The Global Indian Friday, June 27 2025
  • Home
  • Stories
    • Exclusive
      • Startups
      • Culture
      • Marketplace
      • Campus Life
      • Youth
      • Giving Back
      • Zip Codes
    • Blogs
      • Opinion
      • Profiles
      • Web Stories
    • Fun Facts
      • World in numbers
      • Didyouknow
      • Quote
    • Gallery
      • Pictures
      • Videos
  • Work Life
  • My Book
  • Top 100
  • Our Stories
  • Tell Your Story
Select Page
How MIT scientist Shriya Srinivasan's ventilator tech is saving lives
Global IndianstoryHow MIT scientist Shriya Srinivasan’s ventilator tech is saving lives
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Health
  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

How MIT scientist Shriya Srinivasan’s ventilator tech is saving lives

Written by: Global Indian

When Shriya Srinivasan, a postdoctoral medical researcher at Harvard Medical School, came up with a ventilator multiplexer amidst a raging pandemic, she hoped to solve a million problems with one medical device. At the peak of the pandemic, a shortage of ventilators had patients gasping for breath. Srinivasan’s ventilator-splitter could reduce this requirement by half. 

“The problem with earlier ventilator multiplexer models was that they could not be customized to treat each patient,” Srinivasan told Global Indian in an exclusive interview. “Splitting them uniformly between two patients can be injurious to each patient.” 

When Shriya Srinivasan, a postdoctoral medical researcher at Harvard Medical School, came up with a ventilator multiplexer amidst a raging pandemic, she hoped to solve a million problems with one medical device.

Shriya Srinivasan at work

What Srinivasan and her cohort of researchers did was incorporate individualized controls. In other words, doctors can now treat two patients with a single ventilator while customizing the settings to suit specific medical requirements.  

Soon after the research was published in the Science Translational Medicine journal, she sought to industrialize the life-saving equipment given the dire global shortage. “We partnered with a Bengaluru-based startup to add a digital monitoring component to the ventilator multiplexer and get it ready for global deployment,” says Srinivasan. 

However, by the time Srinivasan’s splitter hit the market, India’s second wave had begun to ease, leaving the healthcare ecosystem with less appetite and funds for innovation. The Indian American researcher says,   

“It was incredibly challenging to reach the healthcare market in India. I felt like I was fighting an uphill battle to deploy these units.”

 

 

She added that the reason for a sluggish response was both monetary and bureaucratic. Nevertheless, over two dozen units have been deployed and the splitter may come in handy to tackle the imminent forthcoming waves. 

This Global Indian medical engineer is not new to innovation and her earlier attempts at accessible healthcare equipment stand testimony to it. Her past research focused on surgical innovations which allow a better connection between the human body and prosthetic limbs. “For people with amputations, we’ve seen great improvement in their mobility, pain profile and their ability to sense phantom limbs,” she says. While some techniques are already implemented in individuals fitted with prosthetic limbs, others are on clinical trials. 

Global identity 

Srinivasan was born and raised in the US after her parents Srinivasan Ranganathan, a senior project manager in an IT firm, and Sujatha Srinivasan, an acclaimed Bharatanatyam dancer, moved to the US in the early 1990s. Her parents belong to a conservative family in Tamil Nadu. 

Following her undergraduate course at Case Western Reserve University, she pursued the prestigious program in medical engineering and medical physics from Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology. 

Being a first-generation immigrant hasn’t been easy on Srinivasan. It left her with an identity crisis in childhood. “Any child that follows one culture at home and another at school would go through this identity crisis on where do you fit in,” she recalls. But she managed to channel her crisis to her advantage.  

“You’re out of place and you belong nowhere. Then you realize that you belong nowhere is the same thing as you belong everywhere,”  
When Shriya Srinivasan, a postdoctoral medical researcher at Harvard Medical School, came up with a ventilator multiplexer amidst a raging pandemic, she hoped to solve a million problems with one medical device.

Shriya Srinivasan during a dance performance Photo Courtesy: The Hindu

Perhaps this is what motivated her to set up Anubhava Dance Company – a Bharatanatyam platform to perform and train together – to help fellow Indian-Americans to learn this classical art form. “I’ve been learning dance from a very young age. It’s a very big part of my life,” says Srinivasan, who routinely performs at the famed Chennai’s December Margazhi season. 

Srinivasan and members of the company have performed at shows in over 15 American cities. “It’s hard to carry something like Bharatanatyam over here [in the US]. It requires so much history, language, music, and culture. It’s like a full package you need to know to be productive and carry it forward,” she emphasized. 

While Srinivasan’s long-term goal is to conjure up accessible and affordable healthcare apparatus, she is also determined to firm up her Indian roots through Bharatanatyam. 

Editor’s Take

Ever since the first wave of the pandemic in 2020, medical facilities across the world have faced an accute shortage of ventilators; an oft life-saving option for patients. In this regard, India is in many ways an archetype of the challenges that many developing countries face. It is a crucible for any innovation to succeed at scale; and any innovation with respect to COVID-19 should be lauded. Shriya’s work will have a global impact in the way imminent waves of the pandemic will be dealt with and can possibly save millions of lives.
  • RELATED READ: Dr Nikhila Juvvadi: 32-year-old chief clinical officer who gave Chicago its first Covid-19 jab
Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • Bharatanatyam
  • Case Western Reserve University
  • COVID-19 pandemic
  • Harvard Medical School
  • Harvard-MIT Health Sciences and Technology
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • medical engineer
  • Shriya Srinivasan
  • ventilator multiplexer

Published on 13, Jul 2021

Share with

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

ALSO READ

Story
Woman in STEM: Padmasree Warrior the quintessential Indian-American techie helping people with Fable

(July 9, 2022) Padmasree Warrior is widely acknowledged as one of the world's most influential women in STEM. Her career has spanned a superlative 35 years, which saw her rise through the ranks to head some of the world's largest companies, including Motorola and Cisco. She's come a long way from the young woman who arrived in the US, with two large suitcases filled with textbooks that she bought from India. Padmasree survived her first New York winter with a $10 coat bought at a garage sale.  [caption id="attachment_26714" align="aligncenter" width="675"] Padmasree Warrior, Founder, President and CEO of Fable[/caption] A chance visit to a job fair resulted in Warrior landing a position at Motorola. The rest is history. One of the world's most influential business leader, Warrior's career went from strength to strength. The IIT Delhi grad, who went on to do her PhD at Cornell University, is known for being a visionary leader, having served five years as Chief Technology Officer at Motorola, followed by a seven-year run as CTO at Cisco. Warrior was also CEO of electric car maker NIO, which launched a successful IPO under her leadership. Global Indian turns the spotlight on the remarkable business executive,

Read More

leader, having served five years as Chief Technology Officer at Motorola, followed by a seven-year run as CTO at Cisco. Warrior was also CEO of electric car maker NIO, which launched a successful IPO under her leadership. Global Indian turns the spotlight on the remarkable business executive, who has inspired many women.

The early days 

Born and raised in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, in a middle-class home, money was tough in the early days of her life. Always inclined towards STEM, despite being a gifted artist and painter, Warrior studied chemical engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology, graduating in 1977. Women in STEM fields were a rare occurrence at the time, and she was one of the only five female students in a class of 250. She took the Ivy League route soon after and received a fellowship to do an MS in chemical engineering at Cornell University.  

[caption id="attachment_26710" align="aligncenter" width="616"]Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian Padmasree with her late mother in the early days of her life[/caption]

In 1984, she joined Motorola, where she spent 23 years, working her way up the company ranks and becoming the company's first CTO and female executive vice president. During her stint at the helm, Motorola was awarded with the 2004 US National Medal of Technology, which she accepted from the then President George W. Bush on behalf of the company.  

In 2008, Padmasree Warrior joined Cisco, where she became senior vice president of engineering, strategic advisor and chief technology and strategy officer. Her leadership journey continued at NIO from 2015-2018. She scaled up the company from startup to a successful IPO within a period of just three years. Padmasree was also a board member and chief development officer for NIO US. “I’ve always looked for opportunities to leverage technology to tackle big problems,” Warrior said at the time of joining the organisation. 

[caption id="attachment_26711" align="aligncenter" width="551"]Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian Padmasree with Barack Obama, former US President[/caption]

Perfect switch

After 35 years of service, Warrior moved onto entrepreneurship and founded Fable, a curated reading platform for mental well-being in 2019. She is the President and CEO of the venture and also serves on the board of directors for Microsoft, Spotify and Thorn. Her vision for Fable is to bring the world of stories to everyone, anywhere; so that they can relax, share and learn. 

[caption id="attachment_26715" align="aligncenter" width="632"]Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian One of the many paintings of Padmasree[/caption]

  

A mobile service for curated reading, Fable allows people to share stories in private groups and enables creators to self-publish. In 2021 Fable launched its app, a subscription-based book recommendation engine and private social network.

“Human element of our business is becoming as important as the productivity element. We no longer can treat each other as just job titles. We have to really get to know the person behind that job title.”  - Padmasree Warrior

Work-life balance 

"It's about integration, not balance," Warrior once said in an interview. "It's important to really focus on making sure you're integrating all four aspects of your life - work, family, community and yourself. It's not about trying to spend equal amounts of time on everything you do each day on each of these things, but making sure you're paying attention to all the things that make it up as a whole human being."  

[caption id="attachment_26712" align="aligncenter" width="653"]Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian Padmasree with her husband, Mohandas Warrior[/caption]

In her Cisco days, she found herself working all the time, even on the weekends, shooting questions to her subordinates. “People three-four level down the hierarchy had to work on the weekends too to get me the answers which they didn’t need to give, right then. I had to hit the pause button to ask myself, ‘is this the correct way to do?’” she said in an interview, informing that it was then that she started practicing digital detoxification. She came to an agreement with herself that she would not work on Saturdays and Sundays, and announced the same to her team. “It seemed to me as if I could hear that whole team of 26,000 people heaving a sigh of relief,” she mentioned.   

Why Fable?  

Warrior believes that people should be encouraged to read and relax, and that good distraction is good for a person. She has been assertive on the fact that people are busy at every stage of their lives, and that mental wellness is the price they pay to juggle the demands of modern world. 

Padmasree informed in a virtual interview during the pandemic, while her startup was still new:

“There has been almost 15 – 20 percent increase in anxiety and depression in the last decade. Much of it is driven by workplace stress. Workplace suicides are highest in last 26 years. The World Economic Forum projects a $16.3 trillion loss in economic output between 2011 and 2030 due to mental disorders. The mandate for mental wellness has never been more important.” 

Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian

Life goes on…  

The Silicon Valley veteran, lives with her husband, Mohandas Warrior, whom she met at IIT, and their son Karna in Palo Alto, California. She continues to mentor women in tech and keeps her 1.3 million followers engaged on Twitter. A believer in the ‘Happy People, Healthy Business’ principle, Warrior is forging ahead with her quest towards mental health for people with hectic lives. Fable also works with several organisations, helping them move away from old-school employee engagement, so that people can connect better and grow together. 

[caption id="attachment_26717" align="aligncenter" width="512"]Indian CEO | Padmasree Warrior | Global Indian One of Padmasree's latest designed jewellery[/caption]

Some of the recognitions that came Padmasree's way for being a visionary leader:

  • The Wall Street Journal recognised her as one of the “50 Women to Watch” in 2008
  • Business Insider called her one of the “25 Most Influential Women in Wireless” in 2012
  • The International Alliance for Women honoured her with the World of Difference Award in 2013
  • The Economic Times recognised her as one of the “20 Most Influential Global Indian Women” in 2015
  • Forbes recognised her as “America's Top 50 Women in Tech" in 2018

Follow Padmasree Warrior on LinkedIn, Twitter and Instagram

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Sharad Vivek Sagar: The Harvard and Tufts alumni is in Michigan University syllabus for building future of Indian youth

(October 25, 2022) “Whenever people at Tufts asked me what were my plans after studying on such an expensive scholarship, I always answered that I would take the first flight to India on the very last day of my graduation to make a difference there.” Sharad Vivek Sagar kept that promise. When the fresh graduates were partying away at Tufts on their graduation night, Sharad took the flight to India, came to Patna and resumed work at his organisation, Dexterity Global. The organisation currently reaches seven million people in India’s remotest towns and villages, helping youngsters find opportunities in education, upskilling and building local community role models.   [caption id="attachment_30947" align="aligncenter" width="796"] Posing near Harvard University[/caption] Early struggles to making it big  The alumni of two of the most famous universities of the world, Sharad did not go to school until class four. His father, a State Bank of India employee, was often posted in rural areas. The six villages in which Sharad and his siblings grew up were in such utterly remote regions of Bihar that there were no schools around. Home schooling was the only option.   However, the youth icon, and the founder of Dexterity Global, not only went

Read More

"font-weight: 400;">The alumni of two of the most famous universities of the world, Sharad did not go to school until class four. His father, a State Bank of India employee, was often posted in rural areas. The six villages in which Sharad and his siblings grew up were in such utterly remote regions of Bihar that there were no schools around. Home schooling was the only option.  

However, the youth icon, and the founder of Dexterity Global, not only went on to study in the world’s most renowned institutions – Tufts University and Harvard - he has even visited the White House. Upon the invitation of former President Barack Obama in 2016, Sharad was among a special gathering of young leaders, spending nine hours inside, at the most famous address in the world. Another coveted invitation that the social entrepreneur got was from the Nobel Peace Centre to attend the Nobel Peace Prize Ceremony, which he did. 

[caption id="attachment_30952" align="aligncenter" width="1060"] Receiving the Tufts Senior Award in 2016[/caption]

“At Dexterity Global we teach humility to children, I don’t feel right talking about myself or my achievements in interviews,” the changemaker says humbly, as he talks to Global Indian.

Starting young 

Sharad forayed into social entrepreneurship to uplift the lives of young people in remote areas when he was just of 16, and managed Dexterity Global’s activities remotely while pursuing his bachelors at Tufts University, where he exceled in both academics and sports. For his impactful work, he has been recognised as 100 Next Century Innovators in the centennial list by Rockefeller Foundation, and listed in Forbes 30 Under 30 while he was still a student at Tufts. The grassroots hero of Bihar has even enjoyed a place in Queen of England’s Young Leaders list.  

[caption id="attachment_30955" align="aligncenter" width="1084"] With tribal kids of Odisha[/caption]

Dexterity Global’s impact  

Whether they are tribal kids from the East Khasi Hills in Meghalaya, flood-stricken districts of Bihar or far-flung areas of Andhra Pradesh, Dexterity Global works with the focus to build grassroots leadership in remote corners of the country. It has expanded its reach to some parts of South Asia as well.  

If you want to make a difference to the world, your focus should be on your own self-transformation. You should regulate your thoughts in such a way that as nation builders, together you can bring about a change as scientists, innovators and change makers, making India the greatest country on the planet.

[caption id="attachment_30951" align="alignnone" width="1440"] Addressing audience at one of the events[/caption]

We connect kids with opportunities, help them build their skill sets by developing their critical thinking, research, communication and leadership skills, and enable their transition from high school to top universities of the world.

Says the Tufts alumni, who received a full scholarship amounting to ₹ 4 crore. 

It was a matter of great pride for Sharad in the final year of Tufts University when a youngster from the Dexterity Global network joined the institution as a freshman.

[caption id="attachment_30956" align="alignnone" width="1268"] With Anthony Monaco and senior members of Tufts University at Presidential Award Ceremony[/caption]

From then to now 

“The first time that I saw a school was when I was in grade four. Until then I had only imagined what it looked like,” says Sharad. Patna, the town where he joined school, was the biggest city that he had seen until then.  

The name that his parents chose for him when he was born connotes three significant things, Sharad stands for the autumn season, Vivek has been inspired by Swami Vivekananda, and Sagar by Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar.  

True to his name, Sharad identifies with the principles of Swami Vivekananda greatly, and considers himself his dedicated worker. He gave such a powerful speech at the Vivekananda Memorial in Baroda that Sharad was fondly dubbed the Vivekanand of 21st Century by the local media.  

Sharad’s organisation, Dexterity Global, has successfully reached out to more than 7 million young people across remote towns and villages, connecting them with opportunities to study and upskill themselves. They are taught to develop a mindset geared to solve 21st century problems and many become community role models in their villages. 

[caption id="attachment_30961" align="aligncenter" width="1115"] Invited at Kaun Banega Crorepati as one of the experts[/caption]

Crossing boundaries  

“I was an outstanding student,” he jokes. “Since I loved talking to my classmates, I was made to stand outside the class many times.” The talent of effective communication led him to win more than 200 local, national and international debate and quiz competitions while he was in school. He represented India at intergovernmental and UN platforms in six different countries as a high school student. 

[embed]https://twitter.com/SharadTalks/status/1564134729401909250?s=20&t=8dVOvYsAyGEGivtUB5DcjA[/embed]

 

While Sharad was being celebrated in his school and city, one thought that kept him restless was that ‘how kids with the same amount of passion, dream and talent as him were disconnected from the possibility of going far due to lack of opportunities’. This restlessness led him to start Dexterity Global.

Breaking records  

Sharad has broken major records in both prestigious universities. He became the first Indian to be selected as the Graduation Speaker at Tufts University in 2016, and also became the youngest in the 160 years of the university’s history to receive the Alumni Achievement Award. He graduated with a major in international relations. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P56VJKj4tPw

 

At Tufts, Sagar was the first freshman to win the $100,000 Entrepreneurship Challenge and the only one to win the competition twice. For his path breaking work in the field of education, he became the youngest recipient of the University's Paul and Elizabeth Montle Prize for Entrepreneurial Achievement. 

Though an offer to do his masters from Harvard University awaited him, he chose to focus, for the next five years, on reaching the remotest corners of India. It was in 2021 that he went to Harvard on scholarship for a one-year post graduation programme, participated in the election for the university’s student body president and became the first Indian to be elected for the post. 

[caption id="attachment_30949" align="alignnone" width="821"] Speaking at Harvard[/caption]

Powerful role model  

Rising from a nondescript village, Ziradei, Bihar, where he was born to climb the global education ladder and becoming a part of the syllabus on social entrepreneurship at Michigan State University is no mean feat, but there is more to the hero of Bihar. 

IIM-Nagpur prepared a case study on Dexterity Global, the Govt of Taiwan quoted Sharad on their Social Impact Agenda at World Forum in Milan, Italy, and the Development Bank, Singapore quoted him in their annual report. 

[caption id="attachment_30958" align="aligncenter" width="1051"] With Amartya Sen and friends[/caption]

With the pioneering financial aid model of Sharad Vivek Sagar, the youngsters supported by Dexterity Global have won major national and international awards, started their own initiatives and have received more than 720 million rupees in scholarships from topmost colleges of the world. 85 percent of these kids come from low-income families. “My story is the story of thousands of underprivileged kids,” says the social entrepreneur, who remains firmly committed to nation building and public service.

  • Follow Sharad Vivek Sagar on LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram 

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Slam dunk: India, Spain, or US, basketball pro Prudhvi Reddy ‘shoots’ to thrill everywhere

(January 31, 2023) Back in 2013, when Ambati Prudhvishwar Reddy began practising at the Europe Basketball Academy (EBA) in Barcelona, Spain — his acrobatic abilities, agility, swift moves, and teamwork — earned him a lot of admirers among professional athletes and coaches, almost instantly. One among them, in particular, was the academy’s head coach, Srdjan Premovic, who introduced Prudhvishwar to a ‘basketball life’ in its truest sense, replete with intense training and a tough fitness routine, which improved his game. So much so that when the budding basketball player informed him that he had no money to continue in EBA, three months after his arrival, Premovic not only helped him continue in the academy for one year but also bought his air tickets back home when Prudhvishwar was selected to play in the Indian basketball team! “While leaving Spain, I promised my coach that I will never let him down, come what may. I kept my word,” smiles Prudhvi, as he is known in basketball circles, in an exclusive conversation with Global Indian. Standing tall at 6.2, the professional basketball player made India proud in various national and international tournaments. Representing Telangana state four times to playing for Christian Life

Read More

rcles, in an exclusive conversation with Global Indian. Standing tall at 6.2, the professional basketball player made India proud in various national and international tournaments. Representing Telangana state four times to playing for Christian Life prep school in the US to being selected amongst the two best players in India and going to the US once again for UBA — the list of his achievements is really long. “Practising in Spain was very tough and it was the turning point in my life. Training with highly professional athletes and professional coaches made me what I am today,” says the 27-year-old basketball player.

Double dribble

Born in Siripuram, Nalgonda district of Telangana, Prudhvi studied at Niraj Public School in Hyderabad and later went to St. Mary’s College, Yousufguda. While his mother A Upendra Reddy worked as a PT teacher in the same school, his father A Ravinder Reddy is into business. As kids, he and his brother Rajasekhar Reddy, now a mechanical engineer in the US, loved to play cricket and used to go for regular coaching. “Back then, I wanted to become a professional cricket player,” informs Prudhvi, who soon gave up the sport to perform better academically.

Ambati Prudhvi Reddy | Basketball Player | Global Indian

In school, Prudhvi was an enthusiastic kid who always wanted to run around and play. “Be it any sport, I had that competitive spirit in me to win the game,” says Prudhvi who won the best sportsperson award in class 10. The event was a memorable one as it was his mother, as a PT teacher, who handed over the award. Academically too, he performed well, having passed class 10 (ICSE board) with 81 percent.

Years later, when his brother was getting into basketball coaching, after much prodding by their mother, who felt playing the sport would make him taller by a few inches, Prudhvi decided that he too would follow suit. Moreover, he felt his athletic physique was best suited for basketball. By the time he turned 16, Prudhvi was making all the right moves on the basketball court. Not one, he was going to three different places in Hyderabad for coaching.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4-LggxFiAs

The young sportsman would regularly create videos of him playing basketball and upload them on YouTube. A coach from EBA even got in touch with Prudhvi after he saw his videos. But back then, the budding basketball player was in no mood to give up his education and travel to Spain for training.

When the going gets tough...

Back home, Prudhvi was not able to get through the selection process in Indian basketball camps. “I realised that the training I was receiving back then was not good enough to get selected for the Indian team. The following year, I made up my mind to go to Spain for professional training,” informs Prudhvi, who was among the country’s top 16 chosen by the UBA (United Basketball Alliance) to visit the US after seasons two and three, where he averaged 20 and 25 points per game.

He left for Spain soon after his EAMCET exams. “My father agreed to it the moment I told him about Spain. We gathered all the necessary information, pooled the money, and left for Spain. This was the beginning of my basketball journey,” informs the basketball professional.

Ambati Prudhvi Reddy | Basketball Player | Global Indian

At EBA, Prudhvi was in the best hands. Sporting his talent early, EBA coach Srdjan Premovic took Prudhvi under his wings and he wasted no time picking up the nuances of the game. “Playing with some of the best basketball professionals from across the world and the best facilities was something I missed in India. It made a huge difference,” points out Prudhvi, whose coach admired him for his “hunger for the game.”

He excelled as a point guard in the game, whose primary job was to facilitate scoring opportunities for the team. A point guard has the most specialised role of any position and is expected to run the team's offense by controlling the ball and making sure that it gets to the right player at the right time. “My coach would always challenge me and treated me with 10 euros if I scored the most points. He used to push me harder. To this day, I keep following what I learnt there,” recalls Prudhvi. When it came to Indian basketballers, coach Premovic would describe Prudhvi, as “one of the best materials to work with.”

Upon returning to India, Prudhvi achieved success at the 2014 South Asian Basketball Association (SABA) championship in Bengaluru. Later, his game was noticed by the coach of Christian Life Academy in Houston, Texas where he spent another year of intense training. For Prudhvi, playing in the US was a different experience when compared to Spain. “In Spain, it was mostly training while in the US, I was representing a prep school where we had games throughout the year and it was all about performance,” says Prudhvi, whose experiences and exposure abroad helped him improve his game great deal.

Ambati Prudhvi Reddy | Basketball Player | Global Indian

While in the US, he also worked for a Mexican as an interior designer where he used to design bedrooms into their favourite hero or sports figure themes. “I used to go for NBA games where I met NBA player Tyler Ulis who was playing for Phoenix’s Suns team,” says the professional. Tyler is an American professional basketball coach.

Scaling new heights

With the United Basketball Alliance (UBA) making inroads in India, his career received a major boost. Prudhvi was selected by the Mumbai Challengers on an annual contract in the UBA’s second season.

So what makes for a good basketball player? Prudhvi says it takes years of hard work and consistency for any athlete to make it big in sports. As for basketball, one needs good training and routine. “Having a good diet, eating on time, fitness and regular practice is a must,” he points out.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaKWBE2aEh0

Speaking about his future plans, the basketball player says, “Well, I just fulfilled my dream of opening my basketball academy in Hyderabad. Just like EBA, it consists of everything a basketball player needs including a gym, sports rehab, physio, Ice bath, hydrotherapy, and recovery. It is India’s first such academy,” smiles a beaming Prudhvi, adding that his goal is to educate people that there is life and profession in basketball.

Since he is occupied with basketball for the most part of the day, he makes it a point to watch NBA highlights whenever he has the time. “Otherwise, I spend time with friends,” he says.

  • Follow Ambati Prudhvishwar Reddy on Facebook

Reading Time: 7 mins

Story
From a child actor to an author of children’s books, the multi-talented Jugal Hansraj has come a long way

(October 26, 2023) Most of us remember Jugal Hansraj as the vulnerable little boy in the Shekhar Kapur directed film Masoom. He was also the face of several ad campaigns back in the 80s and 90s. At 21, he played the lead role in a few movies; and in the year 2000, he acted in the multi-starrer Mohabbatein. In 2008, he was back in the news for Roadside Romeo, an animation film he wrote and directed. Bollywood Highs and Lows In an exclusive with Global Indian, Jugal recalls, “I had signed about 30 projects over many years in Bollywood; except that in the 90s, it was a shake hands kind of commitment and not the formal signed contracts they are now. For multiple reasons, the projects would fail to take off. In the process, I’d say no to other offers and ironically, those would go on to become big hits.” In other interviews, Jugal has admitted to being in tears in the early days of his career as an aspiring actor, when his movies failed to launch. He admits he changed his attitude towards these setbacks later. “It hurt a lot, initially. I was young and would wonder what else

Read More

ed.jpeg" alt="Jugal Hansraj | Global Indian" width="606" height="808" />

In other interviews, Jugal has admitted to being in tears in the early days of his career as an aspiring actor, when his movies failed to launch. He admits he changed his attitude towards these setbacks later. “It hurt a lot, initially. I was young and would wonder what else could I do. I realised that getting upset was not helping. It came to a point where, when the producer would call and say the film is being shelved, I’d say thank you and hang up.”

Yet, in the year 2008, he wrote and directed Roadside Romeo, an animated feature film about street dogs. Released by Disney Studios and Yash Raj Films, it went on to win three National Awards including Best Animation Film and Best Director. After that, he directed another rom-com for Yashraj Films – Pyaar Impossible – starring Priyanka Chopra in the lead. Still, it did not translate to substantial amounts of work for Jugal.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jugal Hansraj (@thejugalhansraj)

He is a believer in the premise that one should keep moving. “Just like a rolling stone gathers no moss, I moved on to writing when acting wasn’t working out the way I wished. I am a voracious reader, always have been, and being in the creative field, writing came naturally to me.”

Theme Tunes and More

Strangely, it is in the unplanned, that Jugal seems to have found success. The title track of the film Kuch KuchHota Hai which later when on to become the theme music that is played in the opening credits of every film by Dharma Productions, Karan Johar’s production firm, has been composed by Jugal. He reveals how that came about. “In the late 90s, I was learning Hindustani classical music from Suresh Wadkarji and his wife Padmaji. Once, I met Karan Johar and other friends for lunch where Karan showed me the script of KKHH. Later that day, the tune for the first eight lines of the title song just came to me and I composed it. Karan liked it so much he asked if he could keep the rights to the tune. As a friendly gesture, I gave it to him and it is now the theme music for Dharma films. It wasn’t a professional or commercial arrangement at all.”

[caption id="attachment_46210" align="aligncenter" width="601"]Jugal Hansraj | Global Indian Jugal with his wife[/caption]

Cut to the present day, and a suave Jugal, with a George Clooney-esque grey head of hair, is now a successful author of two children’s books, Cross Connection – The Big Circus Adventure – about a naughty monkey, an unassuming elephant, and other animals at a circus; and The Coward and the Sword.

Living in New York with his wife Jasmine, and son Sidak, Jugal, recalls how the first book came about. “After Roadside Romeo, I was writing my second script as it was a three-film deal with YRF. Again, the film didn’t progress due to financial constraints. One day, I was cleaning out my pen drives and I came across this screenplay I had written. I showed it to a friend of mine who is also an author and filmmaker –Jyotin Goel. He encouraged me to rewrite it as a novel. That is how Cross Connection came about. Then I contacted Rupa publications and they agreed to publish my book.”

A Hero’s Journey

Serendipity at its best, because the script that became a book, led to the next one. The Coward and the Sword, inspired by his son, is essentially the hero’s journey, a prince in a fantasy land who grows from being a diffident, shy and lonely teenager to become a brave leader with the help of his friends. Published by Harper Collins, the second book, titled The Jewel of Nisawa, is due to release early January next year. Jugal is currently writing the third book in this series.

Jugal Hansraj | Global Indian

What is heartening about both the books is that Jugal has maintained a vocabulary far-richer than what is used in some children’s books and has not dumbed down the content. Cross Connection is aimed at children up to the age of ten and the second one is for older kids. The plot, language and imagery encourage a child to imagine the incidents that occur in this fantasy world. The names and landscape denote a Japanese influence, and one of the people he has dedicated the book to is Daisaku Ikeda, the President of Soka Gakkai International. Jugal explains, “Soka is a Buddhist organisation and Ikeda is the author of several books on the Nichiren Buddhist philosophy that I follow.”

Life in New York

Jugal met his wife Jasmine, who is from New York,through friends. Jugal likens NYC to Mumbai. “We lived in India post marriage for three years when I was taking care of my mother. We moved to New York in 2018, because of the birth of our son and Jasmine’s career in banking.Life in New York is similar to living in an apartment in Mumbai, and it has the same big city fast paced atmosphere. I enjoy being a father to Sidak, despite all the challenges, and I write when he goes to school.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Jugal Hansraj (@thejugalhansraj)

What advice does he give other young men who move to the US, with wives who have probably lived there longer than they have? He says, “It is important to have respect and boundaries in the relationship, then everything else falls into place. You have to respect your partner and the need for space on both sides.”

Incidentally, the quality of work he has got as an actor, after becoming an author has changed for the better. He acted in a film called Shiv Shastri Balboa with Anupam Kher and Neena Gupta, where he played a single dad to two young kids. He says, “Anupamji was in New York, shooting for the series New Amsterdam and he called me. After scolding me for not keeping in touch, he offered me this role and I jumped at the opportunity. It was a great learning experience. He has been a very positive and encouraging influence. I have also acted in the second season of the show Mismatched, which released on Netflix. One more, tentatively titled Nanda Devi, a seven-episode streaming show where I play an important character, produced by Lionsgate, a Hollywood studio and directed by Rohan Khambati, will release next year.”

For the future, Jugal hopes that the fantasy world he has created in his books, will become a film or a streaming series for kids and adults alike to enjoy. Given his serendipitous trajectory, this dream too could come true someday.

  • Authors who inspire his writing: Since I write in the fantasy fiction genre, it would have to be JRR Tolkien and J K Rowling.
  • Favourite authors: P G Wodehouse, Bill Bryson, Anthony Bourdain and William Dalrymple.
  • Advice to aspiring writers: Write about that which you would like to read; as opposed to what people will enjoy. Figure out what you like and write. Keep it simple. Be authentic to yourself.

 

  • Follow Jugal Hansraj on Instagram

Reading Time: 7 mins

Story
The thrill of jumps, an adrenaline rush, and a sport unlike others: BMX racing in Hyderabad is beginning to come of age

(September 12, 2021) After Steven Spielberg's parents divorced, he became friends with an imaginary character and used to engage in a conversation with this friend. Little did he know that this imaginary friend would one day inspire him to make a movie and that's how E.T The Extra-Terrestrial, the sci-fi movie was made and went on to become one of the highest grossing movies of all times. The plot revolves around a boy who befriends an extraterrestrial stranded on earth. The scene that would remain etched in the minds of audiences is a chase scene towards the end of the movie where ET is put in a basket with a cover over it and three of the boys' friends trying to run away from the police on their bicycles. That sequence inspired kids and adults world over to ride the bicycle popularly called the BMX (Bicycle Motocross bikes). [caption id="attachment_10018" align="aligncenter" width="484"] BMX Racing is popular in Hyderabad ((Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption] What began in California as an imitation of motocross riders, but on bicycles, soon made its way to the Netherlands when Gerrit Does, a Dutch motocross trainer, introduced BMX in Holland after his visit to the US in

Read More

Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

What began in California as an imitation of motocross riders, but on bicycles, soon made its way to the Netherlands when Gerrit Does, a Dutch motocross trainer, introduced BMX in Holland after his visit to the US in 1974. Three decades later, in 2008, BMX racing became an Olympic sport. In 2016, BMX freestyle gained a level of legitimacy when it came under the umbrella of the worldwide governing body for all cycling, the Union Cycliste International (UCI) France.

[caption id="attachment_9952" align="aligncenter" width="553"]BMX Racing Red Bull Pump Track Championship 2019 (Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

(Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)

Circa 1980s, one could see few folks BMXing on the stairs of Mount Mary Church at Bandra, Mumbai. That was also the time when International BMX Federation was formed in 1981. Credit for starting the scene goes to Rahul Mulani who began BMXing, organized BMX jams and went on to set-up India's first BMX store. Not many may know that BMX is one of the oldest cycle sports in India but followed and practiced by very few. Expensive bikes, no proper safety gears or tracks to practice at, the BMXing has been on a slow growth among the cricket-hoot Indian masses.

However, the sport slowly made its way from an unknown urban activity to become an everyday recreational sport in cities like Pune, North Eastern India, Chandigarh and Hyderabad. Though still nascent, the BMX scene in India has its bright spots.

[caption id="attachment_10011" align="aligncenter" width="539"]BMX Racing BMX racer at Red Bull Championship 2019 (Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

Avid BMX rider, Hamza Khan brought the sport to Hyderabad when he established India's first ever and only asphalt pump track, The WallRide Park, heralding the birth of the sport in the city. Hamza roped in global pioneers and pump track specialists Velosolutions Switzerland to build the track on his family-owned land in Peeran Cheruvu on the outskirts of Hyderabad. The track has a series of twists, turns and jumps and in the past few years has become a hangout for those seeking an adrenaline rush while also providing a great practice and training ground for a number of talented riders.

[caption id="attachment_9953" align="aligncenter" width="505"]BMX Racing BMX racer oiling his bike (Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

Within two years of its opening, the track gained recognition from Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) and became a stop for the Red Bull Pump Track Championship in 2019 hosting the Indian qualifier featuring riders from the country and overseas for a ticket to the finals that would be held in Switzerland. WallRide has become a place of escape for more than just the thrill-seekers. Hamza says, "The place has become more diverse with not just kids and youngsters but even adults coming to have a great time. It's fantastic to see participation in BMX continuing to grow."

However, just as things had begun to look up for the sport, COVID-19 struck and virtually every aspect of the pump track operations were completely shut down. For a niche sport such as this, bouncing back is time consuming with drain of financial resources; more so since it is self-funded with no external help either from any sporting association or the Government. However, once the unlock began, things began to improve: being an individual sport, all it needed were a few operational adjustments for the path to be cleared for training and also to safely host events. Hamza is optimistic of seeing more participation in this sport and has curated a championship exclusive to India called RevJam (Revolutionary Jam).

[caption id="attachment_9954" align="aligncenter" width="603"]Pump Track BMX racer on pump track (Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

A few among the riders who train at his track are aspiring to aim for the pinnacle of all sporting events - the Olympics. Hamza adds, "Our plans are aimed at producing riders of international repute in the future and also encouraging a sustainable growth of BMX.”

Although the future of BMX in India isn't certain like many other sports in the roster, but the fact remains that from its humble beginnings it has come quite far in the past 30-40 years. And until it gains prominence there’s no sitting on the bench in this individualized sport.

[caption id="attachment_10013" align="aligncenter" width="461"]Rahul Mulani BMX racing in Hyderabad (Image Courtesy: Vaqaas Mansuri)[/caption]

Dhroov Rajpal, is one of the country's best BMXers who also builds skate parks. He feels the number of BMXers in the country is growing and they have a huge following on social media. He has built 8 skate parks in India and has a few more to come which can facilitate more newcomers to take up the sport. Dhroov himself is the BMX winner at the India Extreme Nationals conducted by Xtreme Sports Association of India – a body with official recognition formed for the purpose of developing and promoting extreme sports in India and affiliated to Asian Extreme Federation

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aw0XPwvuFKg

India’s BMX veteran and owner of the first BMX store, Rahul Mulani, hopes this sport gets a huge fillip as he doesn't see much happening at a desired pace in the sport. On the future of this sport he says, “As a country, we are not open to accepting some sports because of our upbringing or preference for racket/stick sports. We like to play safe. Further the sport has not caught on because of lack of infrastructure and acceptance of this genre. Anyone wishing to pursue BMX racing will have to do it pretty much on their own with no support from any sporting association. I see this sport taking some concrete shape decades from now."

Reading Time: 7 mins

Share & Follow us

Subscribe News Letter

About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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