The Global Indian Friday, June 27 2025
  • Home
  • Stories
    • Exclusive
      • Startups
      • Culture
      • Marketplace
      • Campus Life
      • Youth
      • Giving Back
      • Zip Codes
    • Blogs
      • Opinion
      • Profiles
      • Web Stories
    • Fun Facts
      • World in numbers
      • Didyouknow
      • Quote
    • Gallery
      • Pictures
      • Videos
  • Work Life
  • My Book
  • Top 100
  • Our Stories
  • Tell Your Story
Select Page
Chef Naved Nasir | Indian Cuisine | global Indian
Global IndianstoryFrom Mumbai’s Irani cafés to khansamas of Uttar Pradesh – they all find expression in Chef Naved Nasir’s food
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian Cuisine
  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

From Mumbai’s Irani cafés to khansamas of Uttar Pradesh – they all find expression in Chef Naved Nasir’s food

Written by: Minal Nirmala Khona

(November 10, 2024) Ancient recipes, affordable street fare and his passion for authenticity define the food created by Chef Naved Nasir.

With a doctor father and a teacher mother, Naved Nasir was like every Indian kid, supposed to follow in his father’s footsteps, professionally. Destiny had other plans. His mother used to travel 80 km back and forth for her job, so he and his father would cook if she was short on time.

From the humble khichdi they made together to creating menus for a restaurant in Covent Garden in London, Chef Naved Nasir’s career trajectory is full of stories. These stories are of places lived, ingredients blended, and dishes had, at street corners, hole-in-the-wall cafés, and at his great-grandfather’s mansion. The nostalgia and love find their way into his food.

Indian Cuisine | Mumbai Chef | Global Indian

Chef Naved Nasir

History and food

Naved’s great-grandfather was a “minor nawab,” and the palatial family home still stands. Over a Zoom call, with Chef Naved in Dubai, while launching his restaurant Khadak, he recalls his earliest food influences. “I grew up in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, and my grandfather’s home was 40 km away from Panipat, in Baghpat. As a child, I remember going there with my parents and brother, and watching my mother’s brother, who was quite a foodie, getting his staff to prepare the ingredients with so much care for the lavish dinners he’d host.”

He had ten cousins at home and remembers his mother’s Dal Gosht as her specialty. He says, “Whether it was the khansamas blending masalas or marinating the meat, or my father and I cooking khichdi when my mother was busy, it sparked an interest in food. My father, a doctor, had hopes I would also become one. I tried; I took the entrance exams for medicine at several universities, but I didn’t pass. At that time, due to all the celebrity chefs hosting TV shows, hospitality was gaining traction. I took the exam to join a catering college. It was relatively easier and I secured the eighth rank all-India.”

He joined the Institute of Hotel Management at Pusa, near Delhi. His first job as an intern was with the ITC group, where he worked in the kitchens of Dum Pukht, Bukhara, and Peshawri.

Indian Cuisine | Chef Naved Nasir | Global Indian

I love Bombay

Speaking of Mumbai, which he calls Bombay, Chef Naved waxes eloquent, much in love with the city he still considers home. He says, “Though I was in Mumbai for five or six years, it is the only city I consider home. I was 24 when I arrived there. I remember sitting on the ledge facing the sea at Marine Drive and crying because I felt lost. Mumbai put its arms around me in a giant hug and it became home. I used to go to the Irani cafés and other famous places like Bade Miyan, Olympia, Baghdadi and Kyani’s. These were places where you could have a lavish meal for a small amount.” Naved loved Mumbai so much that he would go there every weekend even after being transferred to the ITC Rama International in Aurangabad.

During his stint with ITC, from the start till he left, Chef Naved also got to serve and interact with several celebrities. Besides serving food to the Bachchans, planning the menu, and catering the food for the wedding of Rishi Kapoor’s daughter Riddhima. During the launch of their Jamnagar refinery, he also headed a team of 100 chefs to prepare the food for the Ambanis. He says, “We had several meetings with Neeta Ambani, and we sent three truckloads of ingredients to cater to the 600 guests. A separate Marwari caterer took care of the vegetarian fare, we were in charge of the rest.”

Indian Cuisine | Chef Naved Nasir | Global Indian

Chef Naved with Mike, the head of the build team of Dishoom Restaurants at a Mumbai beach

Namastey London

In Aurangabad, Naved was the youngest Executive Chef at 30. While he was there, he met the people who set up Dishoom in 2010. He recalls, “I met the owners and we were on the same page about keeping the food real. Shamil Thakrar and I had a similar outlook as he wanted a refined, authentic version of the Irani café food. If you go to London, between the small street eateries run by Bangladeshis and the Michelin-star restaurants, Indian food is unrecognisable. We wanted to fill the gap and my only condition was that there would be no adulteration. No toning down of the butter in Dal Makhni and reducing the spice in a chicken tikka. We did have options on the menu so for those who can’t eat spice, the Murgh Malai Tikka was a non-spicy option.”

Under the culinary leadership of Chef Naved, Dishoom expanded to ten locations across London. It filled a gap in the market; amidst exorbitantly expensive, quintessentially anglicised, or overly experimental Indian food establishments, the very first Dishoom set a new trend. Each restaurant has a theme based on the aesthetic of certain locations in Mumbai to complement and complete its gastronomy. He even co-wrote a cookbook by the same name.

Mumbai Chef with Chef Raymond Blanc

Chef Naved Nasir and Chef Raymond Blanc while signing each other’s cookbooks

After ten years with Dishoom however, Chef Naved started feeling the need to do his own thing; essentially to cook the Mumbai food he loved and more. The universe heard him and he got an offer to team up with a non-hospitality investor in Dubai. Enter Khadak, his new restaurant which was days away from its launch at the time of this interview.

Gully Boy

Having lived in multiple cities, Chef Naved Nasir delighted in those little bylanes peppered with food stalls known as khau gallis and people crowding around their periphery. These khau gallis are what Khadak is based on. Rather than sticking to a set pattern, he wanted to bring a selection of dishes from a range of backgrounds — truly a one-plate-fits-all. Again, Mumbai played a pivotal role in his new venture. Chef Naved reveals, “Khadak is an area at the far end of the lane near Suleiman Usman Bakery (a landmark on Mumbai’s Mohammed Ali Road, a major food hub, especially during the month of Ramzan). I plan to highlight all that Mumbai has to offer, beyond the swanky restaurants. From the Shammi Kababs to my mother’s Dal Gosht, to the food you get at Bade Miyan and Baghdadi and the recipes I have secured from my 91-year-old aunt, I want Khadak to take you back to authentic food. There are stories attached to these recipes and I intend to tell them through Khadak.”

The stories are told through a multitude of characters with backstories that are unique but relatable. Rajini, the Koli fisherwoman, for example. Along with highlighting her roots, Khadak talks about how the seas are facing the extinction of species and ecosystems, while parallelly supporting sustainable practices. Then there is Bittu, a kid doling out tea. Although appreciating his drive, Khadak encourages their patrons to donate to organisations that help children like him to get off the streets. Nasir is a firm believer that cuisines are not isolated from the people and civilisations they stem from.

Indian Cuisine | Chef Naved Nasir | Global Indian

Naved with his team

Other dishes he plans to include are the Sojni ka Murgh, a Hyderabadi speciality where chicken is cooked with the pulp of drumsticks, Shabrati Nihari, a breakfast item where the meat just falls off the bone, and you eat it with a Lachha Naan sold in the bylanes of Delhi. He also has a vegetarian haleem on the menu made with jackfruit. Chef Naved is passionate about bringing these old stories to life, making them acceptable for the Instagram generation. Even desserts will be morphed. “The bread butter pudding, a family recipe from the Chilia community that our executive chef comes from, uses jaggery instead of sugar, and phirni is made vegan with cashew milk.”

Favourite go-to ingredients

Given the gamut of historical and ancient food at his disposal, what then are his favourite go-to ingredients? Chef Naved says, “I’d say meat is a favourite, because depending on the area of the body it is taken from, how it is cut, marinated and cooked, it tastes different. I even use the fat around the kidney when I cook, because it slices through like butter. Among spices, I like saffron for its subtlety and if you know how to use it, it can give diverse flavours. And lastly, an ingredient I like but am looking for a good quality one is gulab jal or rose water.”

With the spirit of Mumbai’s street food and ancient recipes from his family’s kitchens, Chef Naved could well be scripting food history and creating a legacy of Indian food soon.

  • Chef Naved Nasir on Instagram
  • Discover more fascinating Stories
Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • Brand India
  • Global Indian
  • Indian Chef
  • Indian Cuisine

Published on 10, Nov 2024

Share with

  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

ALSO READ

Story
Google’s $100 million man: YouTube names Neal Mohan as CEO

February 18, 2023) In 2011, Twitter was in turmoil. They needed someone to revamp the product and bring in advertisers - a chief product officer, essentially. Board member David Rosenblatt had just the man in mind: Neal Mohan. So, in 2013, Twitter made him an offer and it seemed like things were going according to plan. Then Neal said no. Google had written him a big, fat cheque - $100 million in stock options, to be exact.  Neal Mohan, the man described by Richard Frankel, his former boss, as a "high-end customer support representative," was now Silicon Valley's most valuable asset. And clearly, he has lived up to expectations. On February 17, when Susan Wojcicki announced that she was stepping down, Indian-American Neal Mohan was appointed as YouTube's new CEO. The Global Indian joins the growing list of Indian-Americans at the helm of US' big tech corporations. Thank you, @SusanWojcicki. It's been amazing to work with you over the years. You've built YouTube into an extraordinary home for creators and viewers. I'm excited to continue this awesome and important mission. Looking forward to what lies ahead... https://t.co/Rg5jXv1NGb — Neal Mohan (@nealmohan) February 16, 2023 Life as YouTube's Chief Product Officer

Read More

SusanWojcicki?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@SusanWojcicki. It's been amazing to work with you over the years. You've built YouTube into an extraordinary home for creators and viewers. I'm excited to continue this awesome and important mission. Looking forward to what lies ahead... https://t.co/Rg5jXv1NGb

— Neal Mohan (@nealmohan) February 16, 2023

Life as YouTube's Chief Product Officer

He's more than earned his stripes. Ever since he took over as YouTube's Chief Product Officer in 2015, Neal has played a pivotal role in some of the company's top products. He is the driving force behind YouTube TV, YouTube Shorts, YouTube Premium (formerly Red), and YouTube Music.

"In a most fundamental way, my job is twofold. I'm responsible for all our products - the YouTube experience on mobile phones, desktops, laptops and large living room screens - everything that viewers use to connect with their favourite creators," he told Lew Later last year. Then, there "things that creators use - this includes YouTubers, musicians, artists and traditional media companies." Finally, there he is responsible for "trust and safety, community guidelines - the rules of the road, so to speak." Simply put, it comes down to "helping my teams make the best deicisions on behalf of that ecosystem. It includes our viewers, users, creators and advertisors."

Early life

Mohan was born in India in 1975 and moved to the US a few years later. "I had always been interested in technology, even before college," he said, in a 2022 interview with Greylock. "I always knew that working would computers would be my career path." His ambition took him to Stanford University, where he studied Electrical Engineering "and a lot of CS classes, basically."

[caption id="attachment_35253" align="aligncenter" width="550"] Neal Mohan (Photo: CNET)[/caption]

He graduated from Stanford and entered the workforce at what he describes as a "pivotal moment." This was the start of the golden age in Silicon Valley - "the dawn of the internet, really. Netscape had just come out with its browsers and was a Silicon Valley startup. There were lots of companies excited about making the transition." It was a fortunate turn of events for him. "When you're able to start your career at the inflexsion of a big technology change, there are lots of interesting opportunities.

Mohan began his career as a 'management consultant, working with tech businesses and finding ways to bring this new technology, the 'internet' to Fortune 500 companies. He realised, "very quickly," that he wanted to be part of these startups himself. He did a short stint at Andersen Consulting (Accenture) and in 1997, So, he joined Net Gravity, kickstarting his career in the technology business. That company was acquired by advertising startup DoubleClick later that year. It's where he met David Rosenblatt. He played a pivotal role in Google's $3.1 billion acquisition of the company.

DoubleClick Inc.

This was the great revolution in democratising information. "It's about fundamentally powering the creation of and consumption of all this information," regardless of whether the user was on a low-speed dial-up in some corner of the world, or a high-speed connection in Silicon Valley. "You have access to the same technology," he said.

That's where DoubleClick Inc. came in - if information was to be provided to everyone with access to an internet connection, preferably for free, it needed a sustainable revenue model. The internet was a medium too, just like print or TV - and those ran on ads. DoubleClick was at the forefront of developing and providing Internet ad services, through technology products and services that were sold to ad agencies and the mass media. They went on to work with businesses like Microsoft, General Motors, Coca-Cola, Apple Inc, Nike and L'Oreal.

The Google acquisition

In 2003, he quit DoubleClick to return to Stanford University for an MBA. The company was having solvency troubles at the time. In 2003, he quit DoubleClick to return to Stanford University for an MBA. The company was having solvency troubles at the time and in 2004, David Rosenblatt was brought in as CEO. He asked Mohan to rejoin as soon as he was done with his MBA. The company was acquired by Google for $3.1 billion in 2007, with Mohan being a key driver of the deal. He joined Google a year later, in 2008.

Life at Alphabet Inc.

Having always worked at the intersection of media and technology, developing a roadmap for advertising models in the digital age, Mohan became invaluable to Google very quickly. Between 2008 and 2015, he served as a Senior VP of Display and Video Advertising.

He was pivotal to developing the company's ad products and helping to grow YouTube revenue. Mohan became a well-known name in Silicon Valley and when Twitter needed a new man to revamp their product, which was falling apart, they turned to the internet ads savant. Mohan has played an important role in some of Google's most important ad products, including AdWords, DoubleClick and Google Analytics. He was also responsible for the automation of buying and selling digital ad inventory."

Transforming YouTube

In 2015, Mohan joined Alphabet Inc subsidiary YouTube as its Chief Product officer. He has been responsible for the livestreaming service YouTube TV, YouTube Music, YouTube Premium and YouTube Shorts.

Under him, YouTube's creator economy boomed. In 2022, Indian YouTubers were contributing around Rs 6,800 crores annually to the country's GDP. "The creator economy in India is truly flourishing," Mohan remarked. The monetisation model changed the content creation site - as of 2019, there were two billion users on YouTube, watching 1 billion hours of videos every day. YouTube ad revenues were around $19.77 billion in 2020.

With Susan Wojcicki announcing her resignation to focus on her health and personal life, Mohan will take over as YouTube's fourth CEO.

Life at home

[caption id="attachment_35255" align="aligncenter" width="726"] Neal Mohan and his wife, Heema Sareem Mohan[/caption]

Mohan is married to Heema Sareem Mohan, who is a spokesperson for Democratic State Senator Joe Simitian. She specialises in reforming the juvenile justice system and education policies and does extensive non-profit work. Born and raised in New York, she mvoed to Silicon Valley to be with her husband.

The couple resides in the Bay Area, in one of San Francisco's most upscale localities, with their three kids.

  • Follow Neal Mohan on Twitter and LinkedIn
Story
Indian-American astronomer Shrinivas Kulkarni wins 2024 Shaw Prize for a lifetime of celestial discoveries

(June 6, 2024) Having been the victim of his many pranks, Professor Shrinivas R. Kulkarni’s wife did not believe him at first when he told her that he had won the 2024 Shaw Prize in Astronomy. Instituted by the late Hong Kong philanthropist Run Run Shaw, the prize consists of a monetary award of $1.2 million. It was an occasion of joy not only at Kulkarni's house in the US but also at the house of Infosys founder Narayana Murthy in India. Kulkarni is the brother of author, educator, and philanthropist Sudha Murty, better half of Narayana Murthy. Shrinivas Kulkarni serves as the George Ellery Hale Professor of Astronomy and Planetary Science at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He has been awarded the 2024 Shaw Prize for his “ground-breaking discoveries about millisecond pulsars, gamma-ray bursts, supernovae, and other variable or transient astronomical objects,” states the Shaw Prize Foundation’s press release. [caption id="attachment_52153" align="aligncenter" width="799"] Professor Shrinivas Kulkarni[/caption] According to the award citation, "Kulkarni’s contributions culminated in the construction of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF, 2009) and its successor, the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF, 2017), two novel astronomical surveys using a seventy-year-old telescope at Palomar Observatory in southern California.” These

Read More

4947.png" alt="Indian Professor | Shrinivas Kulkarni | Global Indian" width="799" height="547" /> Professor Shrinivas Kulkarni[/caption]

According to the award citation, "Kulkarni’s contributions culminated in the construction of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF, 2009) and its successor, the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF, 2017), two novel astronomical surveys using a seventy-year-old telescope at Palomar Observatory in southern California.”

These projects have trained a new generation of young astronomers who are now at the forefront of time-domain astronomy. The extensive data generated by PTF and ZTF has facilitated the discovery of numerous astronomical transients and variable sources.

In fact, ‘ZTF has also found a star swallowing one of its planets’, discovered one of the closest and brightest supernovae ever recorded, a new category of orbital asteroids, binary stars with orbital periods as brief as seven minutes, which emit significant low-frequency gravitational radiation, and numerous other unique systems and rare events that are only now beginning to be comprehended.

 “ZTF is only possible at Caltech, which values exceptionalism,” Professor Kulkarni remarked in a statement at Caltech’s website after the announcement of the Shaw Prize.

Career full of discoveries

Throughout his career,  Kulkarni has made numerous groundbreaking discoveries. Among his early achievements are the discovery of the first millisecond pulsar—a rapidly rotating neutron star emitting over 600 precisely timed pulses per second—and the first brown dwarf, an extremely small star, identified in 1995 that bridges the gap between giant planets like Jupiter and hydrogen-burning stars like the Sun.

Indian Professor | Shrinivas Kulkarni | Global Indian

In 1997, Kulkarni and his colleagues were the first to measure the distance to a gamma-ray burst, revealing that this intense cosmic event originated billions of light-years away, far outside our galaxy.

Although the astronomer has made profound discoveries, he has a playful side to his personality, which became evident in one of his interviews. "We astronomers are supposed to say, 'We wonder about the stars and we really want to think about it,'" he remarked, highlighting the perception about astronomers that they are deep thinkers. But he admitted that's not entirely how it is. "Many scientists, I think, secretly are what I call 'boys with toys,'" the Global Indian said. "I really like playing around with telescopes. It's just not fashionable to admit it."

Astronomical innovations

Kulkarni has been passionate about building instruments to explore uncharted areas in astronomy and has constructed around 10 astronomical instruments. “My motto has been to build a big enough gizmo and things will happen,” he said in one of his Caltech lecturers.

Every two days, his innovation ZTF scans the entire Northern sky, using automated software to analyse the data and an alert system to notify astronomers worldwide of transient events within minutes. The extensive data collected by PTF and ZTF has led to the discovery of a diverse array of astronomical transients and variable sources.

These projects were funded by institutions worldwide and two major grants - one from the National Science Foundation and the other from the Heising-Simons Foundation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5F9Sjt55fM

 

Earlier in his career, working with a graduate student, the professor and astronomer had developed STARE2, an instrument to study fast-radio bursts (FRBs)– the mysterious bursts of radio waves whose origins were unknown. In 2020, STARE2 was among two telescopes that identified an FRB originating from a dead magnetic star called magnetar, marking the initial confirmation that dead magnetic stars can produce FRBs.

Powerful women in his life  

After earning a master’s degree from the IIT-Delhi in 1978, Kulkarni had moved to the US for a PhD in astronomy at UC Berkeley. It was during this time there that he had met Hiromi Komiya, a doctoral student from Japan, and fallen in love with her. Within just a few weeks, he quickly learned Japanese and won her heart. They got married and the couple has two daughters – Anju and Maya.

Being the youngest, Kulkarni has always been in awe of his three elder sisters. His eldest sister Sunanda followed in their father's footsteps and served as gynaecologist at a government hospital in Bangalore. Sudha Murthy, head of the Infosys Foundation is a celebrated author, educator and philanthropist. While his younger sister Jayshree, an IIT-Madras alumnus is married to Boston-based IT billionaire Gururaj 'Desh' Deshpande. "All my sisters were gold medallists and evolved into competent professionals," he remarked in one his interviews. "Coming from such a family, I found it strange that there were so few women in high places in the US when I first moved to that country,” he remarked.

[caption id="attachment_52154" align="aligncenter" width="607"]Indian Professor | Shrinivas Kulkarni | Global Indian Shrinivas Kulkarni in an old  family picture with his parents and sisters Jayashree, Sudha and Sunanda[/caption]

In love with astronomy

“As a child I had a lot of fascination for astronomers,” shared Kulkarni in one of the interviews. Born in the small town of Kurundwad in Maharashtra, Kulkarni moved to Hubli in Karnataka due to his father’s transfer as a government doctor and ended up completing his schooling. He later attended IIT Delhi for an integrated BSc and MSc programme before moving to the US for a PhD in astronomy.

“I wanted to do research and not go into industry or be a doctor or lawyer or engineer which is sort of the more traditional path,” he shared in an interview. At Berkeley, he specialised in radio astronomy. “I had an exceptional advisor who understood what I really wanted to do,” he said.

After completing his PhD in 1983, he went for post-doctoral research at Caltech on a Millikan Fellowship, marking the beginning of an impressive 40 years of association with the institution.

He joined Caltech as a faculty member in 1987, progressing from assistant professor of astronomy to associate professor, professor, professor of astronomy and planetary science, MacArthur Professor, and eventually the George Ellery Hale Professor of Astronomy and Planetary Science. He also served as executive officer for astronomy and director of Caltech Optical Observatories, and oversaw the Palomar and Keck telescopes, two of the international astronomy community’s most prized instruments.

Professor Shrinivas Kulkarni’s passion for astronomy has made him one of the most widely acclaimed award-winning astronomers in the world. Over his four-decade career, he has received numerous honours, including the Presidential Young Investigator Award, the US National Science Foundation's Alan T. Waterman Prize, the Dan David Prize, the Jansky Prize, and the Helen B. Warner Award, and now the Shaw Prize. He enjoys receiving awards because, as he believes, “Awards open doors.”

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap on his Assamese film in the Oscars 2023 race: It feels absurd

(December 22, 2022) Standing at an arm's distance from his classmate in the morning assembly queue, it was a regular balmy morning for an eighth grader Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap. But little did the then Guwahati teenager know that the morning in the February of 2009 was set to change the course of his life. Within a few minutes into the assembly, the school erupted in a deafening celebration as Danny Boyle's Slumdog Millionaire won eight Oscars. The announcement made the then 13-year-old Tuhin contemplate making a film for the very first time. "Slumdog Millionaire was a British production set in India with an Indian star cast. I wondered if someone from outside could come here and make a film that has won an Oscar, then why couldn't we make an Indian film like that? That was the first time that I seriously thought about making a film," says Tuhin who was so keen to hold that Oscars statue someday, that he scribbled a sketch of it on his vision board in his room. And now 15 years later, the filmmaker is an inch closer to realising his childhood dream as his 15-min Assamese film Mur Ghurar Duronto Goti (The Horse

Read More

Mur Ghurar Duronto Goti (The Horse From Heaven) is a 2023 Oscars contender for Best Live Action Short Film.

[caption id="attachment_33088" align="aligncenter" width="606"]Indian filmmaker | Mahrashi Tuhin Kashyap | Global Indian Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap is an Indian filmmaker[/caption]

A perfect expression of surrealism, the film tells the story of an Ojapali performer who believes that he has the world's fastest horse, and wants to win all the races in the city. But in reality, it's not a horse but a donkey. "Making it to the Oscars 2023 race feels as absurd as the film is," laughs Tuhin who recently won the best short film prize at the Russian State University of Cinematography (VGIK), the world's oldest film school. "The screening of the film in Moscow was a beautiful moment as I realised that people in different parts of the world can connect to the film," the final year student at Satyajit Ray Film and Television Institute (SRFTI) says, adding that making it to Oscar race is a sort of validation. "The film got rejected at various international festivals, and many times I thought 'Is this film a donkey that I think is a horse?'," he guffaws. "But now I feel that it did connect with people, and that's what matters to me."

The 15-min film was made as a part of his second-year curriculum at SRFTI, and Kashyap never in his wildest dream thought that a college project would land up at the Academy Awards race. It all began at his grandmother's funeral when he and his father met a man who couldn't stop talking about his horse. "It was an absurd encounter with a man who went on and on about his horse. I remember asking my dad if you believe in this man's story about his horse, to which he replied, 'Maybe he doesn't even have a horse. What he has, must be a donkey.' I found it bizarre but somehow it stuck with me. So, when I had to pitch an idea for my project, I decided to make a film on the same idea," Tuhin reveals, who initially had a hard time convincing his mentor Putul Mehmood of the idea. But as the script progressed, the film started taking shape.

[caption id="attachment_33089" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Indian filmmaker | Global Indian | Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap A still from The Horse From Heaven[/caption]

The cause and effect of theatre

This love for direction and cinema has its roots in theatre, something that Tuhin began indulging in Class 4. He still remembers his first role - a beggar - that made him the talk of the school. His dad recognised his talent and took him to a summer camp. "I call it my first step into acting. That's how my interest in theatre started developing. Soon, I became a part of children's theatre and started working with Manik Roy sir. Taking up theatre changed things for me," he tells Global Indian. But it was Slumdog Millionaire bagging eight Oscars that shifted things for Tuhin, who knew he had found his calling in filmmaking.

Film school calling

He learnt about the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune from one of his teachers and knew that he wanted to get in. "Someone told me that to get into a film school, one needed science. So, after Class 10, I took up science just so that I could make it to FTII or SRFTI someday," smiles Tuhin, who also met Jahnu Barua's art director Phatik Baruah to understand the nitty-gritty of filmmaking. "It was a ground preparation for me." Around the same time, he started Deuka Films with a bunch of aspiring filmmakers who had "no idea how cinema is made." They began experimenting with a basic DSLR and learnt to edit. Their first film Crossroads about child labour made it to the 2015 International Film Festival in Malta. "We were amazed something like this could happen, and this exposure helped me get into SRFTI."

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Arnab Laha (@_filmguy_)

When Tuhin enrolled in film school, he wanted to be the next Anurag Kashyap. "It was glamour that I was after. But SRFTI changed my perspective on cinema. It gave me time for myself, and I started dissecting my existence. Gradually, exploring my identity and my roots (Assamese) started becoming important to me. Now through films, I want to talk about my own identity. Being from the northeast is something I want to talk about and the collective consciousness we have as a community," says the filmmaker who used Ojapali, an indigenous folk dance from Assam in The Horse From Heaven, which he says is now a dying art form. "I was keen to use this ancient storytelling form and translate it into cinema."

Making to the Oscars' race

The story and the form of storytelling both resonated with the audience all across the globe, so much so that it beat Varun Grover's Kiss to win the top prize at the Bengaluru International Short Film Festival 2022 (BISFF). Tuhin explains that The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences has designated BISFF as an official qualifying film festival for the live-action category, and any film that wins the top honours at BISFF automatically makes it to the Oscars race. It was in November that he received a confirmation that his film has made it to Academy Awards consideration. Despite being ecstatic about the news, Tuhin humbly believes that he's "not in the position to be awarded Oscars yet." "I will be glad if I get it, but I think I am yet to make my best cinema. But definitely, I have been a long way than I had imagined," avers the man for whom connecting with people is more important than awards.

Cinema as an expression

Tuhin was barely a teenager when the first seeds of filmmaking were sowed in his young mind, and now years later, he is happy to have found his calling in its truest form. While he still has a long way to go, the filmmaker says that in this journey so far, he has learnt how important it is to believe in oneself and to never give up on your dreams. "If we know in our heart, what we are doing is the right thing. One should pursue it, despite what naysayers tell you."

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap (@the_hobo_storyteller)

While The Horse From Heaven has put Assamese cinema on a global platform, Tuhin believes that his film is just a speck in the "vibrant and experimental" cinema that Assam is witnessing these days. "My film might inspire aspiring filmmakers to take that chance and follow their dreams. But I don't know if it will be a game changer as it's a good time for the Assamese film industry. With the digitisation, the ball game has changed." The 28-year-old, who is already working on two feature film ideas and a few non-fiction ideas, wants to use his craft to express himself and to inspire people to be themselves. "I want to talk about things that have an impression on me and what it's about being from the northeast, a marginalised place. My work will inspire people to be themselves and who they are matters."

[caption id="attachment_33090" align="aligncenter" width="662"]Indian filmmaker | Global Indian | Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap A still from The Horse From Heaven[/caption]

Tuhin opines that it's inspiring to see his film making it to the Oscars race as it gives hope to filmmakers sitting in small cities in any part of the country that it's possible to make their dreams come true. "I don't know if my film has been a game changer but What it has done is that it has opened a window of opportunity for many people that anything is possible," he signs off.

  • Follow Maharshi Tuhin Kashyap on Instagram

 

Reading Time: 8 min

Story
Caroline Mulliez: Helping luxury homeowners in India make a profit at The Blue Kite

(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. [caption id="attachment_52799" align="aligncenter" width="508"] Caroline Mulliez[/caption] 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

Read More

ng>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.

  • Follow The Blue Kite on Instagram and their website. 
Story
Indian African cricketer Keshav Maharaj is bowling people over with his spin magic

(October 21, 2023) 2018 - the South African cricket team found themselves in a tough spot during their second test match against Sri Lanka in Colombo. While it looked like the game was slipping away from the Proteas, a young player, Keshav Maharaj, emerged as the hero, overshadowing even the cricketing stars like Dale Steyn and Kagiso Rabada. The cricketer achieved something incredible that day, taking a career-best nine wickets in a single innings. His outstanding performance helped South Africa turn the tide in the match. What made the cricketer's performance even more special was the way he bamboozled the Sri Lankan batsmen with his precise deliveries and clever flight variations. It was a day when he etched his name in the cricketing history books, setting several new milestones. Cut to, 2023 and this cricketer - who is now the vice-captain of the South African team - is still managing to surprise everyone with his exceptional spinning talent. A key player for his team, which has won big against both Sri Lanka and Australia in the ongoing World Cup, Keshav has already taken five wickets for his team thus far. "For now," the cricketer said during an interview, "My entire

Read More

xceptional spinning talent. A key player for his team, which has won big against both Sri Lanka and Australia in the ongoing World Cup, Keshav has already taken five wickets for his team thus far. "For now," the cricketer said during an interview, "My entire focus is to make sure that my team lifts the cup. The South African team has never lifted the cup, and this time we have a great side and can actually make history."

Connected to his roots

Keshav was born on the beach in Durban to his parents, Atmanand and Kanchan Mala. His family originally came from Sultanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, and they moved to Durban in 1874. While he never visited the country growing up, Keshav has always been quite proud of his connection to India. In fact, it was only about a week back that the cricket fans noticed a unique symbol on Keshav's gear. His bat bore the 'Om' sign, a sacred symbol in Hinduism.

Cricketer | Keshav Maharaj | Global Indian

Growing up Keshav was a part of various school teams, however by the time he was 14 he had made up his mind that he was going to be a cricketer. Just two years from there, the player made his debut in first-class cricket for KwaZulu-Natal and was soon promoted to the Dolphins team in 2009–10. "It started from a very early age. I was playing provincial cricket during the time when no normal sport was played in an abnormal society," the cricketer's father said during an interview, "We belonged to the South African Council of Sport (SACOS), which was the governing body of the non-racial sport. During my playing days, my son used to accompany me to matches. At times when I was not playing I used to work with him in very limited facilities. His first experience in cricket obviously started at home in my backyard. We spent hours together. When unification took place it was easier to find better facilities to enhance the sessions. He was very enthusiastic and he would wait for me to get back from work and take him to the nets. He would bowl left-arm seam in training as he practiced. And being a former gloveman I kept to him."

His reputation as a left-arm orthodox spinner quickly caught the attention of South African cricket's top bosses. They selected him to join the South Africa A team when Bangladesh A toured in 2010-11. This was the moment that changed everything for Keshav. During the tour of Bangladesh, The Global Indian shone by taking 13 wickets in the two four-day matches against the Bangladesh Cricket Board Academy. He even opened the bowling in a T20 match and took an impressive 4 wickets for just 12 runs in four overs.

Cricketer | Keshav Maharaj | Global Indian

A family man, Keshav is known for spending much of his time at home with his lovely German Shepherd, Rio. "He is basically a grounded family person," his father said, "His first love is cricket of course, but when at home you will find him in the kitchen. He is an awesome cook and has a food blog. He also has a strong religious focus."

A long innings

After spending several years playing for local clubs and teams, Keshav had his international cricket debut in a test series against Australia in 2016. Against all expectations, he played a crucial part in the downfall of the Australian batting lineup in the first innings by taking three vital wickets. Notably, he was the first specialist spinner to make his Test debut in Perth. his performance left several wondering why the cricketer couldn't make it to the national team earlier.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yqmoSPmsco

Talking about the moment the family received the news of Keshav's debut in Australia, his father shared, "The moment when Cricket South Africa came asking for Keshav's passport to send him with the national team for the tour of Australia, we actually broke down. And to see him on television playing for the nation brought tears in our eyes and to be fair the call came in at the right time. Keshav had worked really hard and deserved the opportunity to take a shot at the international level," he said.

About two years later, during a match with Sri Lanka, the cricketer recorded the best-ever bowling figures in a Test innings by a South African in Asia. Interestingly, Indian cricketer Ajinkya Rahane became Keshav's 100th wicket in 2019. "I'm trying to do the best I can, wherever I go in the world, whether it's international, domestic, club cricket, or just some local Sunday league that you go play. I'm very fortunate and blessed to be able to do something I love and see other parts of the world, so if I can do well, I'll get many more opportunities to do that," shared the cricketer, who was named the South African T20 captain in 2021.

Cricketer | Keshav Maharaj | Global Indian

Currently, the vice-captain is on a mission to win the cup for his team. However, he also wishes to see more spinners playing for the Proteas. "I just want to keep doing well because it'll mean I get to do what I love, travel the world, and maybe, hopefully, help young kids back home pick up spin bowling," the cricketer said during a recent interview.

  • Follow Keshav Maharaj on Instagram

Reading Time: 6 mins

Share & Follow us

Subscribe News Letter

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.

Read more..
  • Join us
  • Sitemap
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Subscribe
© 2024 Copyright The Global Indian / All rights reserved | This site was made with love by Xavier Augustin