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Global IndianstoryThe Mathemagician: Field’s Medal winner Manjul Bhargava bridges tradition and modernity
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The Mathemagician: Field’s Medal winner Manjul Bhargava bridges tradition and modernity

Compiled by: Darshana Ramdev

(July 6, 2024) In the summer of 1998, Manjul Bhargava’s eye caught a mini Rubik’s cube sitting in a corner of his room. He began visualising numbers on each of the corners and in his own words, “saw binary quadratic forms coming out, three of them.” Bhargava, who was a student at Harvard University then, wrote down the relations between them and realised he had found a description of Gauss’ Law (which explains how electric fields behave around charged objects). He linked it to the work of the ancient mathematician Brahmagupta, which he had read in Sanskrit as a child. It was one of Bhargava’s first major breakthroughs, which paved the way for his winning the Fields Medal in 2014.

To Bhargava, Math is music, and poetry and patterns – and magic. He brings this playfulness to his lectures at Princeton too, where he became the youngest ever full mathematics professor at the age of 28. In class, he is known to use magic tricks, puzzles, toys, poetry and music, which he believes “should all form a key part of the mathematics classroom. When people see mathematics done as described above, as a playful, creative, interactive subject, they see that it is not terrifying at all,” he gushes. “It is beautiful!” Once, he even used chocolate bars to demonstrate the principles of algebra, cutting and rearranging the pieces to solve equations. This hands-on approach not only demystifies complex concepts but also infuses a sense of play and discovery into the learning process.

Manjul Bhargava

Apart from the Fields Medal, Bhargava’s accolades include the Padma Bhushan, one of the highest civilian awards in India, and the Infosys Prize, recognizing his contributions to the mathematical sciences. He has also been elected to the National Academy of Sciences, an honor reserved for distinguished scholars in recognition of their original research.

Early life

Manjul Bhargava was born on August 8, 1974, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, to a family deeply rooted in academia and the appreciation of classical Indian culture. His mother, Mira Bhargava, who is a Mathematics professor at Hofstra University in New  York, told Quanta that his interest in Math became evident when he was a toddler. The only way to make him sit still, she said, was to ask him to add or multiply large numbers, he would do by “flipping his fingers back and forth and then give the right answer. I always wondered how he did it, but he wouldn’t tell me,” she said.

At the age of eight, he would stack oranges into pyramids before they went into making juice. Several months later he produced an equation to figure out a formula for the number of oranges in a pyramid. By this time, he was also attending his mother’s math classes in college, even correcting her if she made an error.

Photo: Peter Murphy

Another big influence in his life came from his occasional trips to Jaipur to see his grandparents. His grandfather was Purushottam Lal Bhargava, a renowned scholar of Sanskrit and head of the Department of at the University of Rajasthan. Learning from his grandfather, Manjul Bhargava fell hopelessly in love with Sanskrit poetry, and found, to his total delight, that they were highly mathematical. “I also learned from my grandfather how much incredible mathematics was discovered in ancient times by scholars who considered themselves not mathematicians but poets. Linguists such as Panini, Pingala, Hemachandra and Narayana discovered some wonderful and deep mathematical concepts while studying poetry.”

He found math in music too and learned to play a number of instruments although he had a special love for the tabla. He enjoyed thinking about the mathematics of the complex rhythm structures contained in Hindustani and Carnatic classical music.

University life

In 1991, Manjul Bhargava graduated from Plaineridge High School in North Massapequa, and had already been admitted to Harvard University. That was where he decided on a career in Mathematics – he had toyed with many options, including being a musician and an economist.  He graduated in 1996, winning the Morgan Prize for his research. From there, he went to Princeton University with a Hertz Fellowship and worked under Sir Andrew Wiles, a Royal Society Research Fellow at the University of Oxford. By this time, he had a slew of awards to his name, including the Hertz Fellowship, the Hoopes Prize and the Morgan Prize.

In 1991, he graduated from Plaineridge High School in North Massapequa, and had already been admitted to Harvard University.  He graduated in 1996, winning the Morgan Prize for his research. From there, he went to Princeton University with a Hertz Fellowship and worked under Sir Andrew Wiles. It was during his time at Princeton as a graduate student that he also solved a 200-year-old math problem.

Solving Gauss’ composition law

As a child, Bhargava had read, in one of his grandfather’s Sanskrit manuscripts, a theorem developed by the great mathematician, Brahmagupta, which had excited Bhargava very much at the time.  Then, during his time at Princeton, he discovered the work of Carl Gauss and his composition law, which is one of the pillars of electromagnetic theory. Was there a simple way to describe Gauss’ 20-page law, Bhargava wondered.

He sat with the question and one night, as he sat in his room which was “littered with mathematical toys,” he looked at a mini Rubik’s Cube. There are three ways to cut a Rubik’s Cube in half, and each of the three forms, Bhargava found, add up to zero. He had found an elegant, more minimalist explanation of Gauss’ Law, which today is known as Bhargava’s Cube. That became the core of his PhD thesis at Princeton, for which he won a five-year Clay Postdoctoral Fellowship.

Making history at Princeton

Bhargava used the funding to stay on at Princeton for another year, as well as at the Institute for Advanced Study, and then moved to Harvard. He was now a very sought after mathematician and at 28, after considering a food of job offers, accepted a position at Princeton University.

In 2014, Manjul Bhargava was awarded the Fields Medal at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Seoul for “developing powerful new methods in the geometry of numbers. He applied these to count rings of small rank and to bound the average rank of elliptic curves. One year later, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan. In 2017, he became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Science and like his mentor, Sir Andrew Wiles, was conferred a Fellowship at the Royal Society in 2019.

Manjul Bhargava’s work has been described as “epoch-making,” and is widely regarded as one of the greatest mathematicians of our time. He also remains a passionate musician and occasionally trains under Ustad Zakir Hussain.

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  • Fields Medal
  • Indian mathematician
  • Manjul Bhargava
  • Princeton University
  • Rubik's Cube inspiration

Published on 06, Jul 2024

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Daltonganj to Diversity: Dr Narendra Prasad Singh’s journey of research and mentoring minorities in the U.S.

(June 13, 2024) After obtaining two fully funded PhDs. - one in cytogenetics from Ranchi University and another in molecular biology from Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg - and a postdoc degree from Aarhus University, Denmark, on a UNESCO fellowship, Dr Narendra Prasad Singh began his research career. He has since dedicated over 25 years to research in molecular biology, molecular immunology, and immunotoxicology in the US. Dr Singh has come a long way, but has not forgotten the struggle of his early days, back home in the small town of Daltonganj (now Medininagar) in Jharkhand (then Bihar). He continues to dedicate his efforts towards helping the less privileged realise the American Dream, just as he did. Having played an integral role in founding the NGO SHRMS in Daltonganj, which focuses on the cyclic development of tribal communities in over 25 villages, and later working with underrepresented African-Americans at the University of South Carolina, Dr. NP Singh truly found his calling. Talking about empowering African American students who have benefited from his mentorship, Dr Singh tells Global Indian, “This has been the most fulfilling assignment and I feel very proud of it, as it allowed me to mentor students

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balindian.com//" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Global Indian, “This has been the most fulfilling assignment and I feel very proud of it, as it allowed me to mentor students from minorities who are poorly represented in research. I don’t want to compare but African Americans are very similar to SC/ST populations of India, poorly educated and economically very backward. I am happy to share that all the students that I mentored are doing very well.” 

[caption id="attachment_52370" align="aligncenter" width="711"]Indian Researcher | Dr Narendra Prasad Singh | Global Indian Dr Narendra Prasad Singh with his mentees[/caption]

At the South Carolina School of Medicine, Dr Singh serves as the Director of the Analytical Core of the NIH-NCCAM Center for Inflammation and Autoimmunity and as the Program Director of Immune Monitoring Core (Immune Modulation) of the Center for Dietary Supplements and Inflammation. He has published more than 125 research papers in high-impact journals such as Immunity, PNAS Nexus, Cancer Research, JBC, Molecular Pharmacology, and Immunology, contributed towards securing close to $50 million in NIH grants, chaired numerous national and international meetings, and presented his work in countries including Australia, China, Dubai, The Netherlands, and India. Dr Singh also serves as the associate editor of Frontiers in Immunology, one of the most cited journals in the field.

The fulfilment that comes from being of help 

Even while trying to find his footing and pursue a research career beyond Daltonganj, Dr. Narendra Singh made efforts to help others in any way possible. One such instance involved a rickshaw puller named Baiju. One morning, while riding on Baiju’s rickshaw to GLA College Daltonganj, where Dr Singh worked briefly as a faculty member, Baiju expressed his desire to see his son admitted to college if he passed his board exams, and was willing to work day and night to fund his son’s education. “I was touched and told Baiju to see me once his son cleared the matriculation exam.”

When the board results were out Baiju came to Dr. Singh's home with his son, who had passed with a second division, not the first division required for admission to GLA College. Despite the challenges, Dr. Singh personally requested the principal to admit Baiju's son, who eventually graduated from the institution. Although he lost touch with Baiju and his son after moving abroad, he feels happy to have played a role in making their dream come true. 

During the same period, Dr. Singh, along with a few friends, laid the foundation of the NGO named Society of Hill Resource Management School, led by Mr. Mishra, a retired forest ranger and father of a close friend. “The NGO’s motto is Chakriya Vikas (Cyclic Development) of the tribal people in Jharkhand, a predominantly tribal state,” he explains. “Starting with five villages, the NGO expanded to 25 villages, earning funds from the Ford Foundation and the Government of India.” 

[caption id="attachment_52369" align="aligncenter" width="425"]Indian Researcher | Dr Narendra Prasad Singh | Global Indian Dr Narendra Prasad Singh[/caption]

Although Dr Singh's direct involvement with the NGO diminished after moving to the US, he takes pride in its ongoing growth. “Currently, the NGO operates a training centre that empowers villagers in cyclic development concepts and become leaders of change in their communities,” he says. 

Mentoring American-African minorities

Always seeking opportunities to benefit the underprivileged, in the U.S. Dr NP Singh has associated himself with South Carolina–Advancing Diversity in Aging Research (SC-ADAR), a programme funded by the National Institute on Aging. SC-ADAR aims to enhance the research experience, academic skills, and career readiness of underrepresented minority students in ageing-related sciences, preparing them for advanced studies in science, technology, engineering, and medicine. 

As part of the programme, Dr Singh mentors and engages select undergraduate students in a rigorous summer research training. The students conduct research in their desired field under his guidance, spending a summer in his lab and creating a research poster that is presented at the annual USC Summer Research Symposium. In addition to the lab curriculum, students also engage in a seminar-based curriculum where they learn more about ageing research as a viable career path. 

Dr NP Singh is proud of the accomplishments of his mentees. “Some of them joined the medical profession and some of them are pursuing graduate programs. Their success gives me enormous satisfaction. It gives me the motivation to do something for others who truly need my help,” he remarks adding, “Helping underprivileged and economically disadvantaged people has always been my passion.” 

[caption id="attachment_52371" align="aligncenter" width="589"]Indian Researcher | Dr Narendra Prasad Singh | Global Indian Dr Narendra Prasad Singh with his mentees[/caption]

Understanding the value of mentorship from personal experiences 

Good role models and receiving great mentorship during his early struggles in Bihar played a significant role in shaping how Dr Narendra Kumar Singh mentors his own mentees. 

In the 1980s as a student, he excelled academically, earning a B.Sc. Honours (First Class First) and an M.Sc. (First Class First) in Botany. He received a CSIR scholarship from the Government of India for his Ph.D., which he completed under Dr. S. S. N. Sinha at Ranchi University. Reflecting on his mentor, Dr. Singh recalls, “Dr. Sinha not only mentored me but also provided full support and encouraged me to pursue my dreams. He was like a father figure to me.” 

After completing his Ph.D., Dr. Singh secured a faculty position at GLA College in his native town of Daltonganj. Despite ranking second on the merit list, he was not placed in his specialised department of Botany, rather was promised a transfer that never materialised. This disappointment led him to seek opportunities elsewhere. Around this time, another mentor at Ranchi University, also named Dr. Narendra Kumar Singh, inspired him by moving abroad to work in a U.S. lab. “While seeing him off at the airport, I contemplated my own future abroad and became motivated to apply for a second Ph.D. overseas,” Dr. NP Singh remarks. 

In 1986, he was accepted into a Ph.D. program at Purdue University but faced funding issues. Fortunately, he secured a paid fellowship in Russia and went ahead with the opportunity. Dr. Singh credits both his mentors, Dr. Narendra Kumar Singh and Dr. S. S. N. Sinha for significantly influencing his academic career and dreams. 

[caption id="attachment_52373" align="aligncenter" width="710"]Indian Researcher | Dr Narendra Prasad Singh | Global Indian Dr Narendra Prasad Singh during a visit to China in 2019[/caption]

Working on his dreams in the US 

After completing his second PhD and postdoc studies abroad, Dr N P Singh has worked at many institutions in the U.S. including Auburn University, University of Louisville, and Virginia Commonwealth University. 

Since 2005 he is associated with the University of South Carolina School of Medicine, and works as the Director of the Analytical Core of the NIH-NCCAM Center for Inflammation and Autoimmunity and also serves as a Program Director of Immune Monitoring Core (Immune Modulation) of the Center for Dietary Supplements and Inflammation funded by the NIH Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) program. 

“At present, we have several important projects, including studying the transgenerational effects of TCDD (Dioxin) in mice and investigating the role of the gut microbiome in the development of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, as well as exploring possible treatments using gut microbiota,” tells the professor and researcher who has also indulged in research pertaining to plant sciences and molecular pathways involved in cancer, in the past. 

His journey, from overcoming early career challenges in Daltonganj to pioneering research in the U.S. and providing guidance to American-African students, highlights his dedication to academic excellence, mentorship, and service to the underprivileged. Dr Narendra Prasad Singh’s achievements demonstrate that the influence of good mentors, coupled with one’s own perseverance, can have a transformative impact on both personal and professional success.

[caption id="attachment_52372" align="aligncenter" width="794"]Indian Researcher | Dr Narendra Prasad Singh | Global Indian Dr Narendra Prasad Singh in a get-together with a nobel laureate[/caption]

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Asmita Kerkar: Helping fight food insecurity in Minnesota through design psychology

(January 10, 2023) Bernice Wimmer has been trying everything to fight the hunger crisis in the city of Alexandria in Minnesota, and was looking for support in redesigning her outreach food shelf (a point where families shop for the rescued food) to help improve shopping flow and focus on fresh food. Keen for a solution, she was still resisting the change. However, a meeting with Asmita Kerkar, the layout designer with the Foundation for Essential Needs (FFEN), changed it all as she helped create dignified shopping experiences for people facing food insecurity. "Having someone experienced, who knows space design and the psychology behind it, was a gift," Bernice said. In the three years that Asmita has worked with FFEN, she has helped improve the turnout at almost seven food shelves in Minnesota through design psychology, helping create a safe platform for community engagement. [caption id="attachment_48115" align="aligncenter" width="639"] Asmita Kerkar[/caption] "Food insecurity is huge in the US," Asmita tells Global Indian. Almost 34 million people in the US are food insecure, a statistic that shocked her. "I had no idea that the hunger crisis was acute in the US. We have around 400 food shelves in Minnesota, out of which over

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nsecurity is huge in the US," Asmita tells Global Indian. Almost 34 million people in the US are food insecure, a statistic that shocked her. "I had no idea that the hunger crisis was acute in the US. We have around 400 food shelves in Minnesota, out of which over 250 have consulted with FFEN at some point." Working with a nonprofit that's helping Minnesota fight the hunger crisis by managing food shelves in the state, Asmita realised design psychology is most needed by these people as they have a stigma of shame to shop from the food shelves. "Coming from low-income families, they are unable to put food on the table every day, and are in a dilemma about choosing to pay the rent or medical bills or using the money to buy food, " says Asmita, adding, "These people get food through donations which happen mostly in spatial experiences that feel unwelcoming due to lack of choice. But what FFEN or we as spatial designers are trying to do is create a grocery store environment for these people but without exchange of money and the freedom to pick and choose."

Understanding that a space can have an impact on people's psychology, Asmita started bringing more colours to the food shelves by collaborating with artists. "Certain colours can uplift your mood. Moreover, signage plays a pivotal role as language is important. We work around environmental graphics like 'Take As Much As You Need' instead of 'Limited to 5LBS' making the experience welcoming to them." Even changing linear aisles to diagonal has helped improve the shopping experience of people at food shelves.

[caption id="attachment_48116" align="aligncenter" width="674"]Outreach food shelf Outreach food shelf[/caption]

Architecture to design psychology - shifting gears

Fashion designing was Belgaum-born Asmita's first choice but an incident made her shift gear in her career choice. Seeing a beautiful heritage home being torn down in the neighbourhood "broke her heart." This prompted her to read more about architecture and its history and led her to sit for The National Association of Students of Architecture exam. "Though I wasn't good at sketching, my dad and my teacher believed in me and encouraged me to follow my dream." After bagging a seat in Bachelor of Architecture, Asmita had an epiphany that it was the correlation between spaces and human psychology that intrigued her more than the exterior of the building.

After graduating, she took up freelancing projects for interior design leading to an interest in spatial experience design, which intensified after arriving in the US for her master's in environmental design at the ArtCenter College of Design. Learning the psychology of spaces opened up a new horizon for Asmita, and her class on Design Matters nudged her toward designing for social impact. "During my thesis, I started volunteering with FFEN as a layout designer and introduced them to the psychology of design and spaces and its impact. Seeing the feedback pushed me to look for opportunities in nonprofit," says the spatial designer, who initially worked with a corporate as sustaining on a nonprofit as an international student wasn't feasible. "However, I kept volunteering with FFEN."

Asmita Kerkar | Global Indian

Designing for social impact

Opportunity knocked on her door when FFEN approached her to work as a design strategist after receiving a part of the $147,000 grant from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency to design Fresh Food First - food rescue toolkits to help preserve the freshness of the rescued food. "Food makes 18% of landfills in Minnesota where it breaks down and produces methane, impacting climate change. I wanted food shelves to know why it was important to save the rescued food so that it doesn't land up in landfills," she adds. Most of the rescued food comes from farmers, family donations, food drives, restaurants, and few grocery stores like Trader Joe's. "All the donated food goes to a food bank that distributes it to the food shelves. It's again dependent on supply and demand."

Asmita Kerkar

So, what are the toolkits that Asmita has created? "It's mostly guidebooks or graphical posters. In the food shelves, there is a scarcity mindset. Since the supply isn't enough, you don't have enough to showcase. How do you display less produce in a way that people think it's more? You use a tilted basket and pile up everything at an eye level. We try to design such small things that play with the mind of the person rather than their reality which you cannot change." Moreover, the toolkits create awareness in case of food shelves displaying food in wrong equipment. "Most display onions and potatoes together but are unaware that they produce ethylene gas which leads to the darkening of potatoes. Providing a list of ethylene-sensitive and ethylene producers list, helps them stock the produce in a better way. Another aspect is recycling food. Up to 2-3 weeks expired baby food can be consumed by baby animals on the farms," explains Asmita.

[caption id="attachment_48119" align="aligncenter" width="744"] McLeod Food shelf in Minnesota[/caption]

This month her team will pilot the project in seven-ten food shelves. Over the years, Asmita's work has helped create an inclusive and dignified space for people to shop. "It was also a learning experience for FFEN as to what is design psychology and why trauma-informed design is important."

Asmita, who loves baking and going on walks, measures her success by the smiles on the people's faces. "Design for social impact is what I am interested in, and knowing that my work is helping hundreds of people every day makes me content," she signs off.

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Guitar Prasanna: Blending strings of tradition with beats of innovation in music

(September 6, 2024) In the world of music, where tradition and innovation often find themselves at odds, one man has managed to harmonize the two opposing poles easily. Prasanna Ramaswamy, widely known as Guitar Prasanna, is a name that resonates with music aficionados across the globe.  A pioneer in playing Carnatic music on the guitar, Prasanna's journey is a masterclass in dedication, passion, and the relentless pursuit of one's unique voice. Having worked with some of the stalwarts in the musical world, including the likes of AR Rahman and Ilaiyaraaja, the maestro has always pushed boundaries with his work.  Musical Roots Prasanna's story begins in Tamil Nadu, growing up in small towns including Mettur and Ranipet before moving to Chennai at the age of seven. His early life was steeped in music, albeit not from professional musicians. His sister learned Carnatic vocal and Veena, and his brother was an enthusiastic singer of film songs. This familial environment, though not professionally musical, laid the groundwork for the maestro’s future. "I was playing professionally from a young age, performing Carnatic music on the guitar and playing with top rock bands," he recalls.  The maestro’s academic journey followed a conventional path, leading him

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natic music on the guitar and playing with top rock bands," he recalls. 

Indian Musicians | Guitar Prasanna | Global Indian

The maestro’s academic journey followed a conventional path, leading him to IIT Madras, where he earned a B.Tech in Naval Architecture. After graduating from IIT, he worked as a software engineer, but his heart was always in music. With the unwavering support of his family, he made the decision to pursue a full-time career in music. 

Unique musical identity 

The musician is renowned for his pioneering efforts in bringing Carnatic music to the guitar—an idea that was almost inconceivable before him. His distinctiveness quickly became his signature, a hallmark that set him apart in a world crowded with guitarists. 

Growing up, Prasanna was influenced by the music of legendary Indian film composers like Ilaiyaraaja and R.D. Burman. Alongside this, he developed a deep love for rock and metal, genres he began exploring with various bands during his teenage years. 

But it was his immersion in Carnatic music that truly defined his musical journey. "I was the only one that I knew who was playing Carnatic music, heavy metal, and Indian film music all at the same time," he reflects. This eclectic blend of styles made him a unique figure in the music world, capable of seamlessly transitioning between genres and integrating them in a way that had never been done before. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uxweBLTnZ4

The American Dream

In 1994, Prasanna made a bold move that would change the course of his life—he relocated to the United States to study at the Berklee College of Music. This decision was driven by his desire to deepen his understanding of jazz and Western classical music, genres that required formal study and rigorous discipline. However, the transition was not without its challenges. "When I came to Berklee, I was shocked to find over 1,000 guitar players studying at the school," he says, highlighting the competitive environment he had entered. 

Undeterred, the musical genius focused on honing his skills, not just as a guitarist but also as a composer and arranger. His time at Berklee was spent mastering the intricacies of jazz and classical music, equipping himself with the tools necessary to create his unique musical signature. "The goal was a single-minded focus towards learning everything that I can," he says, a focus that has undoubtedly paid off. 

Prasanna's journey was fraught with challenges, particularly from critics who doubted the authenticity of playing Carnatic music on the guitar. However, he remained steadfast. "I had to block out the criticism and focus on what I knew I could achieve," he says. His determination was fueled by a deep belief in his vision and the realization that he had the potential to create something truly special. 

Indian Musicians | Guitar Prasanna | Global Indian

His success has since silenced the critics. Today, the musician is recognized worldwide for his contributions as a guitar player and composer, having released 18 albums, scoring the music for the Oscar-winning film Smile Pinki and the National Award and Filmfare Award-winning Tamil film Vazhakku Enn 18/9, and scoring for numerous dance theater productions all over the world. 

His work is not just about blending genres but about mastering them, understanding their depths, and creating something entirely new. 

Role of tradition in a modern world

Despite his modern and innovative approach to music, Prasanna remains deeply rooted in the traditional Guru-Shishya parampara, the teacher-disciple tradition that is central to Indian classical music. "As far as learning Carnatic music goes, this is what I subscribe to," he affirms. 

The stalwart believes that the relationship between the guru and the shishya (disciple) is essential for the transmission of knowledge and the preservation of tradition. He is ‘grateful for the blessings’ of his Carnatic Gurus Tiruvarur S. Balasubramaniam, with whom he studied for six years, and the great Violin Maestro A. Kanyakumari, with whom he studied for over 25 years. 

As a teacher, the virtuoso is not just imparting musical skills but mentoring his students in every aspect of their growth as musicians. "Producing my students' albums is a big part of where my focus is now," he says, underscoring his commitment to nurturing the next generation of musicians. 

Indian Musicians | Guitar Prasanna | Global Indian

In 2024, four of Prasanna’s talented students are releasing their debut albums: singer/songwriter Shruti’s modern pop album Desire, guitarist Rohit H. Sivaram’s progressive metal album Unearth Prophecy, multi-instrumentalist Neil Nayyar’s world music album Breaking Barriers, and guitarist Archish Sadeesh’s jazz and carnatic album Sounds from Thin Air. 

Prasanna arranged and produced Shruti’s, Neil's, and Archish’s albums and co-produced Rohit’s. His student Maya Neelakantan, an eleven-year-old guitar prodigy, has become a global sensation after her performances at America’s Got Talent Season 19 with her Carnatic-infused renderings of Last Resort by Papa Roach and Master of Puppets by Metallica. 

A global citizen

Even though the musician has spent nearly three decades in the United States, his connection to India remains strong. He frequently performs across India in venues ranging from formal concert halls to edgy rock clubs, and he participates in the December Carnatic music season in Chennai. "India has always been a huge part of my concert trips," he says, emphasizing his continued engagement with his homeland. 

Outside of his musical career, Prasanna leads a fulfilling personal life. His wife, Shalini, is an accomplished singer across many genres and an integral part of his musical journey. Their high school-going daughter is passionate about horse riding and competes in equestrian events. As a family, they enjoy hiking, traveling, and other outdoor activities. Prasanna also has a keen interest in chess, a game he credits with making his music "much more radical." 

Indian Musicians | Guitar Prasanna | Global Indian

Guitar Prasanna’s journey is one of passion, dedication, and the courage to pursue a unique path. His ability to bridge diverse musical traditions and create something entirely new has made him a global icon. As he continues to explore new musical horizons and mentor the next generation, Prasanna remains a true global Indian—rooted in tradition yet constantly pushing the boundaries of what is possible in music.

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PK Mahanandia: The Indian-Swedish artist who cycled from India to Europe for love

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. This very love made him cycle 6000 km from Delhi to Sweden on a life-changing epic journey. Now an advisor for art and culture for the Swedish government, he inspired the 2013 book by Per J Andersson called The Amazing Story Of The Man Who Cycled From India To Europe For Love.

[caption id="attachment_28630" align="aligncenter" width="683"]Artist | PK Mahanandia | Global Indian PK Mahanandia and Charlotte[/caption]

Born in 1949 in a village that inspired Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book, PK's life as a Dalit was harsh outside his home. It was in school that he first understood the meaning of caste when he came in contact with the Hindus. From being forced to sit outside the class during school, watching his classmates wash themselves after coming in contact with him, to having stones pelted at him for approaching the temple, PK endured the harsh reality of being an untouchable in India. "There I felt I’m not the same as them. It’s like a skyscraper without a lift. You’re born on one floor and you die on the same floor," the Global Indian told National Geographic.

Despite the hardships, PK knew he was meant for something bigger, at least that's what the priest had prophesised after his birth - he would be working with colours and art. As a kid, he was pulled to art and was quick in drawing things. So much so that eventually he ended up getting a scholarship from Odisha to attend the College of Art in New Delhi. The initial months were liberating, as for the first time, PK didn't have to bother about being an untouchable, here, all were equal. But soon the excitement started to fade away as hunger and poverty came knocking on his door. With no money to keep him floating, things started spiralling until he began painting on the streets of Delhi to earn a quick buck. "I was like a vagabond living between hope and despair. But for three years I learned the lessons of life. I started thinking differently after I met these people," the artist added.

After his schooling, he enrolled in College of Art, Delhi in 1971

He started studying fine arts on a scholarship

It was difficult because most of the time, the scholarship amount didn't reach him and finding a job was difficult because of the discrimination he'd face as a dalit pic.twitter.com/0GIecjA2QJ

— Sufyan🌹 (@PsyOpValkyrie) July 25, 2020

But things changed for him when he ended up doing 10 portraits of Soviet astronaut Valentina Tereshkova and appeared on television. The stint made him an overnight star in the capital and helped him continue making portraits in the heart of Delhi. But it was in December 1975 that the prophecy came to fruition when the artist met a "woman with long beautiful blonde hair" from a faraway land whose family did own a forest and who played the piano and flute. With a longing for India, she had travelled for 22 days in a minibus along the Hippie Trail to reach India. They hit it off instantly and formed a deep connection, so much so that within a few days, Charlotte was on a train with PK to his village in Odisha to meet his family, where they received the tribe’s blessings. But soon Charlotte's trip was coming to an end, and she returned to Sweden with a promise from PK that he would follow her soon to Europe.

But that all changed when he was at a procession one day

It was for Valentina Treskova, the first woman cosmonaut from the USSR

He quickly made a sketch of her a presented it to her. The next day all newspapers went ablaze with headlines like "Woman from Space meets Jungleman". pic.twitter.com/YWAOXfXrA3

— Sufyan🌹 (@PsyOpValkyrie) July 25, 2020

With just $80 in his pocket, he left for Sweden in the chilly winter of January 1977 on two wheels, as "only a Maharaja could afford a plane ticket" in those days. So he took the popular Hippie Trail that stretched from India through Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey, and former Yugoslavia to Europe. Travellers didn't need a visa at that time as the region was safe and stable. "We were together 2-3 weeks and then she left. For one and a half years we didn’t meet. We kept in touch by letter but eventually, I thought it was time to take the first step. So I sold everything I owned and bought a bicycle," he told NatGeo. Those four months on the road, he kept himself floating by painting portraits for food and money.

On 17 Dec 1975, he met a girl from Sweden called Charlotte von Schedvin who had driven for 22 days to reach Delhi.

Although their vast class difference (she was from Swedish nobility and he was a dalit), they hit it off almost instantly. pic.twitter.com/rRejClj1mH

— Sufyan🌹 (@PsyOpValkyrie) July 25, 2020

"I did not know geography, of how big Europe was. I didn't even know the distance in kilometers. If I had known how far it was, I don't think I would have dared. It's good that I didn't know," he told Hindustan Times in an interview. He would cycle up to 70 km every day, but there were days that he would get lifts, and was once even gifted a train ticket from Istanbul to Vienna. "Sometimes you'd get two or three hitchhiking offers and you'd have to choose. I bicycled for love, but I never loved biking," he told CNN.

PK calls it a different world of peace and love, and freedom. With many hippie friends made on the way, he was guided and instructed on his first big adventure outside India. "Afghanistan was such a different country. It was calm and beautiful. People loved the arts. And vast parts of the country were not populated," he told BBC. While he did face communication barriers in Iran, it was art that came to his rescue. "I think love is the universal language and people understand that." Though the 6000 km journey was exhausting for the artist, it was the excitement of meeting Charlotte and seeing new places that kept nudging him forward.

[caption id="attachment_28628" align="aligncenter" width="670"]Artist | PK Mahanandia | Global Indian This cycle on which travelled from India to Europe[/caption]

It was in May that PK reached Europe - via Istanbul, and Vienna and finally made it to Gothenburg (Sweden) by train. However, stepping into a new continent came with its share of cultural shocks and difficulties. But he was determined to win over Charlotte's parents, and finally, the two got officially married in Sweden. "I had no idea about European culture. It was all new to me, but she supported me in every step. She is just a special person. I am still in love just as I was in 1975," he added.

While Charlotte continued her career in music, PK did what he knew best - art. Currently, an adviser on art and culture for the Swedish government, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005. In the last few decades together, the couple has dedicated themselves to promoting indigenous arts and offering cultural scholarships to 25,000 Indian tribal children in high school. "Love has given me the power to forgive the people throwing stones at me. They need education. I'm glad that our story is giving people hope," the artist told CNN.

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MR Rangaswami: From angel investing to mobilising Indian leaders for social change through Indiaspora

(March 12, 2024) These days, MR Rangaswami is a real man about town in the US. He's at the top summits, meeting celebrities like AR Rahman when they're in the US, and rubbing shoulders with the likes of PM Modi, attending parties at the home of Vice President Kamala Harris or rubbing shoulders with Ambassadors Taranjit Singh Sandhu and Eric Garcetti. He's one of Silicon Valley's top angel investors and philanthropists, as he mobilises his vast network of business leaders, politicians, startups and non-profits to bring about social good. It wasn't always the case, though. MR Rangaswami's success came through hard work, failure and the ability to  take a risk, which he has done several times, from becoming the US' first angel investor to organising a CEO retreat for some of the US' biggest names in the corporate world and giving all the proceeds away to charity. Back in 1997, however, when MR Rangaswami was busy organising his first CEO retreat under the banner of his company, Sand Hill, it seemed as if things weren’t destined to go his way. He set up an advisory board, put a programme together and sent out invitations. Nobody registered. CEOs received dozens of

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s received dozens of conference invitations just like this one, and they wanted to know how this one was any different. So, the Global Indian made a bold decision, one that would change his life. He decided to organise the first ever non-profit conference, where 100 percent of the proceeds would be donated. The idea was a huge hit. In the last 15 years, the organisation has given away over $20 million to non-profits, and CEOs pay up to $10,000 per head just to attend. The conference is also a platform for deserving non-profits to network with industry captains, receive advice, feedback and investments.

M.R. Rangaswami is widely regarded as one of the founding fathers of Silicon Valley. He has been profiled on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, named to Forbes' 'Midas' list of investors and has been recognized by CRN as one of the top 25 Tech Executives. He's also the founder of Indiaspora, through which he mobilises high achievers from the Indian diaspora as a force for good. His ethos is simple: Indians are in the top one percent in the US, with an average annual income of $1,50,000. "Our community tends to be very low profile," he said, in an interview. "But we need to be more high profile because all Americans need to know that we are generous and we help." Indiaspora hosts an Annual Leadership Forum, a Philanthropy Summit and the Global Connect Initiative, and engages in community issues as well.

‘Young and naïve’ in Houston, Texas

M.R. Rangaswami first arrived in Silicon Valley "as a young, naive person with absolutely no idea of what the value was about," as he puts it. He had graduated from Loyola College, Chennai and was a techie with a comfortable job in Houston, Texas. One day, when he met a consultant for training, the consultant asked him what he does. M.R. replied that he had an MBA and works with computers. "He says, 'what the heck are you doing in Houston? You better get out to Silicon Valley'. In those days there was no LinkedIn, no Facebook, no internet, nothing. In '82, I'm sitting in  Houston saying, how the hell do I get to Silicon Valley?"

The only way was the long way. He went to the library, starting at what Silicon Valley was in the first place. He made a list of potential employers and software company listings, typed out his resume and mailed it out to them.

The Silicon Valley journey

Sure enough, a company called him, did an interview and offered him a job. What MR didn't know at the time was that he had joined a startup. And he was the only Indian there. The compan did great, doubling in the first year, the second year and third year. Then, in the fourth year, the company asked him to lay off all the employees in his group, until he was the only one left. "Then they called me and said, 'You're laid off as well'."

[caption id="attachment_49924" align="aligncenter" width="528"] MR Rangaswami with PM Narendra Modi[/caption]

However, instead of being bogged down by failure, MR knew the time had come to pivot away from the corporate ladder. "I grew in the industry, seen Steve Jobs, Mary Ellis and Scott McNealy and all the big names in enterprise and consumer tech," he says. "That was my upbringing. I had a terrific career at companies like Oracle and helped take a company public; the stock went from 25 cents to $50." And the sudden break in his career allowed him to ask if he wanted to keep on making money or do something different with his life.

This was the mid-nineties, at the height of the startup boom and the Silicon Valley dot-com bubble. And M.R. Rangaswami chose to do what nobody had done before. He founded the first Angel Investor firm, at a time when the phrase hadn't even come in to use yet. In 1997, he bought sandhill.com for $20, beginning his journey as one of the founding fathers of the Silicon Valley tech startup ecosystem. "I picked up the domain for $20 and thought, that's going to be my exit. One of these days, someone's going to offer me a million bucks." His aim was to help startups, either through feedback and connecting them with investors, or by investing personally. He invested in some 150 companies, a few of them did badly, and others did very well. "I invested in some good companies but that was not my intent," he says. "It was to help founders."

The thrill of giving back

It did, however, invoke his spirit of giving. "Then I wanted to bring the whole ecosystem together, through a conference or a retreat for the top 100 people in business and in tech," Rangaswami recalls. He had seen the Indian community in Silicon Valley grow in leaps and bounds, until they populated the top one percent of the working population in the US. When MR first came to Silicon Valley, it was home to some 10,000 Indians. Fast forward four decades and there are 4,00,000 Indians living there. They're also among the highest earners, at the forefront of major corporations, VCs, angel investor firms and startups.

[caption id="attachment_49925" align="aligncenter" width="443"] MR Rangaswami and Sri Sri Ravishankar[/caption]

When his corporate retreat idea didn't take off, Rangaswami decided to make an even bolder move and pivoted straight into the non-profit space and discovered that he had created a very successful mode. "We have been able to give away over $20 million and also bring the CEOs of non-profits into our network and give them mentorship, advice and even money from many of the CEOs of large corporations," he said, in a talk. "The same CEOs pay a lot of money to attend, today, it's $10,000 per person. All that money goes to non-profits, I don't take a single penny out of it and the model has become a huge success." He also went on to found the Corporate Eco Forum, an invite only community for publicly listed companies with a strong environmental focus in their core business strategy. Members in the Top 100 include Bank of America, Procter & Gamble, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase & Co, Microsoft, Sales Force, The Walt Disney Company and many more.

The birth of Indiaspora

After that, there was no looking back. In 2007, noticing that the Indian diaspora was growing in numbers and in wealth, with no single organisation to unite them, he started Indiaspora. "There are communities for lawyers, doctors and other professions. And there are groups for communities like the Gujarati Samaj and the Tamil Sangam," he says. "The idea was to bring together people from all walks of life to be a force for good." Driven by the idea of 'seva', Indiaspora helps non-profits and different organisations amplify their messages.

A decade later, Indiaspora is a high profile network of global Indian leaders, involved with philanthropy, civic engagement and social impact and entrepreneurship and innovation. Their philanthropic efforts are in the form of a long-term partnership with Give, based in India. In the US, they aim to support over 500 non-profits through philanthropic contributions from over 200 partners and this arm of the organisation is headed by Ashish Shah. The partnership was formed in 2022, as Give India and Indiaspora hosted the Indiaspora-Give Philanthropy Summit at the Consulate General of India, New York, bringing together leading philanthropists, foundations and non-profits.

Their civic engagement deals with a diverse set of issues, including racial justice and gender equality. And MR Rangaswami believes that all enterprises will eventually be social enterprises, that for-profit companies will work for social good. He urges everyone to live by Salesforce's' 1-1-1- model - 'Donate one percent of your time, product, profit to philanthropic causes'.

Follow MR Rangaswami on LinkedIn.

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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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