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Gira Sarabhai (1923-2021): The force de majeure behind the prestigious National Institute of Design
Global IndianstoryGira Sarabhai (1923-2021): The force de majeure behind the prestigious National Institute of Design
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Gira Sarabhai (1923-2021): The force de majeure behind the prestigious National Institute of Design

Written by: Global Indian

(July 16, 2021; 5.30 pm) It is one of the most coveted design schools in the country. With established exchange programs and collaborative agreements with over 70 premier design institutions across the world, National Institute of Design (NID) has played a significant role in promoting courses around design, architecture, and communications. With only about 100 seats in its Bachelor’s program, the institution is one of the toughest design schools to get into and has churned out notable alumni such as Nachiket Barve, Dibakar Banerjee, and Rahul Mishra among others. It also has a significant number of international students. And it has all been possible because of the vision and work of Gira Sarabhai, its co-founder, who passed away on July 15 at the age of 98.  

The Global Indian architect, designer and teacher is known for her contributions to several industrial and educational projects in Gujarat and is credited as a pioneer of design education in India. She played a crucial role in setting up several other institutions and has through her work contributed greatly in the fields of art and architecture.  

And it has all been possible because of the vision and work of Gira Sarabhai, its co-founder, who passed away on July 15 at the age of 98.   The Global Indian architect, designer and teacher is known for her contributions to several industrial and educational projects in Gujarat and is credited as a pioneer of design education in India.

Gira and Gautam Sarabhai at work

The Vikram Sarabhai connection 

Born into Ahmedabad‘s wealthy Sarabhai family in 1923, Gira was the youngest of eight children. She had an exceptionally privileged and progressive upbringing. He father, Ambalal, founded the Calico Mills and her family was a long-time supporter of Mahatma Gandhi and his independence struggle. Gira, along with her siblings was home schooled and never had any formal education. Her brother Vikram Sarabhai is credited as father of India’s space program. Gira trained with noted American architect Frank Lloyd Wright at his Taliesin West Studio in Arizona from 1947 to 1951.  

After her training, Gira and her brother Gautam worked together in Calico and on several other architecture and design projects. Her work was highly influenced by Wright and the siblings sought to create an architectural response to regional concerns by using local materials.  

In an interview with Indian Express, her nephew Kartikeya Vikram Sarabhai said,  

“When she returned to Ahmedabad, my father was planning to build a house. So, he asked her to design it which I will say was first of her design works.”  

Over the years she developed her own style using basic materials in a creative manner.  

Her understanding of space was instrumental in realizing the vision that she and Gautam had to build NID in 1961 along the banks of the Sabarmati River. The design education institute was her baby and Gira was responsible for inviting several international experts as consultants to NID, including the likes George Nakashima, Charles and Ray Eames, Buckminster Fuller, Louis Khan, and Frei Otto. These architectural and design luminaries helped develop architecture and design education in India.  

And it has all been possible because of the vision and work of Gira Sarabhai, its co-founder, who passed away on July 15 at the age of 98.   The Global Indian architect, designer and teacher is known for her contributions to several industrial and educational projects in Gujarat and is credited as a pioneer of design education in India.

Gira Sarabhai with American sculptor Alexander Calder during his visit to India

In the book ‘50 Year of the National Institute of Design 1961-2011′ Gira is quoted as saying, “While I was in New York, Gautambhai wrote to me asking me to go to the Royal College of Art in London. He had already fixed appointments for me with several people, all experts in different fields. I had to invite them to come to NID as consultants.” 

Design on her mind 

Gira and Gautam were also involved in setting up the Calico Museum, one of India’s most famous private museums. Inspired by Dr Ananda Coomaraswamy, the museum was set up in 1949 and was inaugurated by Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru. The museum houses a historic collection of Indian fabrics and is also a centre for design knowledge, resources, and research.  

And it has all been possible because of the vision and work of Gira Sarabhai, its co-founder, who passed away on July 15 at the age of 98.   The Global Indian architect, designer and teacher is known for her contributions to several industrial and educational projects in Gujarat and is credited as a pioneer of design education in India.

Calico Museum in Ahmedabad

Gira also worked on several architecture and design projects along with Gautam and the duo made significant contributions to modern architecture in India in the 1950s and 1960s. They designed the Calico Dome on Relief Road in Ahmedabad.  

Media shy 

A shy and very private woman, Gira avoided giving interviews, though she was very close to those that she worked with. To her, design was a way of life and her time at Wright’s atelier in the US a huge influence in all her work. The NID book quoted her as saying,

“After working in Wright’s office all day we were allowed to be present in the studio at night. Wright’s students would work in the studio all night long. To our fortune, we could look at the original drawings, plans and masterpieces at night.” 

Towards the later years of her career, she began experimenting with traditional Indian forms, elements and motifs for her contemporary work. Even in her last days she was overseeing the activities of the Sarabhai Foundation, according to Kartikeya.  

Editor’s Take 

Gira Sarabhai’s contributions to design education in the country are significant. Not only did she and Gautam found the prestigious NID, they also worked on the soul of the institution – they appointed the first faculty members from diverse fields and inculcated high standards in budding designers. The fact that NID has churned out some very big names in the fields of design is testimony to the extent of perfection Gira envisioned for India. Her vision led NID to always remain oriented towards social good through design interventions.  

  • RELATED READ: The freedom fighter who took Ayurveda to the world
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  • Ahemdabad
  • Ambalal Sarabhai
  • architect
  • Buckminster Fuller
  • Calico Dome
  • Calico Mills
  • Calico Musem
  • Charles and Ray Eames
  • designer
  • Dibakar Banerjee
  • Frank Lloyd Wright
  • Frei Otto
  • Gautam Sarabhai
  • George Nakashima
  • Gira Sarabhai
  • Global Indian
  • Kartikeya Sarabhai
  • Louis Khan
  • Mahatma Gandhi
  • Mallika Sarabhai
  • Nachiket Barve
  • National Institute of Design (NID)
  • Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru
  • Rahul Mishra
  • Sarabhai Family
  • Taliesin West Studio
  • Vikram Sarabhai

Published on 16, Jul 2021

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Remembering Dadabhai Naoroji: Sage freedom fighter and first Asian elected to UK’s Parliament

Mahatma Gandhi had once said that Dadabhai Naoroji was the real Father of the Nation. To hear the man that the masses adored heap such adulation on a political leader is testimony to the power and idealism Naoroji wielded. In 1956, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru had said in the Parliament:  “We have, to my right here, the picture of Dadabhai Naoroji, in a sense the Father of the Indian National Congress. We may... in our youthful arrogance think that some of these leaders of old were very Moderate, and that we are braver because we shout more. But every person, who can recapture the picture of old India and of the conditions that prevailed, will realize that a man like Dadabhai was, in those conditions, a revolutionary figure.”   On his 104th death anniversary, we look at the life of the political leader, scholar, and writer who left a deep impact on modern India.  [caption id="attachment_4156" align="aligncenter" width="480"] A plaque in honor of Dadabhai Naoroji at Finsbury Park, London[/caption] Man of many firsts Born in 1825 into a Parsi family in Navsari, Naoroji, at the age of 28, became the first Indian to be appointed as a professor at a British-run institution. That institution was Elphinstone College in Bombay where he taught mathematics and physics. At a time when most Indian

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the political leader, scholar, and writer who left a deep impact on modern India. 

[caption id="attachment_4156" align="aligncenter" width="480"]Remembering Dadabhai Naoroji on his 104th death anniversary A plaque in honor of Dadabhai Naoroji at Finsbury Park, London[/caption]

Man of many firsts

Born in 1825 into a Parsi family in Navsari, Naoroji, at the age of 28, became the first Indian to be appointed as a professor at a British-run institution. That institution was Elphinstone College in Bombay where he taught mathematics and physics. At a time when most Indian women lacked any form of education, he founded some of the first schools for girls in Bombay. In 1855 he left for England to join Cama’s firm in London as a business partner; here he became so involved in politics that he contested the election for the House of Commons in 1886. Though he lost that year, in 1892 he represented the Liberal Party and became the first Asian to be elected as a Member of Parliament into the UK’s House of Commons.  

He went on to highlight the unfavorable economic consequences of British rule in India. By the turn of the century, Naoroji was openly advocating for ‘Swaraj’ or self-governance. He declared that only self-governance could halt the wealth drain from India to Britain; he batted for the creation of a representative and accountable administration that would serve Indian interests. His theory caught on and gave impetus to India’s nascent freedom struggle. His work and words inspired two other very important figures in the history of India’s independence struggle: Mahatma Gandhi and Mohammed Ali Jinnah. The latter even campaigned for Naoroji in the elections and served as his private secretary for several years. In one of his speeches, Gandhi also said,

“I myself and many like me have learnt the lessons of regularity, single minded patriotism, simplicity, austerity and ceaseless work from this venerable man.” 

[caption id="attachment_4157" align="aligncenter" width="299"]Remembering Dadabhai Naoroji on his 104th death anniversaryRemembering Dadabhai Naoroji on his 104th death anniversary A ₹5 coin with featuring Dadabhai Naoroji[/caption]

Inspiring Nationalism

Naoroji’s work also inspired other nationalist leaders such as Jawaharlal Nehru and Sarojini Naidu. He founded the Indian National Congress in 1885 with help from Allan Octavian Hume and Dinshaw Edulji Wacha. Naoroji went on to play a key role in India’s freedom struggle. However, his brand of nationalism also drew its fair share of criticism. When Bengal reeled from Lord Curzon’s partition in 1905, Bal Gangadhar Tilak pleaded with Naoroji to support the Swadeshi movement. Other radicals such as Shyamji Krishnavarma blamed Naoroji of inconsistency. They alleged that on one hand he condemned British rule, and on the other, he maintained belief in British justice and fair-mindedness.  

In 1906 when the INC was battered by rifts, Naoroji, the only leader amenable to the extremists and moderates, was called upon to preside over the organization’s Calcutta session and he took up the Congress presidency for the third time. It was here that he publicly termed Swaraj as the Congress’ central and ultimate goal.

“Self-government is the only and chief remedy. In self-government lies our hope, strength and greatness,” he declared.   

[caption id="attachment_4159" align="aligncenter" width="607"]Remembering Dadabhai Naoroji on his 104th death anniversaryRemembering Dadabhai Naoroji on his 104th death anniversary Annie Besant and other INC leaders at Dadabhai Naoroji's Versova home[/caption]

The Calcutta Congress was Naoroji’s last major political outing. By 1907 his health had collapsed and he spent several months convalescing. He eventually resolved to retire from public life and retreated to a seaside bungalow in Versova where he led a retired life. In 1912 when King George V and Queen Mary visited India, he pushed asked Indians to push strongly for self-governance. However, in 1915 when he welcomed Annie Besant’s Home Rule League he caused great consternation among the moderates in Bombay. 

When he passed away in 1917 at the age of 92, he had left behind a maturing political organization and a nationalist ideology. In an article in Hind Swaraj, Gandhi declared Naoroji to be, “the Father of the Nation. Had not the Grand Old Man of India prepared the soil our young men could not have even spoken about Home Rule.” 

Watch this short documentary on the life of Dadabhai Naoroji

[embed]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeKpJyF5wB8[/embed]

 

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="attachment_9416" align="alignnone" width="1280"]Indian Influencer | Murthy Megavan | Surfing Champion | Global Indian Murthy Megavan fell in love with the sport at a young age[/caption]

A lasting love affair 

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[caption id="attachment_9417" align="alignnone" width="1280"]Indian Influencer | Murthy Megavan | Surfing Champion | Global Indian Murthy Megavan riding waves at Kovalam[/caption]

It was one fateful morning in 2001 when Murthy came across Jack Hebner, the pioneer of surfing in India. The saffron-clothed foreigner was scouting the area from Mahabalipuram to Kovalam to establish his surf ashram. As Murthy returned from his fishing trip that day, he caught sight of Hebner effortlessly riding wave after wave using an actual surfboard. Until then, Murthy didn’t even know that surfing was an actual sport. He walked up to Hebner and requested to borrow his board – for the next 15 minutes the fisherman rode the waves leaving the Surfing Swami impressed. In 2003, he managed to buy himself a surf board and began self-learning the sport.  

“I would use a fishing rope for a leash, the beach sand to wax my board and coconut oil on my skin instead of sunscreen,” he smiles. “People would point and laugh at me; some said I was crazy. But I didn’t care. I’d fallen in love with surfing.” 

It was written in the stars 

[caption id="attachment_9418" align="alignnone" width="960"]Indian Influencer | Murthy Megavan | Surfing Champion | Global Indian Murthy Megavan teaching a student to kayak[/caption]

A chance meeting with Tobias Hartman, a German architect, and Yotam Agam, a sound engineer, in 2007 set the ball rolling for Murthy in terms of building a successful surfing career. Hartman and Agam would often head to Kovalam to surf and struck up a friendship with the fisherman who would join them to ride the waves; the duo ended up gifting the fisherman a top-notch surfboard. “In return, I promised them that I would do everything I could to further the sport in the area,” says Murthy. Six months later, when Agam visited Murthy, he was surprised to see that he had with him 10 other boys from the hamlet who were effortlessly riding the waves. Murthy had kept his word.  

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[caption id="attachment_9419" align="alignnone" width="750"]Indian Influencer | Murthy Megavan | Surfing Champion | Global Indian Murthy Megavan[/caption]

Social activities first 

As the school racked up students, Murthy was firm on one thing: students at his surf school had to steer clear of alcohol, cigarettes and drugs. “It was the only way I could help the local youth stay clean. Along with this I encouraged them to take up beach clean-up drives and volunteer work. Classes for the local youth were absolutely free if they stuck to my conditions,” says Murthy, who still stands by these rules. 

By 2014, Murthy found support in Arun Vasu, chairman and managing director of TT Logistics and Cargo in Chennai. Vasu, who initially sponsored boards for Murthy’s school, eventually built the Covelong Point Surfing School. The school now offers lessons in surfing, kayaking, and standup paddling, while the first floor houses Surf Turf, a bed and breakfast with a charming café overlooking the sea. 

In the meanwhile, Murthy had been participating at various surfing championships across the country: he was among the top Indian surfers in his age division who managed to hold his own against more experienced surfers from abroad. He’d also participated at competitions in Bali and Sri Lanka in 2014 and 2015. “But I was no match for the participants there. Our boys here have a lot of potential, but they still need a lot more training and support to win at competitions abroad,” says Murthy, talking about the students he’s been training across various water sports. Several of them have gone on to participate internationally.  

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whU496OC6-w[/embed]

The pandemic that shook things up 

The pandemic last year, changed a lot of things for this fisherman-turned-surfer. He exited the Covelong Point Surfing School to branch out on his own and launched Murthy Surf School in the neighborhood. Today, he trains as many as 10 to 15 people each day, many of them from Chennai. “Earlier, we’d have a lot of foreigners signing up for classes, but the pandemic has changed that. Now a lot of locals are showing interest in the sport,” he says.  

In his spare time, he continues giving back to community by spearheading beach clean-up drives in the area and also works towards turtle conservation. Even as we chat, he breaks off mid conversation to holler at a beach visitor he spots carelessly chucking plastic wrapping onto the sand. That’s Murthy for you. 

  • Murthy Megavan can be reached at 9003052231 for lessons in surfing, kayaking, and standup paddling. Introductory classes usually begin at ₹1,500 while regular lessons are priced at ₹750. The ideal surf season along the east coast is from April to September.  

 

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Meet Captain Anny Divya, world’s youngest Boeing 777 commander

(Suruchi Kapur-Gomes, May 28 ) Commander Anny Divya has taken life’s highs and downdrafts with equanimity. At the age of 30, the Andhra Pradesh girl became the world’s youngest woman to command the 360-seater Boeing 777 aircraft.  A girl who couldn’t speak proper English while growing up single-mindedly pursued her dream of flying despite her family’s financial constraints and became one of the most recognizable names in global aviation. And looks the part, in her spiffy four stripes uniform. Today, she’s also a TedX speaker, model, LinkedIn Influencer and champion of social causes.   Army man father  Behind the high-flying girl who pilots the world’s largest twin-engine jet is a dedicated daughter who never forgets her parents' role in her journey. “I have always wanted to fly like a free bird since I was 10. It was a very big decision for my dad to send me to flying school as it was expensive – taking a loan from a bank, and friends. My parents have played the biggest role in realizing my dream,” Anny Divya told Global Indian in an interview. Her father who retired as Naik Subedar in the Army’s artillery division, and her homemaker mother have shaped her worldview. “My dad started his journey as soldier and has done two Siachen postings. I am very, very proud of him,” she smiles.  After completing schooling from Vijayawada’s Kendriya Vidyalaya, she chose engineering but

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In Influencer and champion of social causes.  

Army man father 

Anny Divya

Behind the high-flying girl who pilots the world’s largest twin-engine jet is a dedicated daughter who never forgets her parents' role in her journey. “I have always wanted to fly like a free bird since I was 10. It was a very big decision for my dad to send me to flying school as it was expensive – taking a loan from a bank, and friends. My parents have played the biggest role in realizing my dream,” Anny Divya told Global Indian in an interview. Her father who retired as Naik Subedar in the Army’s artillery division, and her homemaker mother have shaped her worldview. “My dad started his journey as soldier and has done two Siachen postings. I am very, very proud of him,” she smiles. 

After completing schooling from Vijayawada’s Kendriya Vidyalaya, she chose engineering but switched to a flying school in two months. She then did a BSc in Aviation and an LLB from Mumbai‘s Rizvi Law College. 

“This is your captain speaking” 

Anny Divya

Anny Divya finished her Boeing 737 training in Spain and the Boeing 777 module from London at the age of 21. Her first flight as commander for Air India involved immense preparation and commitment. “It’s not adventurous, it’s a great sense of responsibility, it’s not about getting command, it’s keeping it there and being with it,” says the 34-year-old. Since 2020, she has been flying Vande Bharat missions for Air India. 

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Anny Divya

But Divya’s heart and soul are in the B777’s flight deck and she takes upskilling very seriously. “I feel thankful I am where I am. I’ve been with Air India for 15 years, constantly training so it’s like second nature,” says Divya. 

Giving back 

Anny Divya frequently donates money to a leprosy hospital, helps orphanages with school uniforms and makes contributions to old age homes in Mumbai, her home base. Whenever her parents bring anyone’s needs to her attention, Divya steps in with financial help.

 About visiting orphanages, she says: “The children are happy to see a girl pilot who is ready to spend time. They don’t care about the money. It uplifts their spirit – nobody sits and talks to them.” 

Anny Divya

Anny Divya has assisted her siblings, a brother and sister, study abroad. “I wanted to help my siblings, and donate to the needy. I did not buy a house, instead, I bought one for my parents. I can do this because I didn’t only look out just for myself. There is a greater joy in that. It is incredibly rewarding,” says the pilot. 

Her next project is to get her mother’s startup, organic food company White Cinnamon, up and running when the pandemic abates.

 “With all my learning, my mother is the one that has taught me the most - to be nice, honest, strong and stand up for what is right. I think that is much more important than any qualification,” says Divya. 

Aviation is a male-dominated industry but Anny Divya feels women in all walks of life face similar challenges. “Let’s have each other’s back,” Divya concludes.

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Rahul Dubey: The Indian American entrepreneur who sheltered 72 strangers in danger

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would have opened their doors for them." 

[embed]https://youtu.be/ycYEQCb1Q5Y[/embed]

“It’s my house. You can stay here as long as you need to because they will not let you leave.” Compilation of videos from that night and the morning after.

Reconstructing that night

According to the Associated Press, protesters out on the roads after Washington’s 7 p.m. curfew on June 1 last year were about to be arrested. TIME says police had set up barricades seemingly to trap protesters, and were pepper-spraying those who remained. “There was this sense of a human tsunami coming down the street and police beating people, putting faces down on cement,” Dubey told reporters later.

Sensing that things were about to go out of hand, he opened the door of his Swann Street house and yelled: ‘Get in!’ He gave Esquire magazine a more graphic picture:

“This was an out of body experience. Kids were screaming when they were running into the house. I mean, they were lining them off one by one and zip tying them.”

Some went upstairs, some downstairs and others into the garden.

The University of Michigan-Ross School of Business graduate ministered to this scared, tired crowd who had nowhere to go for the night – some aged 70, some as young as 16.

“People were coughing, crying, strangers pouring milk into strangers’ eyes,” Dubey told TIME “They were sharing information, writing down numbers for bail bondsmen. It was this real camaraderie.”

One protestor, who just goes by the name Meka, recalled later on Twitter: “They shot mace at peaceful protesters is a residential neighborhood. The man who took us in is named Rahul Dubey. He gave us business cards in case they try to say we broke in.”

https://twitter.com/MekaFromThe703/status/1267638186676834306?s=20

A couple of cops reportedly attempted to breach his sanctuary by posing as protesters and by trying to intercept the pizzas he had ordered for the 72. Dubey tried to be the negotiator but when matters reached a deadlock, he advised his guests to stay put until the next morning.

https://twitter.com/i/status/1267697465400197120

The aftermath

Dubey’s spur-of-the-moment decision brought along new friendships with 72 persons he now calls family. "There isn't a day that goes by when I don't hear from at least one of them, such are the bonds that have been created, " Dubey told Global Indian.

He has become of the Most Googled Indians since he got the ‘Heroes of 2020’ recognition. People who know Dubey, like Kishan Putta, a neighborhood commissioner in DC, say he has always been a very caring, generous person who tries to do the right things.

Indian American heritage

Rahul Dubey believes his Indian American roots and penchant for travel have played a big role in molding his approach. Dubey’s father came to the US at the age of 19 with just eight dollars in his pocket. “As a child, he would visit India quite often and witness firsthand how his family helped the marginalized, irrespective of religion. “Being an Indian-American and having the blessings of both the beautiful culture of India, the sacredness and piousness of it, the problems of it as well and the opportunities of America, the diversity it brings and the power of people there, has helped shape me more than anything else."

[caption id="attachment_3483" align="alignnone" width="1079"]Rahul Dubey with his new friends at his home. Rahul Dubey with his new friends at his home.[/caption]

Healthcare entrepreneur

A globe-trotter who has visited 25 countries, Dubey is a successful healthcare founder who started America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) Innovation Lab. He was awarded Smart Health's 2018 Excellence in Healthcare Transformation Award and named in the American Journal of Health Promotion's 2017 Innovators and Game Changers list.

But being an Indian American can be a challenging identity at times. "When you are isolated in the suburbs of white mid-west America and suburbs of Detroit, trying to adopt an identity of your surroundings, the biggest challenge was to fit in and understand who I really am. That was something I struggled for a good 20-25 years of my life."

Dubey says he has faced racism all throughout his life in the US but remains optimistic about the future. Speaking to India Today, he said:

“What I need to do is find the identity of the role the Indian American is going to play in this transformation of America, in the transformation of this world that is coming out of Covid, coming out of systemic racism.

[caption id="attachment_3484" align="alignnone" width="409"]Rahul Dubey “They were sharing information, writing down numbers for bail bondsmen. It was this real camaraderie.”[/caption]

Hanuman Chalisa

Interestingly, the ‘Hanuman Chalisa’ has been Dubey’s constant companion for the past 11 years. The Hindu poetic verses make things a little more beautiful and more optimistic, especially on the rough patches, he says.

Today, Rahul Dubey is proud of his Indian American heritage and is keen to represent that even in the remotest corners of the world. “I want to be in the Andes rainforest and interact with people who have never interacted with anyone from the Indian descent. I want to reiterate our values upon other cultures, take their values and see the similarities between the values."

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Raj Echambadi: Indian American iMBA pioneer and first person of color to helm a 131-year-old American university

It was like being “forged by fire” says Raj Echambadi as he describes his first tryst with the American academia; he stands to take charge as the 10th president of the illustrious Illinois Institute of Technology. The India-born educator will be the first person of color to head the 131-year-old research-focused university. Considered a pioneer in online iMBA which he conceptualized in 2016, Echambadi has also been working with the Indian government to build entrepreneurial hubs in Sri Venkateswara University, Tirupati and Utkal University in Odisha.  The incident he mentions is an episode from his early academic years in the mid-1990s which is etched in his mind and shaped his outlook towards education. As a young PhD scholar at the University of Houston, Echambadi had thought that the dissertation proposal he’d submitted was pathbreaking. “During a discussion with my mentor, we spent the first five minutes talking about my Indian roots in what seemed like a casual conversation,” he says. “For the next 15 minutes, however, my mentor launched a professional criticism of my dissertation. It was eye-opening. He dissected my dissertation and told me why it was wrong. I was stunned.”  “The funniest thing was that after the meeting ended we had coffee and spoke about tennis; just like friends. He made sure I was comfortable with his criticism.”  This incident, he says, was demonstrative of the quality of US

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PhD scholar at the University of Houston, Echambadi had thought that the dissertation proposal he’d submitted was pathbreaking. “During a discussion with my mentor, we spent the first five minutes talking about my Indian roots in what seemed like a casual conversation,” he says.

“For the next 15 minutes, however, my mentor launched a professional criticism of my dissertation. It was eye-opening. He dissected my dissertation and told me why it was wrong. I was stunned.” 

“The funniest thing was that after the meeting ended we had coffee and spoke about tennis; just like friends. He made sure I was comfortable with his criticism.” 

This incident, he says, was demonstrative of the quality of US academic dissemination, and the caliber of culturally sensitive faculty members. 

From Chennai to the US 

[caption id="attachment_4282" align="aligncenter" width="413"]Indian American Raj Echambadi will be the first person of color to helm the 131-year-old Illinois Institute of Technology. Raj Echambadi with his friend Ramesh Kumar during his MBA days in India[/caption]

Born in Chennai, Echambadi graduated in Mechanical Engineering from Anna University in 1989. He went on to work as a sales executive at Castrol in Chennai before moving to the US to do his PhD in Marketing from the University of Houston. He then went to work at the University of Central Florida for 11 years, before joining the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was during his time here that Echambadi conceptualized and launched the first-of-its-kind MOOC-based online MBA (iMBA as it is popularly known) in partnership with Coursera. The iMBA has now reached over 80 million people around the world and is considered one of the most disruptive and breakthrough programs in graduate MBA.  

Following this, Echambadi was appointed the Duncan Family Dean at D’Amore-McKim School of Business at Northeastern University in Boston.   

In pursuit of excellence 

Raj Echambadi belongs to a generation of Indians who migrated to the US in pursuit of excellence in diverse fields such as academia, medicine, and technology. Their success stories, in turn, sculpted India’s repute in the global order. Asked what worked for the diaspora, he says: “When I came here, there was no safety net. We had to survive. And, the Indian middle class’ emphasis on the value of education played a role too.” This is precisely what the Indian-American educator wants to impart to the next breed of aspirants. 

[caption id="attachment_4283" align="aligncenter" width="569"]Indian American Raj Echambadi will be the first person of color to helm the 131-year-old Illinois Institute of Technology. Raj with his brother Rajnarayan and cousin Sreedevi in the US in 2013[/caption]

The democratization of education by making it both affordable and accessible has been central to his initiatives such as the iMBA program at the University of Illinois – which scaled up the institution’s outreach and gave access to global learners. The breakthrough iMBA project brought down the cost of the two-year program from $100,000 to just $22,000. A significant number of Indians from both inside and outside the US benefited from it. 

Besides, the academic research expert’s initiatives – through collaborations between American institutions and the Andhra Pradesh government –  to teach entrepreneurial skills to high school and college students are beginning to bear fruits. “The Indian government has invited us after seeing our pilot project in Andhra Pradesh. I’m hoping this model will benefit over 10,000 students by 2025.”  

Hoping to make a similar impact in his new role at Illinois Institute of Technology from August onwards, he reveals the recipe for the success of any project.

“Start small, dream big, experiment, iterate, and scale-up very fast,” he says. 

As a parting shot, Echambadi ends on a somewhat philosophical note on his continuing educational endeavors and giving back to the global community. “Action is thy duty, fruit is not my concern,” quoting Bhagavad Gita. 

  • RELATED READ: Dr Ashish Jha: The straight-talking dean and pandemic expert

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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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