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Nouf al Marwaai
Global IndianstoryNouf Al Marwaai – Saudi Arabia’s first yoga acharya
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Nouf Al Marwaai – Saudi Arabia’s first yoga acharya

Compiled by: Global Indian

(Our Bureau, May 24) When you are fighting a battle with your body, it’s not easy to overcome the odds and become an example for others. That’s why Saudi Arabian national Nouf Al Marwaai stands out. Born with an autoimmune disease that eventually started affecting her kidneys and prevented her from leading a normal life, Nouf took to yoga at the age of 19 in 1999. Suffering from excrutiating joint, muscles and body pain, Nouf was unable to do much at that time.

Nouf Al Marwaai

Nouf first went to Australia to obtain a diploma in physiology and anatomy, and that’s where she was introduced to Hatha yoga, weight management and stress release therapy. Subsequently, she traveled to India – where yoga originated some 5,000 years ago – and trained under teachers across Kerala, Delhi and the Himalayas. Here she learned not just the asanas, but also the practice of Ayurveda-based healing. Her condition started improving drastically and she became a big proponent of yoga.

Giving Back

It was then that she realized that the Arab world had been deprived of the powers of yoga and wanted to introduce the teachings in Saudi Arabia. Back in  2004, yoga was disapproved by a certain section of Saudi society and myths linked it with Hinduism. Pushing through all the misinformation and breaking stereotypes, Nouf became Saudi Arabia’s first certified yoga instructor after a struggle of 20 years. But the journey wasn’t without roadblocks. The 41-year-old’s first big break came in 2009 when she was made the regional director of Yoga Alliance International (YAI) for the Gulf region by YAI founder Swami Vidyananda. Prior to that, Nouf had held seminars for corporates and varsities which also caught the eye of the media.

“People started to know more about yoga and enquired about it and its health benefits,” she told ArabNews. By December that year, Nouf started a centre for yoga and other alternative medicines.

With glory came resistance. Hardliner ideologists made their opposition clear, but Nouf was steadfast. “There is a myth regarding yoga and religion generally, not only Islam… It’s totally unfair and ignorant to fight such a great health and well-being system and a systemic interesting sport using religion and other excuses just because we are intolerant to a certain ideology,” Nouf told News18. 

Winds of Change 

In another interview with Wion, Nouf said her Indian yoga teachers never forced any belief in her. “They respected every belief. They said we are teaching you a practice of lifestyle for health. We are not teaching you anything that contradicts your belief,” she said.  In 2015, she co-founded the Riyadh-Chinese Medical Center in Jeddah. Stronger winds of change started blowing in 2016 when the Saudi government started talking of women’s sports and chose Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud to lead the Community Sports Federation.

Nouf Al Marwaai

In 2017, Nouf met Princess Reema and yoga got official recognition from the government. “Sometimes people say yoga is not a sport. But scientifically if you look at yoga, it increases your pulmonary function, helps in metabolic rate issues and improves weight loss,” she said. What started as an effort to improve personal health has turned into a revolution. Now, yoga is being practiced in Saudi cities of Mecca, Riyadh Madina and Jeddah, which alone has more than 8,000 followers. Recognition came not just from her country but also from New Delhi which presented Nouf in 2018 with India’s fourth-highest civilian award Padma Shri, which is rarely given to foreigners. But work does not end here for Nouf. Her next aim is to bring Ayurveda and naturopathy into Saudi Arabia’s wellness mainstream.

 

 

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Master venkat
Master venkat
December 5, 2022 8:25 am

Namaste
Any vacancy for yoga Coach?

0
Reply
  • Brand India
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  • Nouf Al Marwaai
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Published on 24, May 2021

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YouTuber to Daytime Emmy Award winner: How Prajakta Koli is rising through the ranks globally

(August 28, 2021) "Life is what happens when you are busy making other plans." John Lennon couldn't have been more on point, for this perfectly describes YouTuber Prajakta Koli's journey. For someone who harbored dreams of becoming a radio jockey throughout her teens, it was failure that taught her important lessons. Her show fell flat and she lost her job; but every failure is a detour to a new opportunity and Koli found hers in YouTube. It was YouTube that catapulted her to fame. With each video bringing in more followers and money, Koli found her true calling in content creation. But she isn't just another YouTuber in a crowd of digital content creators. Within a span of six years, the 26-year-old has become a global brand in herself. From being invited to the United Nations to represent India on World Tolerance Day to winning a Daytime Emmy Award for her documentary on girl education to being the only Indian to have been invited by Marvel to collaborate with the cast of Captain Marvel, Koli has become a force to reckon with. Koli has been an inspiration for millions of millennials who look up to her for making a difference

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with.

Koli has been an inspiration for millions of millennials who look up to her for making a difference in the world. Here's the story of this Global Indian who is creating waves with her work.

A failed RJ who became a YouTube sensation

Born to a businessman father and a teacher mother, Koli began her journey in Mumbai. Radio was something that she was hooked to even as a child and it was the life of a radio jockey that a young Koli dreamt of living. So Fever 104 was the perfect career start for this intern who always wanted to be on a radio show. After working behind the scenes for a year, Koli got her first show, but things weren't as rosy as she had imagined it to be. Though she loved to perform for an audience, Koli found the closed-off environment of the radio station claustrophobic. Her night show, Call Centre, failed to get traction and received a lukewarm response at best. Within few days, she was asked to shut shop and was replaced by another RJ. In no time, her RJ dreams came crashing down, but not without another opportunity hanging by at the next curve.

During her RJ days Koli had uploaded a video with Hrithik Roshan on Instagram which caught the fancy of Sudeep Lahiri of One Digital Entertainment who encouraged her to start a YouTube channel and make her own content. Despite not knowing how to, Koli took a leap of faith and jumped onto the YouTube bandwagon which was catching up with the youth. In 2015, Koli exploded onto the YouTube scene under the name of Mostly Sane with her first video that she shot on her dad's old camera:  in no time she became a favorite with the millennials for her funny, quirky and relatable videos.

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

Soon the subscribers on her channel started to increase and money began trickling in. It was then that Koli realized the power of social media. A year later, she saw herself perform at her first YouTube Fan Fest and knew that she had found her true calling.

Working for the right cause

At the start of her career in YouTube, Koli understood that her content could influence millions, and picking up causes and initiatives that resonate with her has been an integral part of her journey. From body shaming to mental health, Koli raised awareness on social causes that matter. It's her content that got her invited to the Obama Foundation town hall meeting in 2017. The very next year this hotshot blogger and influencer joined hands with WhatsApp for a campaign against spreading fake news. She even participated in the #GirlsCount campaign for Org.One, an international non-profit organization, that deals with the importance of girl's education.

Within four years of her YouTube journey, Koli had become a name to reckon with in the world of digital content creators. Even Forbes couldn't ignore this girl who was soon featured on their list of 30 Under 30. The same year, she made it to the Outlook's list of Women of Worth and found herself winning Cosmopolitan's YouTuber of the Year award.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Prajakta Koli (@mostlysane)

With a subscriber base of 2.8 million in 2019, Koli became the first Indian digital creator to partake in the UN General Assembly. Her powerful song No Offence on cyberbullies, misogyny and homophobia was selected by the United Nations for screening at International Tolerance Day.

In a conversation with the Times of India, she said,

"It feels gratifying to spearhead conversations about issues that matter to every other millennial just like me on a global platform like the United Nations. I urge every influencer in the country to shoulder the responsibility of being a facilitator of impact given the turbulent times we currently live in. The internet is a revolution and each of us can use our speech constructively to voice, educate and agitate for change, targeting global crisis."

A global name

In 2020, Koli found herself in the company of former First Lady Michelle Obama when she was chosen by YouTube and the UN for Creators of Change, which brought together 50 creators from around the world to create content on social issues. Along with Liza Koshy and Thembe Mahlab, Koli traveled to India, Namibia and Vietnam to highlight the work being done globally to help further the cause of girls' education. The documentary earned Koli her first Daytime Emmy Award and the 26-year-old became a global brand in her own right.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Prajakta Koli (@mostlysane)

And now this digital creator, who has been an active advocate for women's empowerment, is set to represent India at Google's Impact Challenge and will rub shoulders with the likes of Shakira and Naomi Osaka. "Google has always been such a cheerleader for creators like me. This is another such occasion where they have included me in a conversation that affects so many of us. It's an absolute honor to be in a list that features such powerful global female leaders from around the world. I am very grateful to lend to a cause that advances equity for women and girls around the world and creates pathways to prosperity," she told IANS.

Koli, who stumbled upon YouTube a handful of years ago, has now become a force to reckon with. If her videos make people laugh, her activism has helped create the right noise around causes that need to be heard. The influencer and blogger is one of those content creators who have become a global brand, thanks to their work.

 

Reading Time: 6 mins

Story
Indian-Australian Niti Nadarajah helps women unleash their ‘X Factor’

(December 16, 2022) Until about a year ago, Niti Nadarajah was a full-time in-house lawyer who had practised law for 19 years at a stretch, climbing the corporate ladder one step at a time, ambitious and confident.  When the Covid induced lockdown gave her some time for introspection, Niti, who was a senior counsel at Philip Morris International in Melbourne, realised something was amiss, in her career and in her life. She was feeling stuck, unfulfilled and unhappy. “And my story is not unique. Unfortunately, all too many of us end up feeling like we're on a treadmill that we can't get off. So, we settle,” she tells.   Niti began speaking out on social media and soon, what had started out as a leisure time activity became Coaching with Niti, where she helps women who are looking to change careers, but struggle to tap into their inner compass, or lack the confidence to take the leap.   [caption id="attachment_32877" align="aligncenter" width="655"] Niti Nadarajah[/caption] Her early efforts on social media were met with a massive response. Women everywhere were relating to Niti and were enriched by what she had to say. Clearly, she was filling a void and it led

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looking to change careers, but struggle to tap into their inner compass, or lack the confidence to take the leap.  

[caption id="attachment_32877" align="aligncenter" width="655"]Influencers | Niti Nadarajah | Global Indian Niti Nadarajah[/caption]

Her early efforts on social media were met with a massive response. Women everywhere were relating to Niti and were enriched by what she had to say. Clearly, she was filling a void and it led her to think of a possible career transition in her own life too.  

“It took me some time to figure out what ‘filling that void’ could look like from a career or business venture perspective, but I finally settled on embarking on a portfolio career,” she tells Global Indian. She calls the year 2022 her ‘year of transformation’, as she shaped her career into a mix of freelance inhouse legal work and coaching.” This career transition has put her into a much happier space now. 

Finding the inner compass 

“In my coaching business, Coaching by Niti, I work with women who, like me, have felt stuck in their careers – often wondering ‘Is there all there is?' or ‘What else could I do?’ and ‘Is it too late?’’ she says. Having learnt from her own journey and conversations with others, she strongly reinforces the need to connect to oneself at a deeper level before working out how to get ‘unstuck’, as she puts it. 

We tell ourselves that we can't do anything else because this is all we know. We fear the unknown - the lack of security, imposter syndrome, a lack of self-belief. We shrink ourselves.

This is where Niti helps. To the women who approach her, she says, ‘From someone who has been where you are, believe me – there is another way!’  

Influencers | Niti Nadarajah | Global Indian

Niti is also associated with the firm Grace Papers. It empowers parents and organisations to more seamlessly navigate the transitions that come with having children, including parental leave, the return to work and flexible working arrangements. She also coaches lawyers through a firm called Coaching Advocates. 

Transition from lawyer to entrepreneur  

Getting into the entrepreneurial journey has been challenging and has required a lot of changes to Niti’s mindset. “For instance, my relationship with money has changed, as I no longer have the certainty of a pay check. Instead, I have to search for, and convert potential leads into clients,” she tells. 

One of the biggest challenges, which she also sees as an opportunity, is the ‘need to continually evolve, adapt and pivot’. For instance, she started out with a certain niche in the coaching space but quickly realised that there were some barriers to entry and conversion that were going to be challenging to overcome. She paid special attention to finding those solutions.  

“I suspect this will only continue to happen over the coming year or two and in many ways, is both challenging and exciting as it enables me to lean into new opportunities and learn and grow,” says the new entrepreneur.  

[caption id="attachment_32880" align="aligncenter" width="724"]Influencers | Niti Nadarajah | Global Indian The many hats that Niti wears[/caption]

Finding the path  

Although Niti has made a career transition of impacting women’s lives recently, certain experiences in her life had already shown her the power and solace that comes with being part of a strong community of women. 

“When I had my two miscarriages, I went through those losses feeling isolated in my grief and pain. I felt a strong need to share my story with women in similar situations but initially lacked emotional strength or courage for it.” 

Niti remembers finally opening up to someone about the mental health challenges she was experiencing during that time. This was the starting point of her journey with The Pink Elephants Support Network, an organisation that supports women who have suffered from pregnancy losses. Volunteering with them and sharing her story, through social media and major newspapers in Australia, was enriching for her. 

Niti loved having the opportunity to help others feel less lonely in their grief and giving them a space to feel ‘seen’ and ‘heard’. “It has lent a sense of purpose and mission to my own losses and given me strength to own my journey and become my most vulnerable self,” she tellls.

Later she also got associated as community partner with White Ribbon, an organisation that seeks to eliminate gendered violence by engaging men and boys. “This again is enriching my life as a mum of two children, a girl and a boy,” she says, adding, “I want my children to grow up in a world that is both inclusive and safe.” To be able to play a part in making these changes a reality is hugely rewarding for her. 

Influencers | Niti Nadarajah | Global Indian

Life’s diversity 

Born in Scotland, Niti spent the first eight years of her life moving around different places - England, Abu Dhabi, India and Australia, before her parents finally settled in Melbourne. Though she grew up in a loving household with her parents and little sister, the family moved around a lot. Niti recalls having to make new friends every year and the constant struggle to find inclusion and acceptance.  

As a child of immigrants, first to the UK and then to Australia, she loved spending time with immigrant families from India but often straddled two worlds. “I code-switched from trying to live by the values and norms I was taught at home to wanting to embrace the ones that surrounded me outside the house.” This often left her exhausted in trying to understand what her true identity was. 

It took me a long time to understand that my identity is not simply British, Australian or Indian or a choice between them. It is a mix of all those cultural influences.

Seeing the world through the lens of personal experience has made her very vocal about inclusion and cultural diversity at the workplace.  

A refreshing start to the future   

Influencers | Niti Nadarajah | Global Indian

As first-generation immigrants to Australia, her parents made a successful life for themselves in the foreign land. They always motivated Niti to be the best that she could be and instilled in her strong values around family, connection and community. 

Carrying forward the values instilled in her at home, Niti managed to renew her own life and find the courage to chalk out a new career path for herself, one that was aligned with her purpose and passion.  

In 2023, the Melbourne-based coach, entrepreneur and lawyer is all set to expand her facilitation work and consultancy in the diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) space with the mission to help women unleash their ‘X Factor’. 

  • Follow Niti Nadarajah on LinkedIn

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
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]

 

Reading Time: 8 mins

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Charles Page Perin: The American metallurgist who helped Jamsetji Tata realize his steel plant dream

(July 16, 2021; 10 am) It was a regular September afternoon in the New York of 1902 when a strange man in a strange garb strode purposefully into a crowded office. He came to a halt at a table that was covered with books; behind those stacks was a man poring over account ledgers, a job he didn’t particularly enjoy. The seated man looked up with a start to see an Indian staring at him. What the stranger said next, changed the course of India’s corporate history. That stranger was Jamsetji Tata and the man poring over the accounts books was Charles Page Perin, a geologist and metallurgist, who went on to give shape to Tata’s dream of setting up a steel plant in India.   If there was one thing Jamsetji was convinced about, it was that steel production was of utmost importance for India’s development and progression. He relentlessly pursued the dream for years and even drew up elaborate plans. But he knew it was an ambitious venture not without its challenges. People were sceptical of Jamsetji’s dream; most famously Sir Frederick Upcott, the then chief commissioner for the Indian Railways. Upcott dissed Jamsetji’s plans saying, “Do you mean to say that Tatas propose to make steel rails to British specifications? Why, I

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al of Jamsetji’s dream; most famously Sir Frederick Upcott, the then chief commissioner for the Indian Railways. Upcott dissed Jamsetji’s plans saying, “Do you mean to say that Tatas propose to make steel rails to British specifications? Why, I will undertake to eat every pound of steel rail they succeed in making.” 

[caption id="attachment_5016" align="aligncenter" width="513"]Charles Page Perin: The American metallurgist who helped Jamsetji Tata realize his steel plant dream Jamsetji Tata[/caption]

Jamsetji was not one to be deterred. He knew that if he were to realize his dream, he would need the best talent and expertise on steel. In September 1902, disregarding his failing health, he set sail for the US which was home to the world’s finest iron and steel industry at the time. There he met Julian Kennedy, one of the best metallurgical engineers. Kennedy then pointed him towards Charles Page Perin, an eminent consulting engineer in New York, as the most qualified to undertake the geological work needed for a steel plant in India.  

So, on that fateful afternoon, according to an article on Tata.com, Jamsetji met an unsuspecting Perin and asked, “Are you Charles Perin?” The metallurgist nodded. And Jamsetji said, 

 “At last, I have found the man I’ve been looking for. I have spoken to Mr Kennedy. He will build the steel plant — wherever you advise. And I will foot the bill. Will you come to India with me?”  

As Perin was to recall years later, he was dumbfounded, struck by the character, the force, and the kindliness that radiated from Jamsetji Tata’s face. Perin’s answer was short, “Yes,” he said, “yes, I will go with you.” 

From New York to India 

[caption id="attachment_5014" align="aligncenter" width="365"]Charles Page Perin: The American metallurgist who helped Jamsetji Tata realize his steel plant dream American metallurgist Charles Page Perin[/caption]

Born in 1861 at West Point, New York, Perin was the son of army officer Glover Perin and Elizabeth Spooner (Page) Perin. After graduating from Harvard in 1883, Perin continued his studies at École des Mines in Paris for a year.  He then began his career as a metallurgist and later superintendent at a small mine in Massachusetts before working as a general manager for several mining, steel, and railroad companies in the US and Canada.  

By 1900 he had opened a consulting office in New York where one of his first assignments took him to Siberia in the winter to search for coal supplies for the Trans-Siberian Railroad.   

Giving shape to a dream 

In 1902, he was roped in by Jamsetji to work on his ambitious iron and steel plant and Perin set sail for India, one of the most unusual adventures of his life. While he was on his way, he received a telegram asking him if he could ride a bicycle. He was stumped at the question, but replied that he could. When he reached the village of Sakchi (now Jamshedpur) he discovered the reason behind the strange telegram. There was no motorable road for miles; no conventional mode of transport could take him to his destination. He found himself pedaling a bicycle for several strenuous hours and found himself in the middle of the jungle till a passing bullock cart rescued him.  

There were many more hurdles for him to deal with: the land was harsh and demanding, temperatures extreme, man-eating tigers and road elephants to deal with, and cholera and malaria would sweep the hillside causing workers to flee overnight. But it was here that Perin found more than he and his team had dared to hope for: around 3 billion tons of ore, just 45 miles away from the railway station.  

[caption id="attachment_5010" align="aligncenter" width="575"]Charles Page Perin: The American metallurgist who helped Jamsetji Tata realize his steel plant dream The Tata Steel Plant[/caption]

Drawn by Jamsetji’s indomitable spirit, Perin worked willingly in the most far-flung places such as Dhalli and Rajhara hills. He helped Jamsetji’s son Dorabji Tata and cousin RD Tata establish Tata Steel in 1907, four years after Jamsetji’s death. When the company faced initial difficulties with its open hearth furnaces, Perin help resolve them too. By 1912 the first ingot of steel successfully rolled out of the Tata plant; it was of the finest quality. And it was all because of the American metallurgist who followed Jamsetji to the other corner of the world to help him chase his dream.  

Editor’s Take 

Today, Tata Steel is one of the top steel producing companies in the world and the Tata Group itself has spread its branches much like a Banyan tree.  But India was a different place in 1902 and can imagine how many naysayers would have dissuaded Perin from journeying to India. The story of the lone American metallurgist who decided to follow a man who inspired him to the ends of the world and work under extremely inhospitable conditions needs to be shared in business schools. One has to admire Jamsetji’s conviction in selling his vision to Perin. It tells us that leadership is all about finding the right man for the right job, even if it means handpicking someone from another continent. 

 

  •  RELATED READ: Jamsetji Tata was the world's top donor of last century

Reading Time: 8 mins

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

(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.   [caption id="attachment_5065" align="aligncenter" width="512"] Gira and Gautam Sarabhai at work[/caption] The Vikram Sarabhai connection  Born into Ahmedabad's wealthy Sarabhai family in 1923, Gira

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h her work contributed greatly in the fields of art and architecture.  

[caption id="attachment_5065" align="aligncenter" width="512"]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[/caption]

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.  

[caption id="attachment_5066" align="aligncenter" width="560"]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[/caption]

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.  

[caption id="attachment_5067" align="aligncenter" width="493"]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[/caption]

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.  

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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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