The Global Indian Friday, June 27 2025
  • Home
  • Stories
    • Exclusive
      • Startups
      • Culture
      • Marketplace
      • Campus Life
      • Youth
      • Giving Back
      • Zip Codes
    • Blogs
      • Opinion
      • Profiles
      • Web Stories
    • Fun Facts
      • World in numbers
      • Didyouknow
      • Quote
    • Gallery
      • Pictures
      • Videos
  • Work Life
  • My Book
  • Top 100
  • Our Stories
  • Tell Your Story
Select Page
That was a turning point for him and he decided to join politics himself. Three years later, Puranik, who is popularly known as Yogi, was a councilor; the first person of Indian origin to be elected to office in Japan.
Global IndianstoryYogendra Puranik became Japan’s first Indian-origin politician. Here’s how
  • Indian Origin
  • Whatsapp Share
  • LinkedIn Share
  • Facebook Share
  • Twitter Share

Yogendra Puranik became Japan’s first Indian-origin politician. Here’s how

Written by: Global Indian

(July 21, 2021; 5.30 pm) Back in 2016, Tokyo’s Edogawa ward was contemplating the creation of a Singapore-like Little India in Nishikasai, an area that boasts a sizeable Indian population. A banker, Yogendra Puranik was the only Indian from a professional background at the meeting; everybody else was a restaurant owner. The imbalance wasn’t lost on Puranik, who also found that the Little India model was not socially healthy or sustainable since it didn’t factor in the community’s daily needs.   

Puranik strongly felt that public opinion should also be factored in since the plan involved an Indian street with at least 50 to 60 establishments spanning restaurants, groceries, and clothing along with a temple, and hospital. He told Japan Times that he didn’t think the plan was financially viable and had plenty of other ideas to put forth; but they were met with resistance. “My suggestions to the city councilor turned into an argumentative debate,” which spiraled out of control – the councilor threatened to have Puranik thrown out of Nishikasai.   

That was a turning point for him and he decided to join politics himself. Three years later, Puranik, who is popularly known as Yogi, was a councilor; the first person of Indian origin to be elected to office in Japan. “I wanted to join the other side of the table so I could take the opinion of the foreign community to the city administration.” A naturalized Japanese citizen, Puranik announced his candidacy in the regional elections that were to be held in April 2019. The Indian-origin politician and member of the Constitutional Democratic Party won by a huge margin.  

How Yogendra Puranik became Japan’s first Indian-origin politician

Yogendra Puranik after he was elected as councilor

From Ambarnath to Tokyo 

Born in 1977 in Ambarnath in Mumbai to Rekha, a teacher, and Sharad, a machinist in the Ordnance Factory, Yogendra Puranik studied at the Kendriya Vidyalaya School. When the family relocated to Pune, he transferred to the school’s Pune branch. He graduated from Sir Parashurambhau College in Science and also studied languages like Japanese and German from the Foreign Languages Department of Pune University. In 1997 he was awarded the Study Tour award, a scholarship from The Japan Foundation and that is when his interest in Japan began to develop. He then pursued a Business Management program from IIM-Calcutta with a focus on strategies for doing global business.  

How Yogendra Puranik became Japan’s first Indian-origin politician

Yogendra Puranik with his mother Rekha and son Chinmay

While he began his career in 1996 with a small-scale IT firm called Sutra Systems, he moved to Japan in 2001 where he worked with companies such as Infosys, Fujifilm and Polaris before switching to the banking sector in 2010 as vice president of operations strategy at Mizohu Bank. His last position was at Rakuten Bank as vice director of corporate planning before he took the plunge into politics. 

In summer 2001 he married his Chinese girlfriend and they had a son together, Chinmay. However, the couple divorced shortly thereafter and ever since Puranik has raised his son as a single parent with help from his mother, who now runs an Indian restaurant in Kasai. 

Giving Back 

Puranik moved to the Nishikasai area in 2005 for the sake of his son’s cultural education and because he needed support from the Indian community as a single parent. He eventually became involved with both the Indian and Japanese communities through cultural festivals and voluntary activities. As a result, he became a sort of liaison between his Indian and Japanese neighbors.  

When the earthquake struck Tokyo and devastated northern Japan in 2011, Puranik and other volunteers stepped in to help neighbors and victims of the disaster. “We also started a helpline for Indian people and I shared my personal phone number,” he told Japan Times. Within a few days he had answered over 200 calls about radiation, food and water safety. His work here cemented his standing as a social volunteer.  

It was shortly after this that he decided to settle down in Japan and got citizenship. Puranik also runs the Edogawa India Culture Center, which hosts free classes on yoga, languages, cooking, art, and music.  

Three years after the Little India incident, Puranik is a councilor; the first person of Indian origin to be elected to office in Japan. 

“I want to be an assemblyman who can connect everyone regardless of nationality, age, or even disabilities, through my 20 years of living in Japan.” 
Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Yogi
Yogi
December 15, 2022 4:37 am

Thank you for writing about me. Very nicely and concisely written. One change. I moved to Nishi Kasai in 2006 and I moved here for safety of my son. In fact I was worried about the negative image of Indians as a clusture as rule breakers. And I also organized diwali function in Nishi Kasai as a part of organizing team since 2006 to 2010.

0
Reply
Vinayak Pingale
Vinayak Pingale
April 30, 2023 9:14 am

Can I contact Yogi Puranik San.

0
Reply
  • Ambarnath in Mumbai
  • Business Management
  • Constitutional Democratic Party
  • councilor
  • Edogawa India Culture Center
  • Edogawa ward
  • Foreign Languages Department of Pune University
  • Fujifilm
  • Global Indian
  • IIM-Calcutta
  • Infosys
  • Japanese citizen
  • Kendriya Vidyalaya School
  • Little India
  • Mizohu Bank
  • Nishikasai
  • Polaris
  • Pune
  • Rakuten Bank
  • Sir Parashurambhau College
  • The Japan Foundation
  • Tokyo
  • Yogendra Puranik
  • Yogi

Published on 21, Jul 2021

Share with

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

ALSO READ

Story
Sanjena Sathian: The Indian-American novelist redefining identity through her work

(October 8, 2021) What it means to be both Indian and American? An unnerving question that has kept a generation of Indian-American kids grappling with a feeling of otherness in a country they find at times hard to call home. Being divided between the expectation of their immigrant parents and their own free will, it's the crossroads they often find themselves at. And novelist Sanjena Sathian explores this very notion in her debut book Gold Diggers. A melting point of ambition, American dream and alchemy, the book redefines identity. The 29-year-old, born to immigrant parents who moved to the US with an American dream, had to unlearn a lot to find herself and her identity in the chaos. This in turn led to the emergence of his first book that had put her into the longlist for the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize. Not just this, Mindy Kaling is ready to put this piece of work on the small tube with the screen adaptation of Gold Diggers. Sathian's entry into the world of writers has been with a bang but she had to do a lot of soul searching to reach here. Pressure to overachieve Born and raised in

Read More

had to do a lot of soul searching to reach here.

Pressure to overachieve

Born and raised in Georgia by South Indian immigrant parents, Sathian grew up in metro Atlanta and attended the The Westminster School. Being the grand daughter and great granddaughter of respected Malayalee translators, a young Sathian always dreamt of becoming a writer. She would spend hours scribbling stories in her diary. When she wasn't writing, she would be competing as a policy debater in high school, eventually winning the national championship as a senior.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Sanjena Sathian (@sanjenasathian)

"Once I started winning, I couldn't get enough of it. I became addicted to the hope of winning, and then actually winning — like my existence was confirmed if I won a debate. I sort of became a flat creature if I lost because I didn’t know what to do with that loss," she told Lareviewofbooks in an interview.

Like every second-generation American, Sathian, too, had her eyes on the Ivy League, courtesy the expectation of her parents who wanted her to make it to one of the elite colleges in the US. But internally she often struggled as she felt she was failing to meet the heavy expectations of her family and teachers. And this would put Sathian under immense pressure to overachieve. "It’s comical that I wore this talismanic Harvard sweatshirt and it’s comical how obsessed I was with winning debates. But it’s also tragic that I robbed myself of an inner life and made it really painful for myself to underachieve," she told the New York Times.

Questioning her choices

She didn't land up in Harvard but at Yale University where she earned a BA in English and studied literary journalism and fiction. It was here that she received multiple grants to report from three continents and was awarded the English Department’s highest honors for each of her two senior thesis: one on the novels of Zadie Smith, the other a series of linked short stories.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Sanjena Sathian (@sanjenasathian)

Despite her good grades and a great portfolio, Sathian struggled to find a job as a journalist. New York Times revealed that she once called her dad to discuss the possibility of switching to a career "where it's possible to be mediocre." She eventually became an Indian correspondent, based in Mumbai, for a California-based digital publication Ozy. After staying in the role for two years, the 29-year-old felt that writing was her true calling so she returned to the US and dove straight into the two-year Iowa Writers' Workshop residency in 2017.

The book that changed it all

The seed of her debut novel Gold Diggers germinated during one of the workshops at Iowa. What began as a failed short story became an obsession for Sathian, who was keen to explore the characters and the concept of conceit. Soon a handful of pages turned into a full-fledged novel, and Sathian's first book was born.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Sanjena Sathian (@sanjenasathian)

Sathian's debut book, which was longlisted for the Centre for Fiction's First Novel Prize, tells the story of a teenager who struggles with balancing his own ambitions and those of his parents, and finding his own way to be brown in America. Being herself the daughter of immigrant parents, Sathian beautifully depicts the crossroads at which often most second generation Americans find themselves.

American dream

"I grew up being told that there were 'real Indians' like my parents, and then ABCDs (American Born Confused Desis) like me. I think that's just a ridiculous way to teach someone to think about their identity — as though the fact that I'm born in America inherently makes me confused. What it does is give me a multiplicitous identity, which is something that writers like Smith and Rushdie have engaged with much more richly. So the book is concerned with identity, but in ways that are less basic than 'Am I Indian or am I American or both?', she told the Hindustan Times.

Being raised in the US in a family that was fixated with the American dream, this Global Indian realized that the concept was ingrained deeply in the minds of the people who left their homelands to find a better life in the US. But the writer calls American dream a dangerous idea that is playing with the ideals and aspirations of the immigrants and their families.

"The American dream is a fiction that we Americans feed ourselves to believe that there is such thing as hmeritocracy in this country. This is an appealing idea because, as in books like The Great Gatsby, Americans are taught to believe that it’s possible to remake ourselves entirely, to come up from nothing and wind up rich or famous or wildly successful. Of course, that’s a compelling idea -- so many of us want more for ourselves and our families. And that idea is what brought many Indians of my parents’ generation to the US, especially those who left in the 1960s-80s when the Indian economy was closed. But the American dream is also a deeply dangerous idea because it presupposes that those who aren’t wealthy somehow just aren’t striving enough," she added.

Gold Diggers: From book to TV

It's this very notion of identity that has made Sathian's novel a hit with booklovers. Such has been the success of Gold Diggers that even Mindy Kaling's production couldn't turn a blind eye to this bestseller. Kaling, who is championing diversity with her shows like Never Have I Ever, is keen to adapt Gold Diggers for television. And it is this very feat that has put the Indian-American novelist on the list of new talent to look out for.

Passing the knowledge

Sathian, who has tasted success with Gold Diggers, is imparting her knowledge in the field of writing with the Bombay Writers' Workshop that she started in 2020. "My hope is to bring the kind of creative writing education and community I got at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop to artists of all ages and skill levels writing literary prose in Mumbai. The bulk of writing is a solitary act, and you can’t really teach someone how to do that. But I can help writers who want to better their sentences or learn more about story structure or just read others’ work. Last year, the online course was pretty incredible — a talented bunch of people in both India and the diaspora. I always hope to pay it forward by passing on to other writers whatever small knowledge I’ve gotten from my teachers and friends."

 

 

 

Reading Time: 7 min

Story
Kumar Nadesan: A Pravasi Bharatiya Samman awardee’s tale of transformations

(September 22, 2023) I had the pleasure of meeting Thiru Sivakumar Nadesan, more popular as Kumar Nadesan, on a pleasant afternoon at the Business Club of Taj Samudra, Colombo. The Indian cricket team was coincidentally staying at the same venue for the Asia Cup. Although their presence was unrelated to the essence of our encounter, their proximity added an enchanting touch to the ambience.  Taj Samudra Colombo radiates a deep affection for Indians in Colombo, and amidst the opulence of the surroundings, Kumar Nadesan's arrival only heightened the vibrancy of the atmosphere.  Nadesan, the recipient of the prestigious Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Award 2023, is widely recognised as the print magnate of Sri Lanka. He holds the position of Managing Director of Express Newspapers (Ceylon) (Pvt) Limited, a prominent print and web media organisation. It publishes Virakesari, one of Sri Lanka's  foremost Tamil daily newspapers, amongst other publications. Founded in August 1930, Virakesari stands as the oldest and largest circulating Tamil newspaper in Sri Lanka at 93. [caption id="attachment_45216" align="aligncenter" width="798"] Kumar Nadesan receiving Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Award 2023 from President Droupadi Murmu[/caption] “When Gandhi came here, he advised the Indian community to come up with a publication as he found

Read More

st 1930, Virakesari stands as the oldest and largest circulating Tamil newspaper in Sri Lanka at 93.

[caption id="attachment_45216" align="aligncenter" width="798"]Indian Origin | Kumar Nadesan | Global Indian Kumar Nadesan receiving Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Award 2023 from President Droupadi Murmu[/caption]

“When Gandhi came here, he advised the Indian community to come up with a publication as he found that the diaspora lacked voice in the country at that time. This is how Virakesari started,” Nadesan told Global Indian. Over the years, the publication has diligently catered to Tamil speaking individuals irrespective of nationality and religion.

Apart from being at the helm of all the other publications of Express Newspapers which caters to a wide audience, Nadesan is the director of the Newspaper Society of Sri Lanka, and chairman of Sri Lanka Press Institute (SLPI). Established and operated by the media industry SLPI provides structured training for journalists, encourages self-regulation within the print media sector, and champions a free and responsible media environment in Sri Lanka. Talking about its uniqueness he shared, “We are the first in the world to have people with diverse outlooks all sitting together at one table. Our group includes working journalists, media activists, editors, and publishers, each with their unique perspectives."

As the chairman of the Press Complaints Commission of Sri Lanka, a self-regulatory mechanism of the media industry, Nadesan heads a simple, non-legalistic system by which people with a genuine grievance about the press can gain quick and easy redress, without hassle. 

The Attorney at Law Sri Lanka, has played a major role in addressing the drug menace in the country as the Chairman of Sri Lanka Anti-Narcotics Association. The man of many hats loves being busy and is also the President of the Sri Lanka chapter of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO). He has been the president of the Sri Lanka India Society in the past.

Unfazed by his accomplishments

When I extended my congratulations to him for the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman award that he recently received, Nadesan displayed remarkable humility, stating, "I was, of course, pleasantly surprised to receive it, but I am uncertain about the reasons for my selection." As Chairman of the major print media regulatory bodies his efforts to enhance professionalism within the Sri Lankan media industry is unquestionable and quite evident. 

In his tenure as president of the Sri Lanka Anti-Narcotics Association, his dedication to the cause has been nothing short of tremendous, reflecting his unwavering commitment to the betterment of the community and the country, which is his home. Despite his impressive accomplishments he remained grounded as he spoke. 

[caption id="attachment_45221" align="aligncenter" width="762"]Indian Origin | Kumar Nadesan | Global Indian Kumar Nadesan with Sri Lanka's PM, Dinesh Gunawardena and the High Commissioner of India, Gopal Baglay[/caption]

After returning from the Valedictory Session and Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards Ceremony in Indore, where he received the award from President Droupadi Murmu, his friends threw him a surprise party in Colombo. They had invited the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka, Dinesh Gunawardena and the High Commissioner of India, Gopal Baglay as special guests to honour him. When I mentioned the event to Nadesan, he humbly remarked, "I would have never allowed that if I had known my friends were planning something like that." 

Bond with India 

Despite being a fourth-generation Indian in Sri Lanka, Nadesan’s ties with India are deep-rooted. His initial connection with India was forged during his undergraduate years at Loyola College, Madras which he fondly recalled as ‘some of the most cherished days of his life’. “I even served as the student union president during those carefree days,” he said, talking about his tryst with India in the 1960s. 

His bond with his country of origin grew stronger, particularly when all four of his sisters were married off to India. His late wife, who was a doctor by profession, also happened to be from India. Nadesan met her while they were students in Madras. 

From law to publishing industry  

After completing his bachelor's degree in commerce from Madras, Nadesan went to the United Kingdom to pursue law. Upon his return to Sri Lanka, he was a practising lawyer for two decades, accumulating valuable experience in the legal field. 

However, a significant turning point occurred when he transitioned into the publishing industry. His involvement with the Express Newspaper, a position influenced by his family's business stakes in the publication house, marked a notable shift in his professional journey. 

[caption id="attachment_45218" align="aligncenter" width="684"]Indian Origin | Kumar Nadesan | Global Indian Kumar Nadesan at a media event[/caption]

This career transition was driven by his belief that through the media, he could wield greater influence and potentially challenge government actions when they are unjust. “Newspaper is an ideal platform to expound whatever ideas you have and help the society,” he says. 

Commitment to combat drug menace in Sri Lanka 

Talking about his initiatives as the president of Sri Lanka Anti-Narcotics Association, he shared “I am a member of the Rotary Club of Colombo for more than 50 years. Anti-drugs initiatives started off as part of the Rotary project. In 1982-83, we found that drugs were infiltrating Sri Lanka, with young people being the primary target, and realised that something needs to be done to curb the menace.”  

The drugs entered the country through the sea, as the fishermen who wondered whether they will ever afford to build a house got into the lure of bringing drugs into the country to earn money. A single consignment of the size of a jam jar of drugs could yield the resources to build more than two or three houses – a tempting proposition. 

Considering the future of the country and the well-being of its human resources, it seemed imperative to Kumar Nadesan and his fellow Rotary members to initiate discussions about anti-drug programmes and take action in the sphere. “We conceptualised the idea of fostering human development because, even though drug-related issues may seem minor in scale, perhaps around 1 percent, the impact they create, including robbery and theft, is substantial,” he remarked “Our prisons have been overflowing with individuals unable to pay fines for drug-related offences,” he adds. 

[caption id="attachment_45217" align="aligncenter" width="732"]Indian Origin | Kumar Nadesan | Global Indian Kumar Nadesan at a Rotary function in presence of President of Sri Lanka Ranil Wickremesinghe[/caption]

Under Nadesan’s leadership, the initial initiative of the Rotary project proved to be highly successful. Soon after, the Sri Lanka Anti-Narcotics Association was established reflecting his commitment to addressing drug-related concerns in Sri Lanka. The association has done a commendable job over the past few decades. Nadesan received the 'Service above Self' award from Rotary International for his tireless efforts.

Purpose – to bridge heritage and history 

Nadesan is in the process of envisioning a museum that will encapsulate the rich tapestry of Indian ethos, and the opulent flora and fauna of Sri Lanka. With the museum he aims to serve as a knowledge base of Sri Lanka’s natural beauty, promote the local artisans of the country through a handicraft bazaar and also create a tangible connection to the ancestral homeland for the younger generation of Indian-origin diaspora. Many of them often identify their roots with the picturesque towns in Sri Lanka's upcountry where their forefathers were brought to work as tea plantation workers. 

“The intention is to guide them on a journey back to their origins, immersing them in the rich cultural history, and the earnest pride that once defined the lives of their great-grandfathers in the villages of India,” he remarked. 

[caption id="attachment_45215" align="aligncenter" width="570"]Indian Origin | Kumar Nadesan | Global Indian Kumar Nadesan[/caption]

Kumar Nadesan’s family originates from Trichy in Tamil Nadu. His forefathers were brought by the British to Sri Lanka from India as tea plantation workers. Over the generations, becoming one of the well-known figures in the country is an inspirational success story that Kumar Nadesan exudes. 

Reading Time: 5 mins

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

Read More

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

Story
Tollywood to Hollywood: Meet Avantika Vandanapu, the first South Asian to lead a Disney channel film

(August 28, 2021) Who could have possibly thought that in between the perfectly whitewashed Disney channel films like High School Musical, Camp Rock and Descendants, one would find Spin? But it's 2021, and Hollywood seems to finally be warming up to South Asian representation on the big screen in its most authentic form. And amid this is the first South Asian lead for a Disney Channel film - Avantika Vandanapu. The Indian-American, who began her career in Tollywood, is now making heads turn with her Hollywood debut. Such has been the response to her act in Spin that she has found herself on Variety's 2021 Power of Young Hollywood List. Here's the story of the girl who gave the world it's first South Asian lead in a Disney film.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika) Dancing dream that took her to Mumbai Born in San Francisco to an accountant mother and a software engineer father, Vandanapu was trained in Kuchipudi, Kathak, Ballet, Jazz, Contemporary and Bollywood since the age of 5. It was dance that really made Vandanapu feel at home. Such was the passion for dancing that a 9-year-old Vandanapu applied for

Read More

ax-width: 540px; min-width: 326px; padding: 0; width: calc(100% - 2px);" data-instgrm-captioned="" data-instgrm-permalink="https://www.instagram.com/p/CQj-z_aBm_d/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading" data-instgrm-version="13">

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika)

Dancing dream that took her to Mumbai

Born in San Francisco to an accountant mother and a software engineer father, Vandanapu was trained in Kuchipudi, Kathak, Ballet, Jazz, Contemporary and Bollywood since the age of 5. It was dance that really made Vandanapu feel at home. Such was the passion for dancing that a 9-year-old Vandanapu applied for Zee TV dance reality show Dance India Dance Lil Masters and came to Mumbai after her selection. The adventure of having a first-hand experience of the world of Hindi TV and film in Mumbai, Vandanapu fell in love with the industry. It was then she made up her mind that she would pursue acting as a profession.

Her wish was granted when a Telugu director saw her on the show and cast her in a film. It was with Mahesh Babu's 2016 film Brahmotsavam that Vandanapu made her Tollywood debut as a child artist. She instantly shot to fame and ended up working in Manamantha, Premam, Balakrishnudu and Agnyathavaasi.

Bullied for skin tone

After trying her hands in acting in India, Vandanapu wanted to up her game and improve her craft. This drive to better her art brought her back to the US where she trained intensively in acting and dancing. From taking drama classes at school to going for open-call auditions, Vandanapu was ready to make it big in Hollywood.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by avantika (@iamavantika)

But things weren't easy for this teenager as she found herself being mocked at for her skin tone.

In a conversation with Mid-Day, she opened up on facing racism in America. She said,

"I have dealt with the occasional comments like, 'Go back to your country!' But I know people in the mid-west have it worse. It’s also that lingering feeling of being left out, and that you don’t have the same opportunities as others because of your skin colour. The Caucasian community assumes that as an Indian, you don't relate to the American experience."

However, Vandanapu wasn't ready to bow down to racial discrimination, and kept following her passion. The first opportunity that came knocking on her door was Disney Channel's Spin in 2017, which turned out to be Vandanapu's first audition for a Hollywood film. However, the makers wanted to work a little more on the script and develop the characters fully before starting the project. So for three years Spin was put on hold. But in between, Vandanapu's auditions got her a role in Mira, Royal Detective, an Indian-American-Canadian animated mystery series and an American comedy-drama series Diary of A Future President.

Smashing stereotypes with her Hollywood debut

In 2020, Vandanapu found herself yet again at the audition of Spin, Disney's first film with a South-Asian lead. For the longest time, Disney films have been whitewashed but with South Asian representation trickling on the big screen in a big way, Spin came with an authentic take on Indian American experience.

The 16-year-old has scripted history by becoming the first South Asian lead for a Disney Channel film. But it's still surreal for her because Vandanapu. "What teenager does not dream of being on Disney channel? I have always thought about it. But it was tough for me as a young Indian girl to think one day I would be on that screen. But as we see representation coming to Hollywood, it was like, 'Oh may be this is something I could finally get to do’. And then Spin was here, and it was just so unreal. It was a crazy experience, and I have to constantly pinch myself to be able to live out my dream like this," she told PinkVilla.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCGzsmO03xw

Spin has smashed the glass ceiling in more than one way. The Manjari Makijany-directed film has not just given Disney a South Asian lead but the film also shattered the age-old stereotypes that plague the Indian diaspora. "We have lacked representation for so long. With Never Have I Ever and Spin, I am glad we can see ourselves on screen. It’s so hard being an Indian in the US; to see people going through similar struggles like ours can be empowering," she added.

Vandanapu has become an overnight star in America and India. The Indian American has not only caught the fancy of the people across the globe with her role in Spin, but she has also featured on Variety's 2021 Power of Young Hollywood List.

After making her Hollywood debut with Spin, Vandanapu has now signed her second flick Senior Year that's produced by Rebel Wilson, Todd Garner and Chris Bender.

At 16, Vandanapu has become a global name, thanks to Spin. The girl, who fell in love with acting in India many years ago, has put South Asians on the global stage. Her story is an inspiration for any teenager who plans to make it big.

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Subashini Iyer : The India-born engineer who will give wings to NASA’s ambitious deep space project

(Our Bureau, June 14) Coimbatore-born Subashini Iyer is the backbone of NASA’s ambitious Artemis mission that will take humans to the Moon and planet Mars. Subashini, who is a Spacecraft Engineering Integrator at Boeing, has been associated with Space Launch System (SLS) for two years. She is responsible for the core stage of Artemis I which will take the spacecraft, Orion, into deep space. Subashini was one of the first women to graduate in mechanical engineering from her college VLB Janakiammal College in 1992. She is now leading a diverse team of mechanical and electrical engineers to support NASA once the core stage is built and handed over to the space agency. In an interview with the Times of India, Subashini said the SLS is the most powerful rocket in the world and she is responsible for building the rocket’s core stage which contains propulsion and electronic systems. It is designed to reach a height of 530,000 feet before breaking away and Artemis I is slated to launch in November this year. Sole woman in the batch Incidentally, when Subashini first enrolled for her engineering class she was the only woman in her batch; she was asked to find another woman

Read More

to reach a height of 530,000 feet before breaking away and Artemis I is slated to launch in November this year.

Sole woman in the batch

Incidentally, when Subashini first enrolled for her engineering class she was the only woman in her batch; she was asked to find another woman “for safety” and had to convince a friend to join the course with her. She now heads a diverse team with several women in it. "My manager, the director of production, test and launch is a woman and so is her boss. The NASA SLS launch director and core stage element leader are also women. It has been great seeing more women in the field,” she told ToI.

"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

The lunar exploration program uses new technologies and systems to explore the moon and NASA’s new rocket SLS will send astronauts to the moon and beyond, 50 years after humans last stepped on the lunar surface. The space agency will fly two missions around the moon to test its deep space exploration systems: Artemis I is an uncrewed flight to test SLS and Orion, Artemis II will test SLS and Orion with the crew. According to NASA's website, when the SLS rocket takes off it will produce a maximum thrust of 8.8 million pounds, more power than any rocket in history.

Reading Time: 5 mins

Share & Follow us

Subscribe News Letter

About Global Indian

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

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

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