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Indian Entrepreneur | Raja Sweets | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryFrom Raja Sweets to Mahatma Gandhi District: Yogi Bhai’s vision for Houston’s Little India
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From Raja Sweets to Mahatma Gandhi District: Yogi Bhai’s vision for Houston’s Little India

Written by: Amrita Priya

(September 11, 2024) Had Joginder Singh Gahunia been alive, he would have turned 80 this year. Though he passed away in 2002, he left behind a sweet legacy — Raja Sweets, the oldest North Indian fast-food restaurant and sweet shop in Houston. Almost every Houstonian has either heard of Raja Sweets or been a customer. Yogi Bhai, as he was popularly known, founded the shop in 1985 during a time when affordable fast-food options were scarce.

Affectionately calling Houston’s Hillcroft area “Little India,” Yogi Bhai played a significant role in having it officially designated as the Mahatma Gandhi District. He is remembered as one of the founding fathers of the district.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Joginder Singh Gahunia | Global Indian

Late Joginder Singh Gahunia and Resham Kaur Gahunia with their son and daughter Sharan when she was 10-years-old

 

Raja Sweets, located at 5667 Hillcroft, is still run by his family, with his wife Resham Kaur Gahunia and daughter Sharan at the helm. “Our dream is to keep going as long as we can. The business will hit 40 years in about a year,” Sharan shared with Global Indian. “I aim to make it to 50. I think 50 years at one location would be quite an achievement.”

Proudly carrying forward the legacy

Whether it’s Eid, Diwali, Karva Chauth or Ganesh Chaturthi, the already busy restaurant and sweet shop sees an even greater increase in visitors.

“Our strength is quality and consistency,” Yogi Gahunia often said. The family has worked hard to maintain that consistency, not only in the quality and taste of their products but also in keeping Raja Sweets’ prices reasonable for the past four decades. After Yogi Gahunia’s passing, the family even received a $1.5 million offer to sell the restaurant, which they quickly declined. Sharan could not see the place she had grown up in getting sold. She was in her early twenties then. The legacy had fallen on her shoulders, and she proudly took on the responsibility alongside her mother — as her older sister suffered from cerebral palsy and her brother chose a different path outside the family business.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Raja Sweets | Global Indian

Carrying forward the legacy: Resham (second from left) and Sharan (centre) during Raja Sweets’ 25th Anniversary

The community leader

Her father was a strong supporter of the community and often provided packaged snacks for events of Houston’s India Culture Centre or Indian student functions at a very nominal cost.

There has always been a warm, welcoming atmosphere at Raja Sweets that has drawn people in for years. Under Yogi’s tutelage, the shop became a popular gathering place for workers from various organizations to exchange ideas and plans. Many meetings of officers from the India Culture Centre (ICC), the South Asian Culture Centre (SACC) and numerous other groups have been held at Raja Sweets.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Joginder Gahunia | Global Indian

Former Mayor Lee Brown campaigning at the Mahatma Gandhi District, in front of Raja Sweets

 

Houstonians still remember the dynamic founder, who was an active member of the local Indian community. He played a significant role as a founding member of the South Asian Chamber of Commerce and the Asian-American Political Caucus, served on the Board of the ICC, and was a member of the South Asian Political Action Committee.

A devoted member of the local Sikh community, Yogi Gahunia also served as the President of Gurudwara Sahib of Houston. His community involvement extended to supporting and contributing to numerous political campaigns, including those of President Bill Clinton, Vice President Al Gore, Senator Phil Gramm, Governor Ann Richards, Mayor Lee Brown, and City Councilmen Michael Berry and Gordon Quan.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Joginder Singh Gahunia | Global Indian

Joginder Singh Gahunia giving a taste of India to one of the locals

Creating Houston’s Little India

Yogi Gahunia paved the way for hundreds of South Asian businesses in Houston’s Hillcroft, now known as Mahatma Gandhi Street, after he took the initiative to work with the local government to give the area its own identity.

He, along with fellow immigrant entrepreneurs like Aku Patel of Karat 22 Jewellers and Ramesh Lulla of Sari Sapne clothing store (and later Shri Balaji Bhavan restaurant), set up their businesses in modest retail strips in the Hillcroft area during the 1980s. Together, they dubbed the area “Little India.”

 

Houston's Little India | Global Indian

Mahatma Gandhi District, Houston

 

“He just knew that having a business was the way to go, if you had a family. Both my parents said that working regular jobs wasn’t ideal. So, they wanted to own a business from a get-go,” Sharan mentions.

Yogi and Resham chose to open a restaurant because they wanted Houstonians to enjoy freshly made mithais, and get an authentic taste of India.

Since then, the area has expanded from just three Indian-owned businesses to over 300 Indian and Pakistani-owned clothing stores, jewellers, salons, markets, and restaurants, with Raja Sweets standing as a cornerstone of this vibrant South Asian community.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Raja Sweets | Global Indian

The immigration story

Born in 1944 in the small village of Sujjon in Punjab, Yogi moved to London in 1966 where he earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Isleworth College in Hounslow. He got married in 1971.

Always inclined towards entrepreneurship, in 1973, the late entrepreneur opened his first restaurant in the United Kingdom. “It was in Chesham, England, and he named it ‘Take Away,’” informs Sharan.

Yogi and Resham later immigrated to the United States in 1979, where they established ‘The Front Row Restaurant’ in Cleveland, Ohio. Two years later, they moved to Houston, and in 1985 they opened “Raja Sweets”, the first North Indian fast-food restaurant and sweet shop in the city, naming it after their son whom they lovingly called Raja.

 

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Raja Sweets (@raja.sweets)

“In the beginning, it was hard to find chefs in Houston who could prepare Indian delicacies, so my father brought people from India to cook,” Sharan explains. “Later, my mom’s two brothers migrated from India to the US. Over time they had honed their skills in preparing mithais and North Indian food by going back and taking culinary lessons in the villages. They are still in charge of the kitchen,” she adds.

Maintaining the impact

While the front team at Raja Sweets consists of women, including Resham Kaur Gahunia at the counter, her brothers’ wives, and a Gujarati employee, Sharan remains the ever-smiling face of the business. Raja Sweets is popular not only among South Asian community but also with local celebrities and others, enjoying significant coverage in media.

 

Indian Entrepreneur | Raja Sweets | Global Indian

With male chef in the kitchen Raja Sweets is run by the ladies at the forefront

 

“Apart from being Houston’s oldest Indian restaurant, we serve fresh, made-from-scratch food – that’s what sets us apart,” says Sharan, proud to carry her father’s legacy forward.

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Rajan
Rajan
September 12, 2024 1:49 am

Houston’s best original Indian food spot! 🙂

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Published on 11, Sep 2024

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[caption id="attachment_56414" align="aligncenter" width="444"]Indian Chef | Siddharth Krishna | Global Indian Chef Siddharth during an invitation to cook at the prestigious James Beard House in New York City[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_56415" align="aligncenter" width="454"]Indian Chef Siddharth Krishna | Global Indian Chef Siddharth Krishna at a fish farm and market[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_56418" align="aligncenter" width="450"]Indian Chef | Global Indian Chef Siddharth at work at Rosewood Baha Mar[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_56417" align="aligncenter" width="425"]Indian chef | Siddhartha Krishna | Global Indian Chef Siddhartha Krishna at the Fairmont Windsor Park[/caption]

Chef Siddharth Krishna has a strong belief system which has perhaps played a key role in his success. He says, “I believe that whatever you do, you have to be true to yourself. There have been challenges where acquiring the knowledge and skill was important. Now it is about cooking with passion and authenticity.”

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Confronted with the reality of the situation, he finally had to accept that moving around wasn’t easy any more. “With a heavy heart, I closed down the business.”

Fighting back

Aditya returned to India and tried a prosthetic leg. It took him about seven months to learn to walk with it. “I would fall down often. Several times, out of sheer frustration, I would just lie on the floor. I hated that situation,” he says.

His father helped him see things from a different perspective. “He would tell me that I needed to think like a child. Children don’t complain when they try learning to walk. When they fall, they just get up again. These words really helped me. My parents supported me through everything,” smiles Aditya.

Eventually, he began walking up to a kilometre. Slowly, he increased it to five and then 10 kms. Thereafter, he started swimming and joined an academy in Pune. Around that time, he came across a hoarding of local cycling club. “The picture I saw on it was a glaring reminder of my limitations. I started to reminisce about the days in school when I had the best cycle in class. The thought that I couldn’t ride anymore was too hard to bear.”

One day, Aditya borrowed his cousin’s cycle and made an attempt to ride with one leg. “My father supported me and said I should give it a shot.” I rode for about a kilometre after falling five times. Every fall made me stronger and I just kept going,” he says. Aditya decided then that he would be a professional cyclist. He trained hard, pushing through all the discomfort.

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Aditya Mehta Foundation

After his wins, Aditya decided to support para athletes. In 2013, he launched Aditya Mehta Foundation. The aim was to help people like him win medals.

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In 2020, Aditya and para-cyclists from the BSF went on a 3,801 km long cycling expedition in India, covering 35 cities in 41 days. His foundation raises funds through various events, scouts talent from among the disabled population in the country, trains and funds them to grow in sports.

Fitness

While Aditya has taken up coaching for para-cyclists in a big way, he sticks to his fitness schedule. “Nutrition and conditioning are essential and I follow them religiously,” informs the ace para-cyclist, who is up at 4 am everyday to start training. He trains for almost five days a week and makes it a point to hit the gym in between.

Future plans

Aditya is presently busy coaching. “We are training hard for the Paralympics 2024 in France. I’m also training the children who were identified at the grassroots level for various state, national and international competitions.”

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Inspired by family

Just like her clients, the lawyer fiercely protects her family details from the limelight. While not much is known about her family, it has been public knowledge that her parents shifted from India to New York City in search of better career opportunities. Born in the USA, Priya was inspired by the journey of her grandfather, who was also an attorney. "The lawyer I most admire is my grandfather, a prominent criminal defense lawyer in India, who once won an acquittal in a broad-daylight murder case with four eyewitnesses," she shared during an interview with Super Lawyers Magazine.

[caption id="attachment_31745" align="aligncenter" width="648"]Lawyer | Priya Chaudhry | Global Indian Priya with Canadian screenwriter, film producer, and director Paul Haggis[/caption]

Priya earned BA (High Honors) at the University of California, Berkeley. As she was always clear about her career path, she enrolled herself at the Northwestern University School of Law to pursue a Doctor of law (JD). Soon after, she became an Assistant Public Defender and later joined the Hafetz & Necheles LLP - one of New York's premier law firms focused on criminal defense, defending individuals and corporations in criminal investigations.

Climbing the ladder

After a decade of learning the skills of defending her clients in several complicated cases, the lawyer joined Harris, St. Laurent & Chaudhry LLP as a partner in 2013. It was during this time that she started representing celebrities and high-profile people in criminal matters - from the most sophisticated white-collar cases to homicide. She also represented individuals in regulatory proceedings, such as FINRA and SEC actions, as well as alleged Title IX violations, where she has won complete acquittal after trial for her student-clients.

Her passion for educating young people led her to teach Trial Advocacy at various prestigious institutions such as Cardozo Law School, Rutgers School of Law, and the New Jersey Public Defender. She is also an adjunct faculty at Columbia Law School and Fordham Law School. Keen to share her courtroom experiences, the lawyer has authored the paper “Crimes of Dishonesty: Perjury, False Statement, and Obstruction of Justice” in White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory Offenses, and is also the co-host of the podcast Security and Compliance Weekly.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkvKrvt9i50

Priya established her firm Chaudhry Law PLLC in 2019, through which she represented two very popular cases, that of Jennifer Shah and Paul Haggis. A football lover and a movie buff, Priya's formidable career in criminal defense wins her regular recognition, including from the American Board of Criminal Lawyers, Chambers and Partners, Super Lawyers, National Trial Lawyers, Corporate LiveWire, American Institute of Criminal Law Attorneys, and National Association of Distinguished Counsel.

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Reading Time: 6 mins

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Khyati Trehan’s Oscar ‘22 creative aside, her 3D projects are the talk of the artsy world

(April 29, 2022) The 94th Oscar Academy Awards, the greatest galas of 2022, had an august array of creative spirits. Among them was an Indian graphic designer whose 3D artwork was among eight creatives invited to contribute to the Oscars. 3D artist Khyati Trehan, a well-known fluid digital artist was no doubt thrilled to be selected, even wishing she had been invited to the ceremony. However, her body of work earlier has included working with the biggest names in the industry - New York Times, Apple, WeWork, Adobe, etc.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Khyati Trehan (@khyatitrehan) “I am still in disbelief,” shares Khyati laughing, during an interview with Global Indian. Expressing her love for 3D graphics, Khyati adds, “While working on a project in college, looking for an image, I realised I was spending more time on searching for a photograph, than designing. I started exploring possibilities of making all the pictures, rather than hoping that someone had clicked an image suiting my requirements. That’s how I discovered 3D. It seemed like magic,” recalls the Forbes 30 under 30 2022. Freedom to learn Born in Jalandhar, Khyati moved to Delhi with her parents

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A post shared by Khyati Trehan (@khyatitrehan)

“I am still in disbelief,” shares Khyati laughing, during an interview with Global Indian. Expressing her love for 3D graphics, Khyati adds, “While working on a project in college, looking for an image, I realised I was spending more time on searching for a photograph, than designing. I started exploring possibilities of making all the pictures, rather than hoping that someone had clicked an image suiting my requirements. That’s how I discovered 3D. It seemed like magic,” recalls the Forbes 30 under 30 2022.

Freedom to learn

Born in Jalandhar, Khyati moved to Delhi with her parents at a young age. As the family welcomed another daughter, it was struck with tragedy when Khyati’s father passed away in an accident when she was nine. “My mother, a college teacher in genetics and embryology before marriage, had to leave her job to look after the family,” shares the graphic designer, adding, “After my father passed away, she raised us, and it was a difficult period,” she remembers. Eventually, Khyati’s mother entered the world of haute couture, managing luxury fashion brands.

[caption id="attachment_23835" align="aligncenter" width="593"] Khyati with her mother and sister, Kavya[/caption]

Raised by a single parent, Khyati has a special bond with her sister Kavya, and her mother. “We spent a lot of time together. There was a lot of feminine energy. Yet, as a family of three women, I came across misogyny way sooner - People who worked for us wouldn’t take us seriously without a paternal figure,” recalls Khyati, adding, “My mother is a great parent, more of a friend to me and my sister. Frankly, a lot of my work and who I am today is defined by being raised by a single parent.”

An alumnus of a remarkably interesting school in Delhi, Mirambika - Free Progress School, the 3D designer had a unique childhood. “Mirambika is based on the integral philosophy of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. We were given a lot of freedom and exposed to all kind of subjects. It was a great place to understand my skillset,” shares the once shy girl. “My sister is the opposite. Yet, I was aggressively protective of her. In fact, I named her,” she laughs.

The world of 3D

Mirambika helped Khyati realise her true potential. After school, the artist toyed with the idea of studying economics or languages. “I wasn’t interested in designing. People around me told me about this whole world of design and 3D,” the graphic designer adds.

[caption id="attachment_23836" align="aligncenter" width="650"] Khyati's art, Are Viruses Alive, for New York Times[/caption]

She fell in love with a new world of shapes, colours and design after joining National Institute of Design (Ahmedabad). "NID was a whole new world. A focus on craft - we were asked to draw to help us see things in a certain way. A mindset change, and gaining skills to become a designer, the most amazing was being surrounded by creative people,” says the 3D designer Khyati, who also met her now-husband Sanchit Sawaria during her NID days.

After NID, a few stints at graphic designing companies in Delhi led her to a big change in 2017 - she shifted to Berlin to work at one of the leading European online platforms for fashion and lifestyle, Zalando. “Design is one of those industries that allows one to have different careers. So, if I am working for hospitality, I get to learn how to run a hotel, and if I switch to designing for a musician I might hang out with the artist and learn about his craft. I needed to be versatile, and I absolutely loved it," the graphic designer smiles. The same year Khyati was named as one of Print Magazine’s 15 new visual artists under 30.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Khyati Trehan (@khyatitrehan)

In 2019, Khyati joined award-winning global design and innovation firm IDEO. The sky was the limit as she worked on projects with NYT, New Yorker Magazine, Apple, Adobe, Absolut, Instagram and Snapchat. The successful graphic designer won several awards and recognitions too - Artistry Creator of the Year at Adweek’s Creator Visionary Awards, ADC Young Guns 19 – 2021, etc.

Back to India and straight to Oscars

Having worked without a break for eight straight years, and with the pandemic, the 3D designer decided to return home, and spend some quality time with my loved ones,” the graphic designer adds.

That was when an email from the Academy popped up asking if she was interested in participating on a project. The theme focused on the intersection of storytelling and technology, inviting eight artists from around the world to each create a representation of the Oscar statue inspired by their personal appreciation of movies and  ‘how do movies transform and inspire?’

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Khyati Trehan (@khyatitrehan)

“My concept was of the Oscar statue as a movie viewer amidst the action,” shares the Forbes 30 under 30, and she immediately got a “go ahead.” “It was a dream project and I drew inspiration from the immersive power of movies. I wanted to create an overwhelming sense of feeling,” she shares, adding, “I just wished they has called us to the US for the ceremony when my design was selected,” laughs the artist, who has many interesting projects on the anvil.

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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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