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Sarita Choudhury
Global IndianstoryMississippi Masala to The Green Knight: How Sarita Choudhury wowed the West
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Mississippi Masala to The Green Knight: How Sarita Choudhury wowed the West

Written by: Global Indian

(September 18, 2021) Mira Nair launched a new girl, one who worked with the great Italian director Federico Fellini, opposite Denzel Washington in the 1991 romantic drama Mississippi Masala. But little did this girl know that she would soon be going to wow the entertainment industry with her sheer talent. When Sarita Choudhury erupted on the big screen with her debut film, critics across the globe couldn’t stop raving about this new talent. And now three decades later, the 55-year-old is still making the right noise with her choice of work.

It was in college that Choudhury fell in love with acting, and knew that this was the course to be followed. While the journey wasn’t all sunshine and rainbow for her, she kept delivering her best. Here’s the story of this Global Indian who wowed the West with her stunning performances.

College resurrected the dream of acting

Born in London to an Indian father and an English mother, Choudhury was raised in Jamaica, Mexico and Italy as her dad was a scientist and had a moving job. Living her initial life literally out of the suitcase, Choudhary made a stop over in Canada for a while to complete her graduation in economics from Queen’s University in Ontario. When Choudhury arrived on the campus in the fall of 1986, she had plans of becoming an economist. But Queen’s helped her live her childhood dream of being an actress. It was here that she became interested in film studies and began experimenting with acting by making appearances in the films made her by her classmates. This exposure was enough for Choudhury to feverishly pursue a career in acting, and it was one of her professors at Queen’s who played the perfect catalyst in bringing her closer to her dream.

“Prof. Frank Burke from Film Studies had written a book about Federico Fellini, the great Italian film director, and he gave me a letter of introduction. When I told my mother this, she said, ‘Well, let’s get in the car and go see him.’ I thought she was crazy, but away we went. The address Frank Burke had given me was at Cinecittà Studios, in Rome. When I knocked on Fellini’s door, not only did he see me, he gave me a job translating scripts,” she told Queen’s Alumni Review.

The big break with Mira Nair

This opened up a sea of opportunities for a young Choudhury who made connections in the industry that led her to auditioning for film roles. One such audition helped her land her first big role in Mira Nair‘s Mississippi Masala alongside Denzel Washington. The film on interracial romance between a South African American man and an Indian woman became an art house hit and got Choudhury some rave reviews for her performance. Despite a grand start, Choudhury didn’t find the landing she was looking for in Hollywood. So the 55-year-old focused on finding diversity through her work across theatre, television and films.

Mississippi Masala

Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury in a still from Mississippi Masala.

If she played a Pakistani singer in Wild West (1992), she essayed the role of a Chilean maid in Bille August’s adaptation of The House of the Spirits. After five years, Nair once again collaborated with Choudhury for Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love. The film was screened at the Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for the Golden Seashell award at the 1996 San Sebastián International Film Festival. It was by the late 90s that Choudhury added a touch of Hollywood to her repertoire with films like A Perfect Murder (1998) and Gloria (1999). Simultaneously, Choudhury found interesting scripts on the small screen. Be it NBC drama Kings or Homicide: Life on the Street, the actress pulled off each character with elan.

Diversity in Hollywood

Choudhury kept going strong at a time when diversity was something that Hollywood completely ignored. It was her faith in herself and her hard work that worked in her stride. “How the business perceives us is something I’ve never concerned myself with. I just try to beat the odds of rejection by preparing a lot for auditions, and hopefully changing someone’s mind. Minds and the gate keepers have to change. It’s an exciting time, it’s still slow, but we’re all part of this change,” she told Hindustan Times in an interview.

Homeland

Sarita Choudhury as Mira and Mandy Patinkin as Saul Berenson in Homeland.

This same grit got her roles in films like Lady in the Water, Midnight’s Children, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay and The Last Photograph. But it’s her film A Hologram for the King with Tom Hanks that she is most proud of. “It took me to another level,” she told Mint Lounge.

Choudhury, who paved the way for many South Asians in Hollywood, is truly a global icon. She has worked with the best talent in the industry and has some very powerful roles to her credit. But for her, being a global actor has never been her intention. In an interview with WION, she said, “As actors we don’t really have any intent to be perceived globally in a certain way. But if that is the result of following your dream no matter what the obstacles that is amazing. My dad had seen Satyajit Ray’s films in India when he was young, my mum had seen the same films in England, I saw them in Canada when I was at university. That’s global! And (that) makes me proud.”

Despite two decades of good work to her credit, Choudhury is unstoppable in her 50s. After making heads turn with her performance in fantasy film The Green Knight, the actress has now grabbed a plum role in Sex and the City reboot.

Indian at heart

Choudhury is a popular actress in the West but her heart is still in India. ” I feel like if I don’t go to India once a year, I lose my sense of roots. I have an Indian father, and when you grow up in a house with an Indian father, culturally that’s what becomes dominant in the house. So that’s the tradition we grew up with. And it’s not a coincidence that my dad retired and moved back home to Calcutta. So, no matter which country my brother and I grew up in, we would come home to my father. And that stayed with me, that’s my heart,” she told Times of India.

Choudhury is one of those rare South Asian actresses who made a mark in the West at a time when diversity wasn’t the focus point of Hollywood. However, with her determination and grit, she kept breaking the stereotypes and wowing the global audience with her stellar performances.

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  • Cannes Film Festival
  • Denzel Washington
  • Homicide: Life on the Street
  • Kings
  • Midnight's Children
  • Mississippi Masala
  • Ontario
  • Queen's University
  • San Sebastián International Film Festival
  • Sarita Choudhury
  • South Asians
  • The Green Knight
  • The Hunger Games: Mockingjay
  • Tom Hanks
  • Wild West

Published on 18, Sep 2021

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Mandeep Kaur : Single mom who rose from door-to-door sales to NZ’s first female Indian-origin cop

Many women give up on their childhood dreams especially if they had a failed marriage and single mother responsibilities.  Not 52-year-old Mandeep Kaur. Hers is a story of grit, determination, perseverance and eventual glory: A girl who could barely speak English lands ‘Down Under’, does door-to-door selling, becomes a taxi driver and discovers her true calling in a chance conversation with a passenger. Years later, she becomes New Zealand’s first - and highest-ranked - female police officer of Indian origin.   [caption id="attachment_2874" align="alignnone" width="1440"] Mandeep Kaur on her wedding day in 1986.[/caption] Humble beginnings   Hailing from Punjab’s Malwa region, Kaur was an 18-year-old final-year student of sociology and political science when she had an arranged marriage. Within a decade, the marriage fell apart and a painful custody battle began. In 1999, Mandeep left her two children - then aged 6 and 8 - at her parents’ place and migrated to Australia to help fend for the family.  Her first job was that of a door-to-door salesperson, getting people to change telephone services, New Zealand Herald reports.  "I was able to read and write but I couldn't really speak. So, I had written my pitch on a piece of paper and I would go door-to-door to sell," she said in a statement to the media.  The tipping point came when she landed in New Zealand some years later and started driving taxis. One night she was discussing about the joys of life with a passenger, a psychologist who told her how true happiness

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/stage.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Mandeep-wedding-day.jpg" alt="Mandeep Kaur on her wedding day in 1986." width="1440" height="2204" /> Mandeep Kaur on her wedding day in 1986.[/caption]

Humble beginnings  

Hailing from Punjab’s Malwa region, Kaur was an 18-year-old final-year student of sociology and political science when she had an arranged marriage. Within a decade, the marriage fell apart and a painful custody battle began. In 1999, Mandeep left her two children - then aged 6 and 8 - at her parents’ place and migrated to Australia to help fend for the family. 

Her first job was that of a door-to-door salesperson, getting people to change telephone services, New Zealand Herald reports. 

"I was able to read and write but I couldn't really speak. So, I had written my pitch on a piece of paper and I would go door-to-door to sell," she said in a statement to the media. 

The tipping point came when she landed in New Zealand some years later and started driving taxis. One night she was discussing about the joys of life with a passenger, a psychologist who told her how true happiness comes from realizing one’s childhood dreams. That brought back memories of her childhood fantasy of becoming a police officer. From that point, there was no going back. 

The Kiwi father 

[caption id="attachment_2875" align="alignnone" width="1440"]Retired police officer John Pegler was her 'Kiwi father'. Retired police officer John Pegler was her 'Kiwi father'.[/caption]

It’s fascinating how things start falling into place when one makes up her mind. Enter John Pegler, a retired police officer, who Mandeep affectionately calls her Kiwi dad. Pegler worked as a night receptionist at the YMCA women's lodge in Auckland where Mandeep stayed during her cab-driving days, The New Zealand Herald says. He would make her a hot cup of Milo, listen to her and tell her stories of his days as a cop. When Mandeep disclosed her dream, Pegler encouraged her and brought her an information pack on joining the force.   

The struggles 

Many roadblocks were awaiting her. She had to lose 20 kg "to be fit", learn swimming, and have a stronger command over English. Swimming was the hardest — baring one’s legs and wearing a swimsuit wasn’t easy for a woman from a conservative Punjabi household. But she persisted. Meanwhile, things started to improve on the personal front: She secured her teenage kids’ custody and moved them to New Zealand in 2002.  

[caption id="attachment_2879" align="alignnone" width="1440"] Mandeep with her late mother and children.[/caption]

Bhangra in uniform 

Two years later, she donned the uniform by joining as an ethnic people’s Community Relations Officer at Henderson Police Station in Waitemata. The job entailed attending community meetings, hosting media programs, visiting family violence victims and attending to any other matters where there was a need for ethnic or cultural advice. Her CV boasts of work as a frontline officer in road policing, family violence, investigation support unit, neighborhood policing and community policing.   Throughout this journey she has been in sync with her Indian roots. She is a frequent attendee at the gurudwara in Counties Manukau. Mandeep also started a Bhangra dancing group within the department which performed in their uniforms during Diwali last year. 

[caption id="attachment_2885" align="alignnone" width="640"]Single mother who went from door-to-door sales to New Zealand’s first Indian-origin female cop: How Mandeep Kaur defied the odds Mandeep's stripes being upgraded by senior officers.[/caption]

Hello Sergeant 

She loved her work but was keen to get into a decision-making role to do more.

 "I must have applied for so many positions to be promoted, and so many times I didn't get it," she told The New Zealand Herald.

 Each time she failed to tick promotion criteria, she'd go back to the drawing board, work on her weakness and tell herself: One more time. Eventually, she went on to become New Zealand’s first Indian-born woman to attain the rank of a Sergeant — effectively in charge of overseeing an entire district’s police functioning. Officers like her make just five percent of the entire force. Recently, she was moved to Police National Headquarters in Wellington for a new role as Senior Engagement Adviser in a unit tasked with preventing harm across all of New Zealand's ethnic communities. 

"My grandkids were born here. I want to leave this country a better place for them so they don't face issues as the children of migrants," she says.

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A post shared by 럭키 lucky (@luckyinkorea)

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From India to Korea

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“Back in the day, many of my friends went to English-speaking countries like the UK, the US or Canada to study. I wondered why my parents sent me to Korea,” Lucky remarked in an interview with The Korea Herald. However, he is thankful to his late father who decided to send him and his elder brother to Korea from India at a time when not many were doing so. “He was forward-thinking and saw the potential long before,” he added.

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A post shared by 럭키 lucky (@luckyinkorea)

One of the few foreign-born TV personalities in Korea

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Through this experience, Lucky discovered his passion for being in front of the camera, and gradually, his career began to align with the world of entertainment.

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[caption id="attachment_56295" align="aligncenter" width="529"]Indian origin | Lucky | Global Indian Lucky with famous expats in Korea during Chuseok, the harvest festival of Korea[/caption]

Entrepreneurship and TV success

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During his time on the show, Lucky and his fellow cast members presented a compelling example of global interconnectedness, earning acclaim for the variety of topics and perspectives they brought to the table. While Abhishek has appeared on numerous television programs before and since, he is best remembered for his role on non-summit, where he represented India in 103 of the 144 episodes that were shot before, he left it. He eventually stepped away from the show to focus on his second entrepreneurial venture.

“I’m very thankful to the Korean audience; they’ve loved me, they gave me so much love and support, and whenever I meet them, they always tell me that they actually came to know about many things of India through me, and that India seems a much closer country to them because of me.”

Indian origin | Lucky | Global Indian

Promoting intercultural understanding between India and Korea

Lucky launched his YouTube Channel 354 in 2020, aiming to satisfy the curiosity of travel enthusiasts eager to explore Korea. Through the channel, he highlights lesser-known yet fascinating aspects of the country.

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Having spent more years in Korea than in India, the 45-year-old feels a strong connection with the country, and promotes it in whichever way he can. Deeply proud of his Indian heritage, he also strives to introduce various facets of India to Korean audiences.

[caption id="attachment_56294" align="aligncenter" width="574"]Indian origin | Lucky | Abhishek 'Lucky' Gupta | Bridging Cultures Between India and Korea | Global Indian Lucky with fellow Koreans during Great guide India shoot[/caption]

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Born and brought up in Delhi, Mittal studied at St Xavier School before enrolling for a Bachelor’s in Electrical Engineering from the prestigious IIT Delhi where he received the best graduating student award in 1995. He then kickstarted his professional journey as a senior field engineer with the Houston headquartered oilfield services company Schlumberger where he worked at offshore and onshore oil and gas rigs. This help him pay his way to Harvard Business School where he pursued his MBA and graduated as a Baker Scholar. Shortly before flying to the US though he spent three months working as a summer associate at investment banking company Goldman Sachs’ Singapore office.  

[caption id="attachment_12999" align="aligncenter" width="555"]Indian entrepreneur Saurabh Mittal Saurabh Mittal[/caption]

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Mittal then started out in the hedge fund business before joining hands with IIT batchmate Sameer Gehlaut to launch financial services and real estate conglomerate Indiabulls in 2000. Parallelly, he joined Farallon Capital as an investment associate in 2001 before becoming a full partner at its affiliate Noonday Capital in 2005. As Indiabulls built a name in the market, Mittal served as the vice chairman of its board of directors.  

During his MBA days at Harvard, Mittal had met Chatri Sityodtong with whom he established martial arts promotion ONE Championship in 2011 where he was later made vice chairman in 2018. Incidentally, while at Harvard, Mittal was one of the poorest students in the batch. That’s how he and Chatri connected: the two would scour the campus vicinity for the cheapest meals. They were also in the same study group and their friendship has since ignited a multimillion-dollar business as ONE Championship has grown to become Asia’s largest sports media company. Talking about their partnership, Mittal had told Business Times, “If you work hard, if you have a deep desire to put your best foot forward and also have generosity of spirit, you carry the world with you. Chatri has a very big heart and generosity of spirit. Successful entrepreneurs are typically very good people because they generate positive energy. You can't lead a team unless they truly trust and believe you will look out for them. Over a 20-year period, you can't fake trust or generosity of spirit.” 

[caption id="attachment_13000" align="aligncenter" width="849"]Indian entrepreneur Saurabh Mittal Saurabh Mittal with Chatri Sityodtong[/caption]

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For a fresh start

In 2014, Mittal decided to step down from his position at Indiabulls, sold off a chunk of his stake in the Gurugram-based company and moved to Singapore lock, stock, and barrel. Here he established his private investment firm Mission Holdings in 2014. The private investment holding company that solely owned by Mittal focuses on financial services, media, real estate, and technology. Mission Holdings focuses prefers to invest long terms in a concentrated set of companies, running the spectrum from active ownership with board-level management partnerships to public market investments and passive investments via outside manager allocations. The Singapore headquartered company which has offices in New York, San Francisco and an affiliate presence in Mumbai owns stakes in ONE Championship, fintech startup BSI Financial and SelfScore.   

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNf03MHaXyQ[/embed]

As Mission Holdings took off, Mittal found his net worth skyrocketing and soon found a spot on the Forbes 2021 list of Singapore’s Richest with a net worth of $735 million. In 2017, Mittal was also conferred the Distinguished Alumnus Award by his alma mater IIT Delhi for his exceptional achievement and contribution in the area of corporate business development and entrepreneurship. Some of the past awardees in this list include billionaire venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan, minister of civil aviation Jayant Sinha, and dean of Cornell Business School and Cornell Tech Sunil Sood.  

Philanthropy 

This self-made billionaire is also a dedicated philanthropist who believes in giving back to community: he works towards helping give children with humble beginnings a chance to become leaders of tomorrow. Mittal is on the board of multiple non-profits and is one of the biggest supporters of Parivaar, an integrated school and home for thousands of destitute children. He also supports Avasara and academy focused on developing young women leaders. He is also the founder and trustee of Plaksha University and is also the founder and board member of IIT Delhi’s Endowment Fund.  

Follow him on LinkedIn.

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Sole woman in the batch

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"Involved with the SLS launch is a diverse team … I also have the pleasure of leading women and people from different countries."

[embed]http://twitter.com/NASA/status/1403448958794584064?s=20[/embed]

[embed]http://twitter.com/NASAGroundSys/status/1403771000316174338?s=20[/embed]

Artemis project details

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witter-tweet">

USA benefits greatly from Indian talent!

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 29, 2021

Man of the hour

Parag Agrawal was born and raised in Mumbai, and is an alum of IIT-Bombay. His father was a senior official at the Indian Department of Atomic Energy and his mother, a school teacher. As a student, his brilliance was already noticeable when he bagged a gold medal at the 2001 International Physics Olympiad in Turkey. He schooled at Atomic Energy Central School, and graduated in computer science engineering from IIT Bombay in 2005. A PhD from Stanford University in computer science, his depth of experience working for majors like Microsoft, AT&T Labs and Yahoo! during his research avatar gave him an edge that he has since embellished.

Parag joined Twitter in 2011 as a distinguished software engineer, and gradually rose up the ranks of CTO in 2017. In fact, Parag was the company’s first distinguished engineer, and his work across revenue and consumer engineering, including his impact on the re-acceleration of audience growth in 2016 and 2017 added a notch to his resume. As CTO, he was responsible for Twitter’s technical strategy, leading work to improve development velocity while advancing the state of machine learning across the company, a company release stated.

What also worked in Parag’s favour was that he is well-liked across the company, including Dorsey. “He’s been my choice for some time given how deeply he understands the company and its needs. Parag has been behind every critical decision that helped turn this company around. He’s curious, probing, rational, creative, demanding, self-aware and humble,” Dorsey wrote in a message to Twitter.

not sure anyone has heard but,

I resigned from Twitter pic.twitter.com/G5tUkSSxkl

— jack⚡️ (@jack) November 29, 2021

Bolstered by arduous work and talent

According to a report published in Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Indian Americans form the second largest immigrant group in the US with population well past the 4 million mark. In fact, the Bay Area, where Parag now lives, is home to the second largest Indian American population in the US, after New York area.

The talent and innovation brought to the table by Indian Americans has been propelling several to leadership roles. Anand Mahindra, of the Mahindra Group too tweeted, “This is one pandemic that we are happy and proud to say originated in India. It’s the Indian CEO Virus… No vaccine against it.”

This is one pandemic that we are happy & proud to say originated in India. It’s the Indian CEO Virus… No vaccine against it. 😊 https://t.co/Dl28r7nu0u

— anand mahindra (@anandmahindra) November 29, 2021

The Indian formula to success

R Gopalakrishnan, management veteran, former Tata Sons honcho and author of The Made in India Manager concurs that Indians are primed for management and leadership roles. “This is a trend that is getting clearer by the day. At least 10 of the major companies in the US have persons of Indian origin helming them. The principal reason for this is the fact that Indian management executives are like gladiators. They’ve been training for management roles their entire lives without even being aware of it. They are extremely competitive and are unfazed by the constant hurdles that come their way,” says R Gopalakrishnan, adding how management is like a performing art, and with an Indian’s ability to adapt to any scenario. Their critical thinking skills using relationship orientation make them prime candidates for management roles.

Brand India for the win

As more Indians take on leadership roles across the globe, especially in the US, they are adding heft to Brand India and the pool of talent that the subcontinent offers.

[caption id="attachment_17027" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Parag Agrawal
Parag Agrawal with his undergrad research mentor Frederic Cazals[/caption]

This move will help Twitter smoothen ties in India where it has been running into troubled waters. Industry veteran Tiger Ramesh, former CEO, CSS Corp, avers that this could also be an attempt to build a better relationship with India, and arrest the downward spiral. “Home grown Koo is gaining market share over Twitter as well. By making its CTO the CEO, Twitter will want to be able to defend and protect its platform and architecture from the growing demand from many countries for regulating it. Twitter has become very controversial around the world spurred by the arrogant attitude and image of Jack Dorsey. By making an Indian-born the CEO, it will be seen as a move to change this image. The world has seen Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, and many others build more credible images for their respective organisations worldwide, especially with India, which is the largest emerging market.”

Personally speaking

Destiny too had a role to play in Agrawal’s personal life. His wife Vineeta Agarwala also studied at Stanford University, and after a happy courtship, the couple was married at Amber Vilas in Jaipur in a colourful and jubilant traditional Indian wedding. Vineeta has a BS in biophysics from Stanford University, with an MD and PhD from Harvard Medical School/MIT. Vineeta is a physician, and works as adjunct clinical professor at Stanford School of Medicine. They have a son Aansh who was born on Thanksgiving. A love for travel, an eye for the perfect shot, and a profound belief in family, Parag often posts pictures of his travels and family on social media.

[caption id="attachment_17018" align="aligncenter" width="633"]Parag Agrawal Parag Agrawal is the new CEO of Twitter.[/caption]

As he takes on the mantle of CEO, Agrawal has a slew of tasks cut out. In his note to the company before inviting all employees for a hands-on meeting on November 29, Agrawal wrote, “Thank you, Jack. I'm honored and humbled... Our purpose has never been more important. Our people and our culture are unlike anything in the world. There is no limit to what we can do together. We recently updated our strategy to hit ambitious goals, and I believe that strategy to be bold and right. But our critical challenge is how we work to execute against it and that's how we'll make Twitter the best it can be for our customers, shareholders, and for each of you.”

The other Indian on Twitter

Incidentally, Twitter also has an Indian-origin lawyer Vijaya Gadde who was in the limelight earlier this year for helping suspend Donald Trump’s Twitter account. Gadde, a corporate lawyer, spearheaded the suspension of Trump’s account after his posts encouraged and supported rioters in the US.

With inputs from TEAM GLOBAL INDIAN

Follow Parag Agrawal on LinkedIn and Twitter

 

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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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