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Global IndianstoryAtita Verghese: India’s first female skateboarder is kickflipping gender norms
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Atita Verghese: India’s first female skateboarder is kickflipping gender norms

Written by: Darshana Ramdev

(December 4, 2023) Atita Verghese was 19 when she got on a skateboard for the first time, on a whim. The spark she felt was instant, and very real – ten years later, it’s still burning bright. Atita Verghese, or ‘Atty’, as she is known to her friends, is India’s first female skateboarder. She turned a deaf ear when she was jeered at for being a girl, and if there was no infrastructure available, she helped build it with her own hands. When, for the longest time, she couldn’t afford her own board, she learned to make do by borrowing from the boys.

That’s how Atita went on to become part of a counterculture tsunami, as women around the world, clad in sarees, hijabs and baggy jeans, kickflipped and switched their way to freedom. She’s also the only skateboarder in the country to land a coveted Vans sponsorship (Vans is an American manufacturer of skateboarding shoes and apparel). This year, world class skateboarder Madars Apse featured her in an episode in Season 3 of Redbull’s State Tales, a documentary series “through skateboarding’s wilder shores.” That apart, she’s the founder of Girl Skate India, an organisation that works with young girls from poor families across India, using skateboarding as a means of helping them rise above their circumstances. She also travels the world – she was recently skateboarding in Moscow.

Atita Vergese

The counterculture crew 

“There were like five, six skaters in the city (Bengaluru) when I first started, and not many more in the country,” Atita tells Global Indian. In those early days, the boys indulged the lone girl in their crew. “When they took a break they would let me have their skateboards,” she recalls. She and four others, including her friend Abhishek, who first introduced her to the sport, formed the Holy Stoked Collective and when he saw “how into it” she was, he bought Atita her first board, “all the way from the USA. I was stoked,” she breaks into a grin. “The boys were quite nice to me, it was new to them. Every time I tried something or landed a new trick they would cheer me on.”

Still, it was hard to be taken seriously as a young woman in an all-male space. Atita took it all in her stride, until a group of Germans who were working with her on a project asked the obvious question: “Why do they treat you like this?” It was an unpleasant realisation, but it was also when Atita began to realise she was different and that being so was exactly what made her special.

At the time, to simply skateboard meant starting from the absolute basics. Holy Stoked rose to the challenge and began building their own ramp on a donated plot. “We were determined to make it happen,” says Atita, who was part of the project as well. Two other skaters from Germany, who heard this was happening also came down to help. They happened to have their own building company back home and a year later, they returned, this time with Levi’s and Nike funding them. “They brought pro skaters along with them to share the culture,” Atita says.

 

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The fledgling sub culture was starting to grow and Holy Stoked got on Instagram, which was still fairly new at the time.  “They wouldn’t ever post anything about me, though,” Atita says. That only changed when one crew member, who eventually fell out with the collective, decided to make it happen. “He took a photo of me and posted it. That was the first photo of me on the internet,” she says. The skateboarders from Germany also spotted her talent. “I was the only girl skateboarding in the country and wanted to encourage me. One of them came up with the idea to photograph and document me.” He reached out to Vans, telling them about this Indian “girl who skates really well.”

When fame came calling 

Before she knew it, the recognition was pouring in – journalists from around the world were beating down the door; everybody was talking about Atita Verghese. Even the American apparel giant Vans got in touch. Atita started an Instagram account too and quickly racked up a follower count. She got sponsorship from Extreme, who also put her in touch with Stanley Black & Decker. “That was awesome,” she grins. “They would send me on trips and I did campaigns with them.”  

But what’s passion without purpose? Girls still weren’t getting into the sport and Atita wanted to change that. What was keeping girls away? “We’re still trying to answer this,” she responds. Skateboarding is niche, and it can also be quite scary, she reasons. “It’s an extreme sport for sure – if you’re falling, you’re falling on concrete.” Atita has fallen too – last year, she fractured two fingers. It was a severe enough injury to keep most people away for life, but Atita was back on her skateboard the first chance she got.

While broken bones and grazed knees are always imminent, skateboarding, she says, is the ultimate lesson in mindfulness. “You just stop thinking about anything. Your only thoughts are about staying in the moment, figuring out the technicalities, where your body weight needs to be and where your feet are placed. There’s no time to think of anything else.” Body and brain are firing on all cylinders and there’s a lot of creativity involved. With skateboarding, “nobody likes carbon copy stuff,” Atita says. “Originality and creativity are very respected. It’s all about finding your own style.”

 

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A way of life 

As Bengaluru grew and developed, its vacant spaces were slowly devoured by the ever-growing concrete sea. It was a dangerous sport too, as Atita has pointed out. But the benefits trumped all that. The “meditative” process kept her going – “They say trauma can be healed through skateboarding,” she tells me. Maybe there’s truth to that, not just through the learning of the sport but because choosing it makes you part of a community, and introduces you to a way of life. If you can skateboard, you’re part of a community – of rebels, outliers, iconoclasts and free spirits, perhaps, united an all-consuming love for skateboarding. There were true friends to be found on the fringe.

It’s not just that. What began as a pastime for surfers in the US’ West Coast back in the 1940s and 50s has grown into a global subculture that left its imprint on art, music, fashion and cinema. Companies like Vans, DC Shoes and Supreme, which sell skateboarding gear and apparel, are major fashion labels – the beanies and graphic tees have long since spilled off skateboarding ramps into mainstream couture. Skateboarding is associated with genres like punk rock, hip-hop and alt rock. In 2020, the sport finally made its Olympic debut.

Girl Skate India

Atita was living the dream, but she wanted to do more. “I wanted to not just focus only on myself,” she says. And if she was creating the scene from scratch, building skateboards and drumming up demand, it needed to have a higher purpose than trying to appeal to a bunch of suits in a rigid corporate ecosystem. Living as she did in a country where physical safety is not a guarantee for women, who never even stop to question that, there was lots to be done. That’s how she started Girl Skate India. She wanted to spread the world and to bring more women into the fold so they too could feel the warmth of being part of this vibrant, global community.  

Atita conducts workshops, making use of every bit of free space she can find. “The stars aligned and it worked out,” she says. She goes to rural India and brings women and girls out of their homes and on to skateboards. It’s a struggle, obviously – the corporate ecosystem comes with rigid rules but nothing happens for free. “When I started Girl Skate, there were a couple of other girls skating too, they had started a few years after me. I could see the movement starting to happen and we wanted everyone to join.”

 

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In Kovalam, Atita and the Girl Skate India crew built a skate park for SISP, an organisation that takes in destitute kids. They used surfing as an incentive  – their policy was no school, no surfing. And because the kids love surfing so much, they also go to school. Since the monsoon is too hectic, they built a skatepark, led by Atita and a group of female skateboarders from Europe. “We did a workshop at a girls’s school too and the teachers came in sarees. It was amazing!”  

Purpose and fulfillment

It’s been a big learning process too – “We kept getting to know people’s stories and what they have been through and just how regressive society can be,” Atita says. The women and girls they work with come from poverty-stricken homes, many from slums where several houses share a single bathroom. “One of the girls was able to build a new bathroom inside her house because of the money she got from a skate project I involved her in,” Atita smiles. Alcoholism and domestic violence are rampant – kids fall into bad company, or take their aggression out on their peers. Skateboarding gives them a healthy outlet.  

Girl Skate India has built around 10 skate parks so far. And Atita has seen the change taking place. In one village, a single mother who was harassed for not having a husband, pushed her daughter to skateboard – the girl became MP’s first female skateboarder, got an education and built a life for herself. Atita tells me the story with a smile, saying, “It makes me think that maybe we’re doing the right thing here.”

  • Follow Atita Verghese and Girl Skate India on Instagram.

 

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  • Atita Verghese
  • Bengaluru
  • community building
  • counterculture
  • Extreme
  • extreme sports
  • female empowerment
  • gender norms
  • Girl Skate India
  • Goa
  • Holy Stoked Collective
  • India
  • Levi's
  • Madars Apse
  • mindfulness
  • Nike
  • Redbull State Tales
  • skate parks
  • skateboarding
  • Stanley Black and Decker
  • Vans
  • women in sports

Published on 04, Dec 2023

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[caption id="attachment_32665" align="aligncenter" width="525"]Indian Cuisine | Madhur Jaffrey | Global Indian Madhur's debut cookbook is celebrating its 50th anniversary edition[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_32663" align="aligncenter" width="544"]Indian Cuisine Madhur Jaffrey Madhur Jaffrey[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_32664" align="aligncenter" width="574"]Madhur Jaffrey Madhur Jaffrey[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_32666" align="aligncenter" width="598"]Indian Cuisine Madhur Jaffrey Madhur Jaffrey presenting her cookery show on BBC in 1980s[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_48280" align="aligncenter" width="456"]Indian Cuisine | Madhur Jaffrey | Global Indian Madhur Jaffrey[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_32667" align="aligncenter" width="714"] Madhur Jaffrey Global Indian Madhur Jaffrey in one of her television shows[/caption]

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The competition circuit

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Practice and training

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[caption id="attachment_48058" align="aligncenter" width="617"] Prachi and her husband, Manish Kaurav[/caption]

The boats used by her are different from those used by able bodied athletes, says Prachi, who participates in VL2 (Va) and KL2 (Kayak) categories. While the Kayak boat is slightly wider than the usual one, Va boat comes with a supporter which ensures good balance. Canoeing requires strong arms, so Prachi also takes protein supplements and energy drinks besides the regular food served at the water sports academy, and goes to the gym as part of her rigorous training. “I do CrossFit and circuit training to keep fit and use ergometers for technical training as well.”

So what’s next ?

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  • Follow Prachi Yadav on Instagram 

 

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heck on what was being cooked. None of my brothers had any interest in cooking but since I did, she took me to the markets, and I spent most of my time at home with her in the kitchen. I remember getting excited seeing the roti puff up on the gas burner as a child.”

[caption id="attachment_51601" align="aligncenter" width="458"] Chef Gyanendra Gupta, founder, Raas[/caption]

Indian Roots, Overseas Experience

Chef GG as he is known, grew up in Lucknow, and would even cook for his mother so she could eat with them instead of eating last. All this time spent with her led to him dropping out of medicine at the last minute and joining the Indian Institute of Hotel Management in Lucknow, which was just five minutes away from his home. This was in 1993 and during his third year, he got a job at the Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai as a hotel management trainee. He recalls, “I worked there till 1998, after which I got a chance to work in the Caribbean islands with a London-based hotel group. They had hotels in Granada, St Lucia and many other islands. I used to train people there and on other islands also.”

In 2007, he moved back to India and joined the Landmark Group, a Dubai-based company that was trying to set up hospitality operations in India. He joined as Brand Chef and developed several brands and kiosks for the group in different parts of India including Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Pune, to name a few. One of the restaurants in our franchise was Yellow Chilli by Chef Sanjeev Kapoor and Chef Harpal Singh.”

This assignment gave Chef GG the background he needed in the backend logistics of running a business, which would later help him with Raas, the fine-dining Indian and Pan-Asian restaurant he now owns and runs in Lewes, Delaware. He says, “We had a 5500 sqft kitchen for R & D and we set up the first franchise for Gloria Jeans, an Australian coffee shop chain in Bandra, Mumbai. Though I quit after a year, it had been a great learning journey, where I understood the economics behind the business.”

Dream jobs galore

Other assignments at the Royal Orchid in Bengaluru followed and he was back with the Taj group for their launch of the brand Vivanta for the Taj in Goa. He says, “Though they had earlier launched Vivanta in Bengaluru, the Goa branch was the real launch and it was quite successful.” From there, in 2011, he moved to the Jai Mahal Palace in Jaipur, where he infused new energy into that property. Chef GG created an international menu, launched Frangipani, a Mediterranean restaurant along with Giardino, an Italian restaurant by the poolside, and elevated the culinary level by training his team at Jai Mahal Palace.”

“I believe every trainee has to be as good as you; and on every second Saturday of the month, anyone and everyone in the team had the liberty to prepare any dish they wanted. It was a wonderful exercise because even those who were not in the kitchen, would participate and make so many different items.” This property and the nearby Jaigarh Fort were the locations for several high-profile destination weddings, where the food was overseen by Chef GG.

[caption id="attachment_51600" align="aligncenter" width="547"]Raas, Chef Gyanendra Gupta, Global Indian Raas is located in a 100-year-old heritage home in Lewes, Delaware[/caption]

Then, in 2015, he represented India at the Mid-Atlantic Wine and Food Festival where 24 chefs and 70 winemakers from all over the world participated. He says, “I got a lot of exposure and met with a friend who was a medical student when I was a chef in the Caribbean at Dupont Hotel, Wilmington, USA. He showed me around the place, and I loved Lewes, which is a historic city with beautiful beaches in Delaware, the first State. He suggested I should open a restaurant here as no restaurants were serving Indian cuisine in that area, so the seed was planted in my brain at that time.”

In April 2015, Chef GG moved back to Taj Holiday Village in Goa but during a vacation in 2017, he went back to Delaware. He says, “That is when we decided to open a restaurant there and bought this historic building. It is a Queen Anne-style Victorian structure built in 1899 and we launched our first restaurant called Raas here.”

Dance of destiny

The website for Raas describes the name as a traditional folk dance from Gujarat in India – the garba and dandiya raas of the Gujaratis performed during weddings and Navratri. He has also added a medical acronym for Raas which is the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, the hormonal system responsible for blood pressure, fluid, and electrolyte balance in our bodies. Chef GG and his team renovated the building and launched in August 2019.

The restaurant, which was listed among the 100 best restaurants by Yelp and published in Forbes magazine, was also featured in the Wall Street Journal and has won many awards.

 

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He says he wanted to introduce Americans to Indian flavours as many of them consider Indian food as spicy and that it comprises of curry only. “We plated our food interestingly to intrigue their palates.”

Unlike other Indian restaurants of its kind, Raas has at least 17-18 starters and 28 main course dishes each on the menu. Most places list half that number of options. Chef GG runs a tight ship where he is on the floor meeting guests, explaining the food philosophy of his creations, and reiterating that all the calls to the restaurant are always forwarded to him. He says, “Within a few months of opening, Covid had us shut down, but we started takeout options, which kept us going.” Lewes in Delaware has a lot of folks who own second homes here as the city is barely three hours away from Washington DC and New York. Several of the city folk had never had Indian food before so it was a challenge to get them to try something new. “But I believe in Atithi Devo Bhava – the guest is god – so I interact with each guest and help them decide what they’d like to eat,” he adds.

Raas has some interesting options on offer in the fairly extensive vegetarian and non-vegetarian menu. They also have a full vegan and gluten-free menu which is in demand with locals. The Dal Lalla Mussa, Chef GG’s version of Dal Makhni is a popular favourite. As are the Saag Paneer Kofta, Lamb Shank Rogan Josh, Malai Chicken tikka Arancini, and Duck Breast Korma. He has dishes which are not on the menu but could be prepared on the guest’s request and the spice levels, even in the Pan Asian dishes are mild. He adds that 90 percent of his menu is gluten-free with the Chilli Olive Naan and Missi Roti as fast-moving items.

 

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Now that Raas is an established brand in Delaware, Chef GG is currently thinking of opening a branch in other parts of the US and in the Caribbean islands where he has spent a fair amount of time in the past.

As for global food trends, Chef GG believes that with current lifestyles being such that people eat out a lot, and the US being the multicultural hotpot that it is, people are open to trying food from different cuisines.

While travelling, Chef GG likes to eat at:

  • Cultured Pearls, a Japanese restaurant in Rehoboth, Delaware: Sushi Boat
  • Mediterranean Aroma, Rehoboth: Kebab Platter and Falafel
  • Touch of Italy, Rehoboth: Antipasti platter
  • Rasika, Washington DC: I love their lamb chops
  • The Capital Grille, Philadelphia: They do lovely steaks
  • Roadside Caribbean Jerk Barbeque on St. Lucian Island is his favourite among all of them

Follow Chef Gyanendra Gupta and Raas on LinkedIn and Instagram

Story
The spiritual doctor: India’s top hair transplant surgeon Dr Pradeep Sethi connects giving back with spirituality

(April 21, 2023) Dr. Pradeep Sethi went from being a farm labourer, spending his childhood working in the fields to becoming one of India’s top hair transplant surgeons and the co-founder of Eugenix Hair Sciences, which boasts a long line of celebrity clientele. He’s also a leading philanthropist who has founded the Utkal Gaurav International School in his village Berunapadi in Odisha. The school aims to provide world-class education for free in India’s eastern hinterland, where opportunities are rare. Dr Sethi is in the process of bringing in top faculty from around the world to give international exposure to students, while laying emphasis on spiritual practices to ensure their holistic development.   [caption id="attachment_37628" align="aligncenter" width="538"] Dr Pradeep Sethi[/caption] All through his inspirational journey, Dr Sethi, a true son of the soil, never lost touch with his village, which is situated 160-km away from Bhubaneshwar. Having benefited from education provided by various charitable trusts, he is now deeply committed to philanthropy and connects giving back with spirituality. He made headlines for his work with Utkal Gaurav International School which has been developed with a fund of ₹10 crore. The school was virtually inaugurated by Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik last month. 

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ata-contrast="none">All through his inspirational journey, Dr Sethi, a true son of the soil, never lost touch with his village, which is situated 160-km away from Bhubaneshwar. Having benefited from education provided by various charitable trusts, he is now deeply committed to philanthropy and connects giving back with spirituality. He made headlines for his work with Utkal Gaurav International School which has been developed with a fund of ₹10 crore. The school was virtually inaugurated by Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik last month. 

Until 2020, the ground on which the school has been developed was just a large piece of farming land where I used to work as a daily wage worker. But, today, the same land houses the school.

"Most of my friends, who were initially my clients, have endorsed the idea of my school,” Dr Pradeep Sethi said, while speaking to Business Line.  

The path of spirituality  

Early in life, Sethi began gravitating to the teachings of spiritual gurus, especially Swami Paramhansa Yoganand, author of the iconic book, Autobiography of a Yogi. The spiritual teacher and author has laid emphasis on the importance of physical health and well-being, calling spirituality a holistic practice. Yoganand's teachings had a great impact on Sethi in his growing up years. The spiritual master’s emphasis on the interconnectedness of all things and the importance of service to others deeply resonated with Dr Sethi’s aspirations of life.  

[caption id="attachment_37584" align="aligncenter" width="497"]Indian Doctors | Dr Pradeep Sethi | Global Indian Dr Pradeep Sethi with cricketer Ravi Shastri[/caption]

Autobiography of a Yogi is still Dr Sethi’s favourite, and he gifts the book to people as often as he can. "I have earned lots of friends through this book and I am sure when I die, I will be carrying lots of love, affection and friendship to the other world," he said.

The dream philanthropic project  

Sethi’s own life has been transformed by the kindness of strangers and charitable institutions, and he never misses an opportunity to do good to others. With a deep urge to give back he provides free treatment to the needy, supports charitable causes and extends whole-hearted support to community outreach programmes.  

During the launch of Utkal Gaurav International School, Sethi remarked, “I hope to arrange ₹100 crore for the final look of this dream project, in the next five years,” adding, “I want the kids of my school to get the exposure of the world. The difference between my village and developed countries like USA is all about exposure, and I want to do the hard work to reduce the gap between the developed countries and a developing small village.” Kids at the international school will be introduced to a wide array of fields including technology, sports and agriculture.

Some of my friends from Oxford and Harvard University are already taking classes online. Once the infrastructure is ready for the teaching staff to stay in, we will have teachers from places like the USA, UK and Australia visiting the campus.

Dr Sethi has plans to take the senior kids to international tours. “This would enable their growth and build in them the capacity to imagine the ideas that they can work upon to make the society better,” he said. 

[caption id="attachment_37585" align="aligncenter" width="2560"]Indian Doctors | Dr Pradeep Sethi | Global Indian Opening ceremony of Utkal Gaurav International School[/caption]

Dr Sethi's venture is backed by industrialists like Rajiv Bajaj from Bajaj Group, Adar Poonawalla, CEO of Serum Institute of India, Puneet Goenka of Zee Entertainment Enterprises, and Sandeep Raheja of Exide Battery. Many of Sethi’s clients including cricketers and actors have also extended their help for the project. “The amount does not matter, the feeling behind it matters,” Dr Sethi said.  

Keeping in tune with the principles espoused by his spiritual guru Swami Paramhansa Yoganand, Sethi’ school does not just focus on academics but on the all-round training for a fit body, mind and soul. Yoga, meditation, purpose of life and how to maximise one’s potential find a significant place in the curriculum. “I look forward to the day when institutions all over the country and across the world replicate the model,” he said. 

The course of life 

Though Sethi worked as a farm labourer, he was deeply dedicated to his academics, and later was able to secure an admission at Navodaya Vidyalaya. Studying there, he did well in his senior secondary exams and got admission at the Government Medical College in Sambalpur in Odisha. He later went on to do his further studies at the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi. 

Passing out from there, Sethi started his practice from Rishikesh in 2008. The lack of opportunities in his area of specialisation led him to head to Rishikesh to get some spiritual relief and to try his luck there. Not getting a job immediately after passing out from medical college and moving to Rishikesh is something that he calls ‘blessing in disguise,’ because that prompted him to start his own independent practice.  

Luck prevailed and Sethi’s practice became so successful that he expanded his business outside Rishikesh. Within a few years of starting his independent practice, he co-founded the state-of-the-art hair transplant chain Eugenix Hair Sciences, with his wife Arika Bansal who happened to be his batchmate at AIIMS. With seven clinics across India, Eugenix Hair Sciences has treated thousands of satisfied patients. 

[caption id="attachment_37586" align="aligncenter" width="710"]Indian Doctors | Dr Pradeep Sethi | Global Indian Dr Pradeep Sethi and Dr Arika Bansal with their team[/caption]

To make others happy you will have to go out of your way. You will have to cause yourself discomfort and sacrifice your pleasures. If you go to that extent and serve society, only then you will be able to generate joy within you. That’s what I practice. I am very selfish. I want to make myself extremely joyful.

Dr Sethi is popular for his innovative techniques and advanced hair restoration methods including the DHT technique which he pioneered. He has conducted workshops and training sessions for the people of the medical fraternity in India and abroad and has contributed to the field through his research and publications in various medical journals. The International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery (ISHRS) has bestowed the prestigious Fellow of ISHRS title upon Sethi for his pioneering research. However, the illustrious doctor considers his practice and medical research his ‘secondary job’ while practicing the principles laid down by Swami Paramhansa Yoganand his ‘primary duty’. 

  • Follow Dr Pradeep Sethi on LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook 

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
How Pravin Tulpule, the former naval officer became a medical clown

(September 3, 2022) Popularly known as ‘Happy – the medical clown’, former lieutenant commander of the Indian Navy, who had even worked as an electronic warfare officer onboard INS Viraat, found his purpose in bringing smiles to the faces of the terminally ill. Setting on a completely diverse path he chose to adorn the clown’s costume to take kids in cancer wards and orphanages on a laughing spree, opting for a VRS from the navy after 17 years of service. “It was much to the surprise of my boss and colleagues who thought I had drunk a bit more the previous evening and tried to persuade me away from the idea,” says he adding that he is grateful that his family including his parents supported his decision to switch to a career that offered more meaning to his life. In 2019, he was presented with the Karmaveer Chakra, a global civilian honour conferred by the international confederation of NGO (iCONGO) in partnership with the United Nations. Pravin Tulpule tells Global Indian I do miss the beautiful white, pristine uniform and the culture of the Indian Navy but it was not a rash decision, rather a radical move. I do not have

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beautiful white, pristine uniform and the culture of the Indian Navy but it was not a rash decision, rather a radical move. I do not have a penny’s regret to get into the wonderful world of clowning.

[caption id="attachment_28885" align="aligncenter" width="708"]Pravin Tulpule | Medical Clown | Global Indian Pravin Tulpule, former naval officer, medical clown, happiness coach and corporate edutainer[/caption]

The trigger…

“When I was growing up there were no restrictions in whatever we did at home so long as it was legal and did not hurt anybody. In my teens I picked up the lovely hobby called ‘magic’ and it sort of stayed with me through my school and college days, and later in my naval career”, he smiles. He was always the entertainer of his unit and used to perform in the official get-togethers, mess, birthday parties of his kids and friends’ kids, and for charity initiatives of naval wives.

“A family friend requested me one day to show magic tricks to a group of kids,” he says. Pravin was transitioning in those days from a magician to a clown thinking that instead of fooling people with tricks why not make them part of it by adding the additional angle of clowning to make them happy? “As requested, when I went there in the clown’s costume, I got introduced to a room full of kids suffering from cancer. I was not mentally prepared for it,” he tells. Taken aback by the sombreness of the situation he performed nevertheless. “Entertaining them was overwhelming as I had not been into this situation before, never met so many terminally ill patients at the same time.”

Pravin Tulpule | Medical Clown | Global Indian

Pravin recalls that a child got particularly fond of him, tagging around him during the show. What followed was his pictures in a local newspaper along with that child the next day. “It was the first time that I appeared in any newspaper and was elated.” Much to his shock, Pravin came to know after a few days that the kid had succumbed to his illness.

“I was deeply moved when I got to know that one of the wishes of the little boy was to meet a joker from the circus. That was the trigger,” he says, about what prompted him to take a plunge from the navy, where he had also worked as a communication specialist indulging in defense tactics and instructor at the naval academy, to the world of medical clowning. He was in his 40s then. Staying back for two and half years more would have led to some additional benefits as a naval officer but the pull was so strong that he could not stop himself from embracing the new path.

‘Mission Happiness’

The clown’s costume helps break the ice. It does not make you a clown. The clown has to be inside. It helps you portray the clown. It tells people he is a fun guy - Pravin Tulpule

Being one of the trailblazers in the domain which is still at its nascent stages in India, Pravin has provided free-of-cost services in orphanages, shelter homes, slums, old age homes, and hospitals meant for kids with cancer and congenital heart diseases. In addition to these, he doubled up as a happiness coach, and corporate edutainer with a 20-year-association with a leading MNC as part of their branding and CSR initiatives, following his VRS from the navy.

Though the contract like many other things came to a halt during the pandemic, Pravin continues as an independent professional travelling across the country for fun-filled interactions as a happiness coach and corporate edutainer to lift sombre moods or to drive in an important message with the power of humour.

Pravin Tulpule | Medical Clown | Global Indian

He calls his independent practice ‘Mission Happiness’. “I am doing it at a passion level he says. “If a powerful message is interspersed with humour people get hooked to the message”, he says adding, “it forever gets etched in the memory of kids and adults if a clown is imparting it.’ The entertainer has given close to 5,000 performances so far.

All I need is travel, stay, and food arrangements and I am ready to go anywhere and perform - Pravin Tulpule

Clowning is a technique

Pravin has also been conducting workshops for clowns and those who are not in the profession to make them understand the significant role that medical clowns can play in the treatment process. He addresses medical students at King Edward Memorial Hospital, Mumbai, on how medical clowns are important. I tell them that “a clown should be ready to be the target so that people can laugh at you. This is a quality that is otherwise difficult for people to adopt,” says the edutainer who is attached to Toybank NGO to promote mental well-being and socio-emotional development.

[caption id="attachment_28897" align="aligncenter" width="594"]Pravin Tulpule | Medical Clown | Global Indian Pravin with his children[/caption]

Pravin rues the fact that “many people perceive medical clowning as just wearing colourful clothes and dancing around.” There are quite a few people now who are adopting the profession. Not only one of his friends, who stays in Colorado, is a part-time medical clown, but inspired by Pravin’s unique way of serving society, both his children also get into the clown’s costume when the situation demands, even though they are into different professions altogether.

India’s Patch Adams

Pravin is deeply inspired by the 1998 American biographical comedy-drama film directed by Tom Shadyac, and starring Robin Williams. “You must watch it if you have not,” he recommends. “Dr. Patch Adams is based on a real person, not a fictional character,” tells Pravin who appears happy with the fact that he is referred to as Patch Adams of India.

Based on the life story of Dr. Hunter Adams and the book Gesundheit: Good Health Is a Laughing Matter by Dr. Adams and Maureen Mylander, the film that Pravin resonates with is about how using humour, can lead to better and faster recuperation of patients. Like Pravin, the protagonist of the movie had also found a new purpose in life in clowning.

[caption id="attachment_28892" align="aligncenter" width="678"]Pravin Tulpule | Medical Clown | Global Indian Pravin at a recent event organised by the NGO, Toybank[/caption]

The multifaceted clown

This former naval officer is a jack of many trades due to his constant urge to learn new skills. He is into tarot reading, crystals, face reading, teaching puppet making to children, and more. This festive season has kept him occupied in holding workshops for making eco-friendly Ganesha and teaching clay modelling to the young ones.

The love for underwater activities still stays close to his heart. This Independence Day saw him hoisting the tricolour, 31 feet deep underwater with a team of seven ex-marine-commanders, 40kms away from Mumbai under a controlled atmosphere ‘as all MARCOS (marine commandoes) were above fifty,’ he says. A few years back he had conducted an underwater wedding as the ‘pandit reciting mantras,” says he smiling.

[caption id="attachment_28935" align="aligncenter" width="646"] Pravin as Santa Claus[/caption]

“Incidentally I am an award-winning Santa Claus and boast of at least half a dozen different Santa costumes – the best in the country, I assure you,” signs off the ex-naval officer who believes that makeup in whatever get-up you are in matters. “It should enhance the fun aspect instead of looking scary or evil.”

  • Follow Pravin Tulpule on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram and 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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