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Indian Professor | Pallavi Chitturi | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryIndian professor Pallavi Chitturi – Making statistics & maths relatable to US students
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Indian professor Pallavi Chitturi – Making statistics & maths relatable to US students

Written by: Global Indian

(January 21, 2022) Statistics and maths evoke an ardent response from Indian professor Pallavi Chitturi. The research professor with a firm hold on data, predicts and forecasts diverse viewpoints. Teaching statistics at the Fox School of Business, Temple University, and EMBA programmes in Philadelphia and Bogota, Colombia, is a calling that she has embraced with immense grace.

As research professor, she has written several research presentations at national and international conferences, and also published a book, Choice Based Conjoint Analysis – Models and Designs. The recipient of the Musser Award for Excellence in Teaching and the Lindback Distinguished Teaching Award, for Pallavi, learning is an evolution.

The Andrisani-Frank Undergraduate Teaching Awardee and the Crystal Apple Teaching Awardee, Pallavi was also given the Executive DBA Faculty of the Year Award. The Dean’s Teaching Fellow for innovation in teaching and excellence has decades of mentoring and dedication to her subject and students, in equal measure.

Indian Professor | Pallavi Chitturi | Global Indian

At heart, Pallavi loves teaching, and adores her subjects. While maths and statistics are horrors for many, she was a natural. In school, she recalls her teachers repeatedly advising her to pursue engineering because of her passion and aptitude for maths. Unsure about what she wanted to pursue, the one thing she knew was – it would not be engineering. A vague notion of being a teacher, just like her mother, guided her.

The Lady Shri Ram College, Delhi BA (hons) student in mathematical statistics was bowled over by her professors’ zeal and knowledge —- emulating them was her aspiration.

“LSR being an all-women’s college, the faculty was also all women. They were brilliant, accomplished with PhDs from universities across the country. They were exceptionally good at their subjects and enjoyed teaching. They helped me resolve my dilemma: I was going to teach maths/statistics, and I was going to get my PhD before that,” reveals Pallavi Chitturi in an interview with Global Indian.

Her journey

It was maths and more maths as her journey began. “Mathematics, combined with opportunity – I was lucky to have some wonderful mentors who lit up my path with so much grace,” adds the Indian professor.

“Ever heard of Ikigai — the Japanese philosophy? What you love, what you can be good at, what you can be rewarded for and what the world needs — if these four can intersect, then you can be successful at whatever you choose as your career. I loved maths, I was good at it, and could be rewarded for it. So, my choice of career was clear even before I had earned my PhD,” says the brilliant professor who finished her MA at Delhi University, got married and left for the US. She joined University of Texas, Austin for post-graduation, and a PhD in statistics. “My mentor and guide was the renowned Prof Peter W M John – known for his work in statistics. It was sheer good luck to be mentored by him,” the Indian professor recalls.

Indian Professor | Pallavi Chitturi | Global Indian

As faculty at Temple University, she found herself in the august company of Dr Damaraju Raghavarao, chairman of the department. “Dr Raghavarao was someone whose research papers I had read at DU —- now I was working in the same department. He published a paper with me, and worked with me on the publication of our book, and papers. He need not have worked with me, a junior faculty, but he was such a wonderful mentor. It was a pleasure learning from him,” explains the statistician who cannot forget the impact of Prof John and Dr Raghavrao.

The teacher who connects with students

“I enjoy the subjects, and I enjoy teaching. Students connect with that. Some must think I am crazy – How can anyone love maths so much? Maybe because I try to make it relatable. In one teacher evaluation, a student wrote, “I never thought I could like maths so much till I took your class,’” says Pallavi, grinning from ear to ear.

Students were often bewildered by her accent — Is it Brit, Indian or even a Texan twang? Nevertheless, they love learning from her. As a professor, she was asked to teach at Temple University in Rome and Beijing – a respite she enjoyed.

On bringing up her boys

Shifting to the US was smooth as her upbringing – her father, a retired major-general and mother, a teacher, and their Army life prepared her what was to come. Her sons Akshay and Abhinav grew up in the US with Indian ethos as Pallavi’s parents and in-laws visited often, and she would visit India twice a year. She loves music and the arts and indulges in them in her free time.

Indian Professor | Pallavi Chitturi | Global Indian

Plans for the future

The Chitturis are a teaching family – Pallavi at Temple University and her husband Ravi at Lehigh University (teaching marketing).

For Pallavi, there is a “lot more to do” as she believes teaching can be carried forward in three different modes – research, contributions and service. Her elder son, Akshay just got married to his colleague, and the professor-mother is thrilled. Pallavi believes teaching can be carried forward in three different modes – research, contributions and service. “There is a lot more to do,” she concludes.

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  • Fox School of Business
  • Global Indian
  • Indian Professor
  • Pallavi Chitturi
  • Temple University

Published on 21, Jan 2022

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Who is Kash Patel, the Indian-American who is Trump’s pick for FBI Director

(December 3, 2024) Former President Donald Trump has nominated Kash Patel as the next director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Announcing the decision on Truth Social, Trump described Patel as “a brilliant lawyer, investigator, and 'America First' fighter” who has dedicated his career to “exposing corruption, defending justice, and protecting Americans.” Patel, who is a staunch MAGA patriot and an outspoken critic of the FBI and the US Justice system, will be the first Indian-American to head the FBI if his nomination goes through. FBI directors are confirmed by the Senate and while Patel is likely to face some tough questions about political interference within the agency, several Republican lawmakers have now thrown their weight behind Trump's pick, who has been vociferous about the 'deep state'. If he passes the Senate's trial by fire, he will replace Christopher A Wray, who still has three years left in his term. "Kash will get confirmed by the Senate. He is a man of honour, unquestionable loyalty, and an American patriot. Kash is the son of Indian immigrants who escaped Uganda's genocidal dictator, Idi Amit. He WILL restore and uphold the rule of law, and the FBI will be premier again," said

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mier again," said Congressman-elect Abe Hamadeh on X. Other heavyweights within the legal system, like former federal prosecutor and representative Trey Gowdy, have also expressed their support. "We wouldn't know about the Steele Dossier if it weren't for Kash Patel," Gowdy told Fox News.

The Global Indian's nomination marks the culmination of an extraordinary journey. Born to parents who fled Uganda during Idi Amin’s brutal regime, Patel rose through the ranks of federal service, from prosecuting terrorists to serving as Chief of Staff at the Department of Defense. Along the way, he became a prominent figure in counterterrorism and intelligence, playing key roles in reshaping national security policies and challenging institutional norms.

[caption id="attachment_61121" align="alignnone" width="1600"]Kash Patel | FBI Director | Donald Trump administration | Global Indian Kash Patel is President-elect Donald Trump's pick for FBI director.[/caption]

Early Education and Legal Career

Kash Patel initially wanted to become a doctor, a career path he soon abandoned after a college guidance counselor laid out the extensive time and effort required. "Acting like a stereotypical Indian American, I grew up wanting to be a doctor," Patel recalls. "I took one look at the med school program and said, ‘Nope, I’m out.’” The counselor’s explanation of the long, grueling path ahead—years of medical school followed by residency—prompted him to reconsider.

Patel’s career pivot came unexpectedly when he worked as a caddy at the Garden City Country Club in Long Island during high school. There, he encountered defense lawyers who sparked his interest in law. “I didn’t understand exactly what they did, but being a lawyer seemed interesting,” Patel writes. This exposure led him to law school, and after completing his education at Pace University, he shifted to public defense, where he gained vital courtroom experience. “The most effective way to reach the right results is to have the right process,” he reflects on his time as a public defender.

After earning his law degree from Pace University and a certificate in international law from University College London, Patel faced the harsh reality of a competitive job market. He found that, as a fresh law school graduate, he wasn’t able to secure the position he initially hoped for in the federal government. “It wasn’t until I became a public defender that I truly understood what it meant to fight for justice,” Patel wrote.

Kash Patel | FBI Director | Donald Trump administration | Global Indian

He knew he wanted to be in law school but wasn't thrilled by the idea of being a defense lawyer. However, it seemed the perfect way to climb the economic ladder, he writes in his book. "Instead of being a first-generation immigrant golf caddy, I could be a first-generation immigration lawyer at a white shoe firm making a ton of money." With that, he cajoled himself into attending law school. Unfortunately for him, life didn't quite pan out like John Grisham's The Firm. He put in as many applications as he could, but top-tier law firms simply weren't queuing up to hire him. "It was certainly humbling, he admits, but I think the universe was planning something much better by pushing me in a different direction."

Finding his feet as a lawyer

Having been sidestepped by the glamorous 'white shoe' firms, Patel needed a new dream. He chose to be a public defender simply because he had enjoyed a class on trial litigation back in law school. It wasn't much of a reason, but he reckoned it was "worth a shot." That's how Patel landed up in Miami-Dade, Florida, working at what he later learned was the top defense office in the country. He got the job and was learning from the best.

Even then, however, the shoe didn't quite fit. In college, Patel's politics had started drifting to the right, but when he began his career he found that public defenders aren't "just left-wing; they are to the far left of the left wing." He was disillusioned to see that tended to go soft on criminals, who had a 'bad upbringing, or because they didn't hurt the victims that badly'. However, despite these political differences, he loved his job. "I always cared about justice and wanted those who did good to be rewarded and those wrongdoers to be punished." And, as a public defender, he learned life didn't always work that way. Public defenders weren't spirited superheroes who locked up criminals in prison and threw away the key; they were the ones who ensured 'due process'. Less glamorous, maybe, but essential to keep the system in check.

After Miami-Dade, Patel spent nine years in the Southern District of Florida, where he "regularly stood toe-to-toe in the courtroom against federal prosecutors." He took on high-profile cases, including one of the biggest narco-trafficking cases in the history of the district, where he reprented Jose Luis Buitrago, a Colombian accused of drug smuggling.

Counter-terrorism at the Department of Justice

Kash Patel | FBI Director | Donald Trump administration | Global Indian

After nearly a decade, which came with wins and controversies in equal measure, Kash Patel's time as a public defender came to an end. He was then hired by the National Security Division in the Department of Justice headquarters in Washington DC as a terrorism prosecutor. "I had enjoyed my time as a public defender," he writes, "But after nine years, I wanted to help convict terrorists the right way. And then there's the fact that a job as a federal prosecutor at Main Justice is a dream job for a young and ambitious lawyer.

He began work in the winter of 2013, which was around the time when the world was beginning to hear about ISIS for the first time. His first case took him to Tajikistan for a case involving Omar Faraj Saeed al-Hardan, who was being prosecuted for working with ISIS. This was followed by the hugely sensational Benghazi attack, which claimed the life of US Ambassador Stevens. Patel was part of the team conducting a criminal investigation into the Benghazi tragedy, which he described as "a real-deal national security investigation created to assemble mountains of evidence." As part of one of the US' top special-ops teams, he was to help assist in the legal side of things for the US Special Operations Command.

Patel was recruited to the Donald Trump Administration as the Deputy Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Counterterrorism at the National Security Council, according to TIME Magazine. By then, he had also served as Chief of Staff to Christopher Miller, the then Acting Secretary of Defense, and as an aide to Devin Nunes, former California representative and House Intelligence Committee Chair. His time as an aide was during the FBI inquiry into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

According to TIME, Trump had even "floated the idea of Patel being the FBI's deputy director." This idea had been vetoed, and according to former Attorney General William Barr, who wrote in his memoir, One Damn Thing After Another, "Patel had virtually no experience that would qualify him to serve at the highest level of the world's preeminent law enforcement agency."

However, Patel maintained his close ties to President Trump, even after he left the White House. He also pleaded the Fifth and refused to testify against Trump before a federal grand jury during the investigation into Trump's classified documents. However, he did go on to testify after being granted immunity by the Justice Department.

Kash will get confirmed by the Senate. He is a man of honour, unquestionable loyalty, and an American patriot. Kash is the son of Indian immigrants who escaped Uganda's genocidal dictator, Idi Amit. He WILL restore and uphold the rule of law, and the FBI will be premier again. - Congressman-elect Abe Hamadeh

"Comprehensive housecleaning"

In keeping with the President elect's plans to conduct a major overhaul of all federal organizations, Patel has always taken a hardline, critical approach to the FBI. In Government Gangsters, he writes, "The FBI has become so thoroughly compromised that it will remain a threat to the people unless drastic measures are taken." Patel has even said that he intends to shut down the FBI headquarters and reopen them as a "museum of the deep state."

From the young golf caddy who had no idea what he wanted from life to rising through the ranks of the justice system in America and becoming one of its most outspoken critics, Kash Patel has come a long way. Despite being a staunch American patriot, Patel has maintained his "very deep connection with India" and was raised a Hindu, a faith he continues to keep.

  • Follow Kash Patel on X
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Dipak C Jain: Small town boy to global management guru  

(Aug 1, 2023) On his first day as Dean at the Kellogg School of Management, Professor Dipak C Jain stepped onto stage, before the MBA class of 650 students to make the customary commencement address. A few minutes in, the director of corporate communications rushed up to him and whispered in his ear, "There has been a terror attack. You need to end your speech before the phones start ringing." That was September 11, 2001. "Who could have anticipated that event," Professor Jain asked, in a talk for SolBridge International School of Business, back in 2018. "Nobody. But what we did know is that when the students graduated, the economic conditions wouldn't be good." Dealing with crisis Flights resumed regular services a month later, on October 3, 2001 - Jain is specific about the date, he remembers it well. "For the next few months, hardly a day passed when I wasn't on a flight, going to meet a potential recruiter." Students, Jain emphasises, come to business school with certain aspirations, they expect good teaching and a good placement, too. When he called his peers at Stanford and Harvard, they were resigned to the situation. "They told me, 'Dipak, it will

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the situation. "They told me, 'Dipak, it will affect all of us'. That much is true but how we react can be different." He could use it as an excuse, or do something about it. He chose the latter.

[caption id="attachment_29919" align="aligncenter" width="588"] Professor Dipak Jain. Photo: Twitter[/caption]

 

"We all live under the same sky but seem to have different horizons," Jain said in a lecture. That year, aside from flying out to meet recruiters, he also wrote to his old students, asking them for work for his fresh graduates. That letter, as it happened, got into the press. Jain was approached by CNN's Lou Dobbs, asking him to appear on the show. He couldn't make it that day but Dobbs ran with the story anyway, saying, "Kellogg Dean begging for jobs." Jain saw it as "the best publicity you can get without paying for advertising." He flew out to meet recruiters. The following year, Kellogg School of Management had the highest placement rate and was rated by Businessweek as the 'top business school in the world'.

Currently, the Global Indian is the co-president and Global Advisor of the China Europe International Business School (CEIBS), before which he was Director, Sasin Graduate Institute of Business Administration of Chulalongkom University in Bangkok. After eight years as Dean at the Kellogg School of Management, Jain stepped down in 2009. Two years later, he served for three years as a Dean of INSEAD, from 2011 to March 2013. "I was the first Dean of a European School," he remarked. "It's much more difficult in France than most other places to be accepted, as an Indian.” Jain also serves as an Independent Director on the Board of Reliance Industries Limited and has been a consultant with Microsoft, American Express, Eli Lilly and Company and Hyatt International.

Difficult beginnings

Dipak Chand Jain was born in a small town in Assam, to a "blind father and a mother who never went to school." His grandfather, who had been a schoolteacher, would tell him, "Your father has never seen light. Make sure that you always spread it to the world." Life was tough in his home town as his school had no tables or chairs, or paper to write on. Students sat cross-legged on the floor and scribbled on slates with pieces of chalk, committing what they wrote to memory before they erased it. There was no university either.

[caption id="attachment_29916" align="aligncenter" width="506"] Prof Jain with alumni from CEIBS[/caption]

Finding success  

In 1976, when it was Jain's turn to graduate, he topped the university. For a young boy with very few opportunities in life, it was a major milestone. When he finished his honours in Mathematics from Dharam College in Tezpur, he left home for the first time in 25 years. "My father took me to the bus station in Guwahati and I got on a bus for the first time. Who knew that I would one day go on to become the director of United Airlines?" From this, he learned what he calls one of the major attributes to his success. "There are no shortcuts in life. I did my high school, college, a Master's and a PhD. These things take time. Nothing good happens quickly."

There are no shortcuts in life. I did my high school, college, a Master's and a PhD. These things take time. Nothing good happens quickly.

Ten years later, after his PhD, Jain was a student of Mathematics with no business school background. He received his first job offer, to teach a course in marketing at the Kellogg School of Management. His first encounter with Dean Donald Jacobs, who would go on to be a lifelong colleague, mentor and friend, came at the end of his first year. Jain arrived at the faculty dinner where Dean Jacobs stood and decided to introduce himself. "He took one look at me and lost his temper. I had no idea what I had done wrong. He told me to leave."

The importance of feedback

Jain decided to stick around for the dinner anyway, thinking that his departure would reflect poorly on his boss. The next day, a superior told him that no harm was meant by the incident and not to take the matter personally. It was another mantra he adopted for the rest of his life. "Don't take things personally. And when you're given feedback, accept it with gratitude. The same man who yelled at me in public made me deputy dean, a candidate for the next dean. A football coach told me once that he only yells at players in whom he sees potential."

At the start of his teaching career in 1998, Jain found a group of students waiting outside his office one evening to tell him, "Professor, we have come to the conclusion that you don't know the subject." Jain admitted he was new to it, having had no B-school experience. "They said, we are not here to complain but we believe that there is a great teacher inside of you. We are here to promise that we will make you the best teacher you can be." They stuck to their word, bringing him magazine articles and copies of the Wall Street Journal that Jain could use as case studies in his classes. When he became Dean, Jain began to organise an informal session for students and faculty, where the former could freely express their opinions.

Don't take things personally. And when you're given feedback, accept it with gratitude. The same man who yelled at me in public made me deputy dean, a candidate for the next dean. A football coach told me once that he only yells at players in whom he sees potential.

When Jacobs died at the age of 90, Jain, who was in Delhi heading for the funeral, received a call from his daughter. "She said, 'Dipak, dad passed away. Come quickly.' He had made me the trustree of his wealth. Building trust with people will make you what you are."

INSEAD, France  

In May 2011, Jain accepted the post as a Dean at INSEAD in France, fascinated by the idea of a one-year MBA. At the time, Jain was involved in two other projects as well - creating a business school in Bangladesh and focussing on entrepreneurship and small business management for women in countries like Afghanistan, Sri Lanka and Pakistan, as well as starting a university in Angola. "For global prosperity and peace, we have to target women," he said, at the time of his appointment, in 2010.

With areas of interest that include market segmentation, competitive market structure analysis, marketing of high-tech products and cross-culture issues in global product diffusion, as well as forecasting models, Jain has published over fifty articles and is the author of Marketing Moves: A New Approach to Profits, Growth and Renewal. "Business school is about structured thinking. Solving problems means developing that structured approach." The real-world problems are many - soon, the world will have a large ageing population, with increasing lifespans indicating that the duration of retirement could be as long as the time spent working. "How do we engage the retired population?" This is the age, he says, of "human capital," and the core purpose of business education is "shaping and attracting human talent."

Follow Professor Dipak C. Jain on Twitter or listen to him on YouTube

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The Complete Woman: Nawaz Modi Singhania is shaping fitness in India

(June 5, 2023) Nawaz Modi Singhania, a prominent figure in the field of fitness and wellness, captivates attention with her diverse expertise and achievements. As a versatile artist, yoga expert, fitness trainer, motivational speaker, and spiritualist, her contributions have resonated across various domains. With an unwavering dedication to her craft, Nawaz Modi Singhania has made a profound impact, inspiring countless individuals along the way. The wife of business tycoon Gautam Singhania, Chairman and MD of the Raymond Group, Nawaz's dynamic lifestyle is a testament to her passion and relentless pursuit of excellence. In an exclusive interview with Global Indian, Nawaz opens up about her multifaceted journey, sharing valuable insights into her remarkable career. She is the founder of Body Art Fitness and was the first to offer equipment-based pilates and gyrotronics in India. “No two days are the same for me as I go about my work, which involves so many things. I can certainly never complain about having a dull moment,” she smiles.  Call to action  By her own admission, Nawaz Modi Singhania was tiny, petite and weak from her early childhood days. “In school, when we would line up in front of the physical education teacher to do summersaults and

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By her own admission, Nawaz Modi Singhania was tiny, petite and weak from her early childhood days. “In school, when we would line up in front of the physical education teacher to do summersaults and my turn came, the teacher would just look at me, shake his head, roll his eyes and say, ‘Oh never mind. Just go!’,” recalls the 51-year-old. Those formative experiences helped her realise that she had to take fitness and wellness into her own hands, for the sake of her health and quality of life.   

“Fitness to me is everything – quality of life, health and ultimately - self esteem, in a nutshell. It ensures I turn up as the best version of myself,” feels Nawaz, for whom spreading fitness with all it’s benefits to as many people as she can, is a mission. 

[caption id="attachment_39627" align="aligncenter" width="365"] Nawaz Modi Singhania[/caption]

Childhood in Mumbai 

Born in Mumbai, Nawaz went to pre-school in the New Activity School at Hughes Road. Thereafter from the 1st to the 10th grade, she studied at the Cathedral and John Connon school in Mumbai.  

Her family consisted of her father, her mother – who had left the family by the time she was aged 10, – and an elder and younger brother. “My father is a lawyer. Both my brothers got into the law and are practicing lawyers, my elder brother is a Senior Counsel at the Bombay High Court,” informs Nawaz, who is a Law graduate herself but never practiced it, as she was always passionate about fitness.  

“I was not into sports at a young age, and got into fitness only in college. I was born frail, under-weight, white as a sheet, with the umbilical cord having gone around my neck four times over and choked me as a result; I was thought to be still-born. But you now know that I wasn’t!,” quips Nawaz, who did her Junior College and Bachelor of Arts at the St. Xavier‘s College in Mumbai.   

Thereafter, she studied Law at the Government Law College and the KC Law College, both in Mumbai, and became a Law graduate. “Simultaneously I traveled to America where I got trained and certified as a Fitness Professional at the American Council of Exercise (ACE) and the International Dance Exercise Association (IDEA), where I taught for experience before returning to India to start my own brand (Body Art Fitness centres) in Mumbai,” says the Mumbaikar. 

Carving her niche 

Having no other place, Nawaz, then 21, initially started the fitness centre in the hall of her family home, while her place was being renovated on another floor in the same building. “I first started out just with an Aerobic Studio, with very few classes in terms of variety and also number of batches,” recalls Nawaz, who quickly built up on that to about 25 different routines of completely different genres and many more classes running through the day, seven days a week.  

“Somewhere down the line, I added on a gym and later on, I pioneered the first equipment-based Pilates & Gyrotonics Studio in India. Next came an Aerial Arts Studio, Personal Training, and more,” informs Nawaz. The business soon expanded into a second location, followed by a third and fourth. Different centres would have different facilities, including Aqua Aerobics, Aqua Yoga, Spinning, amongst others.  

“The offerings we have are humongous, and unlike many other centres, which just have a gym offering, we don’t have just one pill for every disease,” says Nawaz, whose fitness centres have a large variety of offerings just in her aerobic workshops. Presently, she runs five centres across Mumbai and has further expansion plans.  

Nawaz’s fitness plan  

“I am a long distance horse,” she says, about her own regimen. “I keep fit by teaching Body Art classes. It is sub-maximal work. On the days I might not be teaching, I get a Pilates workout in,” says Nawaz, who works out six days a week on an average. Depending on what kind of fitness routine she is following or teaching, her taste of music differs. “The music could widely vary from rock, pop, jazz, house, acid, lounge, hip-hop, Hindi, Punjabi, and more,” she says. 

Nawaz specialises in power yoga as well. Ask her which one is more beneficial, yoga or workouts, she says it is important to cross train and engage in a large variety of fitness routines. “A particular workout will work for you, only up to a point – after which both physically and mentally one stagnates and does not see any further tangible benefits,” she explains adding that people get bored of the routine and its monotony. It ends up losing interest and ditch the exercise programme, she says.  

She feels the body has to be challenged differently, for which it’s important to keep engaging in different activities to see the results in terms of fat loss, weight loss, toning, strengthening, flexibility, mobility, health benefits, and more. “Yoga is just one of our many offerings. All in all, we offer well over 30 genres of fitness routines,” informs Nawaz.  

Move away from fitness talk and Nawaz comes across as a very passionate artist and art collector. “Its a very individual and personal journey into the depths of myself, my subconscious and core, crossing back and forth between worlds and realms, breaking barriers and more,” she feels. 

The artist and author 

Nawaz makes it a point to visit art galleries across the world during her travels. “I find art, history and culture intensely fascinating from the point of view of having an insight into the trajectory of mankind from wherever their individual beginning might have been,” she says. 

Elaborating further, Nawaz says unanswered questions about why it is that we are where we are, and why it is that things are the way they are — can all be traced back in a very logical and fulfilling manner.  “I find that riveting. Everything is inter-generationally linked, and to uncover the mysteries of life today, I find that in looking back, I excavate very plausible, relatable answers,” she says. 

Her upcoming book, Time Arrest, published by Penguin Random House, is being launched in August 2023. “It would give the best possible peak into my journey as a life coach,” she informs. 

Juggling so many roles is not easy. For Nawaz, everyday is very different from the last. Focussing on growth and management of Body Art, managing all matters related to her household, her children apart, she handles her father’s requirements and his household as well. “Besides, my varied involvement with the Raymond group of companies, my writing, painting, travel, social and other obligations that need to be met keep me busy,” smiles Nawaz. 

Future plans 

There are many future plans and mini projects in the pipeline, says Nawaz, who feels it’s best to keep them to oneself till they actually materialize. “Call me superstitious, or the fact that energy is very real and if it stays within you, it comes out in the right way, but if it leaves you in the wrong way, it perhaps never manifests. What I do will speak for itself, rather than just my words. Time will tell,” she says. 

Nawaz says she has been lucky enough to engage in all her hobbies adequately. “I am very creative with my hands and fascinated with all things to do with the mind, psychiatry and psychosis,” says Nawaz, who watches TV just for News. For Knowledge, she tunes into Nat Geo and the Discovery Channel! “I consume a lot of educational content on YouTube. When time permits, I enjoy the odd Netflix flick.” 

The Singhania family loves travelling. “I am very well-travelled, though there are a few places I still have on my bucket list. Mostly that’s to do with Safari. The Amazon jungle, Botswana, Madagascar, Brazil are my dream vacays,” she informs. 

Follow Nawaz on Instagram.

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Turkish Delight: Adeeb Shah brings the best of Turkish cuisine to the world through the Kofteci Group

(August 5, 2024) Adeeb Shah, co-founder of Kofteci Group, started his career as a qualified corporate lawyer, but has gone on to make his mark in the restaurant business. His aim: to bring Turkish cuisine to the world. In 2018, Aasim and his brother broke into the F&B business for the first time, and sold kebabs out of a kiosk in Chennai. The restaurant, Kebapci, became popular and it was time to open up a restaurant. Their flagship restaurant, Oz by Kebapci, is spread out across 6000 square feet in UB City, Bengaluru. At Klava, also in Bengaluru, the cafe specializes in authentic, high quality baklavas. Straddling his reach between India and the Middle East, Adeeb Shah is making his mark in these countries in more ways than one. Early Days Adeeb was born and raised in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. After a couple of years in the Middle east, his family moved to India in the early 2000s, where he completed his law degree. Even as a student in law school, Adeeb was helping out at his brother’s F&B startup, and interned with various companies. “I joined a corporate law firm as soon as I finished law school, and around

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MsoNormal" style="background: white;">Adeeb was born and raised in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. After a couple of years in the Middle east, his family moved to India in the early 2000s, where he completed his law degree. Even as a student in law school, Adeeb was helping out at his brother’s F&B startup, and interned with various companies. “I joined a corporate law firm as soon as I finished law school, and around the same time, my brother had started Kebapci,” Adeeb tells Global Indian.

Going into business with his brother had always been part of the plan, and Adeeb began overseeing sales and operations early on in Kebapci’s journey. He would finish work and then be at the restaurant, which opened at 6 pm and shut at 2 am. “My entrepreneurship journey began when I became involved in restaurant operations, which was a mammoth task even though it was just a 350 sq ft store,” Adeeb recalls.

[caption id="attachment_53296" align="aligncenter" width="378"]Adeeb Shah | Kofteci Group | Global Indian Adeeb Shah, co-founder, Kofteci[/caption]

Law Path

Adeeb used his experience as a corporate lawyer to his advantage. During his internships, he had been exposed to various startup private equity, mergers and acquisitions and corporate structuring deals in India and cross border as well. “Hence, I was exposed to various discussions with startup founders, entrepreneurs, investors, venture capitalists which fuelled my interest further in startups and helped me understand how they function,” he says. However, moving from a structured legal environment to the dynamic world of entrepreneurship required a significant mindset shift. “But the feeling of being able to directly have an impact on the food industry also makes it reward,” he says.

Food Calling

Although the idea of venturing into F&B came from his elder brother Aasim, both brothers had been passionate about food from a very young age. “We have been exploring restaurants during most of our travels even before we ventured into the food business. Sometimes we would have dinners at three different restaurants when we were short on time,” he says. However, he admits that the food industry is incredibly demanding, as it requires long hours, meticulous attention to detail, and constant new food dishes innovation to stay ahead.

Chipping Away

He also says that his motivation and drive come from some critical sources. He first credits his elder brother, Aasim Shah, who has always been a significant influence in his life, who believed that as brothers they could be the strongest founding team to drive the business onwards and upwards. “Additionally, our family plays a crucial role in my motivation as their unwavering belief in me and their constant encouragement have been a driving force behind our efforts. Beyond personal influences, I am driven by passion for creating a legacy restaurant chain alongside my brother and our team with constant creativity and innovation,” he says.

[caption id="attachment_53297" align="aligncenter" width="521"]Adeeb Shah | Kofteci Group | Global Indian Oz by the Kofteci Group, at UB City, Bangalore[/caption]

Wise Words

His advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is clear. “I can never emphasize enough on how important perseverance is, focusing on quality output and building a strong network. One of the other crucial parts is staying resilient, as that is the only thing that would help one navigate challenges and roadblocks,” he says. Admitting that every startup has its own methodologies and comes with its share of setbacks, he says that maintaining a resilient mindset has helped them push through tough times. “We view challenges as opportunities to learn and grow, which has enabled us to come out stronger on the other side. Also, I have stopped looking at all problems and challenges in a consolidated manner as it will always stress any level of startup founder, therefore we gun down one problem at a time as it helps to pull through the issue and keep sanity in some situations,” he says.

So far, Adeeb says he has learned that financial discipline, customer-centric approach, value of innovation and speed of innovation are of paramount importance. “Amidst all the challenges and changes, staying true to our core values and vision that is quality over everything has provided direction and purpose. It has kept us grounded and focused on what truly matters,” he adds.

[caption id="attachment_53298" align="aligncenter" width="610"]Adeeb Shah | Kofteci | Klava | Global Indian Klava, by the Kofteci Group[/caption]

Future Calling

In his free time, when he can find it, he tries to plan to travel at least once a quarter. He particularly enjoys exploring new places and experiencing different cultures and cuisines. “Traveling not only provides a break from routine but also offers fresh inspiration and ideas. It is a different story, as to how there are no breaks in real sense,” he smiles. And with the duo currently working on opening Kebapci Hills, a flagship Turkish restaurant in Hyderabad shortly, he has limited free time.

“Further, with a recent presence in Dubai, UAE with one of our brands Klava (a Premium Turkish Patisserie), we are also aiming at expanding Kebapci internationally in the next few years. We are also working on a unique, distinct, and interesting restaurant concept which may soon debut in Bangalore or Delhi. Notwithstanding the foregoing, we will continue to innovate and constantly focus on always bettering our food game in India,” he concludes.

Follow the Kofteci Group on Instagram.

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

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

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

 

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

Mind your language! 

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

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

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

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

Love, actually

 

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

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

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

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

Aam and Basil

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

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

 

View this post on Instagram

 

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

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

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

The ties that bind

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

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

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

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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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