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Global IndianstoryGet, Set, Go: Ultra cyclist and marathoner Dr Amit Samarth loves the ‘extreme’ life  
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Get, Set, Go: Ultra cyclist and marathoner Dr Amit Samarth loves the ‘extreme’ life  

Written by: Vikram Sharma

(December 18, 2022) When he arrived in Moscow to undertake a gruelling, 9100-km bicycle journey (from Moscow to Vladivostok) in August 2018, a mountain of challenges awaited Dr Amit Samarth. As part of the Red Bull Trans-Siberian Extreme — the longest bicycle stage race on the planet — the ultra cyclist was all set to cover the mind-boggling distance in 15 stages in 25 days.

The weather conditions were extreme and the hilly terrain most difficult. The professional bicyclists were to ride massive distances, ranging from 260-kms to 1364-kms in different stages.

Dr Amit Samarth | Ultra cyclist | Global Indian

Dr Amit Samarth

Only those with an iron will and nerves of steel could make it. Dr Amit Samarth was one of them.

The wilderness of Siberia  

“The rain water in Siberia is ice cold and I ended up riding the 10th stage (1054 kms) in heavy rain. TheTrans-Siberian Extreme was a killer, the toughest challenge ever,” smiles Dr Samarth, the first Indian and Asian to have completed the challenge despite massive odds.

In an exclusive conversation with Global Indian, the ultra-cyclist and marathoner, for whom taking on extreme challenges is now a way of life, says that unless risks are taken, one can never realise their capabilities.

If the Trans-Siberian Extreme proved to be the toughest, the Race Across America (RAAM), solo 2017 was another event that tested Dr Samarth’s endurance. It was a 5000-km continuous bike race from East to West Coast and participants get 12 days to finish.

The Race Across America  

“In extreme endurance sports like ultra-cycling, there come occasions when you fall sick or just don’t feel great. During RAAM, I got very dehydrated once and suffered from a throat infection later,” says Dr Samarth, the first Indian solo to finish RAAM in 11 days, 21 hours and 11 minutes, which in itself was a record in the history of RAAM.

While the Trans-Siberian Extreme had an elevation of 77,320 metres, RAAM had a total elevation of 40,000 metres.

Dr Amit Samarth | Ultra cyclist | Global Indian

Amit Samarth during the 15th stage (Khabarovsk – Vladivostok) of the Red Bull Trans-Siberian Extreme, on August 17, 2018

Studious boy to adventure junkie

Born and brought up in Nagpur, Maharashtra, Dr Samarth’s childhood was in complete contrast to what he is today.

In school, Dr Samarth says he was a chubby boy, often poked fun at by his classmates. He recalls trying to enroll for the National Cadet Corps and being rejected on grounds of his physical fitness.

“My focus was only on academics. Since medical admissions were based on a student’s marks in physics, chemistry and biology, it was very important for me to focus only on studies,” says Dr Samarth, who recalls playing ‘gully’ cricket once in a while. In college, though, he began going to the gym.

Focus on public health  

Having done his MBBS from Indira Gandhi Medical College in Nagpur, Dr Samarth, who is now in his early 40s, spent the next couple of years working as a medical officer in various hospitals. After that, he received an opportunity to visit the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Research in Dhaka, Bangladesh, where he met a lot of public health scientists from different universities all across the world. “That is where I actually understood what public health is and what it can do,” says Dr Samarth.

He went on to do earn a Master’s degree in Public Health from Johns Hopkins School of Public Health in the US. When he returned to India, Dr Samarth did stints at the Indian Institute of Public Health, Access-Health International in Hyderabad and then moved to Bengaluru, taking over as the CEO of the Save A Mother Foundation.

Dr Amit Samarth | Ultra cyclist | Global Indian

Taekwondo to marathons  

In Hyderabad, he took to Taekwondo. “I used to get up at 4.30 am and go to KBR Park for training. I used to train in the evenings as well,” says the ultra-cyclist, who went on to earn a black belt in the martial art.

In 2015, he quit his job at Bengaluru and returned to his hometown, Nagpur, where he started his sports academy, Miles and Miles. Encouraged by his friends, he took to Ultra Cycling himself, participating in various cycling events.

His passion for marathons began relatively late in life and was sparked by the running he did for Taekwondo training. His life changed the day he decided to attempt a 10-km run. “I then started doing half-marathons. After I got married in 2010, I started running full marathons,” Dr Samarth says.

The Ironman Triathlon  

Along the way, he discovered the Ironman Triathlon, a series of long-distance triathlon races, organised by the World Triathlon Corporation. The triathlon comprised comprises a 3.9-km swim, a 112-mile bicycle ride and a 42.2-km marathon run, all completed in a single day. It is an advanced challenge, touted to be one of the most difficult one-day sporting events in the world, to be completed in around 17 hours.

It compelled Dr Samarth to purchase his first bike and he has been unstoppable ever since. Over the last decade, since 2012, the ultra-cyclist and marathoner has done three full Ironman triathlons and 17 half-Ironman-races across the world.

“I come from a farming family and we have the willingness to suffer, a trait required for ultra-cycling and marathons. I am not a born athlete but a trained one,” says Dr Samarth, who also did a 6000-km cycling event on India’s Golden Quadrilateral highway in a record time of 13 days, 9 hours and 50 minutes.

Dr Amit Samarth | Ultra cyclist | Global Indian

Sleep deprived  

For races like RAAM and TSE, Dr Samarth would be required to be sleep deprived for many days. “When I was riding for RAAM, I went riding continuously for the first 24 hours. Thereafter, I used to be on the bike for 21 to 22 hours everyday and sleep for around 1.5 to two hours everyday,” informs Dr Samarth adding that riding without proper sleep is part of the sport.

He says one has to think and behave like a ghost, which is what he did during TSE. “It is very hard to explain how to do this. But I did a lot of ghost riding in TSE. One has to think as if you are possessed with some spirit and your thinking will make things happen,” says the ultracyclist, who would talk to himself on the lonely roads all night to reaffirm the belief that he would successfully finish the race.

One of the best way to deal with sleep deprivation and lonely night rides is music. “I take a music player along and play my favourite tracks. Singing along helped me to be more alert and ward off sleep,” says Dr Samarth, who did Ironman Phuket in 2012 (1.9 km swim, 90 kms cycle and 21.1 km run) and Ironman Bahrain (70.3) in 2018.

Few tough moments  

Dr Amit Samarth | Ultra cyclist | Global Indian

Sharing a few more difficult situations he faced during TSE and RAAM, Dr Samarth recalls the 10th day in RAAM, when he was in West Virginia. It was raining heavily and he was riding in rain from 5 pm in evening to almost 2 am in the night.

“It was very cold that night. One of the biggest mistakes I did was taking a break and falling asleep,” he says. Instead of sleeping for one hour, he slept for three hours and then it became very difficult to start early morning due to intense cold. “I lost precious time due to which I had to slog for the next 24 hours to make sure I finish RAAM successfully,” he says.

During TSE, after completing the stage 3, Dr Samarth was completely drained out due to lack of proper food and his legs had turned extremely sore. By evening, hewas running high temperature.

“I had only 10 hours to sleep and recuperate. I tried to eat and sleep as much as possible, took medicines and evaluated myself next morning. That day I rode slower, trying to recover my body on the bike. Yes, you can recover while on the move,” smiles the ultra cyclist, who suffered dehydration with altitude sickness during one of the races in the Himalayas.

“If I get bogged down or afraid of these situations, I would have never finished those races,” he points out.

Giving back  

Earlier, he won the tough Pune tough cycle race and also did some other ultra-cycling rides from Delhi to Nagpur (1021 km in 39 hours), Chennai to Nagpur (in 43 hours). “I have taken those risks and I want to do my bit towards encouraging people to pursue their passions,” says the ultra risk taker.

What are his future plans? “I would like to grow my sports academy and I am presently running a program for tribal athletes,” informs Dr Samarth. His earlier visits to the Deshpande Foundation in Hubbali, which put him in contact with many social entrepreneurs, inspired Dr Samarth to be a sports entrepreneur himself.

 

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A post shared by Dr. Amit Samarth | UltraCyclist (@teamamitsamarth)

He intends to identify more sporting talent from the tribal areas, especially from central India, and train them in his sports academy. “I look forward to create elite national and international athletes from my academy in the time to come,” says the sports entrepreneur, who is doing his bit to give back to the society.

When he isn’t ultra-cycling or marathoning, the fitness enthusiast likes to read books and watch some informative videos about training athletes.

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  • Dr Amit Samarth
  • Global Indian
  • Ironman Triathlon
  • Marathoner
  • Trans-Siberian Extreme
  • Travel
  • Ultra Cyclist

Published on 18, Dec 2022

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ss="wp-image-53568" src="https://stage.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2024/08/WhatsApp-Image-2024-08-06-at-11.37.58.jpeg" alt="Gary Mehigan | George Calombaris | Global Indian" width="432" height="576" /> Masterchef Australia's OG judges, Gary Mehigan, Matt Preston and George Calombaris on their Conosh India tour[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_53570" align="aligncenter" width="475"]Gary Mehigan | George Calombaris | Matt Preston | Masterchef Australia | Global Indian The Masterchef Australia crew[/caption]

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George is continually astonished by the simplicity and vibrancy of dishes made with humble ingredients like lentils. “It’s a lesson in how you can feed many people with something simple yet delicious,” he remarks. Matt highlights the unique sourness and depth of flavor in Gongura, a dish that stood out to him during his travels in India.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Gary Mehigan (@garymehigan)

The journey continues

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>. This early exposure to Indian cinema kindled her love for acting, shaping her desire to perform on screen. As her career gained momentum in Britain, her unique blend of influences—both British and Indian—set her apart, paving the way for her breakout role in The Witcher and ultimately earning her a spot on Forbes' 30 Under 30 list.

[caption id="attachment_59781" align="aligncenter" width="709"]Indian actor | Anya Chalotra | Global Indian Anya Chalotra in Netflix series, 'The Witchers'[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_59783" align="aligncenter" width="602"]Indian actor | Anya Chalotra | Global Indian Anya with her parents[/caption]

Shining in all three seasons of Netflix’s ‘The Witcher’ 

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[caption id="attachment_59805" align="aligncenter" width="795"]Indian Actor | Vengerberg | Global Indian Anya during one of her shoots[/caption]

 

Striding past challenges

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The hard work, focus, and dedication paid off when the first season aired. At the premiere of the first season, the Indian-origin actor proudly showcased her heritage by wearing a Manish Malhotra sari.

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r a 9-5 job and was keen to start something of his own. The idea struck him during his college days after his chance encounter with Ramesh, whom he invited to join an innovators competition as he was keen to pitch the idea of Greensole. "Upon research, I found that over 300 million shoes each year make it to landfills but there is no clear solution. So, I came up with the idea of refurbishing shoes, and this was the beginning of Greensole," Shriyans tells Global Indian. In no time, Greensole, launched in 2015, started to make an impact as lakhs of discarded shoes got another lease of life. "We were among the top 30 innovators in India," reveals Shriyans, who earned his master's degree in leadership from Babson F.W. Olin Graduate School of Business.

Championing two causes - footwear wastage and environment preservation

What began as an idea to preserve the environment by cutting down on carbon print by refurbishing shoes soon took the shape of a campaign that helped lakhs of children across the country who didn't have adequate footwear. "It began with a drive at Priyadarshani Park in Mumbai where thousands of people brought in their old shoes, and we turned them into slippers for children," says Shriyans. The soles of the shoes are used for the slippers, and the uppers are upcycled into slipper straps, thus giving old shoes a second life. However, starting refurbishing at a time when sustainability wasn't a trend was an uphill task for the co-founders of Greensole. "We were also learning a lot in the process, as it was something very new. Even if you would search online, you couldn't find much information," he adds. Being a novel concept, Shriyans was skeptical if people would be interested in buying refurbished footwear, so they began by donating shoes to underprivileged children through the help of CSR. "We kept using the same model for the next four to five years."

Greensole | Global Indian

In those initial years, Greensole became a talking point. "It was a novel innovation that had not happened in India before. Suddenly, we went viral. We grew from working with 1 corporate to 35 corporates without spending a single penny on marketing for the first five years," reveals the social entrepreneur. The growing trust of the corporates helped in making a bigger impact. "From upcycling 50 pairs of shoes a day to now we have moved onto upcycling 3 lakh pairs a year."

Sustainability - the need of the hour

Over the years, Greensole understood that donation couldn't be the only way for the social enterprise going forward, so they diversified, and forayed into upcycling shoes and apparel, along with launching their vegan footwear brand. "We have now shifted to our sustainable material (made from plant-based material) and sustainable retail. So if you are buying a sustainable shoe, you are contributing to a social cause as well as helping preserve the environment."

Greensole | Global Indian

In pursuit of a more sustainable and environment friendly world, Greensole has come up with its plant-based material which Shriyans says has "the potential to replace synthetic leather." With the world progressing steadily towards sustainability, the ongoing changes will become increasingly prominent in the coming years. However, this wasn't the case a few years ago. When the startup ventured into sustainability in 2015, people didn't understand veganism. "By 2019, there were a handful but the number was still very low. Now, people do understand sustainable and vegan but people don't want to pay extra at this time." However, Shriyans points out that the change of perception has begun in metros where a handful of people still choose sustainable shoes. "Most of our orders come from cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru. Awareness is a lot in these cities. Because of Neeman's (a brand that popularised vegan shoes across the globe), people have got to understand vegan shoes and sustainability, and now almost all brands are catching up on the trend. However, we have been ahead of the trend always."

Greensole | Global Indian

Amplifying the impact

Greensole was way ahead of its time, and the co-founders knew that selling a new concept would be challenging. "We didn't say we were doing something new, we said we were doing good for the planet." Since they kept innovating and adding new layers to the startup, Greensole "had to never fight for survival." "If we stick around for another five years, we have the potential of becoming a household name," adds Shriyans, who is creating an impact with Greensole. "Till now, we have donated six lakh pairs of slippers. So, we ended up saving that number of shoes from making it to the landfill by giving them a second life along with saving tonnes of carbon emissions. In the process, we have also created job opportunities with each pair has is being refurbished along with jobs in the retail."

However, Covid-19 pushed Greensole to think of a new strategy to keep the startup afloat as depending solely on corporates wasn't cutting the deal for them. "It was a learning curve for me, so we started to make our presence felt online. A big brand from Germany reached out to us, and that's how we ventured into materials. I realised it's important to have solid planning in place and one should never stop innovating."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z95jJk06VZQ

In the last eight years, Greensole has disrupted the footwear industry in India with bigger brands now venturing into sustainable footwear. "It's been a challenging journey but at the same time rewarding," says Shriyans, who loves travelling and catching up with his friends. Being a torchbearer in the industry, Shriyans is happy to see the change take place. "People are now becoming conscious and adopting the sustainable approach in their lifestyle," he says, adding more people will adopt sustainability shortly. "People will become more aware and most of the shoes available in the market will be sustainable. Also, in the coming years, India will reach a leadership position. In the next decade or so, India will be at the top, and will be recognised as a leader as it will open more and better opportunities."

  • Follow Greensole on their website
    Follow Shriyans Bhandari on LinkedIn
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Reading Time: 5 min

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Gender equality proponent Ambassador Geeta Rao Gupta’s journey is empowering millions

(October 7, 2023) A man trying to cop a feel, a scared teenager struggling to find her voice, and several passengers ignoring the scene... While it is a scary situation, unfortunately, lots of girls across India battle these adversities daily to reach their schools or colleges. While some find the courage to speak about it, most remain silent. When about 10 minutes into our conversation, I asked renowned gender expert and the current United States Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues, Dr. Geeta Rao Gupta if she ever witnessed any such incidents, she quipped, "Growing up in New Delhi, I personally experienced the horrors that girls used to go through. They called it 'eve-teasing', and I feel that it is such a bad word for what actually happens to girls. But nobody ever talked about it, and it made me have an anger in my belly that I had to learn to channel." [caption id="attachment_45748" align="aligncenter" width="619"] Ambassador Geeta Rao Gupta[/caption] In a career spanning over four decades, Ambassador Rao Gupta has served as the former president of the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and was previously appointed by the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as the deputy executive

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four decades, Ambassador Rao Gupta has served as the former president of the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and was previously appointed by the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as the deputy executive director for UNICEF, where she served from 2011 to 2016. During her recent visit to India, the U.S. Ambassador-at-Large took some time out of her very busy schedule to sit with Global Indian and share her journey from being a young girl with big dreams in New Delhi to being nominated by the President of the United States, Joe Biden to become the U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues.

Inspired by her mother

Born in Mumbai in 1956, Ambassador Rao Gupta first moved to Delhi when she was about ten years old. It was quite early in her life that she became aware of the various inequalities prevalent in society. “My parents moved to Delhi when I was in fifth grade. So, most of my childhood was spent in the capital. Delhi was a very different culture from Bombay in those days. Growing up as a young girl in Delhi made me very aware of the inequalities that existed between women and men. But I grew up in a very progressive household, where my parents treated us siblings equally,” she shares.

Growing up in a gender-biased world, Ambassador Rao Gupta was inspired by the journey of her mother, which made her realise that gender doesn't define the limits of what she could achieve. "My mother was a physician and public health specialist," she says, adding, "Her boss had informed her about a 13-month-long Ford Foundation fellowship, which was offering a public health degree from the University of California, Berkeley. I was about seven years old at the time, my brother was nine, and my younger sister was about three. It must have been a difficult choice for her, but my father was very supportive of her decision [to accept the fellowship]. He knew that her exposure, learning, and taking this opportunity would transform our lives forever. So looking back, I can say that this decision changed my life in two ways. Firstly, the role modeling of the fact that my parents supported the professional advancement of my mother. That instilled in me the importance of being your own person. Secondly, my mother brought back several books, toys, and music that gave us immense exposure to the Western culture."

[caption id="attachment_45749" align="aligncenter" width="650"]Ambassador | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian Ambassador with USA Vice President, Kamala Harris[/caption]

But, was her mother her only source of inspiration? As she shares, "My mother's sister was also a physician and demographer. In fact, she and my mother were two of the first trainers of family planning workers in India. However, apart from being a professional woman, she also acted in theatre. Even my grandmother was a full-time working woman.

A world tilted by discrimination

As Ambassador Rao Gupta finished school and stepped into college to pursue a bachelor's in psychology, she was introduced to a world of issues women faced daily - something so common that people do not bother discussing them. "Travelling to college in buses, I experienced sexual harassment, especially since I would fight back" she laughs, adding, "Also, this occurred not only on public transportation but also on the street, which was very common those days. Eventually, I realised that many of my classmates were facing the same situation. I remember one of my classmates telling me that she used to keep open safety pins in her hand when she got onto a bus so that nobody could come close to her without getting poked. So I did that for a while. However, that certainly wasn't a permanent solution."

[caption id="attachment_45750" align="aligncenter" width="650"]Ambassador | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian Ambassador with women entrepreneurs in Bengaluru, during her recent India visit[/caption]

She decided that she would become a clinical psychologist to try and fix society. "I mean, I joke about it now, but it was a very serious commitment then that I would fix one person at a time. And I became a counselor and even did some voluntary counselling work while I was studying. The cases that came to me were inevitably about sex and rape. Frankly, most of them would be about women being traumatised by not knowing anything about sex or being newly married in overcrowded homes. Or it was about men who were confused about sex or were sexually stalking women and didn't know how to stop and were obsessed with it.”

Ambassador | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian

Realising that the issue was too big to be fixed by just one person, Rao Gupta took to social psychology and went on to earn a Ph.D. in the subject from Bangalore University. So, when did she decide to move to the United States? "Now, let me tell you something I have never shared in any interview," the Ambassador quipped, "I was very keen to study clinical psychology abroad, so I applied to a U.S. university for a Ph.D. and was successful in getting admission. However, they wouldn't give me a fellowship for my tuition. My parents, being public servants, didn't have the money and said that they could give me a one-way ticket, but nothing else. It was just too scary for me to go off without any money in hand, and without a return ticket, so I applied for a Rotary Club scholarship. I got to the final round along with a young man who was an engineer. During the interview, a panel of four men asked me repeatedly whether I would get married and have children. And if that was my intention, then why would they spend the money on sending me abroad? I was informed that the candidate I was competing against was a civil engineer who would return and build bridges. He got the scholarship, and it was such a huge disappointment, but also made me so angry because it was so sexist," she shares.

The land of dreams

While it wasn't always her intention to move to the United States, destiny had other plans for her. "I was 23 years old when I got married, and we had no intentions of traveling abroad. My husband was working in the Export Import Bank of India, and at one point further in our marriage, he got a transfer to the United States when the Indian economy opened up," the Ambassador shares, adding, "It was supposed to be a two-year-long assignment. However, he never told me about this opportunity and even turned it down as I would have been on a dependent visa and wouldn't be able to work there. I had a chance meeting with his boss, where I got to know about this opportunity," Ambassador Rao Gupta shares smiling. "I told my husband that I had never travelled abroad - and we can't miss out on this opportunity."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nbv3B4AI4Ts

However, when her husband flew to the United States, Ambassador Rao Gupta was eight months pregnant, and the airline didn't allow her to fly. Then, another incident made her aware of the gender bias in the country once again. “When I delivered my baby in India, in a hospital in an urban site, the nurse would not tell me whether the child was a girl or a boy, because I had delivered a girl child, and she was nervous that I would be so upset with the news that I would hemorrhage and my health would be at risk,” she shares, adding, “So they held the news from me till a few hours later, and told me that I had a girl child with great nervousness that I would be upset. When they saw how overjoyed I was and how pleased my parents and my parents-in-law were, the nurse came to me and said, “You belong to a very strange family. Were you raised in India?”

Ambassador Rao Gupta finally flew to Washington, D.C., four months after her daughter arrived. "For two years I was home with my baby, which was wonderful. However, soon I started getting restless because I wanted to work. And so, I joined the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW), and that's how my journey began," she says, adding, "When I went there they had never heard of Bangalore in those days. They didn't know whether I spoke good English, and wanted to see if maybe I could write something and test my English. So, I started as a volunteer, working for no money."

[caption id="attachment_45751" align="aligncenter" width="650"]Ambassador | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian Ambassador with student interns at G20[/caption]

But then how did she manage to stay in the United States? "Soon after joining, ICRW decided to sponsor me for an H-1B visa, and offered me a full-time job," says the Ambassador, adding, "I joined as a Research Associate, and eventually became a Project Director. Subsequently, they sponsored me for a Green Card. Meanwhile, my husband's assignment kept getting extended."

Five years later, however, her husband's company decided to call him back home. It was a difficult decision, but he decided to make a tough choice for the sake of his wife’s career. "At that point in my career, my boss had given me my first project directorship of a new programme called the Women and Aids Research Programme. I had gotten very involved in learning about women's vulnerability to HIV. And so, my husband said that he would go back to India and tell his bosses that he would be taking a sabbatical so that I could continue my job. And then after one year, we could all go home," shares the Ambassador.

[caption id="attachment_39735" align="aligncenter" width="649"]Gender activist | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian Dr. Rao Gupta with Michelle Milford Morse, Vice President of the UN Foundation’s Girls and Women Strategy[/caption]

But of course, destiny again played its part. Her husband's bosses didn't agree to a sabbatical, and he came back to the United States after resigning from his position. It was a tough time for the couple; they didn't have much savings, had to shift their five-year-old daughter from a private to public school, and the bank - which owned all their household stuff - took it back. But the couple persisted, and her husband got a consulting assignment with the World Bank soon after. "I remember, one day he told me that from now on yours is the career and mine is the job," shares Ambassador Rao Gupta, who seven years after she got her H-1B visa was made president of ICRW.

Ambassador Rao Gupta and her “angels”

Navigating the path in an organisation in a new country, can be challenging. But Ambassador Rao Gupta benefitted by having several ‘guardian angels’ helping her. "When I moved here, there were not that many Indians in the United States. So, to fit in, I felt I had to cut my long hair and dress a certain way. But I had no clue where to shop and as a result, wore all the wrong types of clothes! Luckily, one day, when I was in the Xerox room, one of my senior colleagues was standing in the corner flipping through a women's clothes catalog, that now I know is not a catalog that she would ever buy clothes from. When I asked her what she was looking at, she showed me some of the clothes from the catalog and said how amazing they would look on me. I had no clue that she was telling me, “Don't wear what you're wearing," laughs the Ambassador.

[caption id="attachment_45753" align="aligncenter" width="650"]Ambassador | Geeta Rao Gupta | Global Indian Ambassador Geeta Rao Gupta with Indian PM Narendra Modi[/caption]

A few years later, while she was a co-lead on a project, the Ambassador was asked to present the results at an event and had to wear a business suit to the event. A little unsure, Rao Gupta went to a Casual Corner store. "A saleswoman helped me get the clothes. The next day people loved it so much, that I ended up wearing it even on the second day of the conference," she said, as her whole team burst out laughing.

Forging ahead

The former president of ICRW, and deputy executive director of UNICEF, was nominated to be the United States Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues by President Biden in 2021 and was confirmed by the Senate on May 10, 2023. Speaking about her goals ahead, the gender equality advocate says, "So, you know how people say at the beginning of speeches, 'I'm very honoured and feel very privileged'. For me, this is more than just words. It's tough to imagine the distance that I have traveled. I have a wonderful job. There are many champions of women within the department, and we need to partner with them to amplify the impact that the Office of Global Women's Issues can have."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WD3PZx0hZws

As she signs off from the interview, Ambassador Rao Gupta has just one piece of advice for young activists, who want to create an impact and bring good changes to society. "Be persistent," she says, adding, "It's a tough road, but you have to be tenacious and keep at it."

  • Follow Ambassador Geeta Rao Gupta on LinkedIn and Twitter

Reading Time: 8 mins

Story
Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi: The bestselling author weaving magic with words

(May 6, 2023) In 2020, when the world was in lockdown and mourning the loss of their loved ones due to the pandemic, Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi's latest release Loss hit hard. The book was a reminder of the harsh reality of how boys are raised to become men in a world where nothing hurts or destroys them, and weeping in public or emoting is considered nothing less than blasphemy. For someone who lost his mother and father in about a decade, he invites readers to embrace their loss with compassion. It's this connection, the complexities of love, relationships, and loss that the 45-year-old portrays in its most authentic form which has made him stand out in the literary circles. With a Betty Trask Award to his credit, Siddharth has become a name to reckon with in the world of literature. At 22, he wrote his first book, but it took him four years to get it published. Despite the delay, it turned out to be an international bestseller, making Siddharth an instant hit in the literary world. However, it has been a long journey for this author to find his true calling. [caption id="attachment_38210" align="aligncenter" width="558"] Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi[/caption] From

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" wp-image-38210" src="https://stage.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2023/05/sid1.jpg" alt="Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi | Global Indian" width="558" height="279" /> Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi[/caption]

From solitude to storytelling

Born into a Gujarati family in Mumbai, Siddharth always loved his space. Even as a child, he would often escape to his tree house where he would find solace after running away from his school and would spend hours, either reading books or just being alone. It's these years that laid a solid ground for this then-teenager to silently absorb every moment and be on his own. "That I was left alone as a child was the most precious gift my parents gave me. I was allowed the space to not become anyone in particular but myself," he told Verve in an interview.

It was the world of books that captivated Siddharth. So, after completing his schooling, he moved to London to pursue his MA in International Journalism at the University of Westminster, where he specialised in photography and learnt how to sell his stories. For someone who was often broke and would crave a beer or two, he used to spin yarns for his friends while hanging out at pubs with them, and in return, they would pick up his tab. "I realised that I had the gift of storytelling - and that I was a lousy photographer," he said in an interview.

 

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A post shared by Siddharth Shanghvi (@thepostcarder)

The journey of a bestseller

After graduating, he moved to Northern California post securing a scholarship at San Jose State University for a master's degree in mass communication. But the course was set to begin the following year. In the interim, Sanghvi moved to Mumbai in 2002 to nurse his broken heart after a bombed love affair. With still a year left for his course to start, he spent most of his time with a manuscript he started writing a few years ago. He feverishly wrote a love story of sorts that later took the shape of his debut novel The Last Song of Dusk. It took him one year to cull out the first draft and three more years to deepen the themes. However, he dropped it after his agent suggested a few changes. Instead, he left for his course in California, and it was only in 2004 that his first novel saw the light of day.

Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi | Global Indian | Author

In no time, it won one of the UK's most prestigious prizes for debut novels - the Betty Trask Award, the Premio Grinzane Cavour in Italy, and was nominated for the IMPAC Prize in Ireland. Translated into 16 languages, The Last Song of Dusk became an international bestseller. At the age of 26, Shanghvi was hailed as the next big thing after Salman Rushdie and Vikram Seth, following the success of his debut novel. It was the use of magic realism and the exploration of themes like karma and sexuality that drew such comparisons. While he rose to popularity with his debut novel, Shanghvi took five years to release his second book. In between, he curated shows and travelled while writing The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay. Inspired by the events of Jessica Lall's murder case, the novel epitomises Mumbai's essence in the backdrop of a love story. The book was short-listed for the Man Asian Literary Prize.

Love, pain, hope - his muses

Around the same time, Shanghvi turned to photography after his dad was diagnosed with cancer. His photograph series The House Next Door, which captured the loneliness and seclusion that his father subjected himself to while battling cancer, opened at Galleri Kontrast in Stockholm in 2010. It was later showcased at the Matthieu Foss Gallery in Mumbai and Delhi's Vadhera Art Gallery. Acclaimed author Salman Rushdie praised Shanghvi's body of work calling it touching. "They are at a once intimate and clear-sighted objective, precise and affectionate. The quietness of their world is the silence of memory and sorrow, but there is, too, considerable artistry in the composition, and joy taken in detail, and character, and place," he said.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_2-_mEKJ6iM&t=7s

This Global Indian's next masterpiece came in the form of The Rabbit and the Squirrel which was released in 2018. The book that Shanghvi wrote as a parting gift for his friend soon made its way to the shelves of bookstores and struck the right chord with the audience for being a profound story of love, friendship, longing, and reunion.

Shanghvi, who has given book lovers a great gift in the form of his novels, has scaled literary heights with pieces of writing and innumerable accolades. The 45-year-old has been bringing stories that matter to the forefront with his body of work, and that's what sets him apart from his other contemporaries.

  • Follow Siddharth Dhanvant Shaghavi on Twitter and Instagram

Reading Time: 5 min

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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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