Global Indian Youth Saturday, June 28 2025
  • Main Site
  • Home
  • Stories
    • Exclusive
    • Startups
    • Culture
  • Blogs
    • Opinions
  • Fun Facts
    • World in Numbers
    • Did You Know
    • Quotes
    • Word of the day
    • Influencers
  • Gallery
    • Pictures
    • Videos
  • OPPORTUNITIES
    • Migrate
    • Work
    • Study
    • Invest
    • Travel
  • About Us
  • Events
  • Join us
  • Subscribe
Select Page
Global Indianstory Global Indian ExclusiveScaling new heights: Meet young Indian mountaineers who are climbing their success peaks
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian Sports

Scaling new heights: Meet young Indian mountaineers who are climbing their success peaks

Compiled by: Team GI Youth

(January 13, 2023) When mountaineer Avtar Singh Cheema first decided to be a part of the Indian Army mission to scale Mt Everest in 1965, many in his village came to see him off, thinking they wouldn’t meet him again. He went on to become the first Indian to conquer the world’s tallest mountain, inspiring many Indians to undertake challenging expeditions. However, the last few years have seen a steep rise in the number of young mountaineers who are not afraid to scale the heights of these ice monsters. Global Indian takes a look at some of these young mountaineers, who are flying the nation’s tricolour very high – quite literally!

Arjun Vajpai 

Snowed in for seventy-two hours at 7,000 metres, Arjun Vajpai lost sensation in the left side of his body. His Sherpas had long since abandoned the teenager – his first attempt to scale Mount Cho Oyu in Nepal in 2012 had resulted in catastrophe. Arjun is no ordinary kid, however, two years prior, in 2010, he had achieved the ultimate mountaineering feat – scaling Mount Everest – and becoming the youngest Indian ever to do so. In 2011, he became the youngest person to climb Lhotse and the youngest mountaineer to scale Mount Manaslu. No stranger to adversity, therefore, Arjun began the agonising descent from Mount Cho Oyu, crawling for 17 hours using only his right arm and leg.

Indian Mountaineer | Arjun Vajpai | Global Indian

Arjun at the Kangchenjunga Base Camp, in 2018

Today, the youngster holds the title of being the world’s youngest mountaineer to summit six out of the total 14 highest mountains in the world. Born to Col. Sanjeev Vajpai and Priya Vajpai in 1993, Arjun’s fascination for trekking and mountaineering goes back to his childhood. He started young and began training at the Nehru Institute of Mountaineering, Uttarkashi. The mountaineer who loves exploring the routes of new peaks, however, doesn’t feel are records are endgame. “It makes me feel super happy but I’m not someone who chases records. It’s a moment of pride, not just for me but for the country, to hold a title and each time motivates me to climb more and take India’s flag to some of the highest peaks on earth. I want to be the youngest in the world to do all 14 peaks above 8,000 metres,” he shared during a press interaction.

Anvitha Reddy 

The youngest daughter of a farmer from a small district of Telangana, Bhongir, Anvitha was always good at sports. She got to know about mountaineering while pursuing her graduation and was motivated by her physical education trainer to join a group training to climb Mt Kilimanjaro – the highest peak in the African continent. There was no looking back for this mountaineer after she conquered the African giant in January 2021. The same year, Avnitha scaled Mt Elbrus and Mt Khadey.

Mountaineer | Avnitha Reddy | Global Indian

In 2022, Anvitha became the first Indian woman to reach the True Summit of Mount Manaslu – the world’s eighth-highest mountain (8,163 metres) – in Nepal. “I was ecstatic on reaching the top of the world, a moment I aspired for the last eight years had come true. It was this moment which kept me going despite enormous challenges,” the mountaineer shared during a press interaction, adding, “I’ve planned to climb seven mountains in the seven continents in one-and-half years. Now that I’ve already climbed three, the next treks will begin in December.”

Virat Chandra 

When a five-year-old Virat first told his parents that he wanted to climb mountains, his parents thought that it was just one of those things kids say while growing up, and forget about the next day. But when Virat persisted, they had no choice but to introduce him to a local mountaineering trainer. Exactly two years later, Virat Chandra Telukunta became one of the youngest mountaineers to summit Mt Kilimanjaro in 2021. And just one year later, Virat won the prestigious Pradhan Mantri Rashtriya Bal Puraskar.

Mountaineer | Avnitha Reddy | Global Indian

“I remember when we stepped out for the last leg of climbing Kilimanjaro, the visibility was very low. I was frightened because it was still dark and whistling winds with a snow downpour. With support from our guides, we could make it to the summit. It took almost eight hours to reach the summit,” the mountaineer shares, adding, “I am very happy and proud that I was honoured by the Prime Minister of India. I have just started my mountaineering journey and there are many other peaks I want to scale.”

Piyali Basak 

A young primary school teacher from the small village of Chandernagore in West Bengal, Piyali Basak created history by becoming the first Indian to scale the highest mountain in the world, Mt Everest, without any supplemental oxygen in 2022. The mountaineer, who has been passionate about this adventure sport since she was a young girl, had attempted the record in 2019 as well, however, had to drop the plan due to bad weather conditions. But that is not where it ends. After conquering Everest, she climbed Mount Lhotse – the world’s fourth-tallest mountain – in just two days. In 2021, the young mountaineer also climbed Mount Dhaulagiri in Nepal without oxygen supplementation.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Piyali Basak (@piyali.basak.90)

The mountaineer, who was inspired by legendary Tenzing Norgay, shared with the press, “I started my journey when I was just five. I could climb mountains easily without any support. I started going for treks at an early age and developed a passion for them. Mountaineering is my life and I will continue climbing new peaks, and making my country proud.”

Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • Anvitha Reddy
  • Arjun Vajpai
  • Avtar Singh Cheema
  • Global Indian
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Global Indian Youth
  • Indian mountaineers
  • Indian sports stars
  • Indian Youth
  • mountaineers
  • Piyali Basak
  • Virat Chandra

Published on 13, Jan 2023

Share with

ALSO READ

Story
8-year-old Indian scuba diver Tharaagai Aarathana’s deep dive into marine conservation

(February 22, 2022) "Pristine water, a school of colourful fishes swimming in synchronicity, a jellyfish floating away to the surface, and a dugong resting in water," are some of eight-year-old Indian scuba diver and eco-crusader Tharaagai Aarathana’s earliest memories of snorkelling. She was just three when she first witnessed the beauty of underwater life, but over the years began to understand the grim reality of marine pollution. "Who's responsible for the reduced marine life? It's us! Plastic waste is causing havoc for underwater life, and we should do everything possible to protect it," Tharaagai tells Global Indian in an exclusive interview. Sharing a special bond with the ocean, the eco-warrior, who can dive up to 2 metres, has till now fished out 600kg of plastic waste to help protect marine life. Moreover, she set a record in Assist World Records in January 2022 for swimming a 19km stretch from Covelong to Neelankari to bring attention to the cause of conserving aquatic life. [caption id="attachment_11145" align="aligncenter" width="641"] Tharaagai Aarathana is an Indian scuba diver.[/caption] Bonding with water Before she even began crawling, Tharaagai was smitten by water. "She was just three days old when I started adapting her to water. Every

Read More

softTeams-image.jpg" alt="Indian scuba diver | Tharaagai Aarathana" width="641" height="427" /> Tharaagai Aarathana is an Indian scuba diver.[/caption]

Bonding with water

Before she even began crawling, Tharaagai was smitten by water. "She was just three days old when I started adapting her to water. Every day for 10 minutes in the morning and evening, I would make her sit in the water," says her father Aravind Tharunsri, who is a scuba diving instructor. Tharaagai's love for water was a gift to her from her dad, something she has held onto dearly in the last eight years. "I was nine months old when I started floating in the water, and by the time I turned two-and-a-half, I had begun swimming. Over the years, I have formed a strong bond with water," says the girl who began training for scuba diving in shallow waters when she was five. From learning in a small tub to practicing in the swimming pool, Thaaragai made sure to follow her dad's instructions to the tee. "We played games like collecting coins from the bottom of the tub as a part of the practice session," adds the Class 2 student.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2iE87eSk_I

An eco-crusader in the making

A water baby, Tharaagai loves being in the ocean, and this proximity to the sea has made her aware of marine pollution. "I was three when I started accompanying my father to weekly beach cleanups. Though I didn't understand much back then, I did see a lot of plastic waste on the beaches," says the Chennai resident, who is now an eco-crusader. Thanks to her dad, she learned about ocean pollution while seeing him impart training to the Tamil Nadu Marine Police and fisheries department along with the Wildlife Institute of India a few years ago. "Since I'd be accompanying my dad to the training, I learned how plastic and abandoned nets were adding to the pollution and affecting marine life," explains Tharaagai who has been raising awareness on protecting endangered marine species, especially the Dugong (sea cow).

[caption id="attachment_11150" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Indian scuba diver | Tharaagai Aarathana Tharaagai Aarathana collecting plastic waste from a beach[/caption]

"During the awareness programs and training, she would absorb all the information. She learned that there are less than 150 dugongs left in India, and decided to save them from plastic pollution. She is creating awareness among kids through presentations in various schools," beams her proud father, who himself has been working closely to protect marine life for many years now. 44-year-old Aravind started South India's first-ever scuba diving center Temple Adventures in Pondicherry in 2007. "Back then, there were only 2-3 scuba diving centres in the country. A chance encounter with two Australian friends in 2004 changed my life forever when they introduced me to scuba diving as a profession. There has been no looking back since then," adds Aravind.

Like father, like daughter

His passion for protecting the environment has rubbed off on his daughter as the two are now working as a team of eco-crusaders. "She has collected over 200 kgs of plastic waste from the ocean bed and 400 kgs from beaches, while I have collected over 15,000 kgs of plastic waste till now. Every week, we clean up the beaches as well as the ocean beds. I then segregate the plastic and send the one that can be upcycled to the recycle plant. While the other is taken care of by the government who dispose of it properly," reveals Aravind.

[caption id="attachment_11148" align="aligncenter" width="677"]Indian scuba diver | Tharaagai Aarathana Tharaagai Aarathana collecting plastic from ocean bed[/caption]

Tharagaai learned the grim reality of marine pollution when she saw her father bring heaps of plastic waste from the ocean bed to the shore. "Every year scuba divers rescue innumerable marine species that become entangled in the abandoned nets. It breaks my heart to see marine life affected by the waste," says the Indian scuba diver. Too young to rescue the fishes now, she is keen to follow suit when she grows up. "Many fishes get tangled in the ghost nets and often die. Turtles, on the other hand, unintentionally consume plastic as it resembles jellyfish. The pollution is threatening the marine ecosystem but we try our best to protect it by cleaning the ocean beds and beaches," adds Aravind, who wants to educate the next generation to feel a greater sense of responsibility towards the environment.

Following in her father’s footsteps, Tharaagai is helping bring attention to conserving marine life. On National Girl Child Day (January 24) this year, she set a record in Assist World Records for swimming a 19-km stretch from Covelong to Neelankari, under the theme Save the Ocean. "She completed it in six hours and fourteen minutes, despite drastic weather changes. It started raining, and the temperature dropped and it got cold. I tried to talk her out of it, but she continued and finished the stretch," says Aravind who was swimming alongside his daughter to motivate her.

[caption id="attachment_11151" align="aligncenter" width="431"]scuba family Tharaagai with her parents[/caption]

Tharaagai, who wants to be a scuba diver like her father when she grows up, loves cycling and exercising. Being home-schooled, she enjoys the freedom to travel with her dad to different locations in India and work as an eco-crusader. "Caring for the planet Earth," is the biggest lesson that she has learned in her journey. The eight-year-old, who fishes out plastic waste from the ocean to conserve marine life, is asking people to not use plastic. "Marine life will be safe if you don't use plastic," advises the young Indian scuba diver.

  • Follow Aravind Tharunsri on Linkedin

 

 

Reading Time: 6 min

Story
From classroom to startup: Yale grads Sneha and Anushka turn class project into a tech company

(November 6, 2024)  What began as a class project has grown into a startup for recent Yale engineering graduates Sneha Sivakumar and Anushka Nijhawan. During their senior year, the two developed an AI-powered no-code automation tool designed to simplify and speed up the process of testing web applications without manual coding. Their innovative solution enables companies with web-based applications to verify functionality seamlessly, a concept that quickly gained recognition. Supported early on by a $500 grant from Yale’s Tsai CITY Student Exploration Fund and recently accepted into Y Combinator’s elite accelerator program with $500,000 in funding, the duo took their idea to the next level. This May, shortly after graduating with degrees in Computer Science, Sneha and Anushka officially launched their startup, Spur, building on the foundation of their college project. “A lot of companies spend a lot of time writing tests for their web applications, and our entire company is about automating that process and making it really easy,” Sivakumar explained in a recent interview. [caption id="attachment_40212" align="aligncenter" width="647"] Anushka and Sneha[/caption] From class project to startup Sneha and Anushka enjoyed working with each other on different projects since their first year in college. “We first met freshman spring

Read More

ndian.com/youth//wp-content/uploads/2024/11/1727374002020.webp" alt="Y Combinator | Indian Entrepreneur | Global Indian " width="647" height="431" /> Anushka and Sneha[/caption]

From class project to startup

Sneha and Anushka enjoyed working with each other on different projects since their first year in college. “We first met freshman spring at Yale,” remarked Sneha. As their first project, the innovative duo built a social planning application location for fun. 

After working on several other projects, the youngsters realised that they really liked working on tasks together and came up with the idea of working on a startup. They decided to work on a user experience research application. “That side of tech companies is typically very underserved. We thought we could come up with a solution that would fix that problem,” shared Anushka. “We worked for three months during the fall semester in 2023 on the idea. Part of that was because we were taking this class at Yale called Software Engineering, which allowed us very dedicated, focused time throughout the semester to actually build it out in tandem with our other classes.”

Seeing their project come out well, they applied for the Y Combinator at the end of their last semester, and the rest is history.

[caption id="attachment_40213" align="aligncenter" width="513"]Indian Entrepreneur | Global Indian Anushka and Sneha[/caption]

What is Y Combinator?

Y Combinator (YC) is a top-tier startup accelerator that offers a three-month, high-intensity program aimed at rapidly scaling early-stage companies. It provides $500,000 in funding in exchange for a seven percent equity stake and includes tailored mentorship and a collaborative startup environment.

YC brings together founders at various stages—some just beginning, others more established—and pairs them with experienced partners for weekly guidance, along with bi-weekly group sessions. Founders connect via Bookface, YC’s exclusive platform for networking and knowledge-sharing, and participate in events like weekly talks from successful entrepreneurs, providing insights into startup growth and strategy. The program culminates in Demo Day, where founders pitch their startups to leading investors, often securing additional seed funding. Even after the program ends, YC alumni continue to benefit from ongoing support and access to YC’s extensive network, creating a lasting support ecosystem for continued growth.

“In YC, there's about 200 to 300 companies every single batch and they break these companies into different groups. So, it builds a community in which everybody is working on all of their startups together,” explains Sneha.

[caption id="attachment_40214" align="aligncenter" width="724"]Y Combinator | Indian Entrepreneur | Global Indian Sneha and Anushka[/caption]

Help and support from other sources

Sneha and Anushka’s journey in creating Spur was bolstered by crucial support networks and resources at Yale. Assistant Professor Arman Cohan’s mentorship was instrumental, beginning with his class on AI Foundation Models, which inspired the pair to work with him on their senior thesis.

Throughout their last semester, Professor Cohan offered ongoing guidance, connecting them with other industry experts and helping shape their project. Additionally, a $500 grant from Yale’s Tsai CITY Student Exploration Fund provided them with vital workspace and resources. The fund, which awards grants of up to $500 to student-led teams working on early-stage innovation and entrepreneurship projects, became essential for Sneha and Anushka as they refined their product. With a collaborative workspace at Tsai CITY available daily, they had the ideal environment for brainstorming, teamwork, and advancing Spur to launch readiness.

[caption id="attachment_40215" align="aligncenter" width="728"]Indian Entrepreneur | Global Indian Anushka and Sneha during a Y Combinator launch live event[/caption]

Taking entrepreneurship in stride

Sneha Sivakumar and Anushka Nijhawan’s journey of building Spur has been challenging and a learning experience for the young entrepreneurs. They admit that taking the plunge into full-time entrepreneurship was nerve-wracking, but once they committed, everything came into focus.

Now, each day is a new lesson—not just in engineering but in marketing, sales, accounting, HR, and tax management, as they are currently handling all aspects of the business themselves. “We're just picking them up as we go,” remarks Anushka talking about the multiple skills that an entrepreneur’s life demands.

Although their life as an entrepreneur is far cry from their initial roles as developers, and while the hours are long and the work demanding, the youngsters find fulfillment in building something truly their own. Embracing the highs and the challenges alike, they’re learning that startup life is about so much more than just innovating something —it’s about adaptability, and the drive to bring their vision to life.

  • Follow Sneha Sivakumar and Anushka Nijhawan on LinkedIn
  • Discover more fascinating Stories

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Shriya Bopanna: From Miss India America to Forbes 30 Under 30

(October 4, 2023) Miss India America 2020, Shriya Bopanna who is also an activist, author, and on-air personality has been named in the Forbes 30 Under 30 Austin list of 2023, "I am honestly still shocked and incredibly grateful for making to the list," Shriya told Global Indian. "There is a certain amount of validity I feel in being authenticated and it has been a dream of mine to make it to Forbes 30 Under 30 since I was 16," she added. The multi-talented changemaker who also works as a project manager and business analyst at Accenture in the United States, looks at the Austin list as a stepping stone to eventually making to the entire North American list of Forbes. [caption id="attachment_33374" align="aligncenter" width="473"] Shriya Bopanna[/caption] In the world of pageantry Right from her school days, Shriya Boppana had been passionate about advocacy, and deeply involved in raising awareness and funds for causes like anti-sex trafficking. She would do whatever it took to achieve her goal – show up at community events to hand out flyers, volunteer, do community service, and more. “Over time, these community spaces weren’t big enough for some of the initiatives and in college, I

Read More

ght from her school days, Shriya Boppana had been passionate about advocacy, and deeply involved in raising awareness and funds for causes like anti-sex trafficking. She would do whatever it took to achieve her goal – show up at community events to hand out flyers, volunteer, do community service, and more. “Over time, these community spaces weren’t big enough for some of the initiatives and in college, I stepped on the Miss India DC stage as an ambassador for the Save our Stars Foundation to raise money for an HIV clinic in Nepal,” Shriya says. This turned out to be a great turning point in her life.

Little did she know that she would end up participating in the competition and also winning the first runner-up title. “After that, I had no plans of competing in the nationals of Miss India America 2020 until some friends encouraged me to show up. I won completely accidentally – no training, no planning, no preparation,” says the youngster. “That crown catapulted me and my advocacy into the media limelight overnight and I got featured everywhere from ABC to the Wall Street Journal,” she says.

[caption id="attachment_29357" align="aligncenter" width="451"]Indian youth | Shriya Bopanna | Global Indian Shriya Boppana[/caption]

Opportunity to host her TV show  

After her win in the Miss India-America contest, Shriya’s popularity caught the eye of producers at Fox 5 Plus/GTV who offered the youngster her segment on-air, Becoming a Voice with Shriya Boppana.

“My show has hosted popular voices from political candidates such as Deja Foxx of the Kamala Harris Campaign to Maria Thattil, Miss Universe Australia, all the way to Jared Isaacman of SpaceX’s Inspiration4, and reached more than six million households. My efforts in educating the public on gender-based violence got hugely successful,” Shriya says.

After doing a season of the show the youngster stepped down to work for Nickelodeon and AwesomenessTV in talent casting. By that time, Shriya already had more than twelve years of experience in theatre acting under her belt.

Indian youth | Shriya Bopanna | Global Indian

“I guess the opportunities that I got after winning the crown were a ripple effect of my win. I had only planned to do two things in life – acting and advocacy,” she says. The unplanned foray into the world of pageantry and subsequent win turned out to be a game-changer, helping her reach her goals more easily both in advocacy and acting.

“I received a lot of love, support, and attention from the media and audiences. I cannot thank everyone enough for consistently believing in me and providing me opportunities to grow,” she adds.

These days, Shriya has a nine-to-five at Accenture, while continuing to film season 2 of her Fox 5 Plus show with GTV. “I have incredible guests lined up for the new season, it's so exciting!" she shares

Acting - a passion   

As a schoolgirl, Shriya was deeply interested in theatrical arts, musical and films. She has won awards for her performances in short films like Love is Louder, which was a semi-finalist at the All-American High School Film Festival. Shriya was also cast in a full-length feature film, Water with a Slice of Lemon, which debuted in DC theatres in 2018. In 2020, she starred in the Chinmaya Mission-sponsored short film, ‘Been on Sale’.

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

 

Her interest in performing arts has led to several achievements in the sphere of dancing as well. Shriya has competed nationally for her premiere collegiate Bollywood fusion dance team – Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) Sahara, winning multiple trophies for her alma mater. As much as she likes competing, the youngster loves to organise events. She has been the youngest board member of the National Bollywood Dance Championship, Legends in the US. Her academic training in marketing helped her in taking up the role of the Public Relations chair at the non-profit, Desi Dance Network Inc for two years where she raised awareness about South Asian performing arts.

The multifaceted beauty queen   

A graduate of Carnegie Mellon University, Shriya majored in business administration with a double concentration in marketing, and leadership and organisational effectiveness with a minor in psychology.

At the CMU campus, her advocacy was in full swing. She worked for minority, religious, generational, and socioeconomically weaker communities to strive for equality on the campus against battles supporting sexual assault victims, LGBTQ+ members, immigrants, international students, and ‘everyone in-between’.

[caption id="attachment_29356" align="aligncenter" width="640"]Indian youth | Shriya Bopanna | Global Indian Shriya at one of the Carnegie Mellon University's functions[/caption]

Always a good student and multi-tasker, Shriya has represented CMU as the vice president of communications in their chapter of the American Marketing Association and volunteered as the vice president of marketing for the Carnegie Mellon Business Association, and vice president of internal affairs for CMU Women in Business.

“I am in the midst of applying for an MBA programme with the aim to elevate my social impact organisation - ‘Becoming A Voice’ into an official non-profit,” she shares.

Continually striving to achieve new milestones, Shriya is preparing to apply for the role of the 13th official US youth over server to the UN. “With all my work with the UN Foundation over the years, I aim to contribute in the national policymaking on child rights and sexual safety if appointed,” she remarks.

 Winning along the way  

The youngster loves participating in contests. In 2018 she won the Deloitte Start-Up Case competition bagging the third position. She was the only CMU freshman chosen to compete that year. Along with her team members, Shriya took her BusyBus business idea into the world of real-time technology and was even nominated for Forbes 30-under-30 in the consumer technology category.

The multifaceted beauty queen also dabbles in the freelance design and marketing world when time permits. “I kick-started my content creation career after winning Miss India America and have partnered with many incredible brands like Amazon Prime, Bumble, Handshake, Bobbi Brown Cosmetics, Adobe, Tangle Teezer, Mugler, and Tommy Hilfiger to name a few,” she says.

[caption id="attachment_33382" align="aligncenter" width="683"]Indian youth Shriya Bopanna | Global Indian Shriya Bopanna[/caption]

Love for India   

Shriya moved to the US with her parents when she was just five and a half years old, but her tie with India is strong. “I visit India at least once a year for a month at a time, minimum. It’s important for me to stay in touch with my extended family,” she says. “I was raised in Indian culture for a good portion of my developmental years and find joy in mixing both the American and Indian identities as much as possible. Whether it’s the clothes, the media, the food, or the religion, I partake in all aspects of my daily life to keep my roots strong and home-grown,” the youngster shares.

Significant collaborations and initiatives  

  • In 2021 Shriya Boppana joined the Obama Foundation and Michelle Obama’s Girls Opportunity Alliance partnership.
  • As STF Global Youth Ambassador advocating for girls’ rights, she teamed up with famous actress, Brooke Shields to raise awareness for sexual health education of girls for the #GirlsGetLoud campaign.
  • She has partnered with the popular beauty brand, Bobbi Brown, for their ‘Pretty Powerful’ campaign.
  • Shriya holds sexual assault clinics in partnership with Bachpan Save the Innocence in India. In their partnership, they have sensitized above 6000 individuals at more than 320 orphanages, schools, slums, and colleges with over 10 different programs like safe and unsafe touch, consent and puberty, digital safety, cybercrime, sexual abuse, and trafficking.
  • The Indian American youngster conducted light-hearted discussions about mental health and relationships, and self-health as a radio jockey on Radio Zindagi, reaching more than one million listeners in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and the Indo-Caribbean community.

Follow Shriya Boppana on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and her website 

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Ishaan Leonard Rao: The young piano prodigy bridging cultures and genres

(June 27, 2023) Ishaan Leonard Rao was two years old when he hummed ragas with Pandit Ravi Shankar. He was much too young to remember the experience, but it’s an anecdote he has heard many times over the years from his parents. As it happens, quite a few of Ishaan’s early musical experiences predate his memories. The young piano prodigy is the son of two virtuosos - his father, Pandit Shubhendra Rao is a sitarist and a long-time disciple of Pandit Ravi Shankar. His mother, Saskia Rao-de Haas is trained in both the Western and Hindustani styles, and designed the Indian cello, which she uses in her Hindustani concerts. [caption id="attachment_31469" align="aligncenter" width="697"] Ishaan Leonard Rao. Photo (and featured image) by Bandeep Singh[/caption] The young piano prodigy is not really given to talking about his achievements, which already make up quite a long list. He has trained in the piano for 12 years, and in the sitar for seven. “I was five when I fell in love with the piano and decided to make it my instrument,” he tells Global Indian. This month, during his break from Berklee, Ishaan will begin his solo tour across India, performing five concerts across

Read More

in love with the piano and decided to make it my instrument,” he tells Global Indian. This month, during his break from Berklee, Ishaan will begin his solo tour across India, performing five concerts across Bengaluru, New Delhi and Mumbai. The tour will take him to some of India's most prestigious cultural venues, including the Nita Mukesh Ambani Cultural Centre, the NCPA in Mumbai, the India International Centre in Delhi and the Bangalore International Centre.

"This programme will have a classical piano repertoire, with Hindustani and Carnatic-inspired music," Ishaan says. "And some jazz I picked up last year at Berklee, along with some South American influences. I have really tried to show who I am as a musician," he adds. His journey is only just beginning, but Ishaan is already crafting a style that is uniquely his own, inspired by his deep knowledge of Hindustani and Western classical music, as well as the many influences he encountered travelling with his parents as they performed around the world. In this concert, he will also combine elements of modal jazz, which has been studying at University, with ragas, as he explores John Coltrane (Naima), Dave Brubeck (Rondo A La Turk).

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ishaan Leonard Rao (@ishaanleonardrao)

A childhood steeped in music

Growing up in Delhi, music was always "a given for Ishaan Leonard Rao, which is not surprising, all things considered. “I didn't know anything else through my childhood," he remarks. Music isn't merely a part of Ishaan’s world, something he loves or is good at - it is life itself. He was listening to music even before he was born and doesn't even recall the first time he picked up an instrument. By the time he met Pandit Ravi Shankar, he had learned around 15 ragas, even though he was still a toddler. "My parents had taught me ragas by then, not necessarily in a regimented way but I had learned how to identify them.” When they sang him to sleep as a child, the lullaby would be based on a particular raga. It came naturally to him too.

"The unique combination of Hindustani and Western classical music has shaped me so that I can understand music quite intuitively. Indian music teaches you how to train your ear in relation to other notes, if you hear a 'sa', you know every other note in relation to that. Western music shapes your understanding of absolute pitch." Although he's comfortable with sheet music, the piano prodigy is happiest playing by ear.

That wasn't all. Ishaan would also accompany his parents across the world, and has been meeting people from different cultures and heritages for as long as he can remember. "Hindustani and Western classical music are the most familiar to me but I have never really confined myself to a genre," he says. From the time he was born till about the age of 15, Ishaan was on the road with his parents for a "good three to five months of the year." Having a South Indian father and a Dutch mother also lent itself to cultural exploration - "I grew up speaking Kannada with my father and Dutch with my mum. And then I was travelling a lot. I became used to different cultures, am cognizant of my cultural heritage and find it very easy to acclimatise and feel at at home in either part of the world." It lent itself also to his explorations as a musician.

[caption id="attachment_31452" align="aligncenter" width="363"] Pandit Ravi Shankar with Ishaan[/caption]

A love story with the piano

Ishaan began training in the piano at the age of six, and showed great talent for it. “I have had four teachers along the way - Justin McCarthy, Raj Bhimani, Svetlana Radashkevich and Dimitris Lambrianos,” he says. He has also has also taken master classes by Polish pianist Raphael Lustchevsky, French pianist Martine Dellenbach and Dutch pianist Marianne Boer. Ishaan dedicated himself to the piano, going to class once a week and spending a couple of hours a day practicing. By the time he entered his teens, he knew beyond doubt that he wanted to be a pianist, not just a musician. "I'm really focussed on my instrument and I'm still in that process of completely mastery. That's not something you ever really achieve, but you work as hard as you can to get there," he says. And while he doesn’t claim mastery, Ishaan went on to become the youngest Indian ever to finish the ABRSM Grade 8 exam and the youngest to receive the ARSM performance diploma at the age of 12.

The young piano prodigy gave his first concert at the age of nine, performing the first movement of a Mozart sonata and a piece by Chopin. It's a big achievement for someone so young, but he quickly says, "They weren't particularly complex pieces. As a child, you tend to progress quite quickly through technical difficulty. Bringing out the music from that is as much of a journey," he explains. "Being a classical pianist is about a lot more than technical mastery. He went on to perform in India, France and Australia before making his New York concert debut at the age of 14, as part of the Chhandayan All Night Concert at the Society for Ethical Cultures.

Bending genres, breaking rules

He names Chopin, Debussy and Bach as composers he admires deeply but Ishaan doesn't want to confine himself in any way. It's why he chose Berklee College over a conservatory like say, Juilliard. "I love the traditional piano repertoire but I don't want to be confined to it. I'm in the process of developing my own musical voice, I would say." At Berklee, he has trained in modal jazz, and is also in a Klezmer ensemble.

His parents always encouraged the exploration. "When I was growing up, I quite liked just following the path that was set for me. I didn't realise that I instinctively wanted to go outside the path and break those rules. But you have to know the rules to break them. Over the last year, even though my primary focus has been on my classical repertoire, I feel a lot more comfortable with my own expression through them, rather than playing them the way they are supposed to be played." This exploration also includes adapting the piano to ragas, although he does so differently from his mother, who designed the Indian cello to create an instrument better suited to playing Hindustani classical music.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Ishaan Leonard Rao (@ishaanleonardrao)

Ishaan Leonard Rao's musical journey is a testament to his exceptional talent, dedication, and diverse musical influences. From his early exposure to Hindustani and Western classical music to his explorations in jazz and fusion genres at Berklee College, Ishaan has developed a unique musical voice that reflects his deep understanding of different traditions. His commitment to his instrument, the piano, is evident in his achievements and performances at a remarkably young age. With a blend of technical mastery and artistic expression, the piano prodigy is poised to make significant contributions to the world of music and continue to carve his own path as a musician.

Follow Ishaan's work on his website and on Instagram.

Story
Footprints in the sand: UN Young Leader Udit Singhal breaks the ‘glass’ ceiling

(February 3, 2022) “Be mindful,” Udit Singhal implores in a TedX Talk. It is that same mindfulness that saw him solve the glass menace in Delhi. The UN Young Leader for sustainable development goals is a sum of many parts - social entrepreneur, youth leader, finance and tech enthusiast, artist and golfer. Primarily, though, he is a student at University College London (BSc in management science), and proactive on world issues. The 20-year-old was one among 17 selected by the United Nations for his contributions in 2020. Udit now hopes to galvanise the youth to work towards SDGs. The UN Young Leader, Udit founded Glass2Sand at 16 to address the glass dumping problem – it was the result of the glass bottles he encountered piling up at his home. “I asked why. I found that the collection of glass bottles for recycling is unviable due to dropping demand, large storage space requirements and high transport costs. Empty glass bottles are not segregated anymore, and have started to be dumped in landfills,” reveals Udit Singhal in an exclusive to Global Indian. The then enterprising teen uncovered the silent glass waste crisis, channelising his solution-driven mindset. “I founded Glass2Sand, an environment-friendly zero-waste

Read More

isis, channelising his solution-driven mindset. “I founded Glass2Sand, an environment-friendly zero-waste ecosystem and ‘no glass to landfills movement’ which stops glass bottles from being dumped in landfills by crushing them into commercially valuable sand, and repurposing it for sustainable construction. It is plugging a major gap identified in recycling of such materials,” says the young visionary.

UN Young Leader | Udit Singhal

Singhal also got a special grant from the New Zealand high commissioner in India, which aided in formalising an understanding with Kiwi patent-holders, “This helped me import technology from New Zealand that crushed glass bottles in under a minute,” smiles the university student.

The boy who saw too much waste

What gives Udit a decisively better understanding about problem solving evolved from a “family of trailblazing entrepreneurs.”

“My parents pioneered in setting up the market for international wine in India 25 years ago, when wine was relatively unknown. My father (Rajiv Singhal) was appointed Chevalier de l’Ordre National du Merite by the President of France – the second highest civilian honour. My brother, a wealth manager, was inducted into the Ordre des Coteaux de Champagne,” Udit reveals. Not giving up in the face of adversity, and to think about the bigger picture is what his family has ingrained in him.

One can easily picture Udit as a child looking for places to hide and seek, and encountering heaps of bottles - wondering where he and the bottles could hide in tandem. “When I stumbled on the menace, it birthed the concept of Glass2Sand,” says the entrepreneur who hopes to leverage the Kiwi technology to continue the good work.

The former IB student at the British School, New Delhi, threw himself into learning with a two-week programme within sustainable development and social entrepreneurship at Yale in 2019. Incidentally, his father is also a Yale alum.

Emulating a family of achievers

Having role models at home, he has taken the learning a notch higher as a UN Young Leader. For the young preppy youngster, serious mindedness and self-belief are key, and now he wants the youth to muster the courage to manoeuvre through hurdles. “Seeking support is a step in that direction and finding a ‘good’ mentor will leave you in good stead,” smiles Udit. His most memorable experience was, “A meeting with the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in November 2020 which left a lasting impact. The opportunity to present Glass2Sand and mobilise strategies to drive the SDG’s forward offered me new perspectives.”

UN Young Leader | Udit Singhal

Turning glass to sand, responsibly

Seeing wine being swirled and its terroir as a normal conversation at home was undoubtedly a push to launch the “Drink responsibly, dispose responsibly” campaign to raise awareness about the silent glass waste crisis, in association with the ambassador of Hungary to India in 2019. “Till date, Glass2Sand has crushed 25,600+ bottles into 15,300+ kilograms of sand, and we now have over 350 volunteers and 18 partners (institutions and diplomatic missions) active on the Glass2Sand network,” says the proud UN young leader.

Young people are calling to be able to #LearnForOurPlanet!

On Friday, tune into #COP26 as @UNESCO puts #ClimateEducation in the spotlight 📚
@YAGClimate member @pcopaloma & 1 of our #SDGYoungLeaders @_uditsinghal will also join 🙌

🕐 12 pm EDT
➡️ https://t.co/dyeYadI8bv pic.twitter.com/QEGVwWVFPz

— UN Youth Envoy (@UNYouthEnvoy) November 4, 2021

The learning continues even as he juggles classes, connects with the other young leaders, and finds impressive solutions to global challenges. “Covid has made collaboration difficult, but we have come together at speaking engagements,” he adds.

Singhal also worked closely with Jayathma Wickramanayake, the UN Secretary-General’s envoy at the youth office. “The best part of my appointment as a UN Young Leader for SDGs was being able to synergise and strategise closely with various UN organisations for effective youth climate action – a key learning was in taking initiative to create impact, rather than waiting for things to happen,” says the boy who is at heart a forward thinker.

A UN youth leader who is artsy too

Not many know that Udit is an artist, a gene he admits having inherited from his mother. “ I have been creating art since I was incredibly young. Despite being colour blind, I express myself through my artworks – paintings, sculptures and sketches. My passion for art got intertwined with my interest in the ever-evolving world of technology, manifesting in my first ever NFT Collection, Fabled Minds,” says the creator, revealing that it was a vividly curated collection of mystique paintings, photographs and sketches - powered by blockchain.

The UN young leader also loves to code and develop websites, in fact, he is most excited about a bid-based e-art gallery he developed to empower budding artists by monetising their artworks.

‘Putting’ the responsible forward!

On a sunny day when London weather complies, a bit of golf can do Udit a world of good. He calls himself a “scratch player” who started training formally at eight, having gone to the golf course as a tiny two-year-old.

Having delivered 25 plus keynote addresses so far (G20 side-event, UNRIC, UNITAR, UN75, etc.) and a sustainability podcast for Dell India in January 2021, the UN young leader looks for inspiration in life, music and golf, of course.

UN Young Leader | Udit Singhal

Art is a self-expression which Singhal has over the years embraced. His studio stems from this urge to create, “USStudio is a creative I founded that focuses on uplifting and enhancing the image and presence of brands through web development. It also spotlights creative portfolios - initiatives, photographs and artworks,” he adds.

His philosophy in life is about being initiative-taking, and he spurs others on, “You can’t just wait for something to happen – take a proactive stance – because unless you’re Newton, it’s unlikely that an apple is going to fall on your head. Opportunities don’t appear magically. You have to lead them your way,” avers the UN young leader.

Urging humans to address climate change as a collective problem, Udit says this is a make-or-break decade for the planet and instead of imagining a mythical entity to solve problems, get a solution-driven mindset.

Working from the ground up, Udit’s activism is real, not just “about optics and acoustics.” Not wanting to be another “nodding head in a numbered strike or draw attention through ‘blank’ signposts,” he wants to afford real solutions. And in that regard, he has already made great strides in cleaning the world of waste glass.

  • Follow Udit Singhal on Twitter and Linkedin
  • Follow Glass2Sand on Instagram

 

Reading Time: 6 min

globalIndian_logo

Share & Follow us

Subscribe News Letter

globalIndian_logo

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.

We are looking for role models, mentors and counselors who can help Indian youth who aspire to become Global Indians.

Read more..
  • Join us
  • Sitemap
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2023 copyright The Global Indian // All rights reserved. This site was made with love by Xavier Augustin