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 ExclusiveYoung titans: The Telugu champions shaping the Indian sports landscape
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian athletes

Young titans: The Telugu champions shaping the Indian sports landscape

Written by: Team GI Youth

(May 24, 2023) In the realm of sports, the Telugu region has become a breeding ground for exceptional talent, producing individuals who have defied odds, shattered barriers, and etched their names in the annals of sporting history. This is a tale that celebrates the indomitable spirit and remarkable achievements of Telugu sports stars. Through their dedication, perseverance, and unwavering determination, these individuals have become beacons of inspiration, captivating the hearts and minds of millions across the nation. Global Indian explores the journeys of badminton champs Gayatri Gopichand and Satwik Rankireddy, boxer Nikhat Zareen, who has carved herself a place in history, athlete Jyothi Yarraji who battled great odds to rise to break the national record and the decorated young US-golfer Sahith Theegala, who copes with scoliosis but never lets it hamper his game.

Nikhat Zareen

Nikhat Zareen

“Who is Nikhat Zareen?” The Olympian’s dismissive response to the then 22-year-old Zareen cut the young boxer quite deeply. Zareen was already a Youth World Champion and wanted the Indian Boxing Federation to conduct trials for the Olympic team selections. Kom, who was looking forward to what would likely be her final rendezvous with the Olympics, was not happy, snubbing Zareen for her request. Still, Zareen refused to show weakness. She  had always been used to fighting great odds – she is from Telangana, a region without a boxing culture unlike Manipur or Haryana. She was also a Muslim – female Muslim boxers don’t come around too often in India.

Today, Nikhat Zareen is a two-time world champion, the winner of the gold at the 2011 AIBA Women’s Youth & Junior World Boxing Championships, the 2022 Istanbul and 2023 New Delhi IBA Women’s World Boxing Championships. She also bagged the gold at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham.

Born on June 14, 1996 to Mohammad Jameel Ahmed and Parveen Sultana in Nizamabad, Zareen studied at Nirmala Hrudaya Girls’ High School. It was her father, Jameel, who introduced her to boxing and trained her for a year. “It’s true that not everyone in the neigbourhood or even the family were supportive. They would say it is wrong and it would spoil her marriage prospects. But I never let Nikhat worry about these things. I wanted her to do her best. People always talk. If you stop and listen to what everyone has to say, you won’t go very far,” Jameel said.

As she progressed, there weren’t too many girl competitors at her level, and she would go up against older boys. She moved ahead rapidly and at 14, won her first international gold at the Youth World Championships.

Nikhat Zareen is proud of her roots and her faith, performing a sajdah at the New Delhi World Championships and saying that she would use her prize money to send her parents on the Haj pilgrimage. “I come from a middle class family. I come from a minority community where girls don’t always get the opportunity to take up sports. Boxing has given me freedom,” Zareen said.

Satwiksairaj Rankireddy

Satwiksairaj Rankireddy

In 2018, Chirag Shetty and Satwiksairaj Rankireddy stormed their way to a historic victory at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, bagging a gold at the Mixed Team event and the men’s double silver. That year, they also won top honours in the Hyderabad Open BWF Tour Super 100 tournament, beating their Akbar Bintang and Reza Pahlevi Isfahani from Indonesia.

Rankireddy was born in Amalapuram, Andhra Pradesh, into a family legacy. His father was a state-level player, as was his older brother, both of whom inspired him to begin playing. In 2014, he enrolled at the Pullela Gopichand Academy and became a doubles specialist. In 2016, his coach, Kim Tan Her paired him with Chirag Shetty, creating a winning team.

The duo has won five international series titles. Rankireddy also has a strong partnership with Ashwini Ponnappa in the mixed doubles category.  They began 2022 by winning the Indian Open and were part of India’s Thomas Cup team, a victory achieved through great determination, as they started out by losing the first game.

Rankireddy was given the Arjuna Award for badminton in August 2020.

Gayatri Gopichand

Gayatri Gopichand

Gayatri Gopichand

From the moment she decided on a career in badminton, Gayatri Gopichand had very big shoes to fill. Both her parents are renowned shuttlers – her father, Pullela Gopichand won the England Open Badminton Championships in 2001, the second Indian after Prakash Padukone. Her mother, P.V.V. Lakshmi, is an eight-time Indian national Telugu champion and an Olympian who represented India at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. She also won the bronze at the 1998 Commonwealth Games.

Gayatri entered the fray with the best kind of backing, including being able to enroll at her parents’ state-of-the-art academy, the Pullela Gopichand Badminton Academy. She was initiated early and had the chance to observe and even train with India’s reigning champs like Saina Nehwal and P.V. Sindhu.

By the age of 15, Gayatri had an all-India ranking of No. 1 in the under-17 age group in India. In 2018, she became the youngest member to be part of an Indian Asian Games badminton contingent and went with them to the Jakarta 2018 Asian Games, although she didn’t actually get any game-time that year.

Until the pandemic, Gayatri had trained as a singles player. In 2021, however, acting on the advice of her father and coach, Arun Vishnu, she tried the doubles game, teaming up with Treesa Jolly. “When the coaches saw our game styles, they thought that putting us together was the best,” Gayatri told The Hindu. That year, they became runners-up at the Polish International and their star only rose from there, as they reached the Syed Modi International final in 2022 and bagged the BWF World Tour Title.

“Now, I feel I can play anyone. Off Court, they are all legends and all  but on court, everyone is equal and you just have to give your best,” Gayatri said.

Jyothi Yarraji

 

Telugu Champion | Jyothi Yarraji

Jyothi Yarraji

Jyothi was in class 10 when she took her first strides towards being an athlete. She had no idea how she would go about it, either. It was a late start and a far-fetched idea for a poor girl in Vishakapatnam. “My father is a security guard and my mother is a cleaner in hospitals. I’d always been told the path to come out of that was through studies.” In class 10, encouraged by her P.E teacher, she decided to give it a go.

She started out with a pair of inexpensive jogging shoes (spikes were out of the question) and just a few months into formal training, won a gold in the state-level 100m. “I used to feel good when I started running. It made me feel like I didn’t have time to waste. It made me feel that I was doing something important,” Jyothi said. Still, her decision was looked upon with great disapproval. The neighbours raised their eyebrows because she was “being sent to run outside. Why is she running in knickers and a banian? Why is she talking to boys,” they would ask. Her mother stood by her.

Today, the Telugu champion hurdler holds the national record of 13.04 seconds, which she broke three times in 2022. She also represented India at the 2022 Commonwealth Games and at the Indian National Games that year, won the gold in the 100-metres and the 100-metres hurdles. In October, Jyothi became the first Indian woman hurdler to clock below 13 seconds. She did even better in 2023, breaking the national record for the 60-metres hurdle five times. She also won the Silver in the 2023 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships at Astana.

Sahith Theegala

Telugu Champion | Sahith Theegala

Sahith Theegala

Only two weeks ago, in May 2023, Sahith Theegala made headlines for a superb left-handed shot at the Wells Fargo Championship at the 16th hole. It was a perfect shot and the audience roared its approval, more so because Sahith Theegala is not left-handed. “Absolutely fantastic,” the commentators said and even Theegala’s caddie was impressed.

The US-based golfer, who hails from Hyderabad, has had a strong year, making his presence felt on the PGA Tour as he rose from outside 300 to 30 in the Official World Golf Rankings.

Theegala had always loved the sport, even as a child, and even though he suffers from scoliosis (a curvature of the spine). A the age of five and six, he would cry when it was time to leave the golf course. At the age of six, he won the Junior World Championship and went to study at Pepperdine University, known for its sports teams. In January 2020, he won the Haskins Award, the Ben Hogan Award and the Jack Niklaus Award, becoming the fifth player in the history of US golf to win all three Player of the Year honours.

Subscribe
Connect with
Notify of
guest

OR

Connect with
guest

OR

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
  • AIBA Women's Youth & Junior World Boxing Championships
  • Arjuna Award
  • Asian Games
  • Asian Indoor Athletics Championships
  • Ben Hogan Award
  • BWF World Tour Title
  • Commonwealth Games
  • Gayatri Gopichand
  • Haskins Award
  • Hyderabad Open BWF Tour Super 100
  • Indian National Games
  • Istanbul Women's World Boxing Championships
  • Jack Niklaus Award
  • Jakarta 2018 Asian Games
  • Junior World Championship
  • Jyothi Varraji
  • national record
  • New Delhi Women's World Boxing Championships
  • Nikhat Zareen
  • Official World Golf Rankings
  • Polish International
  • Pullela Gopichand Badminton Academy
  • Sahith Theegala
  • Satwiksairaj Rankireddy
  • Syed Modi International
  • Telugu community
  • Telugu Diaspora
  • Wells Fargo Championship

Published on 25, May 2023

Share with

ALSO READ

Story
Meet the five Indians selected for Rhodes Scholarship 2025

Each year, thousands of the world’s brightest minds vie for the coveted Rhodes Scholarship, a life-changing opportunity to study at the University of Oxford. Established in 1902, through the will of British businessman and colonialist Cecil John Rhodes, the scholarship is one of the oldest and most prestigious international academic awards. Designed to cultivate public-spirited leaders, it aims to foster mutual understanding and peace through education, bringing together exceptional students from around the globe. As the Rhodes Trust states, “When different people come together in a shared spirit, exciting new things begin.” [caption id="attachment_40553" align="aligncenter" width="660"] Cecil John Rhodes' statue at the Oxford University[/caption] In 2025, five Indian students have been selected to join this elite community, marking the continuation of a legacy that has evolved far beyond its colonial origins. Originally intended to foster unity among English-speaking nations, this esteemed and long-standing international scholarship programme underwent revisions over time. By the 21st century, eligibility expanded to encompass citizens from all countries. Indians gained access to this scholarship opportunity in 1947. Rhodes Scholars receive full financial support, covering tuition fees, visas, health surcharges, and even travel and living expenses during their time at Oxford. Starting in 2026, the number of

Read More

lly intended to foster unity among English-speaking nations, this esteemed and long-standing international scholarship programme underwent revisions over time. By the 21st century, eligibility expanded to encompass citizens from all countries. Indians gained access to this scholarship opportunity in 1947.

Rhodes Scholars receive full financial support, covering tuition fees, visas, health surcharges, and even travel and living expenses during their time at Oxford. Starting in 2026, the number of scholarships available to Indian students will increase to six, thanks to a perpetual endowment by entrepreneur couple Mukund and Soumya Rajan. Global Indian takes a look at the five Indian youngsters who have bagged the 2025 Rhodes scholarship:

Pal Aggarwal

Pal is a fourth-year undergraduate student from Ghaziabad, U.P., studying Engineering Physics (Hons.) at IIT Bombay. With dual minors in Computer Science and Machine Intelligence, her academic journey is deeply rooted in her passion for astrophysics, mathematics, and data science. Pal dreams of becoming an astronaut and is equally committed to advocating for women in science, inspiring others to pursue their ambitions in traditionally male-dominated fields.

[caption id="attachment_40554" align="aligncenter" width="374"]Indian youth | Pal Aggarwal | Global Indian Pal Aggarwal[/caption]

Beyond her academic pursuits, Pal is an accomplished Bharatnatyam and contemporary dancer. As a student researcher at IIT Bombay’s Space Technology and Astrophysics Research (STAR) Lab, she works on "Daksha," a proposed space mission to detect electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational wave sources. Her previous work includes contributing to the uGMRT’s Fast Radio Burst (FRB) detection pipeline at the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics, Pune, and participating in the Student Satellite Program at IIT Bombay. Her internships span a Quantum Computing research stint at the National University of Singapore and a strategic consulting role at Bain & Company, where she earned a coveted Pre-Placement Offer.

Rayan Chakrabarti

Ryan, a postgraduate student of Arts and Aesthetics at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), is driven by a deep interest in memory studies, anthropology, and the narratives of nationalism. A graduate of English Literature from St. Stephen’s College, Ryan envisions creating a dedicated archive and museum to document the COVID-19 pandemic and its far-reaching impact on South Asia. This passion for exploring collective memory led him to co-found the Pandemic Oral History Archives, capturing firsthand accounts of the crisis and its aftermath.

[caption id="attachment_40555" align="aligncenter" width="373"]Indian youth | Ryan Chakrabarti | Global Indian Ryan Chakrabarti[/caption]

Ryan’s academic pursuits are complemented by his commitment to social impact. During his time at St. Stephen’s, he worked on a poverty alleviation project, conducting surveys to facilitate bank account access for slum residents and teaching remedial classes to underserved students. An accomplished pianist, he also channels his creative energy into writing and translating poetry that interrogates politics and nationhood, blending art and activism in meaningful ways.

Shubham Narwal

“I can’t believe I am India’s first vet Rhodes scholar elect. Happy to be part of the Rhodes community,” shared Shubham in his heartfelt reaction on social media after being named a Rhodes Scholar for 2025. Currently pursuing a Bachelor’s in Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry at the Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Shubham is driven by a mission to safeguard biodiversity. His academic focus lies in clinical embryology, where he aims to pioneer new conservation strategies for critically endangered species, particularly the Great Indian Bustard.

[caption id="attachment_40556" align="aligncenter" width="369"]Indian youth | Shubham Narwal | Global Indian Shubham Narwal[/caption]

Apart from internships at reputed institutions, Shubham’s journey has been enriched by a fully funded short online course on modern methods in Infection Biology conducted by the Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg, Germany. In the course where students from other countries were his fellow participants, he delved into bioinformatics, microscopic imaging, and the One Health approach to tackle neglected tropical diseases, earning valuable global insights into animal health and ecosystem management. Beyond his academic pursuits, Shubham’s love for basketball and Harry Potter highlights his vibrant personality, balancing scientific rigour with creative passions.

Vibha Swaminathan

Vibha, the Rhodes Scholar-elect for 2025 from Delhi, is deeply committed to exploring the political and legal fragilities of citizenship regimes in India. A final-year student at the National Law School of India University (NLSIU) and an alumna of Lady Shri Ram College for Women (LSR), Vibha envisions combining her academic pursuits with a dynamic human rights litigation practice in India’s trial courts. Her journey reflects a seamless integration of intellectual rigor and practical advocacy.

[caption id="attachment_40557" align="aligncenter" width="340"]Rhodes Scholarship 2025 | Vibha Swaminathan | Global Indian Vibha Swaminathan[/caption]

At LSR, Vibha’s brilliance earned her several accolades, including the Faculty Prize, the Randhir Singh Award for Excellence in Political Analysis, and the Rena Sewak Award for Excellence in English Public Speaking. At NLSIU, she has continued to excel, taking on leadership roles as an elected member of the LLB Recruitment Coordination Committee and a member of the Academic Support Programme. She has also contributed significantly to legal practice, engaging in appellate citizenship litigation before the Guwahati High Court and assisting with constitutional cases in the Supreme Court. Vibha’s dedication to academia is equally impressive. She served as a teaching assistant for Criminal Law II (Criminal Procedure) and a research assistant for the Women Leadership in Law project.

Avanish Vats

Avanish, a bachelor’s student at St. Stephen’s College, Delhi, is driven by a passion for epistemology and a vision to make philosophy accessible to disabled people. A former student of DPS Ranchi, Avanish combines his intellectual pursuits with a strong commitment to social work, aiming to bridge the gap between abstract ideas and real-world inclusivity.

[caption id="attachment_40558" align="aligncenter" width="329"]Rhodes Scholarship 2025 | Avanish Vats | Global Indian Avanish Vats[/caption]

An accomplished tabla player, Avanish has been a central figure in enriching the cultural fabric of his academic institutions. From serving as the primary tabla performer for school assemblies to being a key member of his college band, his musical journey has instilled in him discipline, teamwork, and a deep appreciation for community and culture.

Together, these Rhodes scholars represent the multifaceted talents and ambitions of a generation determined to shape a more equitable and innovative world, using the opportunities at Oxford as a stepping stone to drive meaningful change.

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
Indrani Das: Indian-American STEM girl pioneers new treatment for brain damage

(December 15, 2022) A rebellion put Indian American Indrani Das on the path to research brain injuries, something that led her to win a quarter-million-dollar at the Regeneron Science Talent Search award as a 17-year-old. While most Indian parents coax their children to become doctors when they grow up, Indrani's parents weren't the same. With their roots in Kolkata, the banker couple had warned their daughter against opting for science. They even told her to not be a doctor. "Don’t become a doctor, it’s long and expensive. So, I decided I wanted to be a doctor,” she said. This passion led the Harvard University graduate to a medical-oriented project that focuses on her new approach to neurological damage. Always fascinated with brain injuries after learning about their irrevocable and devastating effects, she decided to learn more with her full-fledged project. As a senior at the Academy for Medical Science Technology in New Jersey, she explored how brain damage occurs and examined ‘astrogliosis’, a process that can lead to the excess production of a toxin that can damage neurons. She was keen to understand the nuances of how brain damage occurs and if she could figure out a way to slow

Read More

re out a way to slow or reverse the process. "My work centers on repairing the behaviour of supporting cells to prevent neuron injury and death. It was really that shock of what it can do to a person that pushed me to work," she explained.

[caption id="attachment_25387" align="aligncenter" width="683"]Indrani Das | Indian American | Global Indian Indrani Das is an Indian-American young scientist[/caption]

This very work led her to win $250,000 at the 2017 Regeneron Science Talent Search, which is nicknamed the Junior Nobel Prize. "These diseases are so prevalent, so debilitating, it matters to me that I continue to work on this," she added. Her purpose is to treat traumatic brain injury which can lead to stroke, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's diseases. "In all these injuries, there is an insult to brain tissue which on the one hand causes neurons to die, but on the other hand causes supporting cells to calm these neurons. In my model, I found one of the problems which contributing to the disease condition, and then I also helped to treat it," she added.

The New Jersey resident was only three when she heard about the Regeneron Science Talent Search, as her love for science began blossoming at a young age. Seeing her fascination for dinosaurs and discovery at a young age, her parents suggested she submit her fossil findings to the competition. Years later, she not just applied but also took home the top prize for promoting neuron repair. But it wasn't a cakewalk for the Indian American who went through a process of reading scientific literature and running small experiments over many years to finally work on the subject.

[caption id="attachment_25388" align="aligncenter" width="800"]Indrani Das | Global Indian | Indian American Indrani Das won the 2017 Regeneron Science Talent Search[/caption]

It was at the beginning of her high school as a 14-year-old that she began working on the project with only a rudimentary understanding of biology. The lack of in-depth experience with molecular biology and neuroscience was one of the biggest challenges for Indrani, which was exacerbated by the absence of "any one source for basic information." "What set the tone for my work was the learning curve I went through in the following months and years. I spent hours each day reading research journals to come to an understanding of the problems in a brain injury that I wanted to study, and used my growing knowledge base to help me conduct more and more refined experiments," the Global Indian said in an interview.

Being educated at the Bergen County Academy for Medical Science Technology, one of New Jersey's top public schools, she would often push her limits by conducting her research projects. That's when she wanted to focus on the brain. "Neurodegenerative diseases ruin a person's quality of life, they take away from (a person's) basic humanity. It was that impact I wanted to understand and to study and to try and repair,” she told CNN. With the help of mentor-cum-biology teacher Donna Leonardi, she embarked on her research journey, and began learning how cells lived and died by growing and manipulating cell cultures. She's also a member of the Stevens Lab at Boston Children's Hospital, where she works on synaptic pruning, a critical process in brain development.

[caption id="attachment_25389" align="aligncenter" width="601"]Indrani Das | Global Indian | Indian American Indrani Das with her parents[/caption]

Indrani, who aspires to be a physician-scientist, is grateful to her parents for letting her follow her passion. "I’ll never forget my parents’ stories of how they worked full-time day jobs while securing additional degrees by night, and saved religiously for over a decade before my birth to provide me with the most comfortable life possible. I wouldn’t say that I’ve chosen a different path from my family, but that my choices reflect the evolution of theirs. We’re living the American dream," she added.

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

Indrani, who has plans of wrapping up her Ph.D. program in the next 10 years, advises youngsters to not be limited by their circumstances and to break bigger goals into small steps. "At the end of the day, it’s not who you know, how much you know, or what you have that determines whether you achieve your goals – it's how much you are willing to go through. If you aren’t losing your drive to excel, you’re winning the game."

 

Reading Time: 4 min

Story
How fintech entrepreneur Aman Bhayana helped students avert a ‘PayCrunch’

(March 15, 2022) Moving across the country for college, fintech entrepreneur Aman Bhayana, who, at 22 is the co-founder, PayCrunch, quite naturally revelled in his newfound freedom. But even unbridled independence, he found, was something of a mixed bag. Like his classmates, he would count every last rupee - a difficult call to make when popularity and status were so dependent on “being seen” at the right restaurants and making travel plans. Requests to parents for personal credit cards were inevitably met with a resounding “no.” And with no credit scores, borrowing money from mainstream channels wasn’t possible either. “Obviously, my father wouldn’t let me have a credit card,” Aman smiles. Working out of Third Wave in Bengaluru as he spoke to Global Indian, Aman looks every bit the entrepreneurial 20-something for which Bengaluru is now known. PayCrunch, his micro-finance startup for students has already raised $500,000 in funding from Y Combinator and plans for expansion are well underway. [caption id="attachment_12536" align="aligncenter" width="587"] Aman Bhayana, co-founder, PayCrunch[/caption] The need to ideate Growing up in Delhi in a family of businessmen, the fintech entrepreneur to-be seemed all set for a conventional career path, choosing to study at the prestigious Vellore Institute of Technology in

Read More

ch entrepreneur | Aman Bhayana | PayCrunch | Global Indian" width="587" height="525" /> Aman Bhayana, co-founder, PayCrunch[/caption]

The need to ideate

Growing up in Delhi in a family of businessmen, the fintech entrepreneur to-be seemed all set for a conventional career path, choosing to study at the prestigious Vellore Institute of Technology in Tamil Nadu. “I was all set to become a coder,” he smiles. “It didn't take me long to realise that it wasn’t for me. I love to write algorithms and design structures but I don’t really enjoy coding. I did at first but I needed something more.” His parents, Sunil Kumar and Poonam Bhayana, run two schools in Haryana – the Tagore Senior Secondary School and IPS Senior Secondary School – a legacy handed down to them by Aman’s grandfather. “My grandfather has been a great inspiration to me,” the young entrepreneur remarks, adding, “He took a loan to start the first school 70 years ago.” Does he see himself in that line of business too? “Not really. I want a career where I am learning something new all the time,” Aman remarks.

To Aman, finding his own path meant leaning into his strengths as a people person and the entrepreneurial acumen that had come to him quite early in life. “Even in school, I was always eager to participate in events in whatever way I could,” Aman says, adding,  “If I couldn’t participate, I would anchor them.” This meant taking part in everything from science Olympiads to dance competitions and being a part of various societies in college as well. “In college, I was part of many societies and clubs, I was usually the guy setting things up at an event,” says the boy who draws energy from being around other people. “You gain a lot of knowledge and understanding by observing others. What do they talk about? What they are hearing, and understanding? Right now, we don't understand each other. We need tools to do so and someone has to make those tools,” says the fintech entrepreneur.

When money matters

His experiences in college got Aman thinking. A part of various clubs in college, he even began a small travel-planning business for students. “If a student wanted to travel but had no money, we would ask them for their budget. That was all. We handled the rest,” he adds. The experience gave him an understanding of the challenges faced by college students and look for solutions.

“Everybody wants more spending money, but for students, the need is dire. They don't have the options an employed person has -  no credit, banks, etc,” the fintech entrepreneur explains. “But then I thought, why can’t I do something about it? We’re in 2020, there is so much open-source data available to use for behaviour analysis. Why not use that data and give students something they actually need?”

As he prepared to graduate (2019-2020), he and a friend, Meherdeep Kaur, hit upon an idea. What students lacked was a convenient pay later option that could be used through a third-party app or wallet. “Not everyone can get a credit card but everybody uses UPI - more than 15 million accounts have been created in the past four or five years. We wanted to create a system where a student could buy a plate of pani puri and access a pay later option,” he says, of the idea where they could register with a college id, Aadhaar card and KYC process, as PayCrunch accesses open data on their phones.

How human behaviour gave them the way forward

Much of the work involved a study of human behaviour. As they explored repayment systems, they found that customers could be divided into two segments - the ability to pay and the willingness to do so. “We checked their ability to pay by doing the math on the user account. Yet, for willingness? This is something nobody will admit to you - everybody promises to repay debts. So we study past behaviours through social media, transaction data and utility bills,” explains the fintech entrepreneur. It’s a lot less complex than it sounds, for the user at least - the credit lines are approved in an hour or two, after which the user can go to any store, scan a code through the app and pay later.

Fintech entrepreneur | Aman Bhayana | PayCrunch | Global Indian

“It’s not just about money either,” Aman remarks. “In college, there is one thing more important than the money - status. We want to build a whole credit system and offer perks and benefits in the future.” Right now, Aman and his 12-member team are working to partner with stores, restaurants and pubs, and companies like Amazon, Myntra and Starbucks.

People-watching unearthed revelations

Observing people is what Aman enjoys most, thus working out of cafes helps him meet people daily. The fintech entrepreneur explores indie music, loves a good suspense thriller, "Have you heard of a writer named Sidney Sheldon" and looking mystified when met with laughter, he adds, “I have started geeking out into entrepreneurial books as well now.”

  • Follow Aman on LinkedIn

Reading Time: 6 min

Story
Japanese language expert Gautam Kumar is gifting knowledge through ‘Puraskaar’

(May 31, 2023) Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) conducts Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT) within Japan as well as in select countries outside the country to evaluate and certify language proficiency for non-native speakers. Brajraj, a native of Bodh Gaya in Bihar, with no exposure to the language and lack of training facilities in the small town was able to clear the foundation level of JLPT assessment. He attributes his success to Puraskaar’s initiative - to make knowledge accessible free of cost in far flung areas.   Just like him, Pammy too tasted success. She was able to crack the JNU entrance test crediting her feat to Puraskaar. Like Brajraj and Pammy, there are 1500 learners across India who are registered with the NCR based non-profit which is helping them fulfill their life goals.   "I can proudly say that the volunteers, who devote their time to Puraskaar’s initiatives helping learners in diverse subjects, are the reason behind the non-profit’s exponential growth,” remarks its founder Gautam Kumar in an interview with Global Indian.   [caption id="attachment_30586" align="aligncenter" width="758"] Gautam Kumar, founder, Puraskaar[/caption] The 150 volunteers, who teach at Puraskaar, are students of top Indian academic institutions including the IIMs, DU,

Read More

 

[caption id="attachment_30586" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Indian Changemaker | Gautam Kumar | Global Indian Gautam Kumar, founder, Puraskaar[/caption]

The 150 volunteers, who teach at Puraskaar, are students of top Indian academic institutions including the IIMs, DU, JNU, Amity, and Punjab University as well as senior professionals working in MNCs and also homemakers wanting to do their bit for the society. Together they impart education in close to 25 subjects which are both academic as well as non-academic in nature.

How is Puraskaar helping

Puraskaar provides free coaching facilities in a wide array of subjects starting with science and math to painting, yoga, dance, music and more. Regular interactive sessions and group discussions, career counseling, motivational webinars, quizzes and personality development sessions are also organised.

Since Gautam holds a five-year integrated degree from JNU in Japanese, he takes care of the foreign languages department of the non-profit. “Today we are imparting training in seven languages - Spanish, French, German, Chinese, Korean and English,” he says.  

“I believe that learning a foreign language makes students more confident in life. Learners from financially-weaker sections especially love the concept because they cannot afford learning such languages like students studying in private schools.”

Though the main focus is on providing support to the underprivileged, in the peer learning model of Puraskaar anyone who wants to be associated with the non-profit is welcomed. "Learners of Puraskaar are as young as primary school kids to as old as fifty-year-olds," reveals Gautam. While 80 volunteers teach academic subjects, 70 are engaged in imparting knowledge in non-academic subjects.  

[caption id="attachment_30587" align="aligncenter" width="1166"]Indian Changemaker | Gautam Kumar | Global Indian Gautam celebrating his birthday with underprivileged children at DLF mall, Vasant Kunj, New Delhi[/caption]

The classes are held mostly in the evenings and the volunteers are more like mentors. “They teach just like any ‘bhaiya’ or a ‘didi’ would teach in a home environment.” Though the classes are largely conducted online, offline classes have been started in some places in Delhi and Patna’s slum areas. “The volunteers of Puraskaar are a wonderful set of people who use novel techniques to keep learners’ interests intact. Perhaps this is the reason why an initiative that was taken during the pandemic is still in momentum,” says the founder for whom Puraskaar is a 'dream project'.

The non-profit also dedicates a campaign every month to topics like women and hygiene to spread awareness in society on vital issues.

How did it start…

After passing out of JNU, Gautam worked in one of the corporate houses as a translator and then switched to teaching optional Japanese language courses in institutions like Amity University Gurgaon and Manav Rachna University. When the pandemic struck, seeing him teach online, his maid requested him to teach her kids as well.  

One of her children was in class nine while the other studied in class eleven. Her request gave Gautam an impetus to turn online teaching into a social work project, involving his students. Together they decided to teach a group of underprivileged children instead of just the maid’s kids.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kho6XCeyi9U

 

Over the course of time, LinkedIn and WhatsApp played a crucial role in spreading awareness about their initiative, attracting both learners and volunteer teachers. Later, Gautam and his team formally registered Puraskaar as a non-profit organisation.  

“The designation of the ‘founder’ is just for the namesake. My core team members who have been there with Puraskaar since the beginning have played an equal role in making the initiative reach where it is today,” remarks Gautam who received Indian Achievers' Forum's Shiksha Bharthi Award for the year 2021-2022. “Starting with a handful of students and four volunteers the exponential growth in the number of learners and volunteers is all thanks to them,” he adds. “It’s a collaborative effort.” 

Love for Japanese

Growing up in Bihar, Gautam was fascinated by the story of a cousin’s friend who had studied Japanese and was earning well after completing his studies. Inspired, he too dreamt of studying Japanese to afford a comfortable life. After passing out of school, much to his happiness, he was able to crack JNU’s entrance exam for a five-year integrated course.  

Gautam still considers himself a learner who is picking up nuances of Japanese culture through its language. “It’s a lifelong process,” tells the Puraskaar founder who is nurturing his next dream - to present Puraskaar’s initiatives at the august platform of UNESCO someday. As far as earning a living is concerned, Gautam is now into interpretation and consultancy.

  • Follow Gautam Kumar on LinkedIn 
  • Follow Puraskaar on LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and its website

Reading Time: 5 mins

Story
How Tanya Gupta went from NASA to Harper’s Bazaar

(March 4, 2023) How does a mechanical engineer go from being a rocket scientist at NASA to striking it big in the creative design world? If Tanya Gupta's story is anything to go by, through a lot of hard work, persistence and the courage to put yourself out there, even at the risk of looking silly. Tanya's ability to show initiative landed her in Harper's Bazaar but we'll get to that in a minute. The 25-year-old holds a software patent at NASA and in 2021, became the first Indian American to be selected for the Adobe Creative Residency. Today, she's the founder of Guptanya.JPG Studios and lives and works in New York City.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Tanya Gupta (@guptanya.jpg) Reaching for the stars Tanya was eight years old when she fell in love with space, during a family trip to the Johnson Space Center. She decided then that she was going to be a rocket scientist. "I started doing a lot more Math and Science in school and when I was 11, I went to my first engineering class,” she said. “"I was able to realise that dream and made it to

Read More

m_campaign=loading" data-instgrm-version="14">

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tanya Gupta (@guptanya.jpg)

Reaching for the stars

Tanya was eight years old when she fell in love with space, during a family trip to the Johnson Space Center. She decided then that she was going to be a rocket scientist. "I started doing a lot more Math and Science in school and when I was 11, I went to my first engineering class,” she said. “"I was able to realise that dream and made it to NASA as a rocket scientist."

The Global Indian earned herself a place at NYU, where she went to study mechanical and aeronautical engineering. There, Tanya co-founded Curtain Call, a music business startup where they would sell tickets to shows around the city for belkow the asking price. They company partnered with various venues and that would give them leftover tickets to sell. "The venues were happy, the customer was happy and we were happy," she smiles.

Her creative journey had already begun in high school, however. Her immigrant parents were "adamant" that Tanya be "academically rigorous." Unlike her peers, she was discouraged from getting a job in high school. To make extra money, she chose freelance photography, taking on gigs for her friends, doing senior portraits and events.

Life as an engineer was also going well. Tanya chose a study abroad programme at NYU Berlin, where she mae her first foray into augmented reality. She was also a teaching assistant at Stanford University's high school summer camp, where she taught teenagers who wanted to take college classes for extra credit. That led her, she says, to NASA.

[caption id="attachment_28130" align="aligncenter" width="506"] Tanya at NASA. Photo: NYU[/caption]

Life at NASA

Tanya did two stints at NASA, both as a student and even turned down a job offer. The first stint was as Ops Lead on the PRANDTL-M (Preliminary Research Aerodynamic Design to Land on Mars) aircraft at the Armstrong Flight Resarch Center. "The mission is to implement Ludwing Prandtl's 1933 bird wing design on an aircraft that is intended to perform the first-ever Martian flight," she explained. "It was going to be first ever aircraft on Mars." The teams were asked to sign the original design and that model was sent to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, where it remains. "If you're at the Smithsonian, you can see my autograph," she laughs.

She was also mentored by Al Bowers, the chief scientist at Armstrong and an expert on Prandtl's alternative wing theory. "He's the coolest person I've ever met - which I decided one day when he casually told me about the time he hung out with Buzz Aldrin," she remarked. She even "got to do a couple of barrel rolls on an F-15."

The second internship was at the Kennedy Space Centre, after her study abroad programme at NYU Berlin. There, she helped patent a 3D modelling conversion tool. Essentially, polygon-based models, the most common type of modeling for video games and animation studios. NASA had plenty of these, which they wanted to showcase to clients. However, they needed mesh-based models, which represent surface but have nothing inside to see. There was no shortcut to creating them. Tanya earned herself a software patent for creating a "one-stop shop where you can input a polygon-based model and turn out a mesh-based model," she said.

A lockdown hobby

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tanya Gupta (@guptanya.jpg)

Tanya eventually turned down a job offer from NASA, choosing instead to join IBM as a reality engineer in 2019. Still, she was hungry for the chance to create and "needed something to motivate me to continue that practice and skill." She spent her time learning from YouTube tutorials and to build her design cred and hopefully, be an art director someday. "My wall used to be covered in editorials and I'd tried, multiple times to get the free trial of (Adobe) Photoshop," she said. "Every single time, it was so overwhelming, and I didn't have the tools, time or resources to devote to it."

So, in 2020, when the world went into lockdown and Tanya's job went completely remote, she asked friends to send her their smartphone selfies. Submissions came pouring in almost at once. Every day, Tanya would pick one and spend three to five hours practicing a new Photoshop skill she wanted to try out. At the end of the lockdown, Tanya had a portfolio, with dozens of works of art that her audience, it turned out, really enjoyed. She posted them with the hastag #QuarantineArt".

One of her early large projects was a recreation of her favourite Botticelli work - The Birth of Venus. "I had this idea to create my own version and call it the Birth of Parvati, who is the Hindu goddess of love," she said. "I thought it would be a really cool juxtaposition."

[caption id="attachment_28129" align="aligncenter" width="1600"] Birth of Parvati - Tanya's recreation of the Botticelli masterpiece. Photo: Guptana Studios[/caption]

Adobe Creative Residency Program

In 2021, acting almost on a whim, Tanya applied to the Adobe Creative Residency. It wasn't a whim, really, because thousands of hours of work had gone into building a portfolio and learning her way around Adobe Photoshop. She went there hoping to learn about augmented reality projects but ended up focussing on photoshop and compositing. "Recreating art is like a thing for me," she says - she even recreates scenes from her favourite game, SIMS 4.

"I loved Kim Kadarshian's look at Saturday Night Life, so I recreated that," she says. She copied the outfit, analysed the photograph to figure out the lighting and recreated the image in a dark room, putting herself in the picture. She also has her own take on Barbie and Ken.

Finding herself as an artist

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Tanya Gupta (@guptanya.jpg)

Validation was pouring in from brands and audiences on social media. While major brands commended her work, everything was still unpaid. Tanya saw herself designing magazine covers but without experience, she couldn't find a gig. She ended up creating a mock-up of a Harper's Bazaar cover - "I styled, modelled, photographed, edited and designed everything myself. I called it manifestation in action and it actually led to me being featured in Harper's Bazaar. If you put youself out there, the right person might just see it and it could just lead you to the right place," she remarks.

Harper's Bazaar asked her, in a recent interview, about her future plans - "I'm setting myself up for an invite to the Met Gala in 2023."

  • Follow Tanya on Instagram and through her website.

Reading Time: 6 mins

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