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Subramanyan Chandrasekhar | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryWho is Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar? The scientist after whom Elon Musk named his son
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Who is Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar? The scientist after whom Elon Musk named his son

Compiled by: Charu Thakur

(December 8, 2023) Early this November, a conversation between billionaire Elon Musk and India’s IT Minister, Rajeev Chandrasekhar at AI Safety Summit, UK, unearthed a revelation. The 52-year-old disclosed that his son with Shivon Zilis has an Indian connect. He bears the middle name “Chandrasekar,” a homage to the Nobel Laureate Professor Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.

Making the revelation, Rajeev Chandrasekhar tweeted, “Look who i bumped into at #AISafetySummit at Bletchley Park, UK. @elonmusk shared that his son with @shivon has a middle name “Chandrasekhar” – named after 1983 Nobel physicist Prof S Chandrasekhar.”

Look who i bumped into at #AISafetySummit at Bletchley Park, UK.@elonmusk shared that his son with @shivon has a middle name “Chandrasekhar” – named after 1983 Nobel physicist Prof S Chandrasekhar pic.twitter.com/S8v0rUcl8P

— Rajeev Chandrasekhar 🇮🇳 (@Rajeev_GoI) November 2, 2023

Replying to Rajeev Chandrasekhar’s tweet, Shivon Zilis tweeted, “Haha, yes, that’s true. We call him Sekhar for short, but the name was chosen in honour of our children’s heritage and the amazing Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar.”

Indian scientist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1983 “for his theoretical studies of the physical processes of importance to the structure and evolution of the stars.” Global Indian puts the spotlight on the Indian physicist.

The child prodigy

It was in the Pre-Independent India that Chandrasekhar was born into a free-thinking and Tamil speaking Brahmin family in Lahore to a civil servant father CS Ayyar. For him and his siblings, education began at home where their mother Sitalakshmi taught them Tamil and English, and their father would take the charge of teaching arithmetic and English before leaving for work every day. At the age of eight, he moved to Madras with his family as his father was promoted to the role of a deputy accountant general, and by 1921, he started going to a regular school. In the second year of his school, he was introduced to algebra and geometry, and he was so fascinated by the subjects that he ended up devouring the books the summer before the start of the school.

Subramanyam Chandrasekhar | Global Indian

Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar

This interest led him to Presidency College in 1925, where he studied physics, maths, chemistry, Sanskrit and English. While his interest in physics and maths kept going, he was also inspired by S Ramanujan who had gone to England and was counted among the world’s most distinguished mathematicians. Though he eyed mathematics honours, his father was keen that his son too becomes a civil servant. But it was Chandrasekhar’s mother who backed him up and asked him to follow his heart. Chandrasekhar opted for Physics honours in order to placate his father because his paternal uncle CV Raman was a noted physicist who had won a Nobel Prize in 1930.

The discovery that led to Nobel Prize

At the age of 17, he spent a summer working in his uncle’s lab but soon realised that experimental physics wasn’t his calling. However, in those days he befriended one of Raman’s colleagues who introduced him to the work of Arnold Sommerfeld, one among a group of theorists revolutionising the field of physics through the principles of quantum mechanics. This group also had Ralph H Folwer who helped Chandrasekhar publish his first professional paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Towards the end of his college, he was offered a scholarship from Govt of India to study in England, and in 1930, he set off sail for the University of Cambridge. It was during his voyage that the 19-year-old, while reading physics publications, came across an insight that led him to win a Nobel Prize in 1983.

Almost seven decades ago astronomers saw a white dwarf for the first time. It’s a tiny, hot, and super dense leftover from a star that ran out of fuel. But something didn’t add up—this object should have collapsed under its own gravity. Fowler, who was going to be Chandra’s teacher for a Ph.D. at Cambridge, figured out the mystery by using quantum theory to explain why the white dwarf didn’t collapse. He explained that when the nuclear energy source in the center of a star such as the Sun is exhausted, it collapses to form a white dwarf, and he demonstrated that there is an upper limit — now called the Chandrasekhar limit — to the mass of a white dwarf star.

 

Subramanyan Chandrasekhar | Global Indian

Moreover, up until that time scientists used to think that when a star used up all its fuel, it would become a cold ball of ashes—a white dwarf star. Chandra’s math proved that a white dwarf heavier than the sun couldn’t exist. Instead, it would collapse forever into an incredibly tiny point with infinite density. This collapse would create something called a black hole, a place in space where nothing, not even light, could escape. Chandra’s work was the first undeniable proof, backed by math, that black holes, as we now call them, had to be real.

The controversy that changed it all

Excited about his discovery, he thought that he would be welcomed with open arms in Cambridge, however, his hoped were dashed as the scientists ignored his discovery. Depressed, he continued and finished his doctorate in 1933. The same year he also won a fellowship to continue his work at Cambridge. Feeling encouraged by these achievements, he went back to studying what happens to stars in the future. Surprisingly, the well-known Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington, a leader in astrophysics, started visiting him often to check on his progress.

Encouraged by his support, Chandrasekhar prepared a paper for a meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society in London in 1935 that was to have all the leading figures in astrophysics in attendance. He presented the paper, showing a chart that if a star was heavier than a certain amount, it would definitely shrink away to nothing and even more. However, Eddington didn’t back Chandrasekhar’s conclusions and even stating that it has no basis in reality. His reputation was so strong that nobody felt brave enough to disagree with him. Chandrasekhar wasn’t even allowed a chance to respond. The argument continued for many years in papers and during scientific meetings.

Subramanyam Chandrasekhar | Global Indian

The confrontation had a lasting effect on Chandrasekhar, who for decades, didn’t follow up on his discovery and even turned to a different field, and took up a position in University of Chicago. A few decades later, scientists trying to make the hydrogen bomb noticed that it resembled an exploding star. In 1966, at the Livermore National Laboratory in California, scientists started using computer codes for both astrophysics and hydrogen bombs. This breakthrough led the scientific community to accept that a star could indeed collapse and turn into a black hole.

Six years later, scientists identified the first black hole, named Cygnus X-1. Since then, many more black holes have been discovered. This meant that, 40 years after Chandrasekhar’s first discovery, he was proven right, and Eddington was proven wrong. Chandra received the Nobel Prize in 1983 for his research on white dwarfs.

Subramanyam Chandrasekhar | Global Indian

The scientist breathed his last in 1995 and four years later, NASA’s premier X-ray observatory was named the Chandra X-ray Observatory in his honour.

And now the Nobel laureate is again in news as Elon Musk has named his son after Chandrasekhar. His groundbreaking contributions to astrophysics, particularly his work on the Chandrasekhar limit, significantly advanced our understanding of stellar evolution. Musk’s choice to honour this scientist underscores the enduring impact of scientific pioneers and the importance of recognising their invaluable contributions to humanity.

 

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  • Black Hole
  • Dwarf Star
  • Elon Musk
  • Elon Musk Son
  • Global Indian
  • Indian scientist
  • Livermore National Laboratory
  • Nobel Prize for Physics
  • Shivon Zilis
  • Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar

Published on 08, Dec 2023

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Ananya Birla: The artist and entrepreneur tiptoeing into the family business

(February 3, 2023) Ananya Birla's appointment as director to the Aditya Birla Fashion and Retail Ltd marks the entry of the fifth generation of the family in the $60 billion conglomerate. However, before diving into the family business, the 28-year-old billionaire heiress wanted to carve her own journey and not rest on the laurels and fame of her family name. And that's exactly what she did in the last decade - being an artist and an entrepreneur. Being born with a silver spoon can spell comfort and security, but affluence can also cast a shadow on freedom and destiny. And this was something that she was aware of at crucial junctures of her life. It is her heart that Ananya follows, and this led to her finding her true calling — music and entrepreneurship. For someone passionate about singing and making a difference in the world, Ananya is carving her niche as a youth icon.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Ananya Birla (@ananyabirla) A loneliness that led to music Born to billionaire industrialist Kumar Mangalam Birla and Neerja Birla, Ananya often found herself at the crossroads of living up to her family's name and

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A post shared by Ananya Birla (@ananyabirla)

A loneliness that led to music

Born to billionaire industrialist Kumar Mangalam Birla and Neerja Birla, Ananya often found herself at the crossroads of living up to her family's name and carving her own identity. With a bodyguard and a curfew in place, Ananya felt claustrophobic trying to fit into the world's expectations of her. It was music that came to her rescue in times of loneliness and made her feel understood.

[caption id="attachment_34628" align="aligncenter" width="508"]Ananya Birla | Global Indian | Artist Ananya Birla with father Kumar Mangalam Birla[/caption]

Her parents who were supportive of her dreams often helped ease her dilemma. Even as a child, it was music that gave Birla solace and joy. At age nine, she picked up the santoor, having watched her mother play the instrument over the years. Growing up, she fell in love with the guitar and taught herself to play the instrument through YouTube tutorials. That's when she started tiptoeing into the world of music composition. However, music continued to be a hobby, until, she moved to Oxford University to study Economics and Management.

The musical journey

It was here that Ananya was introduced to the vibrant music scene and the gig culture that played a catalyst in transforming her passion into a career. She began playing at local pubs and clubs in London, and also started writing her own music. This exposure to several genres of music gave her the confidence to make her own music. And that's what she did when she dropped her first single Livin the Life in 2016.

The popularity of the song landed her a worldwide release through AM:PM recording after Dutch DJ Afrojack remixed it. This was the beginning of her innings in music.

Ananya arrived on the scene when there were not many takers of the music that she was producing. But the 28-year-old had to break the ceiling to make her voice heard, literally.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzeKmJj7L-Q

In a conversation with Billboard, she said, "When I started out, I was told that there wasn’t really an audience in India for my type of music. Until recently, film music really dominated. Different genres and English-language songs didn't get much attention. Now labels are pushing independent singers, and there's a lot more opportunity for artists who want to create their own music. The digital shift and globalisation also mean the appetite for English language music has increased so much," adding, "I think if you want to stand out from the crowd you have to be willing to take risks and go against the grain. Breaking out was tough and I got a bit of criticism at first which was hard to deal with. But, I learned quickly that this comes with the territory and anything creative is 100% subjective. I am so happy people are now responding so positively to my music back home."

With 2017 came her next single Meant To Be. Such was the response to her song that made her the first Indian artist with an English single to go platinum in India. In no time, Ananya made a name for herself in the music world and was recognized by international artists. So much so that she soon found herself performing at Coldplay's concert in Mumbai.

The platinum singer

Ananya is one of the few women artists who is making it big in pop music with five of her singles making it to platinum. Be it Hold On (2018) or Unstoppable (2019), Ananya has been carving a niche for herself in the world of music, one song at a time. "As a woman in a male-dominated industry, it’s important to believe in yourself and not to do anything you don’t feel comfortable with. It can be tough. When I started out, it really hurt when I was told that my style, look, or sound wasn’t right. But my vision was strong and I refused to change for anyone. As soon as I was confident being unapologetically myself, everything started falling into place," she added.

 

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A post shared by Ananya Birla (@ananyabirla)

Ananya's songs are an extension of herself, something that she draws from her personal experiences. For her, music is a medium through which she connects with people and emotions.

The singer and songwriter is one of the few artists to collaborate with big names like Sean Kingston and Mood Melodies, thus giving the world a perfect mix of pop music. Ananya's songs and collaborations are a reminder that music is a universal language. "International perspective definitely helps take a song to the next level. I'm influenced by all the places I go. I’ve been lucky to work in some of the best cities across the world where music is a huge part of the culture. India, though, is a part of my soul. It is impossible not to be influenced by it, the intensity, the sounds, the centuries of culture," added the Global Indian.

In just a few years, Ananya has become a name to reckon with in international music circles. If her 2019 song Day Goes By was proof of the first collaboration between an Indian and American artist, her 2020 song Everybody's Lost put her on an American national top 40 pop radio show, Sirius XM Hits, making her the first Indian artist to achieve that feat.

Ananya's music is universal, and her performances at some of the biggest music events like Global Citizen, Oktoberfest, and Sunburn are proof of her popularity.

The entrepreneur making a difference

Ananya's love for music is quite evident, but not many know that she founded her first startup at 17. While her heart is in music, her purpose lies in making a difference and that's exactly what she did when she started Svatantra Microfin to provide financial aid to women in rural India.

Despite her privileges, Ananya was aware of the existing income gap and wanted a company that could help small businesses grow. But it was a challenge to start a company at 17, even with a powerful surname.

 

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A post shared by Ananya Birla (@ananyabirla)

"When I started up, I was young and no one was willing to join my team; banks were not willing to lend. No clients are willing to come in. I used to cry in the bathroom when I came home after work," she told Makers India in an interview. But she was determined to make it happen and currently, her startup has reached over one million customers across the country.

Ananya expanded her vision and dove into a global luxury e-commerce platform with Ikai Asai in 2016. It was in the same year that Forbes named her one of Asia's Women to Watch.

The youth icon and entrepreneur is also closely involved with MPower, a mental health foundation she started with her mother Neerja to break taboos around mental health. Her struggles with anxiety as a teenager led to the formation of MPower, and the foundation is working incessantly to create awareness of mental health.

"We have centuries worth of stigma built up around mental health issues - self-perpetuated by the fact that poor mental health is so difficult to talk about. However, the importance of talking about it cannot be overstated. When we talk about mental illness we debunk falsities, tackle isolation and empower those suffering to get the help they so badly need. With global suicide rates on the rise, it is crucial that reaching out for help becomes an act of power as opposed to a sign of weakness," she told YourStory.

Ananya Birla | Global Indian

During the pandemic MPower joined hands with the Government of Maharashtra to launch a 24x7 helpline and more than 45,000 calls were received within the first two months of its launch.

Not only this, Ananya launched Ananya Birla Foundation in 2020 to provide COVID-19 relief work that had the distribution of PPE kits and providing essentials to migrant workers at its centre.

At 28, Ananya is the textbook example of a youth icon who is breaking the glass ceiling with her global music one hit single at a time, and making a difference in society with her philanthropic work.

  • Follow Ananya Birla on Twitter and Instagram

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Meet Raj Patel, the Gujarat-born American Indian, whose brand of wine was served at the State dinner hosted at the White House for our Prime Minister. (July 23, 2023) Recently, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the US, President Joe Biden hosted a State dinner for him. A bottle of wine from Patel Winery was served along with the food. It is not very often that one hears of an Indian entrepreneur in the US who is in the business of producing wines. Competing with other vineyards, some of them being family-owned businesses going back hundreds of years, and selling a bouquet of high-end red and white wines takes some doing. Yet, Raj Patel, a first-generation wine producer, has successfully converted his early passion for wine into a business. Passion for Wines Raj recalls how his journey into wine-making began. “My passion for wine began 20 years ago while working as a lab intern for Robert Mondavi Winery. I learned how to make superior-quality wines and I have been a passionate student ever since.” [caption id="attachment_42088" align="aligncenter" width="505"] Raj Patel, Founder of Patel Winery.[/caption] Raj initially worked in the finance industry. And when an opportunity to get into the wine

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ploads/2023/07/Raj-Patel-Headshot-1-scaled.jpg" alt="Global Indian | Raj Patel" width="505" height="714" /> Raj Patel, Founder of Patel Winery.[/caption]

Raj initially worked in the finance industry. And when an opportunity to get into the wine business opened up, he grabbed it, though it came with challenges. He says, “Starting a wine business was at the back of my mind since 1989 when I first worked at Robert Mondavi. A winery requires years of planning and saving. It also requires patience, a tremendous amount of work, and determination because you might have to wait for a couple of years before you start turning in a profit. Building a brand is difficult in any industry, but in the wine business, it’s even more so because of lots of competition, and many wineries have been around for a few hundred years. I finally started the business plan in 2006 and in 2007 we made our first vintage.”

The wines that Patel Winery started out with were Cabernet Sauvignon (CS) wine and added red wine in 2008; In 2013 they added Malbec, Coombsville, and Rutherford CS. Raj’s goal though is to produce Bordeaux-style red wine and finally, own a winery of his own in the future.

Napa Valley Nuances

What is the business model then and how does Raj actually produce the wines? He explains, “We are currently using a custom crush facility to produce our wine. We use only handpicked, hand-sorted grapes from premiere Napa Valley vineyards. Winemakers believe that wine is made in the vineyard—in other words, it takes great grapes to create great wine.  Our mission statement is ‘to produce the finest Bordeaux-style red wine from Napa Valley.’ My intent is to create unique wines with a strong personality that reflect the uniqueness of each vineyard and sub-applications of Napa Valley.” His personal favourites though are wines from Napa Valley, Bordeaux, France, Piedmont, Italy, and Champagne, in France.

Pairing Indian food with Wine

Global liquor giants are now tweaking their alcohol brands to suit Indian cuisine, some even blending them differently or creating exotic cocktails with Indian spices and other ingredients, and offering them at curated meals with dishes specifically paired to suit the drink. Do Raj’s wines follow this trend? He says, “We make wine for those who love wine and all kinds of food, and we let our clients decide what they enjoy a bottle of our wine with. In the US, many are moving away from spirits and beer to wine. Drinking wine is fashionable in the Indian community all over the world. Here, over 50 percent of my customers are of Indian origin. In today's global market, it's too difficult to set a broad agenda to match food and wine, that is an old concept.  The new school of thought is more open to the type of foods and wine pairing.  The wine critics might have a different viewpoint, but from a winery owner's point of view, we need to trust consumers and let them figure it out.”

Hence, Raj prefers to stick to the traditional while reiterating that Indians, even those in the US, are now drinking wine and not just beer and whisky, and pairing it effortlessly with Indian food. He believes that his wines are best paired with Indian curries and dishes that are bland to medium-spicy. “Because we have people from so many diverse cultures who drink our wines, it's hard to stay one dish works better than another. Having said that, I would not pair very hot and spicy foods with our red wines, medium-spicy works best. Our white wine can be paired with much spicier foods.”

What then is the business model followed for the production of wine since he doesn’t grow the grapes himself? “Due to the nature of grape production, considerable produce can be obtained on a limited amount of land. Depending on the variety produced, for many new farmers, especially in areas where land is quite expensive, leasing land is often the best option.  We lease the bulk of their land for crop production, allowing them the flexibility to adjust to our growth target.”

Process of Winemaking

The techniques followed also stick to the traditional. “We utilise neo-classic winemaking techniques; we are not a style that is driven by or follows the latest fad in winemaking. Our goal is to capture the uniqueness of the growing site for each vineyard and give each wine its personality. This approach to winemaking is pure and unadulterated; therefore, the wines will typically be very dark in colour, complex and aromatic; most of the characteristics that determine a wine’s style. We also age our wine in 100 percent new French oak barrels and one year in a bottle before release.”

[caption id="attachment_42090" align="aligncenter" width="509"]Global Indian | Raj Patel Raj Patel with Winemaker Luc Morlet.[/caption]

Raj’s company has a limited production – 1000 cases a year. He says, “Low yields are common and each vine is cared for individually by the vineyard owners.  Because of the intense demand for great vineyard fruit in Napa Valley, we are only able to produce a limited amount of wine each year. There are 12 (750ml) bottles in one case, (that is 9 liters per case, this is universal in the wine world). Our goal is to grow the winery to about 2,500 to 3,000 cases in the next 10 years. We are limited by a small supply of fine quality grapes, and what mother nature gives each year, hence our production is limited.”

The wines are certainly from the premium range. Starting at USD 60 and going up to USD 170, Patel wines are aimed at HNIs and connoisseurs who don’t mind spending as much for a bottle. About 60-70 percent of each vintage is sold directly to consumers from the website. “We ship to 40+ states in the USA and six other countries.  The remainder is sold to wholesalers who then sell to fine shops and fine dining restaurants all over the USA,” says the Global Indian.

When asked about his Cabernet Sauvignon that had been served at the White House, he said, “We are honoured to have our wine featured at Prime Minister Modi's White House State Dinner.  Julien Fayard, our winemaker, does an amazing job! At the end of the day, even though I am Indian, I grew up in the US, and when the White House serves wine, it’s representing America and the best that we can offer.”

  • Follow Raj Patel on LinkedIn and Twitter
    (For more details, you can visit patelwinery.com)
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Sharath Jois: Carrying on the legacy that took yoga to the world

(December 7, 2024) At 3 am every day, as Mysuru slept, 19 year-old Sharath Jois would ride through the deserted streets to his grandfather's house to practice yoga. His grandfather and guruji was the legendary Shri Pattabhi K Jois, the founder of Ashtanga Yoga, one of the teachers who took yoga from the confines of a small group of gurus and disciples to the world, a mission that Sharath continued to fulfil until his death. The Global Indian, who passed away in November 2024 at the age of 53, had dedicated over 30 years of his life to carrying on his grandfather's storied legacy, training thousands of students and teachers around the world. Today, over 300 million people worldwide practice yoga, and the Jois legacy has been instrumental in making this happen. Back in 2017, when International Yoga Day was just becoming a global phenomenon, a colleague, who happened to be from Mysuru, gave me Sharath Jois' phone number. An long-time practitioner of yoga myself, I was thrilled at the opportunity to interview the legend. That evening, Sharath told me how yoga became a rage around the world. In 1941, Wallace Kirkland, a photographer for Life Magazine, was on a six month

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. In 1941, Wallace Kirkland, a photographer for Life Magazine, was on a six month visit to explore the "museum of human achievement and eccentricity that is India." Passing through Mysuru, he came across a group of young yogis in the middle of an advanced yoga practice with their guru.

Kirkland’s photographs were published in Life in February, 1941, and spread like wildfire. Before these austere, unassuming yogis could process the fame that was thrust upon them, "people were flocking to the shala from all over the world," Sharath told me, in an interview for the Deccan Chronicle. Pattabhi Jois had passed away in 2009, and Sharath, who had adopted the title of Paramaguru or lineage holder, had inherited his grandfather's Ashtanga Yoga Research Institute. In 2019, he set up the Sharath Yoga Centre, where he went on to train yoga teachers and practitioners around the globe.

[caption id="attachment_61368" align="aligncenter" width="543"]Sharath Jois | Ashtanga Yoga | Pattabhi Jois | Global Indian Sri Pattabhi Jois in Life magazine, photographed by Wallace Kirkland. Photo: Deccan Chronicle / Life[/caption]

The birth of a legacy

Sharath Jois' story is the story of Ashtanga yoga, and it begins with his grandfather, Shri K. Pattabhi Jois. The older Jois was the son of an astrologer, and had grown up learning Sanskrit and Hindu rituals at a very young age. "He was 12 years old when he met Krishnamacharya for the first time," Sharath said. Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, now called the Father of Modern Yoga, is regarded as one of the most important gurus of yoga as we know it today, and is credited with the revival of hatha yoga.

For Shri Pattabhi Jois, yoga was an instant calling. "He went up to him (Krishnamacharya) immediately and asked if he could be his student," said Sharath. "He would travel to Hassan everyday for his practice." Shri Pattabhi Jois dedicated his life to teaching yoga, as did his fellow student, BKS Iyengar.

Those were not easy days. "Finding students was very difficult at the start and grandfather would go from house to house and across the Sanskrit College campus, asking people to join his class," Sharath recalled. Life changed all that. They soon had to move out of the small shala in Lakshmipuram and set up a bigger space in Gokulam, which soon ran out of space also.

[caption id="attachment_61369" align="aligncenter" width="661"]Sharath Jois | Ashtanga Yoga | Pattabhi Jois | Global Indian Sharath Jois with BKS Iyengar and Sri Pattabhi Jois[/caption]

Sharath Jois’ trial by fire

"As a child, I was always ill," he writes in his book, Ageless: A Yogi's Secrets To A Long And Healthy Life (Juggernaut Books, 2018). "My early years were racked with pain. Tonsilitis, rheumatic fever and infections from the fever... you name it, I had it." He couldn't do anything his friends did, including riding a cycle. And when he was 11 years old, an illness dashed his dreams of becoming a professional cricketer. "I spent months in bed," he writes. "I was diagnosed with a rare illness called rheumatic fever, which can take anywhere from five to ten years of antibiotic medication to heal completely.”

However, he had begun practicing yoga at the age seven, and would go reluctantly to the shala wishing he could play cricket instead. "I would run out the back door and go play cricket with my friends," he laughed, recalling those days in an interview. "My grandfather would come searching for me, and my friends would warn me, so I would run and hide until he went away!"

In retrospect, he admits that those early days of yoga may have saved his life. "Yoga with my grandfather changed my health for the better. Instead of a decade of antibiotics, a series of very simple postures helped me become stronger. I could feel my body heal and repair." Even doctors said his recovery was a miracle, because his body had been so badly weakened by illness after illness. "Later, I would learn that the 'miracle' was not mystical, it was simply the result of the practical and logical yogic practice to which my grandfather introduced me," he writes in Ageless. This realisation would go on to become one of the cornerstones of Sharath's own teaching, which is rooted  in the teachings of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, and focussed on the breath as the centre of the asana practice. Like his grandfather, Sharath would also immerse himself in the study of the eight limbs of yoga, Vedic knowledge and Ayurveda, which is how he presented yoga to the world.

When yoga became a calling

Sharath was 19 years old when he began taking yoga seriously. His maternal grandparents were managing the show alone at the shala and his mother would urge him to go help out. "I would keep putting it off until one day, I decided to go. That's how it began."

He had great passion for yoga, and the best teacher, but when he got a job at an electronics company in Bengaluru, he was tempted to take it. His grandmother encouraged him to turn it down and continue training in yoga. She passed away in 1997, the year Sharath began travelling the world with Shri Pattabhi Jois. "In December 1996, after having been denied a visa thrice, I finally travelled abroad for the first time, to Sydney," Sharath writes. "Soon after that, my grandfather and I visited the US a few times."

With this wave of popularity, more students began coming to the Shala in Mysuru. After the Americans came Europeans, followed by Japanese and Chinese. Sharath himself was doing "demos from Japan to Chile," as his grandfather led the counts and he demonstrated the postures.

Sharath Jois | Ashtanga Yoga | Pattabhi Jois | Global Indian

Taking Ashtanga to the world

By the year 2000, Ashtanga Yoga "started gaining popularity at a phenomenal pace" and Sharath was doing demos around the world with his grandfather. However, he was surprised to learn that people had no idea where yoga came from - many thought it came from America! Sharath saw it as his duty to set this right. "Yoga is Bharat Bhumi. Just one look at Indian history and you will see how even before India was India, people came here from all over the world to learn yoga."

Celebrities like Gwyneth Paltrow and William Dafoe were doing Ashtanga yoga and became advocates of the method. "Paltrow practiced with Guruji when we visited New York in the aftermath of 9/11. At this time in American history, Ashtanga became a release and a powerful healer for Americans," Sharath writes.

Today, social media is full of fitness stars, contorting themselves into fantastic postures, and providing 15 second preps for handstands (adho mukha vrksasana), rather than the gradual seeking of the Vinyasa Krama. Just as his grandfather brought breathing to movement, Sharath worked to bring this ancient practice back to its spiritual roots, rather than the acrobatic and spiritual showboating that is so common among yoga influencers.

Taking over the Jois legacy

In 2007, Sharath Jois took over his grandfather's yoga institute, and after Shri Patabbhi Jois died two years later, he renamed the organisation in his honour as the K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga Institute. In 2019, his mother became its leader and Sharath set up his own company, the Sharath Yoga Center.  As of 2022, the students and shalas of K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga Institute are situated in over 100 countries around the world. As of 2022, the students and shalas of K. Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoa Institute are situated in over 100 countries around the world.

 

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An untimely death

Towards the latter half of his life, Jois spent the better part of the year travelling, and his workshops, held in Mysuru and around the world, were attended by thousands of disciplies. In November 2024, Sharath was at the University of Virginia and, during a hike with his students near the university campus in Charlottesville, began complaining of fatigue. He sat down on a nearby bench and toppled off it. His students attempted to revive him and he was declared dead moments after the emergency service arrived.

The Jois family legacy will now be carried on by the thousands of disciples who went on to become teachers under the tutelage of Sharath Jois. "The crowd was growing every year," Isha Singh Sahwney, the co-author of Ageless: A Yogi's Secrets to a Long and Healthy Life, told the New York Times. "He was an excellent yoga teacher, one of the best. At the time of his death, Jois was scheduled to teach workshops in San Antonio, Sydney and Dubai and was also working on his second book.

An immortal legacy

Until the end, he maintained the life of piety and discipline he had learned from his grandfather. His day would begin at 1 am, for two hours of personal practice, followed by six hours of teaching. And while he received great admiration, he shied away from it. "He didn't want to be this god figure," Sahwney said. "He just wanted to teach yoga and spread the message of yoga." Sharath himself would joke, in fact, when his admiring disciples asked questions about spirituality. "These days it's fashionable to offer Pranayama and even Samadhi in the form of a certificate! People like to say, yes, I have achieved Samadhi, look it's on this certificate. It's a good way to make a living, but it won't make you a yogi."

  • Follow Sharath Jois on Instagram. Ageless is available for purchase on Amazon.

 

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Adarsh Gourav: Cementing his position in Hollywood, one project at a time

(March 12, 2023) "This is beyond anything I can express to be honest. But to be working with such an incredible team at such an early juncture of my career is truly rewarding," is how BAFTA nominated actor Adarsh Gourav reacted to being working with stalwarts like Meryl Streep, David Schwimmer and Sienna Millers in the Apple TV Plus show Extrapolations. The futuristic drama set in 2037 has opened to rave reviews, and one Indian actor has made it among the "most impressive cast in TV history." But standing tall against actors like Tobey Maguire, Kit Harington and Edward Norton speaks volumes about Adarsh's acting mettle. It was Adarsh who brought Balram Halwai alive from the pages of Aravind Adiga's 2008 Man Booker Prize winner The White Tiger. Such was the powerful performance that Gourav found himself racking up a Best Male Lead nomination at the Independent Spirit Awards as well as a BAFTA Best Male Lead nod in the first quarter of 2021. And now two years later, he is cementing his position in Hollywood with Extrapolations. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QP-xrG0kZk The 27-year-old might be a newcomer in the league of international bigwigs but this Forbes 30 Under 30 actor has definitely

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wigs but this Forbes 30 Under 30 actor has definitely cemented his position as a breakout Indian actor.

Music led him to Bollywood

It was in Jamshedpur where Gourav's story began. At a young age, his parents enrolled him in classical music sessions under Guru Chandrakant Apte. With each passing year, he excelled in his skill, and his growing talent prompted his family to relocate to Mumbai because they believed in his chances of gaining success as a playback singer. And they had there reasons too. By the time he turned 13, Gourav had already appeared on Jharkhand Idol, a singing reality show that seemed like a possible launch pad for his Mumbai dreams.

Upon landing in Mumbai, Gourav enrolled at Suresh Wadkar's Ajivasan Music Academy, and it was here that he started to convert his potential into palpable projects. His mentor Padma Wadkar brought with her two singing opportunities: one was Subhash Ghai's Black & White and other being Ilayaraja's Chal Chalein. Wadkar got Gourav in touch with Raell Padamsee who recommended Gourav for a performance at the Kala Ghoda Festival. It was here that talent agent Nazli Currimbhoy planted the idea of acting as a career. He soon started going for auditions with his mother on weekends.

 

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One such audition landed him at Shanoo Sharma's office who was looking for an actor to play a young Shah Rukh Khan in Karan Johar's 2010 film My Name Is Khan. He nailed the audition and bagged the role. At 14, his acting career began but it wasn't until 2013 that he started pursuing it seriously when he landed an important role in John Abraham's production Banana. The film changed the way Adarsh saw cinema.

"That was the first time that I realized what it is to think and walk and talk like a different person. I was playing somebody who was so far removed from what I am. That experience was very cathartic," he said in an interview.

Around the same time, he enrolled in Narsee Monjee College of Commerce, and in his third year, he got a chance to work with Anurag Kashyap for his short film Clean Shaven. For the next few years, he kept doing a handful of roles, however, recognition and fame eluded him. It was after wrapping up Rukh and Mom that Gourav decided that he needed some actual acting training to up his game.

"Things abroad were too expensive and I couldn’t afford anything, so I finally chose Drama School Mumbai. I got a scholarship and my mum helped me with funding the rest. It was so important for me — I unlearnt everything I had learnt before, learnt what I had to at Drama School, and then unlearnt it all again to get back to work," he added.

Straight out of his drama school, Adarsh found himself in Paul Goodwin's NCPA production Lucrece. This opportunity led him to his next project Leila, a Netflix film by Academy nominee Deepa Mehta.

 

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Though Adarsh did a handful of supporting roles in Bollywood, he was never a part of commercial potboilers because it was something that never intrigued him. At a time when any actor would kill to be a part of a big-budget Bollywood film, he kept a low profile. "I was never majorly influenced by big Bollywood commercial films. I was always intrigued and in awe of gangster dramas and crime-related dramas and actors who portrayed such characters influenced me in a lot of ways. But I have a lot of admiration for people who can dance and sing and do the whole thing," the Global Indian told Film Companion.

The film that changed it all

He wanted to work in cinema that spoke to people, and that's the reason he kept trying to get an audition with casting director Tess Joseph who casts for international films in India for almost two years. In 2019, destiny rolled the dice and Gourav found American filmmaker Ramin Bahrani looking for the perfect Balram Halwai for the screen adaptation of Aravind Adiga's 2008 book The White Tiger.

Gourav found Joseph contacting him for a role in an international project, however, she didn't mention the film. But Gourav who had read Adiga's book as a teenager guessed the film and his role after reading a few scenes from the script. To look the part, Gourav bought flashy clothes for ₹150 from a local market for his audition. He wanted to look every bit of Balram Halwai and he did that when he went and sat down on the floor before the director on his audition day.

[caption id="attachment_36133" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Adarsh Gourav | Global Indian Adarsh Gourav and Priyanka Chopra in a still from The White Tiger[/caption]

"I bought the clothes I though Balram would wear and I sat down on the floor [like a servant]. It's not something that I would do as Adarsh, but I knew Balram would. I was also trying to see how it feels. I think Rahmin took notice of that," he added.

Adarsh bagged his first Hollywood project, and the actor left no stone unturned to get into the skin of the character. To understand the complexity of the character, he took off to a village in Jharkhand and spent a few weeks like Balram. He then moved to New Delhi to work on a small food cart where he washed the dishes and ran small errands for 11 hours a day for two weeks. "I wanted to know that feeling of being trapped in something you don't particularly enjoy and still have to do it," he told Screen Daily.

Global appreciation

His breakout role in the Netflix film earned him the love and appreciation of millions across the globe. What The White Tiger did was it catapult a 26-year-old, a newcomer in international cinema, into the nomination lists of the biggest global awards. The Indian actor saw himself up against acting powerhouses like Steven Yeun (Minari), Riz Ahmed (Sound of Metal), Anthony Hopkins (The Father) and the late Chadwick Boseman (Ma Rainey's Black Bottom) in the Best Leading Actor category at BAFTA 2021. Though Gourav lost to Hopkins, being nominated next to the bigwigs of the film industry is testimony to his talent and skill.

His journey is proof that like the stunning white tiger, the actor is someone who is born once in every generation, destined for great things.

  • Follow Adarsh Gourav on Instagram

Reading Time: 6 min

Story
First among equals: Who is Rishi Sunak, the man leading the race for UK’s PM?

(July 16, 2022) "Rishi is one of the most decent, straight people with the highest standards of integrity I have ever met in British politics." Former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt, who was one of the candidates eliminated in the first round of voting on July 13, threw his weight behind former Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak, for whom he was full of praise. With Priti Patel bowing out of the Prime Ministerial race and Attorney General Suella Braverman winning a paltry 27 votes in the second round of voting, Conservative Party MP Rishi has emerged as the Indian-origin strongman, topping the first round with 88 votes. Global Indian takes a look at Rishi's life and his rise in politics. A glowing article in The Tatler, describes Rishi from his days waiting tables at an Indian 'curry house' named Kuti Miah. The restaurant's owner was friends with Rishi's parents, Yashvir and Usha. Which is not to say that Rishi Sunak comes with a tear-jerker of a rags-to-riches, immigrant in the UK origin story. Far from it. Born to a physician father, while his mother ran a pharmacy, his life was decidedly upper-middle class. Far from his exotic, immigrant status giving him

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at Rishi Sunak comes with a tear-jerker of a rags-to-riches, immigrant in the UK origin story. Far from it. Born to a physician father, while his mother ran a pharmacy, his life was decidedly upper-middle class. Far from his exotic, immigrant status giving him a leg-up, Rishi's upper crust life has made him 'less relatable' among the hoi polloi, which could prove to be a disadvantage. What's more, the re-emergence of an old clip, in which he says, "I have friends who are aristocrats, I have friends who are upper class, I have friends who are, you know, working class, but... well, not working class," could hamper his prospects. However, for a man who has overcome great odds as a candidate of colour in a conservative party, it might not be too big a hurdle to overcome.

[caption id="attachment_27001" align="aligncenter" width="830"]Rishi Sunak | Global Indian Rishi Sunak. Photo credit: Rishi's website[/caption]

Despite early hurdles, Rishi was quickly picked out as a rising star - according to The Tatler, this quality was spotted early on, even by his former boss at Kuti Miah. That year, in 1998, as the then 18-year-old Rishi was all set to enter Oxford University, his boss remarked, "You're going to be someone, Rishi." Sure enough, the fiercely patriotic young man, who grew up, thanks to his parents, immersed in the local community, never looked back.

Head boy to hedge funds

His broad grin, which he flashes generously, belies the seriousness that lies beneath - Rishi's flawless record goes back a long way, he was Head Boy at Winchester College, an independent boarding school for boys and also editor of the school paper. He went on to read Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Lincoln College, Oxford, where he first dipped his toes in politics, as an intern at the Conservative Campaign Headquarters. He graduated in 2001, which was also the year he gave the fateful interview about his 'working class friends' to Middle Classes: Their Rise and Sprawl.

After graduating from Oxford in 2002, Rishi joined Goldman Sachs, where he worked for three years as an analyst. He, then, moved onto The Children's Investment Fund Management, a hedge fund firm and became a partner in 2006. That year, he moved to America to get his MBA from Stanford University, as a Fulbright Scholar.

It was at Stanford that Rishi would meet his future wife, Akshata Murty, daughter of Infosys co-founder Narayan Murty, marrying her in 2009. As the media is only too happy to point out, the couple is the 222nd richest people in Britain, with a combined fortune of £730 million as of 2022.

[caption id="attachment_27002" align="aligncenter" width="724"]Rishi Sunak | Global Indian Rishi Sunak with his wife, Akshata Murty[/caption]

In the political fray

Rishi's entry into politics began in 2015 when he won the constituency of Richmond, North Yorkshire in the general elections, becoming the Conservative Party's rising star almost instantly. His entry, however, was not well-received by other conservative candidates, who resented this apparent upstart claiming territory they believed to be theirs. His victory was even more noteworthy because he contested "as a rank outsider," according to the Business Standard, "in the 97 percent white, prosperous rural Conservative bastion of Richmond in Yorkshire, where, the joke goes, there has been no immigration since the Norman conquest in 1066." However, his right-wing economic views - Rishi is an enthusiastic believer in free markets and a vocal critic of Brexit - helped him secure a historic win.

In 2018, Rishi was inducted in the UK government by then British Prime Minister Theresa May. At 37, Rishi was a Conservative party MP (Richmond, Yorkshire) with great promise, entering the government as the parliamentary-under-secretary of state in the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. Incidentally, he was joined by another Indian-origin MP, also a pro-Brexit campaigner - Suella Braverman, who was Suella Fernandes at the time.

Rishi went on to make several contributions in the House of Commons, on issues like digital economy, social mobility and foreign direct investment. "From working in my mum's tiny chemist shop to my experience building large businesses, I have seen how we should support free enterprise and innovation to ensure Britain has a stronger future," Rishi told the media back in 2018.

Rishi Sunak | Global Indian

On a sticky wicket?

As a conservative candidate of colour, Rishi Sunak's position is always likely to be precarious. Will he usher in a post-race era, or speak up for the hyper-local, ethnic problems that minorities face in the UK? Always fiercely patriotic, his loyalty to the UK cannot be called into question. However, he remarked, to the Business Standard, "British Indian is what I tick on the census, we have a category for it. I am thoroughly British, this is my home and my country, but my religious and cultural heritage is Indian, my wife is Indian. I am open about being a Hindu." Although he is given to phrases like "Oh crikey," he does speak a smattering of Hindi and Punjabi.

In 2019, Rishi became the first Indian-origin to be named Chancellor of the Exchequer, taking over 11 Downing Street as one of the most powerful people in England. His term was, admittedly, fraught with controversy - he was charged with breaking lockdown laws, for instance. And the debate around wife Akshata Murty’s non-dom status (it exempted her from paying some ₹196 crore in taxes) continues to rage on.

On July 5, 2022, Rishi resigned from his post as Chancellor of the Exchequer, withdrawing support from PM Boris Johnson over a sexual harassment scandal within the government. He did, however, refuse to badmouth Boris, calling him, "one of the most remarkable people I've ever met." He said, in no uncertain terms, that "he would have no part in a rewriting of history that seeks to demonise Boris." With that final, noble gesture preceding his entry into the prime ministerial fray, perhaps Rishi Sunak will have his own chance at rewriting history after all.

  • Follow Rishi on Instagram and Twitter

Reading Time: 6 min

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About Global Indian

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

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

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