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Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryMadhubani to Mississippi: Prakash Kumar Jha cultivates success in agricultural sciences and mentorship
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Madhubani to Mississippi: Prakash Kumar Jha cultivates success in agricultural sciences and mentorship

Written by: Amrita Priya

(June 19, 2024) After earning a fully funded admission into a PhD program in Crop and Soil Sciences at Michigan State University, Prakash Kumar Jha, a native of Madhubani in Bihar, first landed in the US nine years ago. He was met with culture shock and a desperate need to fit in, which required improving his English and adjusting his accent to match the new environment.

This adjustment took months. Having experienced the struggles of gaining admission abroad and then striving to excel and integrate as a student, Prakash found his calling in helping others transition smoothly from students in India to scholars abroad. “In my initiative, I have mentored more than 1,000 young graduates by offering them advice on academic and career opportunities,” Prakash tells Global Indian.

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

Prakash Kumar Jha

His professional and voluntary accomplishments led the assistant professor of Mississippi State University to receive the Foreign Fellow Award recently from the Society for Science of Climate Change and Sustainable Environment (SSCE), an NCR-based organisation. “Usually, the Fellow Award from SSCE is conferred on senior members who are in their 50s and 60s, but for the first time in their history, they have awarded a member who is below 40,” the 34-year-old remarks.

Mentoring – a passion

Apart from working as a researcher and academic in the US, Prakash is part of several professional organisations. As a mentor, he not only guides young people on how to improve their competency but also connects them with the professional organisations he is involved with, helping them enhance their exposure and increase their networking opportunities.

One such organisation is SYAHI – Society of Young Agricultural and Hydrology Scholars of India, which he co-founded in 2019. “Now, it’s a group of 1,000 members from 40 countries,” he says. Prakash is also associated with Agricultural Scientists of Indian Origin, a voluntary organisation with members from across the globe. For a two-year term, he has been designated as the Liaison Officer to build collaborations between Indian and US agricultural scientists. He also serves as the chairperson of the agricultural vertical and secretary of the Global Indian Scientist and Technocrat Forum (GIST)—USA.

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

Prakash Kumar Jha

Staying connected with roots

Although Prakash looks at the US as the place that helped him build his identity, develop confidence, and find his path in life, his love for India and his fellow countrymen is central to many of his initiatives and associations.

He is associated as the adjunct faculty of agricultural meteorology, University of Agricultural and Horticultural Sciences, Shimoga, Karnataka, and precision agriculture, Shere-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, Jammu.

As a mentor of Indian students aspiring to study abroad, he says he tries to respond to queries immediately, even if it is late hours in the US. “I find satisfaction in helping others and sharing my expertise whenever I can.”

Calling SYAHI his passion project, Prakash and his team have built a consortium of early career researchers to develop collaboration, build networks, share research, and make more connected actions in the field of hydrology and agricultural sciences. “Helping develop the overall agricultural ecosystem is something that I am deeply passionate about,” he says.

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

Prakash Kumar Jha

The team also mentors young graduate students focusing on training them to gain admission abroad, submit research proposals, secure research grants, write research papers, and work on agritech startup ideas.

Looking at adversities as advantage

Prakash had been a good student in his childhood, earning admission to Navodaya Vidyalaya on merit — a remarkable achievement given his humble background. This achievement entitled him to free education, clothing, lodging, and food from standard six to twelve. However, he also faced failures. “I do not hide the fact that I was not able to clear the medical entrance exams despite two attempts,” he says. “Rather, I now feel happy that it led me to the path of agriculture.” Someone suggested he take up agricultural sciences when he was unable to clear the medical entrance exams, and he now feels grateful that the initial plan did not work out, as it led him to a field he finds most interesting.

After completing his bachelor’s in agricultural sciences from BHU, Prakash pursued a master’s in environmental sciences from the Centre for Environment Science and Climate Resilient Agriculture at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi. Following this, he earned his PhD in crop and soil sciences from the Department of Plant, Soil, and Microbial Sciences at Michigan State University.

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

As soon as he completed his PhD, the world was engulfed by the COVID-19 pandemic. The appointments at universities where he wanted to work as faculty were stalled. It was a sudden disruption in his career plans. Nevertheless, he took the setback in his stride and found a postdoctoral research opportunity at Kansas State University. “During this time, I focused on creating a repertoire of research papers, which helped enhance my CV,” he says.

After three years, he finally landed a job as an assistant professor at Mississippi State University. Prakash now has more than 50 research papers to his credit.

Making a mark

Prakash is grateful to his mentors, including Professor Vara Prasad, Professor of crop ecophysiology and Director of the Centre for Sorghum Improvement in the Department of Agronomy at Kansas State University.

Through his hard work, he achieved notable recognitions, such as the Best Graduate Student Award in 2017 from the Department of Plant, Soil, and Microbial Sciences at Michigan State University. In 2019, Prakash was awarded the Dr Delia Koo Global Student Scholarship for his contributions to South Asia scientific collaboration at Michigan State University. The same year, he was honoured with the National Young Scientist Award by the All-India Agricultural Students Association and the Indian Council of Agricultural Research.

Later, he received the Outstanding Postdoc Award at the annual meeting of the Association of Agricultural Scientists of Indian Origin held in Salt Lake City, Utah. Recently, he was conferred the International Young Scientist Award from Bihar Agricultural University. “I see awards as inspiration to achieve more,” he says.

Indians in USA | Prakash Kumar Jha | Global Indian

Prakash Kumar Jha conducting a field visit

As a scientist and academic, Prakash specialises in agronomy and plant sciences. His research interests include investigating the impact of agronomic management on crop growth and development. His work focuses on understanding the complexities of agricultural systems, integrating crop simulation models, remote sensing, and climate forecasts to develop decision support systems for improved management strategies in crop production.

Prakash Kumar Jha’s journey of transition from a Madhubani boy to a researcher and academic in the US, and a mentor to aspiring students, is a result of his dedication to agricultural sciences and his commitment to guiding the next generation of scholars – all while taking setbacks in stride and turning them into opportunities for growth and success.

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vivekanand jha
vivekanand jha
June 22, 2024 5:19 pm

Congratulations! Wish many more accomplishments under his name! God bless!

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Published on 19, Jun 2024

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ds/2022/02/rahulchari5.jpg" alt="Digital Payments | Rahul Chari | Founder Of PhonePe" width="639" height="426" /> Rahul Chari with his co-founder Sameer Nigam[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_20391" align="aligncenter" width="542"]Digital Payments | Rahul Chari | Founder Of PhonePe Rahul Chari with the PhonePe team[/caption]

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[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bLGhH6GJBj4[/embed]

 

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  • Follow Rahul Chari on LinkedIn 

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determined to follow through on her plan.

How a childhood dream found wings

Born in Kozhikode to Malayalam Muslim parents, Nazia found herself attracted to the game even as a child. After her parents' divorce when she was five, Nazia moved to Chennai with her mother who was then a teacher. But summer vacations took her back to her hometown each year where she fell in love with football. "I loved the way football brought the entire town together and it was the best show of secularism. It was at this tender age that my affinity towards football began to grow," she tells Global Indian in an exclusive interview from London where she has kick started the first leg of her course.

[caption id="attachment_10971" align="aligncenter" width="392"]Aisha Nazia Aisha Nazia at Old Trafford Stadium, Manchester[/caption]

While the soccer field made Nazia quite happy, she was equally ecstatic nestled between her pile of books. After securing the eighth rank in mechanical engineering at University of Kerala, she found herself working with the Indian Oil-Adani Group Pvt Ltd in Kochi in 2017. Two years before she entered the corporate world though, Nazia had volunteered as a football facilitator for the 2015 National Games that were held in Kerala. Then a third year student at TKM College of Engineering, she heard about the games being held in her city and couldn't let the opportunity slip by. "It gave me the perfect exposure to the sporting industry and the workings of it," she adds.

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A chance meeting 

After working with the best for a few years and gaining valuable insights into the world of sports management, Nazia knew she was ready to take it a notch higher with the FIFA Master course, something she had heard about six years ago. "While volunteering at the National Games in 2015, a referee from Tamil Nadu who had trained under the Premiere League saw potential in me and encouraged me to take up the FIFA Master course," adds Nazia. But she wanted to give herself four years after her graduation before taking a plunge into any Masters program.

[caption id="attachment_10974" align="aligncenter" width="395"]Aisha Nazia Aisha Nazia at NBA matches in India.[/caption]

So when the entire world came to a standstill in 2020 and sporting events became a rarity, Nazia knew it was the right time to pursue her FIFA Master dream. "The selection process for this course is like it would be for an Ivy league school. This year 32 students were selected from a pool of 700 applicants across 29+ countries," adds the Kozhikode native. The one year course will have Nazia travel to three countries (England, Italy and Switzerland) to complete her Masters in Management, Law and Humanities of Sport.

Crowdfunding, not charity

If securing a seat among 700 students wasn't a rigorous process, Nazia found herself raising 22,000 CHF (approximately ₹28 lakh) for the course. She is one among the three students to have secured a merit scholarship which has halved her course fee, but the amount is still heavy on her pocket. "In a country like India, you can apply for an education loan against mortgage of property or gold, and I had nothing as security. Crowdfunding seemed like a wise decision to raise money for my education," says Nazia.

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[caption id="attachment_10977" align="aligncenter" width="423"]Aisha Nazia Aisha Nazia at Indian Super League 2019-2020[/caption]

With GoFundMe inaccessible to Indians, Nazia opted for Ketto to raise money for her education. "In India, crowdfunding is mostly restricted to medical emergencies, so my plea to raise money for education falls a little short in comparison to their issues."

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[caption id="attachment_10979" align="aligncenter" width="575"]Aisha Nazia Aisha Nazia at a sporting event.[/caption]

The future

Nazia, who is currently at De Montfort University in Leicester, is excited for the program. "It will be an enriching experience with lots of learning and field trips. After completing three months in the UK, we will move to Italy for the next quarter. And the last six months will be in Switzerland, which is also the headquarters of FIFA. Getting to work with their management will be exciting. Also, at the end of course, FIFA selects three people for employment," reveals Nazia.

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mbed]https://twitter.com/HakimHabibulla/status/1418132814600433673?s=20[/embed]

A holistic approach

NimbleQ’s holistic skills development programme focuses on building the next generation of leaders, creators, and entrepreneurs, and it was developed by the US-returned Varshney and his wife Shailey Motial, who handles brand development and strategies. 

What started as an after-school curriculum, now focusses on helping youngsters to innovate. “The idea is to get children to think independently like creators. While it is important to learn all things tech-related, it is also important that children know how to apply the knowledge, understand business, entrepreneurship, and money,” says Madhukar, who was in the US for 20 years thanks to the citizenship he was awarded under the Outstanding Researcher Category in 2009. 

[caption id="attachment_16994" align="aligncenter" width="4898"]Global Indian Madhukar Varshney Madhukar Varshney with students during a NimbleQ class[/caption]

Raised in a very conventional family in Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh), entrepreneurship didn’t even cross his mind. Born in 1974 to a father, who was a government contractor father, and teacher mother, Madhukar grew up believing that the route to success was through a US education. “Career choices then were either as doctors or engineers. I’d never thought about starting up. When I moved to the US, I got the opportunity to explore with an exposure to diverse cultures and professional experiences,” recalls Madhukar, who graduated in chemical engineering from HPTI, Kanpur, and then did a master’s and PhD in biomedical engineering from the University of Arkansas. 

Madhukar then worked at Cornell University as a research associate studying micro and nanomechanical cantilever-based sensors. A job at NABsys, a company which develops semiconductor-based tools for genomic analysis, came next. 

The researcher turned educationist 

During his career as a researcher, Madhukar published over 35 papers and owns three patents. Bitten by the entrepreneurial bug, he decided to branch out on his own. In 2014, he set up his first company Forty-Five NE, a digital healthcare company that influences disease outcomes by empowering patients to get involved in self-care. 

[caption id="attachment_16984" align="aligncenter" width="1065"]Global Indian Madhukar Varshney Madhukar Varshney with his wife and co-founder Shailey Motial[/caption]

He ran the Massachusetts-based company for two years. The Varshneys then began searching for something empowering in education. “We weren’t too happy about where the education system was headed. For instance, in India, students are not encouraged to question. There is no room for creativity, independence or leadership qualities. In the US too, though the system is different, there is still a loophole that needs to be plugged,” he tells Global Indian. 

The seed was planted, and the couple moved lock, stock, barrel and family, to India and set up NimbleQ in 2017. Headquartered in Lucknow, NimbleQ is aimed at developing nimbleness of the mind. “They say that intelligence and capability are not natural talents; they are built by the flexibility of the mind. At NimbleQ, that’s what we aim to do: we encourage students to learn how to learn, question, focus, (even) fail and take in their stride and begin again,” says the founder of the so far bootstrapped startup. 

Designed to teach 

The NimbleQ experience is designed to teach kids to adapt, be flexible, question the status quo and adopt a holistic approach to life. “This is why business and entrepreneurship and understanding money are important aspects of the programme. So children are truly future ready,” he adds. 

[caption id="attachment_16986" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Global Indian Shailey Motial Shailey Motial[/caption]

With programmes aimed at kindergartners to class 10 students, the startup has already been seeing some very positive results. For instance, a six-year-old student of theirs, won a Business Idea Hackathon for suggesting that energy be harnessed from Mars. “We don’t want our engineers to build a Taj Mahal. What’s the point of a Taj Mahal if it cannot be sold? The idea is for our engineers to innovate and design buildings that can be scaled and sold,” says Madhukar. So far, about 4,000 students have signed up since they started, with 80,000 plus hours of classes conducted. 

The programmes are designed to treat students like adults, show them real time scenarios and what real jobs involve. After months of research, sit-downs with industry leaders, educationists, and researchers, Madhukar developed the programmes which today they are helmed by NimbleQ teachers (all engineers). 

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlpvltyIF9M[/embed]

The startup has students in India, US and UAE. Plans are afoot to resume offline classes again, with expansion plans. “We’re also looking to raise funding to aid these plans,” says Madhukar, who is headquartered in Lucknow and always wanted to start small. "We’re not in it for the race.” 

The father of two, loves to unwind with his children and encourages them to explore and question the world. 

“At the end of the day, we put the student at the centre. We treat them like grown-ups. We don’t restrict ourselves to premium schools, we want to democratise education and also tie up with mid-size and small schools,” says the entrepreneur, who loves to sketch. 

 

  • Follow Madhukar Varshney on LinkedIn.

 

 

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Story
Ananya Tiwari: Texas academic promoting STEM among rural Indian girls with SwaTaleem

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ds-2023" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-auth="NotApplicable" data-loopstyle="linkonly" data-linkindex="2">The Estée Lauder Companies Inc – which saw nominations spanning 45 countries across six continents. The award ceremony was held at New York in presence of the UN under-secretary general for global communications, Melissa Fleming.

This is one of many achievements for Ananya, who is an assistant professor at the Texas A&M University and the founder of the non profit, SwaTaleem. The foundation focuses on increasing STEM participation and aiding retention of adolescent rural girls in STEM education. In 2022, Google named Ananya as one of seven rising changemakers and a ‘Leader to Watch’.

[caption id="attachment_51731" align="aligncenter" width="640"]Indian Social Entrepreneur | Ananya Tiwari | Global indian Ananya shared the 2023 Nature Inspiring Women in Science Award with  Dr. Hortense LE FERRAND[/caption]

“One of the things that we want to do very strongly is to take this programme to as many girls as possible and so we are of course expanding in India. We are also very interested in collaborating with different entities across the world and are looking at a global expansion,” said Ananya.

SwaTaleem

“Over 53 million Girls between the ages of 12 to 18, many of whom are first- generation learners, hail from low socioeconomic backgrounds, rural and tribal areas. As of 2015, their school dropout rates are on the rise and over 13 million have been pushed into child marriages. SwaTaleem helps break this cycle of oppression and empowers these young Girls of tomorrow with the necessary skills and long-term support,” reads the SwaTaleem website. The initiative is running for the past six years in India.

SwaTaleem collaborates with Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya (KGBV) school girls their families, educators, and community women. These residential schools meant for the poorest of the poor were established by the government of India to provide quality education to girls from underprivileged communities. SwaTaleem has been working with 31 KGBVs in Delhi and Haryana – the state with one of the lowest literacy rates of girls.

https://youtu.be/J6xlxkTcMl0

The SwaTaleem empowerment story

Ananya Tiwari adopted the approach of empowering KGBV teachers and local women to support young girls by forming school clusters. Through the use of IVRS technology, SwaTaleem enables girls, parents, and teachers to participate in the development of life skills content collaboratively. This interactive engagement equips young girls to learn life skills easily, feel empowered and build aspirations.

SwaTaleem also works towards improving the skillsets of skill providers and educators in the villages.  “Some of the best days in SwaTaleem are when the team members across villages and districts come together to learn and grow, and find new ways to work with girls, teachers, parents and education system’s officials,” the Global Indian said.

The foundation conducts Internal Team Readiness Workshops for all the field team members, including Cluster Leads, Associate Cluster Leads, and Field Coordinators. The primary aim for these workshops is to establish strong connections among team members, enhance unity, encourage reflection on experiences and lessons learned from various field projects, prepare for upcoming interventions in the coming months, and review the annual calendar.

Since most field team members are women, when young girls see so many women facilitating education to them, they get empowered as they have grown up in environments where they have not seen women working.

Ananya Tiwari

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWXN0SzeZd4

Mai Bhi Curie

The foundation’s programme ‘Mai Bhi Curie’ which translates to ‘I can also be Curie’ in Hindi,” is named after Nobel Prize winner Marie Curie, who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity. This programme has played a big role in making SwaTaleem earn international awards and recognitions. The programme integrates science, gender, and life skills curricula for young girls. These girls often belong to first-generation learner families, marginalized castes, religious minorities, and face high rates of high school dropout and early marriage.

They face a number of barriers in terms of not just completing their schooling but also choosing science. What is interesting is that we recruit local village women to get trained and do the sessions with the girls in the schools.

Ananya Tiwari

After the end of the academic session every year, the girls get to display their scientific projects to the villagers including their parents, family and the government officials at a science fair. This initiative has facilitated scientific knowledge and is playing a role in changing cultural norms, ultimately aiding in the retention of more young girls in STEM fields.

[caption id="attachment_51733" align="aligncenter" width="685"]Indian Social Entrepreneur | Ananya Tiwari | Global Indian Glimpse of the Main Bhi Curie initiatives[/caption]

The impact 

SwaTaleem has impacted 250,000 girls in Delhi and Haryana. The foundation not only observes but also quantifies the changes in behaviour and impact, such as improvements in self-esteem, confidence, and assertive communication levels. Ananya emphasizes the profound connection between these changes and scientific knowledge.

“When a girl feels proficient in subjects or areas typically considered difficult by society, she gains the ability to advocate for herself within her family. Numerous studies, including internal research conducted by the foundation, highlight a strong correlation between these factors,” she explains. Along with the evidence-based data, the foundation boasts of anecdotal data of girls that highlight how SwaTaleem has helped navigate their lives in a better direction.

A fun fact is that the schools we work with are nearly two decades old but the girls for the very first time after participating in our programme worked on any science project and submitted in government competitions.

Ananya Tiwari

"These competitions were first held at the block level where they competed with boys and won,” Ananya shares adding. “Their wins have been across gender, across cast, across class, and across the rural urban divide at the block levels, after which their projects went up to the district level and that has been a historical moment for us, something that we've taken huge pride in,” Ananya mentions

[caption id="attachment_51734" align="aligncenter" width="725"]Indian Social Entrepreneur | Ananya Tiwari | Global Indian SwaTaleem Girls[/caption]

The joy of giving back

Ananya gives full credit to her team for the huge impact that SwaTaleem Foundation has hade. The Texas-based educationist believes that had it not been for them, coming so far would have been impossible.

I have grown up in India and I was very fortunate to be able to go to school, to be able to study. I don't come from a very wealthy family but I always had food on table and my parents took really good care of me, so I think it's very important for me as a person to give back and that is why girls education is extremely important to me something that I have been involved with not just through SwaTaleem but also my own research areas here in the US.

Ananya Tiwari

Ananya has studied on numerous scholarships throughout her educational journey. She earned the Margaret McNamara Education Grant (MMEG) to support her studies in the US. MMEG is a nonprofit, public charity founded in 1981 that awards education grants to exceptional women from developing countries.

After completing a BSc from St Stephen’s College, Delhi, Ananya pursued her MA in psychology from Kanpur and graduated as a gold medallist. She did a postgraduate diploma course in liberal studies from Ashoka University on a Russel Mehta Scholarship and earned the Outstanding ELM Award. Following that, Ananya went on to pursue her MS and PhD in educational psychology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where she was the recipient of the outstanding doctoral medallion.

 

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Pramila Jayapal: Indian-American becomes the first Asian woman elected to the US House of Representatives

(February 13, 2023) She was only 16 when she made her way to the US to study at Georgetown University, and "after 17 years on an alphabet soup of visas to become a US citizen", Pramila Jayapal was lucky enough to have the "opportunity to live the American dream" - something that's still a distant dream for many immigrants today. And now she is set to make this dream a reality for many immigrants as the Indian-American Congresswoman has been named Ranking Member of the powerful House Judiciary Committee's panel on Immigration, making her the first immigrant to serve in a leadership role for the subcommittee. "It is extremely meaningful to me that I will now be in this position to better move the needle and re-center our broken immigration system around dignity, humanity, and justice," she said. Interestingly, she is the first immigrant to serve in a leadership role for the subcommittee. "As the first South Asian woman elected to the US House of Representatives and one of only two dozen naturalised citizens in Congress, I am honoured and humbled to serve as the Ranking Member of the House Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement," added the 57-year-old

Read More

dded the 57-year-old who is representing the 7th Congressional District of Washington State.

Pramila Jayapal

Born in Tamil Nadu, she grew up in India, Indonesia, and Singapore before moving to the US in 1982 to study English and Economics at Georgetown University, and later enrolled in Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management for an MBA.

It was in the 90s that she began her activism as a community organiser in Seattle, Washington, working on a variety of social justice issues, including immigrant rights, environmental protection, and affordable housing. She served as Director of the Fund for Technology Transfer at Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (1991-1995), a program that funded critical health projects in Asia, Latin America, and Africa. In 1995, she was awarded a two-year fellowship from The Institute of Current World Affairs to live in villages and towns across India and write about her perspectives on modern Indian society in the context of development and social justice. In 2000, she published her first book Pilgrimage to India: A Woman Revisits Her Homeland.

Then 9/11 happened, and that's when Pramila started OneAmerica — originally called the Hate Free Zone Campaign of Washington — as a response to the hate crimes and backlash against Arabs, Muslims and South Asians. "What started as simply protecting people against hate crimes turned quickly into much more—working to defend our civil liberties and rights for all immigrant communities," the Global Indian wrote in a blog.

Pramila Jayapal | Global Indian | Indian American

She soon realised the importance of federal immigration reform policy to the US. "In 2003, through the Immigrant Worker Freedom Ride, we began working on immigration reform and never stopped. We built political power for immigrants in our state, registering and mobilising to the polls tens of thousands of New Americans. We organised in different ethnic communities and advocated for better policies. We worked with the media to improve the narrative around immigrants and immigration. Together, with partners, allies, and members, we built OneAmerica from a fledgling effort into the largest immigrant advocacy organisation in Washington and a strong national force for justice," she added.

It was in 2016 that she ran for the House of Representatives and was elected as the first Indian-American woman to serve in the House of Representatives. In Congress, she has been a vocal champion of a wide range of progressive causes, including healthcare reform, environmental protection, and reproductive rights. She is also a leading voice in the fight for comprehensive immigration reform and has been a vocal critic of the Trump administration's hard-line immigration policies.

Pramila Jayapal | Global Indian | Indian American

Moreover, she played a key role during the Covid-19 pandemic through American Rescue Plan, a $1.9 trillion stimulus package aimed at providing relief to individuals and businesses impacted by the pandemic. Furthermore, she is a philanthropist and an advocate for women’s rights, LGBTQ+ rights, and healthcare. She has introduced several bills aimed at improving the lives of marginalised communities, including the Medicare for All Act of 2019.

She is married to Steve Williamson, a long-time labor leader, and strategist, and is the proud mother of a transgender daughter named Kashika.

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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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