contribute significantly to various sectors, including technology, education, hospitality, and business. “Of late, the India diaspora is growing especially with students and people in the IT industry,” remarks Abhishek.

Many Indian students are attracted to Korea's advanced educational institutions and its emphasis on research and innovation. Scholarships and programs aimed at international students have further encouraged this trend, with Abhishek serving as a prime example. 

As a professional, scholar, and coach in the world of Taekwondo, a national heritage of Korea, Abhishek Dubey is contributing to strengthening Indo-Korean ties in his own way.

[caption id="attachment_57525" align="aligncenter" width="555"]Indian sports coach | Indian coach | Global Indian Abhishek Dubey[/caption]

Plans for future - giving back and elevating India’s position 

Abhishek aims to apply his expertise in both sports management and the martial art form to support the growth of India's Taekwondo community in different capacities and in several meaningful ways.

“I would love to establish an Elite Athlete Taekwondo Training Program/Center for youth from marginalised communities in India and develop a concrete plan to create India’s first World Champion in the Olympics,” he signs off with a determination to keep empowering the next generation of athletes and elevate India's presence in the global Taekwondo rankings.

  • Follow Abhishek Dubey on Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn

Reading Time: 5 mins

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Making sense amidst Quantum Chaos: Tamil-French mathematician Nalini Anantharaman is changing the world of numbers

(September 22, 2022) The archaic belief that "mathematics is not for women" has contributed greatly to the gender gap in the field. While girls are being encouraged to take up a career in science and technology, many steer clear of pure mathematical studies. Breaking all the stereotypes is Tamil-French mathematician, Nalini Ananthraman, who is decorated with three major awards in the field - Henri Poincaré Prize, Salem Prize, and Jacques Herbrand Prize. The Chair of Mathematics at the University of Strasbourg, Nalini was awarded the Infosys Prize (2018) recognising her path-breaking work in quantum chaos and allied areas. In 2020, the mathematician received the Frederic Esser Nemmers Prize in Mathematics “for her profound contributions to microlocal analysis and mathematical physics, in particular to problems of localization and delocalization of eigenfunctions”. [caption id="attachment_29690" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Nalini Ananthraman, mathematician[/caption] "I work with questions coming from physics but with a mathematical perspective. For the last 10 years, I’ve been working on equations describing how waves propagate—these could be sound waves, electromagnetic (light) waves, water waves, or waves in quantum mechanics," the Global Indian said during a press interaction after winning the Infosys award, adding, "It is a privilege to create beautiful things without

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ian | Nalini Ananthraman | Global Indian" width="640" height="640" /> Nalini Ananthraman, mathematician[/caption]

"I work with questions coming from physics but with a mathematical perspective. For the last 10 years, I’ve been working on equations describing how waves propagate—these could be sound waves, electromagnetic (light) waves, water waves, or waves in quantum mechanics," the Global Indian said during a press interaction after winning the Infosys award, adding, "It is a privilege to create beautiful things without having to worry about their applications."

Inspired by her parents

Born to a Tamil father and a French mother, who were both distinguished mathematicians, Nalini started in the world of numbers with a strong advantage. Speaking about her family, Nalini had told Bhavana magazine, "My father studied at the Tata Institute (TIFR) in Mumbai, and he left for France at the time of starting a Ph.D. to work. My parents met in Paris at the end of the 1960s. My mother still has a letter from her friend, the mathematician Michèle Vergne, who writes in that letter that she wanted to introduce her to a young Indian who had just then arrived in France."

[caption id="attachment_29691" align="aligncenter" width="478"]Mathematician | Nalini Ananthraman | Global Indian A young Nalini with her mother, Claire[/caption]

A very bright student, Nalini rarely required any help with her studies. As her parents were professors at the University of Orléans, the young mathematician remembers having free access to the library, a place she "loved to spend her time the most." Interestingly, while she was drawn to numbers from a very young age, music, and not maths, was her first choice of career. She wasn't too keen on taking part in any mathematics competitions as well. "I wanted either to be a pianist or a researcher, but not necessarily in math. Physics, and even biology, also fascinated me then. I never participated in math competitions. No one suggested it, and I didn’t even know those competitions existed. I’m not sure I would have liked the idea of 'training' for such a competition," she said during the interview.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ASu98tR8Kg

It was during her high school years that she decided to pursue an undergraduate course in mathematics at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris in 1994. Intrigued by the subject, she did her post-graduation from the same university and later completed her Ph.D. at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in 2000, under the supervision of François Ledrappier. It was during her years in Paris, that the mathematician noticed the stark gender gap in her class. "For a long time, I did not think of the difficulties involved in being a woman doing mathematics. Only as I was preparing for my Ph.D. thesis, did I realise how few women there were at conferences, without being particularly affected by this fact," she told European Women in Maths magazine.

Tackling the world of numbers

At 24, when most scholars are still looking for their research subject, Nalini has already earned her doctorate. What made her research papers even more interesting was that her ideas had a healthy overlap of topics from theoretical physics to pure mathematics. Her paper on understanding the fine topological features of geodesics on negatively curved manifolds fetched her the prestigious Henri Poincaré Prize in 2012 'for her original contributions to the area of quantum chaos, dynamical systems, and Schrödinger equations, including a remarkable advance in the problem of quantum unique ergodicity'.

[caption id="attachment_29692" align="aligncenter" width="658"]Mathematician | Nalini Ananthraman | Global Indian Nalini, with other distinguished mathematicians at the Infosys Award event, 2018[/caption]

"I liked theoretical physics and studied it together with math while I was an undergraduate. But some visits to an experimental lab convinced me that I actually preferred math. When I looked for a Ph.D. subject, I did not particularly want it to be at the interface with physics. My Ph.D. was in the field of dynamical systems. It was only in 2012, when I won the Poincaré prize, that the words “mathematical physics” became attached to my work," shared the mathematician, who worked as visiting faculty at the University of California and Princeton, between 2009 and 2014.

In 2013, Nalini received the CNRS Silver Medal and two years later was elected as a member of the Academia Europaea, and was the plenary speaker at the 2018 International Congress of Mathematicians. Now a mother of two, the mathematician is a vocal advocate of women's rights. Encouraging young girls to take up a career in maths, she added, "I would tell a young woman that the career of a mathematician is rather well suited for a woman; of course, it requires a lot of work but it provides some flexibility since one can organise one’s work. Right now, the scarcity of positions penalises women. I nevertheless do not see how one can think that a career as a mathematician is not appropriate for women."

She added, "Now that I have children, I wonder more about these issues and realise the differences in the ways women and men view their careers. Sharing with my male colleagues the questions that come to my mind, such as the difficulty to come back to mathematics after maternity leave, is difficult, if not impossible. After a child’s birth, men intend to go on working as before, whereas women are ready to reorganise their schedule and dedicate less time to research. Having received prizes, at the time my children were born, it was expected that I would get back to research straight away. However, during my maternity leave, topics on which I was working were the object of research, and led to publications I was not invited to join."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2Ii6nmS7d8

While she loves her research, she enjoys teaching young minds even more. "Were I to choose a career now, I think I would choose medicine. Medicine incorporates a human component that I somewhat miss in mathematics, particularly since I like working on my own. The human aspect of teaching provides a little compensation for this lack. In my professional activity, I enjoy the freedom we feel in understanding things. Doing mathematics is a creative work that emanates from person, which another person would not have done in the same way. In doing mathematics, I express something personal. It is a source of joy to know that, despite this personal aspect, the fruit of my work can be of interest to other mathematicians," she had expressed during a press interaction.

  • Follow Nalini Ananthraman on Twitter

Reading Time: 7 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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