AAPICO Celebrates 10th Annual Charity Event In Columbus Ohio

American Association of Physician of Indian Origin-Central Ohio ( AAPICO) celebrated its 10th annual charity event at Hyatt Regency  in Columbus Ohio on September 19th, 2015. The event was attended by more than 300 participants from across the state. This year charity event was dedicated to raise funds to promote Breast and Ovarian Cancer Research and awareness.

Dr Seema Jain, President of AAPI, a chief guest, noted that there are more than 110,000 doctors and medical students of Indian origin in the US. The number of medical students is estimated at 38,000. In some universities, more than 30 percent of the students are of Indian origin.

“In several states, one in four patients, consult a doctor of Indian origin. Nationally it is one in seven. It means that the Indian physicians play a major role in the healthcare in the US and their absence would disrupt the health sector,” Dr. Jain said. “AAPI continues to play a major role in in the health care in this country. We played a crucial role in securing the approval of Dr. Vivek Murthy as Surgeon General.”

Dr. Gautam Samadder, AAPI’s Vice President, said, through his active participation and leadership at the national level, he wants to “amplify participation among young physicians and medical students, strengthen AAPI’s financial security through profitable corporate sponsorships and facilitate collegial cooperation between local and state chapters, as this will increase AAPI’s global stature and eminence, which will ultimately make healthcare more efficient and effective in USA and India.”

On a national level AAPI has risen to become the premier ethnic medical association in the United States, representing well over 70,000 practicing physicians, residents, fellows and medical students.  The mission of our organization is to serve as a forum to facilitate and enable Indian American physicians to excel in patient care, teaching and research, and to pursue their aspiration in professional and community affairs.  In addition to the support of our 17 healthcare clinics in India and 25 clinics here in the United States, AAPI is also recognized as a strong voice in the healthcare legislation and policy arena.

After the gala, participants proceeded to the major fund raising concert of Sunidhi Chauhan, one of the most decorated artist in Bollywood performed for the first time in Ohio on September 19th at Ohio theater in Columbus. Capacity crowd  from all over Ohio came to listen to their favorite artist. Sunidhi performance was mind blowing. The crowd within half hour left their seats and took the floor to dance with the tunes of her songs.

She even gave one of her young admirer a chance to sing few lines dedicated to her. Both young and old spectators were mesmerized with her songs and stage performance. The show had to be extended an extra hour to meet up with crowd expectations.

At the end of the show a private meet and greet session was arranged for the sponsors and Sunidhi was gracious enough to have a photographs with all of them. The concert left a long lasting impression on everyone at the Auditorium, while contributing to the noble cause of AAPI and its initiative to create awareness on breast cancer.

Indra Nooyi, Shobhana Bharatia Receive USIBC Global Leadership Award

PepsiCo chairman Indra Nooyi and Hindustan Times Group chairperson Shobhana Bharatia were honored with the 2015 Global Leadership Award by the U.S. India Business Council Sept. 21 at its annual gala for their commitment to driving a more inclusive global economy and their roles as women leaders. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry were among those who spoke at the gala.

Noting that USIBC plays an important role in strengthening the India-U.S. relationship, Nooyi said there are tremendous opportunities ahead to work together in new ways that capitalize on their collective strengths, paving the way to shared prosperity.

In other news, a venture capital fund backed by Reliance Industries Ltd. and a United States-based technology firm have signed an agreement to bring cutting-edge software technologies to India. Reliance-backed GenNext Ventures and Ecorithm’s partnership was announced on the sidelines of the inaugural India-U.S. Strategic and Commercial Dialogue.

Ecorithm’s powerful suite of technologies can be applied to build systems and various other enterprise solutions to improve operations, optimize systems, and minimize energy use, a media release said.

“As we bring Ecorithm into India, we are keen to deploy the technology to optimize the energy efficiency of our buildings and raise the standard of environmental design and operation for buildings and enterprises to global levels,” said Vivek Rai Gupta, managing director of GenNext Ventures. Asserting that India offers immense opportunities, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj sought investments from United States industry leaders in public and private sectors.

In her address at U.S. India Business Council’s 40th annual gala Sept. 22, Swaraj said U.S. businesses are “best placed” to make their business decisions. “But it would help if I underline here the scale of India’s economic ambition and the size of economic opportunity that it represents for both our countries,” she said.

“We have plans to boost urbanization, and we are determined to provide affordable power and housing for all. We want to connect manufacturing in India with global supply chains… to develop product-based and service-based industrial and governance platforms around Digital India,” she said.

All of these initiatives and plans present commercial and business opportunities for U.S. industries to partner with India’s public and private sectors for a “win-win outcome,” the minister said. Meanwhile, John T. Chambers, executive chairman of Cisco, has been elected as the new chairman of the U.S. India Business Council.

Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard and Narendra Modi discuss opportunities

San Jose, CA – This evening at SAP Center in San Jose, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (HI-02) shared the stage with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he was welcomed by a crowd of more than 18,000 people. Just before the Prime Minister took the stage, he met with Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard and other Members of Congress to discuss plans to build U.S.-India relations and promote technology partnerships.

“Today I met with Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and welcomed him during this visit that has been focused on technology and innovation and how they can be leveraged to empower people in both of our countries,” said Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard. “There are many different areas and sectors where the United States and India’s growing friendship will cover mutually beneficial ground. Prime Minister Modi’s second visit to the United States has allowed us to continue to strengthen those bonds and explore new opportunities for us to work together.”

The Prime Minister’s 2-day tour of Silicon Valley also included meetings with technology executives who offered their ideas and assistance in bringing India fully into the digital world. India is the world’s fastest-growing economy, and use of the Internet and smartphones is growing rapidly, providing new markets for American companies.

ASEI – Michigan Chapter hosts 30th Annual ASEI Convention focusing on Disruptive Innovations & Technologies

American Society of Engineers of Indian Origin (ASEI) – Michigan Chapter hosted the 30th Annual ASEI Convention focusing on Disruptive Innovations & Technologies (DIT 2015).  This convention was held on September 19th at the Ford Community & Performing Arts Center in Dearborn, Michigan.

The objective of this convention was to promote and share advancements related to disruptive innovations and technologies. In addition to ASEI members from various chapters, DIT 2015 was attended by over 200 professionals including scientists, engineers, entrepreneurs, and corporate leaders across USA. This convention featured multiple interactive sessions with prominent business owners, technologists, media personalities, educators, and policy makers. It was a unique opportunity to celebrate success from positive contribution of engineers of Indian origin residing in US.

“ASEI Engineers are always front runners of disruption, innovations and next generation Technologies as well as prospers on wealth and job Creation in America, and these Technologies will help improve the quality of life here in USA and the whole world,” said ASEI National Board Chairman Subba Gopavarapu.

“ASEI’s engineering convention is where dreams are initiated, invented and socialized and engineers turn dreams into realism” said Convention Chairman Rakesh Patel.

This convention was supported by Gold (General Motors), Silver (The Boeing Company, FutureNet Group, and Ramp Group), Bronze (Siemens, PNC Bank, DTE Energy, and Sistar Mortgage) and many other sponsors and supporters.

Overall, DIT 2015 convention was a huge success. This would not have been possible without the support from technical speakers and guest speakers. Attendees enjoyed excellent food during lunch and banquet. The Youth Technology Exhibition by middle and high school kids was awesome!! The Bollywood Music Night with Live Orchestra by Sammvad was amazing. It was really great to see large number of attendees both during morning / afternoon technical sessions. All tables for Banquet were also filled. The participation from attendees was a big factor behind this successful convention.

“All accomplishments and achievements of the convention were only possible because we have a solid team of dedicated, talented and hardworking individuals” said Jwalant Lakhia, President – ASEI Michigan chapter.

Morning Session

The morning session of the convention was inaugurated by Isaiah McKinnon, Deputy Mayor of Detroit. He delivered an inspiring and motivational speech about how Detroit is turning around while creating opportunities for businesses and residents to excel. There were several technical sessions on various topics. Rashmi Rao, Director of Advanced Engineering –

Harman International presented on “Convergence of Consumers and Cars”. K Venkatesh Prasad, Senior Technical Leader – Ford Motor Company lead a session on “Connected Car”. Nagesh Nidamuluri, Vice President – Tech Mahindra talked about “Digital Manufacturing 4.0 / Factories of Future”. Kameshwar Eranki, Founder & CEO – Vajrasoft, Inc. presented on “Internet of Things”.

ASEI Student Scholarships were awarded during lunch session. The ASEI Chairman Student Award was given to Kaval Shah from University of Ann Arbor, Michigan. The ASEI Undergraduate Student Scholarship was given to Ravi Patel from Wayne State University. The ASEI Graduate Student Scholarships were given to Anuj Nimkar and Krishnesh Pujari from University of Mayland – College Park.

Yogesh Dalal and Hemanth Vadlamudi from Western Michigan University also received the ASEI Graduate Student Scholarship. There were two guest speakers during Lunch Session. Dr. Prabhakar Patil, CEO – LG Chem talked about global trends in “Li ion Batteries and Vehicle Electrification”. Professor Ken Cook, Chair Engineering Technology – Lawrence Technological University made a presentation on “Student Entrepreneurship from Innovative Ideas”. Professor Cook also performed few magic tricks with audience.

Technical Sessions continued in the afternoon. Alex Shikany, Director of Market Analysis – Association of Advancing Automation presented on “Innovations in Automation: Robotics, Vision, and Motion Control”. Dr Amar Basu, Associate Professor – Wayne State University talked about “Advancement in Biomedical Engineering”. Jitesh Agrawal, Senior Director – Siemens PLM Solutions lead a discussion on “Revolutionizing Product Life Cycle Management”.

Dr. Shreekant Agrawal, Engineering Manager – Northrop Grumman presented on “Trends and Drivers in Aerospace”. Deval Desai, Executive Director – Magna International talked about “Trends in Automotive Technologies”. Dr. Thomas Abraham, Founder President of GOPIO International and Executive Trustee of GOPIO Foundation moderated a session on “Indian American Engineering Groups – How Effectively We Can Work Together”. Panelists included officials of ASEI, SIAEA (Society of Indo-American Engineers and Architects) and PAN-IIT. There was a panel discussion held on “Disruptive and Innovative Technologies: Technical & Business Opportunities”. The panel consisted of two prominent guest speakers, Dr. Rajiv Shah – Founder & Program Director, Systems Engineering & Management Program, University of Texas – Dallas and Dr. Sasi Pillay – CIO, University of Wisconsin.

This convention also featured a “Youth Technology Exhibition” (YTE) by middle and high school students demonstrating their work based on Science, Math, Engineering, and Technology. There were eight teams part of YTE with exhibits on “Sprinkler Pressure and Water Conservation”, “Lego Robotics”, “Trends in Visual Effects”, “Earthquake Proof Skyscrapers”, “Reviving the Glory Days of Go-Karts”, “Automated Plant Watering System”, “Water Rocket Technology”, and “First Robotics – Lego League”. This Youth Technology Exhibition was sponsored by Vijay and Sue Mahida who are life members of ASEI.

The evening banquet featured three guest speakers. US Senator Gary Peters, addressed the attendees with acknowledgement and appreciation of contribution from Indian American technical professionals and entrepreneurs to US economy and society. Senator Peters also talked about some of the initiatives he has taken to bring innovations and new technologies in various fields to the State of Michigan.

Dr Virinder Modugil, President & CEO of Lawrence Technological University was the keynote speaker for the evening banquet. Dr Moudgil provided an excellent presentation on contribution from past Lawrence Technology University alumni in many applications based on disruptive and innovative ideas.

Bill Coughlin, President & CEO – Ford Global Technologies talked about enablers for developing disruptive and innovative technologies.  He emphasized importance of Intellectual Property rights while focusing on culture, environment, and principles required for innovation. Mr. D B Bhati represented the office of Consul General of India – Chicago during the evening banquet.

There were six ASEI Awards presented during the evening banquet. ASEI Engineer of the Year award was given to K. Venkatesh Prasad, Senior Technical Leader – Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, MI. ASEI Award for Service Excellence was given to Tim Madhanagopal, Plant manager with Orange County Utilities, Florida. ASEI Lifetime Achievement Award was given to Jagannadham Kottha, Past ASEI Chairman from Cleveland, Ohio. ASEI Emerging Entrepreneur of the Year award was given to Bob Bawa, owner and president of LA Gauge Company, Sun Valley, California and the Entrepreneur of the Year to Dr. Nauna Singh, Chairman & CEO of RGBSI, Troy, MI. ASEI Founder’s Award was given to Kupp Sridhar, Associate Technical Fellow/Manager, Boeing Company and Chairman, 29th ASEI Convention. Both Boeing Company and FutureNet Group participated in ASEI Corporate Excellence Recognition Program. Boeing presented Engineering Excellence award to Rajiv Patel. FutureNet Group presented Engineering Excellence award to Jay Mehta.

“Indian American engineers are making substantial contribution to the technology sphere of America and among them we have selected some of the best for this recognition,” said Dr. Thomas Abraham, Chairman of the ASEI Awards committee. ASEI Michigan Chapter recognized Sanjay Patel and Sue Mahida for their dedicated service and support. ASEI National Board Chairman Subba Gopavarapu congratulated and thanked ASEI Michigan chapter leadership team for hosting 30th National Convention. For more information, visit: https://aseiusa.org/

Porn addiction can hamper mental health

Are you hooked on to porn in a way that you feel you cannot control the urge to watch it? If yes, the mere idea of porn addiction can make you sick, says a new study. While some say porn is a healthy form of sexual expression, others believe it is an evil that leads to unrealistic expectations and addiction.

The new study from Case Western Reserve University suggests that the mere idea of porn addiction can have medicaldaily.com reported. The researchers found that those who believed they had an addiction to pornography also experienced psychological issues, like depression, anger, and anxiety.

However, this was not a result of watching porn itself, but rather it was a result of the feeling that watching porn was becoming an uncontrollable habit. “It does not seem to be the pornography itself that is causing folks problems, it is how they feel about it,” said lead study author Joshua Grubbs.

“Perceived addiction involves a negative interpretation of your own behaviour, thinking about yourself like, ‘I have no power over this’ We know from many studies that thinking something has control over you leads to psychological distress,” Grubbs said.

Grubbs added that psychological distress does not always come from a sense of guilt about viewing pornography. In fact, some people have no problem with the porn itself, but instead worry more about what will happen if they watch too much of it.

“Someone can be called out and publicly shamed, a marriage can become troubled, or maybe you are caught at work and get fired. Any of these causes psychological distress,” said Grubb.

Sikh Community Shines in Papal Services in New York

September 25, 2015 (New York, NY) – Sikh community leaders from across the United States joined the Sikh Coalition’s Sapreet Kaur and Simran Jeet Singh in celebrating the recognition of the Sikh faith during Pope Francis’ 9/11 Memorial interfaith service today.

University at Buffalo professor, Dr. Satpal Singh, shared a Sikh prayer with Pope Francis, while his daughter, Dr. Gunisha Kaur, delivered the English translation for the hundreds in attendance and for the millions watching around the world. Dr. Singh and Dr. Kaur were two of just eleven interfaith community members who were invited to be on stage for the service.

Click here for photos from the event.

The Sikh Coalition worked with Dr. Singh and the Sikh Council for Interfaith Relations to coordinate Sikh community attendance at the service. The Sikh Coalition then worked to publicize the Sikh story through U.S. and international news channels.

“We were honored when Dr. Singh and the Sikh Council for Interfaith Relations reached out to the Sikh Coalition for our support in coordinating Sikh attendance for the service today,” said the Sikh Coalition’s Executive Director, Sapreet Kaur. “It’s not every day that the Sikh faith is so prominently featured at such a high profile international event. This once again highlights the continued progress being made on multiple fronts to ensure that our presence and participation as a community is heard around the world.”

Since the beginning of September the Sikh Coalition has worked with Dr. Singh and Dr. Kaur to secure news coverage in several news outlets, including the Wall Street Journal, Religion News Service, Buffalo News, NBC News, India Today, the Metro, and the Huffington Post.  As always, the Sikh Coalition urges Sikhs everywhere to continue to practice their faith fearlessly.

New York Library Apologizes to Indian American Woman Over Breast-feeding

A library in New York has apologized to an Indian American woman after an employee of the public library asked her to stop breast-feeding her daughter in public. “We will be giving our staff additional coaching to remind them about the proper practice for maintaining a welcoming environment,” CBS New York online cited a library statement as saying Sept. 22.

Sherry Singh, a regular visitor at the Forest Hills Library, was told last weekend to stop feeding her child in the library and to breast-feed her four-month-old daughter in the restroom.

“Me and my other daughter were playing with puppets, when this little one started crying. I started nursing her,” Singh was quoted as saying.

“An employee came over and told me not to breast-feed my daughter there,” Singh said.

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said the law allows breast-feeding in public. It has been the law for quite a while. It is every woman’s right to breast-feed in public,” Lieberman said. Singh has accepted the library’s apology and is not taking any legal action, but she wants the story to go out to educate others.

Sunil Sharma Sentenced to 33 Months in Prison

Carlsbad’s Sunil Sharma was sentenced Sept. 14 to 33 months in prison for running a Ponzi scheme, the SanDiegoReader.com reported. He had raised $8.36 million from 32 companies through his companies, Gold Coast Holding and Safe Harbor Tax Lien Acquisitions.
He told the investors he would put their money in diversified portfolios, managed by Wall Street’s Goldman Sachs, that would invest in bonds of emerging markets Brazil, Russia, India and China.
However, he was using investors’ money to day-trade stock options — a risky business. When his returns shrank, he began pulling a Ponzi, paying off early investors with funds from later ones.
He put $700,000 of investor funds into a $2 million home and also diverted some to a Mediterranean cruise and leases on a Mercedes and a BMW, said reports.

Indian Diaspora in U.S. Launches ‘Mission 2022’

The three million strong Indian diaspora in the United States has launched “Mission 2022” in partnership with the Confederation of Indian Industries to make the U.S.-India partnership a defining one of the century.
“We have set a goal called ‘Mission 2022,’ which is to have a series of dialogues with the diaspora over the next seven years as India turns 75,” Indian American entrepreneur M.R. Rangaswami said during a reception hosted by the CII and Indian diaspora.
The reception was attended by U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker and Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, among others. The dialogues would be held every six months.
“The goal is that by 2022, the U.S.-India partnership is a defining partnership of the 21st century,” he said Sept. 21.
Highlighting the significant positive change taking place within India, CII president Sumit Sumter invited the diaspora to invest in India’s transformation; avail of the immense opportunities; and be part of the mutual growth story.
Sitharaman applauded the vision of U.S. President Barack Obama and India Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and highlighted the significant deepening of commercial ties between the two nations and their businesses.
Pritzker stressed on the work cut out by both the governments to make this into a $500 billion economic engagement between the oldest and the largest democracies in the world.
Together the two leaders highlighted the substantial steps taken in the direction of boosting trade and investments.
Amidst the ongoing wave of optimism and promising developments surrounding the U.S.-India Strategic and Commercial Dialogue, as well as Modi’s anticipated second visit to the U.S., major stakeholders joined to celebrate the flourishing Indian diaspora and to place them front and center within the context of the overall bilateral partnership.
Stressing the positively evolving commercial relationship between the countries, both Sitharaman and Pritzker invited the business community to help shape and deepen the economic relationship.
The growing Indian American diaspora is heavily invested in the American system and can not only rise to be the backbone of this critical partnership, but can help fuel the countries’ mutual growth story.

Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy Featured on Forbes Cover

Indian American entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, 30, shocked a lot of people when he turned $5 million into $3 billion with Axovant Sciences’ initial public offering. Now, as featured in the Sept. 28 cover story for Forbes Magazine, Ramaswamy is poised to repeat history.
In June, Ramaswamy was at the forefront of the biggest IPO in the history of the American biotechnology industry. The Bermuda-based company, with offices also in New York, has just one product: a dementia drug to treat Alzheimer’s.
Axovant was formed eight months prior to the IPO and raised roughly $360 million to develop the drug that was essentially abandoned by GlaxoSmithKline. By the end of the first day on the New York Stock Exchange, Axovant had a market capitalization of about $3 billion. Ramaswamy had purchased the drug from Glaxo for $5 million.
Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy Featured on Forbes Cover
Entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy Featured on Forbes Cover

A graduate of Harvard College with an A.B. in biology and the recipient of a law degree from Yale Law School, Ramaswamy is a former hedge fund partner. There were skeptics who wondered how a company could be worth so much. The stock had dipped 12 percent below the IPO price by the beginning of the month.

And while Ramaswamy was touting that Axovant’s goal “is to be the leading biopharmaceutical company focused on the treatment of dementia,” they had yet to generate any revenue, even as other companies were creating drugs to compete with his company’s product.
But now, as Axovant drifts to the backdrop, Ramaswamy is up to his old tricks: rescuing the pharmaceutical industry’s forgotten drugs, according to Forbes. Ramaswamy said Axovant is the first step in a broader mission to liberate abandoned or deprioritized drugs, the report said.
It’s not unprecedented. Drugs like Lipitor and Imbruvica have also almost faced extinction before being presented anew to the world. Ramaswamy hopes to do the same for dozens of companies.
“This will be the highest return on investment endeavor ever taken up in the pharmaceutical industry,” he boasted in the Forbes report. “It will be a pipeline every bit as deep and diverse as the most promising pharma company in the world but with a capital efficiency that is unprecedented.”
As an analyst, Ramaswamy noticed there were several forgotten drugs that he would have liked to invest in but couldn’t. They were trapped in big pharmaceutical firms that had shelved them for strategic or bureaucratic reasons, or in small biotechnology firms that had to focus all their resources on a single product, no matter how good option No. 2 was, the Forbes report said.
The Indian American accomplished successful returns with his company Roivant Sciences’ 76 percent stake in Axovant, as well as turning an $8 million purchase of drugs to treat liver virus hepatitis B into $110 million in Arbutus BioPharma. With Roivant, in May, he bought a psychosis drug for $4 million from Arena Pharmaceuticals and later partnered with a Duke University group known for inventing rare-disease drugs.
Axovant speculators will have to wait until 2017 before they hear any new drug data for Alzheimer’s, during which the stock could drift without a bona fide catalyst, said Forbes. Under the best possible scenario, real benefit to Alzheimer’s patients is years away.
But it would be a mistake to get stuck in the weeds of Roivant’s Alzheimer’s efforts. Ramaswamy’s approach is long term and broad in scope and even if Axovant’s efforts fail, the money raised will help with finding other compounds of drugs that could be more effective.

Indian American Astronomer Discovers New Mid-sized Black Hole

In a first, a team, including an Indian American astronomer, has found evidence for a new intermediate-mass black hole about 5,000 times the mass of the sun. The discovery, made by Dheeraj Pasham from the University of Maryland and scientists from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Goddard Space Flight Center, adds one more candidate to the list of potential medium-sized black holes and strengthening the case that these objects do exist.
“The result provides support to the idea that black holes exist on all size scales. When you describe something for the first time, there is always some doubt,” said Pasham, a post-doctoral associate at the joint space-science institute, a research partnership between UMD and NASA Goddard.
“Identifying a second candidate with a different instrument puts weight behind both findings and gives us confidence in our technique,” he added. Nearly all black holes come in one of two sizes: stellar mass black holes that weigh up to a few dozen times the mass of our sun or super massive black holes ranging from a million to several billion times the sun’s mass. Astronomers believe that medium-sized black holes between these two extremes exist.
The new intermediate-mass black hole candidate, known as NGC1313X-1, is classified as an ultra luminous X-ray source and is among the brightest X-ray sources in the nearby universe.
Some astronomers suspect that ultra luminous X-ray sources are intermediate-mass black holes actively drawing in matter, producing massive amounts of friction and X-ray radiation in the process.
NASA plans to launch a new X-ray telescope, the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer, in 2016. Pasham has already identified several potential intermediate-mass black hole candidates that he hopes to explore with this telescope.
“Observing time is at a premium, so you need to build a case with an established method and a list of candidates the method can apply to,” Pasham noted.
“With this result, we are in a good position to move forward and make more exciting discoveries,” he concluded in a paper published in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Mohinder Singh Gilzian takes over as President of the Indian National Overseas Congress, USA

The Indian National Overseas Congress, USA announced that its President Juned Qazi has resigned from his post effective immediately. In a statement issued by Qazi, he has taken responsibility for the ensuing confusion due to his statement on the whereabouts of Shri. Rahul Gandhi and, therefore, resigned from the post of the President of Indian National Overseas Congress, USA. effective September 28, 2015.
‘INOC is grateful to Mr. Qazi for his years of dedicated work on behalf of the organization and hopes that he would continue to be a strong voice for the values and principles the Congress party stands for’ said Harbachan Singh, Secretary General of INOC, USA.
His position has been filled by the Sr. Vice President, Mr. Mohinder Singh Gilzian as interim President.  Mr. Gilzian has been with INOC from its inception and served in various capacities. Prior to his migrating to the U.S.A, he was active with the Youth Congress in Punjab.
‘Mr. Gilzian is a firm believer and faithful stalwart of the Congress party and the INOC over the years and it is only appropriate that he takes up the helm and lead the organization at this critical juncture’ Said George Abraham, Chairman of the INOC, USA. ‘We wish him well and assure him of our undivided loyalty and support’ Mr. Abraham added.

Domestic Harmony Foundation Plans ‘Run/Walk to End Domestic Violence’

September 25, 2015 – Westbury, NY – Domestic Harmony Foundation (DHF) is a community based not-for-profit organization in Long Island, working to empower victims of domestic violence through support services such as advocacy, counseling, legal consultations, support groups, crisis intervention, financial assistance, and leadership development initiatives.
October is National Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Beginning in 2012, DHF as part of our education and outreach initiatives has initiated and hosted a Walkathon reaching out to a diverse array of people of all age groups to educate and spread awareness about violation of basic human rights. Domestic Violence is hurting not only the victims, but also their children and families.
This year, DHF has added a 5K Run alongside the 2.5K walk. The event ‘Run/Walk to End Domestic Violence’ will be held on October 11, 2015 from 9:30 AM-1:00 PM at Eisenhower Park, Uniondale, Long Island.  A participation of 300 – 500 people will make the event a huge success. Prizes were donated by DHF supporters for Men’s First Place 5K Finish – 2 TICKETS for GAME 3 of METS PLAYOFF SERIES and Women’s First Place 5K Finish – GIFT CERTIFICATE for SHOPPING.
DHF is requesting all Long Islanders to register as well as encourage family members, friends and colleagues to participate in the Walk/ Run to send a powerful message of NO to VIOLENCE and help us raise much needed funds. Registration fees: General $20, Senior $15, Students $10.  Pre-register at www.dhfny.org. with credit card.  On-site registration starts at 9:30 AM followed by a short program at 10:30 AM with the Run/Walk starting at 11AM sharp.
HAB bank is a major sponsor of the event with co-sponsors Student Leadership Activities Center at Hofstra University, The Safe Center of Long Island, Islamic Center of Long Island, National Council of Jewish Women-Peninsula section, Whole Foods, Jericho, Ms. Carol Dahl.  Participants will include members of South Asian American Women Alliance, India Association of Long Island, APPNA Women as well as various student groups and community leaders.
For more information visit website www.dhfny.org or call Jasia @ (516) 385-8292.

United Nations Farce: Saudi Arabia to Head UN Human Rights Council

All victims of human rights abuses should be able to look to the Human Rights Council as a forum and a springboard for action. (Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary-General, 12 March 2007, Opening of the 4th Human Rights Council Session.)

Article 55 of United Nations Charter includes: “Universal respect for and observance of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion.”

In diametrical opposition to these fine founding aspirations, the UN has appointed Saudi Arabia’s envoy to the United Nations Human Rights Council to head (or should that be “behead”) an influential human rights panel. The appointment was seemingly made in June, but only came to light on 17th September, due to documents obtained by UN Watch (1.)… Mr Faisal Bin Hassan Trad, Saudi Arabia’s Ambassador at the UN in Geneva, was elected as Chair of a panel of independent experts on the UN Human Rights Council.

As head of a five-strong group of diplomats, the influential role would give Mr Trad the power to select applicants from around the world for scores of expert roles in countries where the UN has a mandate on human rights.

Such experts are often described as the “crown jewels” of the HRC, according to UN Watch.

The “crown jewels” have been handed to a country with one of the worst human rights records in the world. Saudi Arabia will head a Consultative Group of five Ambassadors empowered to select applicants globally for more than seventy seven positions to deal with human rights violations and mandates.

In a spectacular new low for even a UN whose former Secretary General, Kofi Annan, took eighteen months to admit publicly that the 2003 invasion of, bombardment and near destruction of Iraq was illegal, UN Watch points out that the UN has chosen: “a country that has beheaded more people this year than ISIS to be head of a key Human Rights panel …” (2)

In May, just prior to the appointment, the Saudi government advertised for eight extra executioners to: “ … carry out an increasing number of death sentences, which are usually beheadings, carried out in public” (3.)

Seemingly: “no special qualifications are needed.” The main function would be executing, but job description: “also involves performing amputations …”

The advert was posted on the website of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Ministry of the Civil Service.

By 15th June this year executions reached one hundred “far exceeding last year’s tally and putting (the country) on course for a new record” according to The Independent (15th June.) The paper adds that the Kingdom is set to beat it’s own grisly, primitive record of one hundred and ninety two executions in 1995.

The paper notes that: “ …the rise in executions can be directly linked to the new King Salman and his recently-appointed inner circle …”

In August 2014, Human Rights Watch reported nineteen executions in      seventeen days – including one for “sorcery.” Adultery and apostasy can also be punished by death.

In a supreme irony, on the death of King Salman’s head chopping predecessor, Salman’s half bother King Abdullah in January (still current decapitation record holder) UK Prime Minister David Cameron ordered flags flown at half mast, including at the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey, leading one MP to question: “On the day that flags at Whitehall are flying at half-mast for King Abdullah, how many public executions will there be?”

Cameron apparently had not read his own Foreign and Commonwealth Office Report citing Saudi as “a country of concern.” Reacting to a swathe of criticism, a spokesperson for Westminster Abbey responded: “For us not to fly at half-mast would be to make a noticeably aggressive comment on the death of the King of a country to which the UK is allied in the fight against Islamic terrorism.”

The Abbey’s representative appears to have been either breathtakingly ignorant or stunningly uninformed. In December 2009 in a US Embassy cable (4) the then US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton wrote that:

While the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) takes seriously the threat of terrorism within Saudi Arabia, it has been an ongoing challenge to persuade Saudi officials to treat terrorist financing emanating from Saudi Arabia as a strategic priority.

Moreover, donors in Saudi Arabia constitute the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups worldwide … engagement is needed to … encourage the Saudi government to take more steps to stem the flow of funds from Saudi Arabia-based sources to terrorists and extremists worldwide.

At home women are forbidden: “from obtaining a passport, marrying, traveling, accessing higher education without the approval of a male guardian.” (HRW Report, 2014.) Saudi is also of course, the only country in the world where women are forbidden to drive.

The country is currently preparing to behead twenty one year old Ali Mohammed al-Nimr. He was arrested aged seventeen for participating in anti-government protests and possessing firearms – the latter charge has been consistently denied. Human rights groups are appalled at the sentence and the flimsy case against him, but pointing out that neither “factors are unusual in today’s Saudi Arabia.”

Following the beheading, al-Nimr’s headless body will be allegedly mounted: “on to a crucifix for public viewing.”(5) What was that mantra issued unceasingly from US and UK government Departments in justification for blitzkriegs, invasions and slaughters in countries who “kill their own people”? Numerous Reports cite torture as being widespread, despite Saudi having subscribed to the UN Convention Against Torture.

There are protests at Saudi embassies across the world highlighting the case of blogger Raif Badawi, sentenced to a thousand lashes – fifty lashes a week after Friday prayers – and ten years in prison for blogging about free speech.

Since March, Saudi Arabia has been bombing Yemen – with no UN mandate – destroying schools, hospitals, homes, a hotel, public buildings,  an Internally Displaced Persons camp, historical jewels, generating: “a trail of civilian death and destruction” which may have amounted to war crimes, according to Amnesty International. “Unlawful airstrikes” have failed to distinguish between military targets and civilian objects. “Nowhere safe for civilians”, states Amnesty (6, pdf.)

Further, the conflict … has killed close to 4,000 people, half of them civilians including hundreds of children, and displaced over one million since 25 March 2015.” There has been: “ … a flagrant disregard for civilian lives and fundamental principles of international humanitarian law (killing and injuring) hundreds of civilians not involved in the conflict, many of them children and women, in unlawful (disproportionate and indiscriminate) ground and air attacks.”

It is alleged that US-supplied cluster bombs have also been used. One hundred and seventeen States have joined the Convention to ban these lethal, indiscriminate munitions since December 2008. Saudi Arabia, of course, is not amongst them.

Saudi was also one of the countries which bombed Iraq in 2003, an action now widely accepted as illegal. It is perhaps indicative of their closeness to the US that the bombardment of Yemen is mirror-named from the Pentagon Silly Titles for Killing People lexicon: “Operation Decisive Storm.” Iraq 1991 was of course: “Operation Desert Storm”?

Saudi is also ranked 164th out of 180 countries in the 2015 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index. All in all Saudi leading the Human Rights Council at the UN is straight out of another of George Orwell’s most nightmarish political fantasies.

Oh, and of course we are told that nineteen of the hijackers of the ‘plane that hit the World Trade Centre were Saudis – for which swathes of Afghanistan and region, Middle East and North Africa are still paying the bloodiest, genocidal price for the “War on Terror”– whilst Saudi’s representatives stroll in to the sunlight of the UN Human Rights body.

On the UN Human Right’s Council’s website is stated:  “The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) represents the world’s commitment to universal ideals of human dignity. We have a unique mandate from the international community to promote and protect all human rights.” Way to go, folks.

Rupee to be under strain, central bank likely saviour: Experts

The free fall in rupee value is expected to continue in the short term, as the US starts discussions on an interest rate hike and global recessionary fears prompt risk aversion by investors, experts said last week. However, a monetary easing by the Indian central bank could arrest the rupee’s downward trajectory in the turbulent times.

“With US Federal Reserve (US Fed) again raking up interest rate hike discussion, global equities may start off negatively in coming week and the impact will be seen in the rupee as well,” Hiren Sharma, senior vice president, currency advisory at Anand Rathi Financial Services, told IANS.

The US Fed did not raise interest rates from near zero levels, that it has maintained for a decade or so, during the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held on September 17. Fears that it may soon announce a hike has spooked global investors.

A hike in interest rates by the US Fed will send shock waves across the world’s capital markets.

A rate hike could potentially lead to massive amounts of pull-back of foreign funds from emerging economies like India. The US dollar will also strengthen against emerging market currencies, gold and other asset classes.

High interest rates in the US are expected to wean away foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) from India. It is also expected to dent business margins as access to capital from the US will become expensive.

“Markets are still in a consolidation zone, post August sell-offs… I expect, risk aversion to resume soon… Global recessionary fears are there… Talk of US Fed hike is not helping much,” said Anindya Banerjee, associate vice president for currency derivatives with Kotak Securities.

Notwithstanding the fears of further downward trajectory, the rupee can rely on the fact that the India Inc and global investors are betting at a cut in key lending rates by Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

The RBI will decide on whether or not to ease the key lending rates during its upcoming monetary policy review slated for September 29.

But a mere token reduction of only 25 basis points “won’t do much” for the rupee, market watchers said. “RBI policy may not have much of an impact. Overall bias will be of depreciation,” Banerjee said.

According to India Inc and market observers, the rupee might require a “booster dosage” of nearly a 50 basis points cut, which will spur the recovery in both equity and currency markets.

“All eyes will be on the RBI policy. Markets have already discounted a 25 bps rate-cut. Whereas a 50 bps cut can be a surprise move which will have a positive impact on domestic equities leading to a recovery in the rupee,” Sharma added. The rupee continued on its downward trajectory. The rupee ended last week’s trade down 17 paise at 66.16 to the dollar, against its previous close of 65.99.

New UN Goals for the New Millenium

In the last 15 years, the world has made great progress in reducing poverty, in part because of eight targets known as Millennium Development Goals that the United Nations committed to in 2000. Each carried a 2015 deadline. One goal — of cutting extreme poverty by half as measured by the proportion of people living on less than $1.25 a day — was in fact met five years ahead of schedule. Maternal mortality was not cut by three-fourths, as the U.N. wanted, but it was cut nearly in half, no small achievement.

Now, the U.N. is doubling down and setting even more ambitious development goals for the next 15 years. But this time it faces a very big obstacle: a slowing global economy, which will require the leaders of developing countries, especially those in Africa and Asia, where most of the world’s poorest people live, to make big policy changes.

New UN Goals for the New MilleniumThe Millennium Development Goals coincided with a period of very rapid growth in developing economies, especially in places like Brazil, China and India, making it easier for those countries to generate jobs and invest in health, education and other public services. All of those countries are growing at slower paces now, and their leaders do not seem to have credible strategies for dealing with their problems. Each country has a unique set of problems, but they all need to make their economies more productive and inclusive.

The new targets are known as the Sustainable Development Goals, and they were formally adopted by the United Nations on Friday. Nothing appears to have been left out. There are 17 goals in all, covering areas like poverty, public health, the environment, education and justice.

So far, they are rather vaguely stated. The U.N. has not yet established statistical indicators against which to measure progress. It promises these numbers in the coming months. That won’t be easy in some cases: Goal No. 16, for example, calls on countries to “Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels.”

Several goals, including those on sustainable consumption and production (No. 12), climate change (No. 13), conserving oceans (No. 14) and sustainable use of land (No. 15) cover a lot of the same ground and might easily have been consolidated. The U.N. should have picked fewer and more targeted goals.

Every weekday, get thought-provoking commentary from Op-Ed columnists, The Times editorial board and contributing writers from around the world. That said, this is a worthy, high-minded effort. Developed economies like those of the United States, the European Union and Japan need to play an important role by providing more aid, expertise and private investment to developing countries. And industrialized nations need to revive their economies to help lift global growth, which the International Monetary Fund estimates will slow to 3.3 percent this year, from 3.4 percent in 2014.

Multilateral agencies like the World Bank can also help with research and by financing public works projects. And charities like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will be critical in providing money and leadership to achieve public health goals like eliminating malaria and other tropical diseases (No. 3).

Realistically, some nations may be beyond help at this point because they are so deeply mired in war and other conflicts. Without peace and better political leadership, it is hard to anticipate big gains in development in places like Iraq, Libya, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Fifteen years ago, the Millennium Development Goals showed that setting ambitious targets helps rally government officials, individuals and businesses toward a common cause. This time around, leaders everywhere will need to adopt creative and aggressive policies to boost a world economy that now seems stuck in neutral.

Chinmaya Jyoti Arrives At Chinmaya Mission Chicago

Chicago IL: September 20, 2015 was one of the most auspicious days at Chinmaya Mission Chicago! May 8, 2015-May 8, 2016 marks the birth centenary year of Pujya Gurudev, Swami Chinmayanada. While celebrating the life of the spiritual master who spearheaded a global Hindu spiritual and cultural renaissance, “Jyoti Yatra” is a traveling unbroken flow of light in the form of an oil lamp. The light is traveling throughout India and one in the United States of America, symbolizing the light of spiritual knowledge that Swami Chinmayananda spread across the world.

The Jyoti arrived at Chinmaya Mission Chicago from Chinmaya Omkara – Northwest Indiana, accompanied by a bus full of devotees. Swami Sharanananda and Acharya Dhiren Khatri from Chinmaya Mission Chicago held the Jyoti as it was led in a procession with reverence and celebration accompanied by Swami Ramakrishnananda from India, Acharyas Jetindra and Swapna Nayar from the Yamunotri Center of CMC and Acharya Sachin from Kitchner, Ontario. Bala Vihar children were lined all along Badri walkway with Om flags. Children and adults performed Lezim dance and Raas Leela while taking the Jyoti into the ashram with chants, bhajans and firecrackers. After crossing the threshold of the ashram the Jyoti was received with Purna Kumbha, a traditional expression of welcome with chanting from the Vedas.

In the shrine the idol of Lord Badri Narayan dressed in finery and fragrance of fresh flowers smiled in anticipated welcome. An elaborate Paduka puja was offered – worship of the feet of the Guru, signifying the worship of the spiritual knowledge on which the Guru stands. During the puja the children led the chanting of 108 names of Pujya Gurudev and offered a beautiful bhajan composed by Swami Tejomayananda and the adults offered an auspicious dance from Kerala. Over 400 children and adults attended the event.

The inspiration and the energy of the day were remarkable; celebrating the Guru who sacrificed everything to spread the message of Bhagawad Geeta and the Upanishads for the wellbeing of humanity. The Jyoti will reside at CMC – Badri through October 30 and will be taken to Chinmaya Mission Minneapolis on October 31, 2015.

‘Healthcare providers in India to spend $1.2 bn’

Healthcare providers in India are expected to spend $1.2 billion on IT products and services in 2015 — an increase of seven percent over 2014, according to a new report released by market research firm Gartner.

The report includes spending by healthcare providers (includes hospitals, as well as ambulatory service and physicians practices) on internal services, software, IT services, data centre, devices and telecom services.

“IT services, which includes consulting, implementation, IT outsourcing (ITO) and business process outsourcing (BPO), will be the largest overall spending category throughout the forecast period within the health care providers sector,” said Anurag Gupta, research vice president at Gartner.

“It is expected to reach $334 million in 2015, growing seven percent over 2014. The BPO sub-segment will record the fastest growth rate of 15 percent over 2014. ITO will be the largest sub-segment in IT services recording a 10 percent increase in 2015 to reach $103 million in 2015,” he added.

According to the report, the software market is slated to grow 6.7 percent in 2015 to reach $102 million — up from $96 million in 2014.

Vertical specific software (VSS), which includes hospital information system, electronic health/ medical records, health information management, patient financial management, and more, is expected to grow six percent in 2015 to reach $28 million, it added.

“The growth in the Indian healthcare ICT market will be driven by the private sector mainly focusing in tertiary specialised care, secondary hospital care and the government investments on core public health and primary care across several states,” Gupta said.

Apna Ghar Celebrates its 25th Anniversary Gala with Nobel Laureate Dr. Muhammad Yunus

Chicago, IL Apna Ghar, a Chicago-based  not-for-profit organization, celebrated  its 25th Anniversary Gala on Thursday, September 24, 2015 at 6:00 pm at Hilton Chicago located at 720 South Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60605, with Muhammad Yunus, Noble Laureate and Founder of Grameen Bank as the Guest of Honor and Keynote Speaker.

“Empowering women in general and those who belong to poorer sections of society in particular, by diversifying and enriching their income generation potential, holds the key to break the vicious circle of poverty”, said Yunus in his keynote address.

“They should be encouraged to come out with viable business ideas, provide them with loans to ground their proposed ventures, and help them out by creating a requisite support system in order to make them job providers rather than allowing them to stagnate as mere job seekers”, said Yunus. He added that the resultant culture of self-employment and entrepreneurship among women will generate additional income which will bring multiple beneficial outcomes for households and for society at large.

Yunus said that he made a humble beginning in Bangladesh by extending financial support to poor women, from out of his own pocket, to enable them to set up their own business units. “They proved him right in his trust in them by not only setting up their businesses but also making them commercially successful”, he added.

“The success of the initial lot of entrepreneurs led to the historical establishment of Grameen Bank, committed to cater to the needs of self-employment and entrepreneurship among poor people in general and their women counterparts in particular, which proved to be a win-win proposition for all the parties involved in this exercise”, said Yunus with a sense of accomplishment.

Yunus said that exposure of women to the emerging Information and Communication Technology will equip them not only to come out of the shadows of poverty but also to keep pace with the developments taking place around them.

“The first-generation women entrepreneurs in Bangladesh, belonging to poorer sections of society, used their mobile phones not only for enhancing their social awareness but also for a number of other innovative purposes, including taking ECGs, eye-scanning, etc.”, Yunus stated and added that IT- literacy has become a sine qua non for one’s survival in the contemporary fast changing world of work.

Yunus said that poor people are neither deficient in their intelligence nor in their potential; the environment, which is hostile to the optimum use of human resources, gives rise to poverty. “If supportive mechanism is created, poor people will respond positively to it by tapping their full potential, which will lead to a transformation in their economic profile”, he added.

Yunus congratulated Apna Ghar for serving the victims of gender violence for a long period of 25 years. “It is a great achievement for a voluntary organization in its own right, which deserves to be emulated, on a larger scale, by similar organizations in the US and beyond”, he added.

Earlier, Saiyed Rabbani, President, Board of Directors welcomed Muhammed Yunus, eminent guests from different walks of life, functionaries of Apna Ghar, and others to the celebration of the milestone year in the history of Apna Ghar. He said that Apna Ghar is one of the first agencies in the US which has been serving the victims of gender violence in South Asian and other immigrant communities across the Chicago metro area, through 24-hour crisis line, a roof over survivors’ heads with emergency shelter, healing though group and individual counseling, support to navigate the legal system, and access to attorneys for legal cases, etc. Alderman James Cappleman, 46th Ward, Chicago spoke about his personal motivation for public service in general and support to Apna Ghar in particular.

Awards were presented to Ramzan & Parvin Dhanji Family Foundation, Ashima Mehta, and to Shakuntala Chhabria for their generous support to Apna Ghar in fulfilling its mission and vision and also to Surinder Nand and Danial Noorani in appreciation of their dedication and services to Apna Ghar.

The event included an informative video and slideshow presentation highlighting the history of Apna Ghar and a mesmerizing performance by modern guitar virtuoso, Fareed Haque and his band MathGames.  The event brought together more than 350 guests, who are deeply committed to the vision of Apna Ghar.

Ravi Baichwal, Anchor the ABC 7 Weekened News, was the Master of the Ceremonies. He stole the hearts of the audience by conducting the proceedings of the function in a professional fashion, laced with his wit and sense of humor. Apna Ghar was founded by five Asian American women activists in 1989.

Pope to US Congress: Stop bickering

The past, the promise and the potential of the United States must not be smothered by bickering and even hatred at a time when the U.S. people and world need a helping hand, Pope Francis told the U.S. Congress. Making history by being the first pope ever to address a joint meeting of Congress, Pope Francis was introduced to the legislators by the House sergeant at arms Sept. 24 as: “Mr. Speaker, the pope of the Holy See.”

The pope introduced himself, though, as a son of the American continent, who had been blessed by the “new world” and felt a responsibility toward it. In a long speech, he gave the sense that he sees the United States as a country divided, one so focused on calling each other names that it risks losing sight of how impressive it can be when its people come together for the common good. That is when it is a beacon of hope for the world, he said.

Pope Francis condemned legalized abortion, the death penalty and unscrupulous weapons sales. He called on Congress to “seize the moment” by moving forward with normalizing relations with Cuba. And, again referring to himself as a “son of immigrants” — and pointing out that many of the legislators are, too — he pleaded for greater openness to accepting immigrants.

A reporter had asked the pope in July about why he spoke so much about the poor and about the rich, but rarely about the lives and struggles of the hard-working, tax-paying middle class. The result of a papal promise to correct that was the speech to Congress and through Congress to the American people.

“I would like to take this opportunity to dialogue with the many thousands of men and women who strive each day to do an honest day’s work, to bring home their daily bread, to save money and — one step at a time — to build a better life for their families,” the pope said.

“These are men and women who are not concerned simply with paying their taxes, but in their own quiet way sustain the life of society,” he said. “They generate solidarity by their actions, and they create organizations which offer a helping hand to those most in need.”

Pope at US Congress
Pope at US Congress

Showing he had studied the United States before the visit — something he said he would do during the Rome August break — he used four iconic U.S. citizens as relevant models of virtue for Americans today: Abraham Lincoln, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Dorothy Day and Thomas Merton.

“A nation can be considered great when it defends liberty as Lincoln did; when it fosters a culture which enables people to ‘dream’ of full rights for all their brothers and sisters as Martin Luther King sought to do; when it strives for justice and the cause of the oppressed as Dorothy Day did by her tireless work; the fruit of a faith which becomes dialogue and sows peace in the contemplative style of Thomas Merton,” the pope said.

Dialogue, he told the legislators, is the only way to handle the pressure and fulfill the call to serve the common good, promoting a culture of “hope and healing, of peace and justice.”
For the speech, Pope Francis stood in the House chamber in front of Rep. John Boehner, speaker of the House and a Republican from Ohio, and Vice President Joe Biden, president of the Senate. Both men are Catholics. Besides the senators, representatives and their invited guests, the attendees included members of the U.S. Supreme Court and members of President Barack Obama’s Cabinet.

In his speech, Pope Francis gave strong support to several concerns of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, including defending the right of people to publicly live their faith and join political policy debates from a faith-based perspective.

“It is important that today, as in the past, the voice of faith continues to be heard, for it is a voice of fraternity and love, which tries to bring out the best in each person and in each society,” he said. The dialogue the country needs must be respectful of “our differences and our convictions of conscience.”

“Every life is sacred,” he insisted, calling for the “global abolition of the death penalty” and the “responsibility to protect and defend human life at every stage of its development.”

Some U.S. politicians and pundits have expressed confusion or even anger over Pope Francis’ teaching about the damage provoked when money becomes a god and profits count more than people. The pope insists his words are straight out of Catholic social teaching.

His speech to Congress included more of that teaching, delving deeper into the positive aspects of a market economy — as long as it is ethical and includes controls, solidarity and a safety net for the poorest and weakest members of society.

“The creation and distribution of wealth” obviously is important for continued efforts to reduce poverty in the United States and around the globe, he said. “The right use of natural resources, the proper application of technology and the harnessing of the spirit of enterprise are essential elements of an economy which seeks to be modern, inclusive and sustainable.”

“Business is a noble vocation” when it seeks the common good, Pope Francis said. And today, he told legislators, the common good includes protecting the environment and taking bold steps “to avert the most serious effects of the environmental deterioration caused by human activity.”

Kartik Chandran Named MacArthur Fellow

Kartik Chandran, an Indian American environmental engineer was among the 24 talented individuals honored as prestigious MacArthur Fellows for 2015, it was announced Sept. 28.

Chandran, 41, an associate professor in the department of earth and environmental engineering at Columbia University in New York, was one of the Fellows recognized by the foundation for his innovative work.

“The fellowship bestows great honor and a greater responsibility towards overcoming the global challenges that we as a society face today,” the engineer told the media. The MacArthur Foundation fellowship program awards unrestricted fellowships to talented individuals who have shown extraordinary originality and dedication in their creative pursuits, and a marked capacity for self-direction.

Fellows are selected through a multi-phase nomination process and are evaluated by an independent selection committee comprised of about a dozen leaders in the arts, sciences and humanities professions, as well as for-profit and nonprofit communities.

Typically, 20 to 30 fellows are selected each year.

Chandran, who received a B.S. from the Indian Institute of Technology at Roorkee and a doctorate from the University of Connecticut, has focused on integrating microbial ecology, molecular biology, and engineering to transform wastewater from a troublesome pollutant to a valuable resource.

He approaches wastewater treatment with the goal of producing useful resources such as fertilizers, chemicals, and energy sources, in addition to clean water, in a way that takes into account the climate, energy and nutrient challenges faced today.

“I expect to leverage and build upon the fellowship award to specifically address the interlinked challenges relating to clean water, sanitation, energy and nutrients, among others,” he said.

The Indian American has determined an optimal combination of microbes to remove nitrogen from waste while minimizing the release of nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas.

In addition, while using ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, he has enabled the transformation of bio-generated methane gas into methanol, a chemical that is both easily transported and widely useful.

His solutions are imaginative and locally appropriate, according to the MacArthur description of his work, citing a project he did in rural Ghana re-engineering source-separation toilets to provide sanitation and recover nutrients to use in agriculture.

Chandran’s bio on the fellowship program page goes on to say he is “demonstrating the hidden value of wastewater, conserving vital resources and protecting public health.”

Newt Gingrich to Be Honorary Chairman of ‘Republican Hindu Coalition’

A key supporter of India Prime Minister Narendra Modi has roped in former Republican House speaker Newt Gingrich to back a new effort to bring Indian Americans, a traditional Democratic political base, into the Republican Party.

Gingrich will be the honorary chairman of the “Republican Hindu Coalition” funded with an initial $2 million from Chicago businessman Shalabh “Shalli” Kumar, of electronics firm AVG Advanced Technologies, according to a media report.

Fashioned after the influential Republican Jewish Coalition, Kumar’s outfit could give the Republican Party a new inroad to first-generation immigrants that traditionally vote Democratic, Gingrich told the Washington Examiner.

“What Shalli is doing is really making us move towards bringing together people from all over the country, giving them a chance to get involved in politics and, in the process, really beginning to give us an opportunity to have a much different Republican Party that’s much broader based,” Gingrich was quoted as saying.

Kumar said he was prompted to form the political group by concerns that United States President Barack Obama and Democratic leaders are undermining the economic recovery with regulations, and dropping the ball overseas.

The RHC, which will officially start this fall, will back candidates that will focus on cutting U.S. debt, supporting a strong national security policy against terrorist groups such as the Islamic State.

It also advocates reducing aid to India’s foes like Pakistan, and expanding trade with India.

For example, Kumar said he wants to convince U.S. companies to shift manufacturing operations from China to India.

Kumar and Gingrich have a plan to attract 400 founding members to the Republican Hindu Coalition to raise money for Republican candidates and groups, while also convincing Indian Americans to switch to the Republican Party.

Gingrich said Kumar’s group should help activate Indian Americans not involved in politics.

“A lot of first-generation folks feel more comfortable and feel more engaged and more involved if they network with fellow people from their background,” he told the Examiner.

President Obama Announces Key Appointees To Faith Advisory Body

President Barack Obama announced Sept. 24, he plans to appoint several Indian-Americans to his third Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, a body entrusted with bringing together religious and secular leaders as well as scholars and experts in fields related to the work of faith-based and neighborhood organizations.

Among those to be appointed are former New York State Solicitor General and Obama adviser Preeta Bansal, Nipun Mehta, founder of non-profit ServiceSpace; and Jasjit Singh, executive director of the Sikh American Legal Defence and Education Fund.

The Council has a broad mandate to focus on steps the government should take to reduce poverty and inequality and create opportunity for all, including changes in policies, programs, and practices that affect the delivery of services by faith-based and community organizations and the needs of low-income and other underserved persons.

“I am confident that these outstanding men and women will serve the American people well, and I look forward to working with them,”the President is quoted saying in a press release from the White House.

Preeta Bansal
Preeta Bansal

Bansal, an early Obama supporter who also served as general counsel for the Office of Management and Budget from 2009 to 2011, is currently a lecturer at MIT’s Media Lab and a Senior Advisor at MIT’s Laboratory for Social Machines, positions she has held since 2014.

She is also President of Social Emergence Corporation, a newly-formed non-profit founded in May, which aims to empower human networks and community relationships. From 2012 to 2013, Bansal served as a Global General Counsel for HSBC Holdings. Before joining the Obama administration, Bansal was Partner and head of the appellate litigation practice at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher and Flom LLP from 2003 to 2009.

During the George W. Bush administration she served as a member of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom from 2003 to 2009, and as Chair of that commission from 2004 to 2005. She was Solicitor General of the State of New York from 1999 to 2001. A graduate of Harvard Law School, Bansal clerked with United States Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens. She is a Henry Crown Fellow at the Aspen Institute and a Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Nipun Mehta
Nipun Mehta

Mehta is the founder of ServiceSpace, a non-profit organization established in 1999. From 1998 to 2001, he was a software engineer at Sun Microsystems. He is a member of the Advisory Circle of the Seva Foundation, the International Advisory Council of the Dalai Lama Foundation, and the Advisory Board of the Greater Good Science Center.

He has received numerous awards for his community work, including the Jefferson Award for Public Service, the President’s Volunteer Service Award and Wavy Gravy’s Humanitarian Award. He earned his B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley.

Jasjit Singh
Jasjit Singh

Singh’s appointment comes in the wake of a seeming rise in the number of hate crimes against Sikhs and the higher visibility SALDEF and other organizations have tried to muster to raise awareness about the Sikh faith and hate crimes against its members. Singh has served as executive director of SALDEF since 2012, and earlier as the organization’s associate executive director in 2009. Prior to joining SALDEF, Singh worked at Deloitte & Touche as a Senior Consultant from 2007 to 2009 and as a Consultant from 2004 to 2007. He has a B.S. degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Singh founded the Sikh Students Association at the University of Illinois, and served as its president from 2000 to 2002. According to the SALDEF website Singh has been a “leading voice” for the Sikh American community.

He is credited with building strong relationships with the national leadership since 2009, giving testimony to Congress and providing presentations on racial profiling, employment discrimination and community challenges to audiences including the US Assistant Attorney General, FBI Director, TSA Administrator, metro police, and EEOC Chairman, the website says.

Singh was instrumental in organizing national media attention for both the Oak Creek, Wisconsin gurdwara shootings in 2012, when 6 devotees were massacred by a white supremacist, and in other instances of hate crime. Singh has been on the Secretary of Homeland Security’s Faith-Based Initiative and the Executive Committee of the National Council of Asian Pacific Americans.

Dream to make India $20 trillion economy: Modi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday said he dreamt of making India a $20 trillion economy and that he was pleasantly surprised by the change of perception about his country in a short period of time. Attending a question and answer ‘town-hall’ session with Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg at their office at Hackers Square here, the prime minister also said a lot had to be done to bridge the digital divide in India.

“We are an $8 trillion economy today. My dream is for India to become a $20 trillion dollar economy,” Modi said, adding: “Amazing, how perception about India has changed in a very short time. We have brought in a new level of confidence.” Zuckerberg said India was personally very important to the history of Facebook.

“Early on, before things were going well, we saw Steve Jobs,” he said, referring to the legendary chief executive of Apple Inc, now deceased. Modi also sought to tell Zuckerberg that India has other things to offer as well. “When you came to India, you went to a temple. And look where you have reached today,” he said.

The Facebook chief had announced the Indian prime minister’s visit on his page earlier this month and invited users to post questions. Tens of thousands of comments were made in reply, with questions on internet expansion in India, unemployment and also Modi’s human rights record.

“We’ve received more than 40,000 questions for this town-hall,” Zuckerberg said. Typical to the US, a town hall meeting refers to an informal public event, open to all, where those who attend ask questions from invited guests, generally public figures or functionaries, and also give ideas and seek their grievances to be redressed.

Modi said that in the last one to one-and-half years, “the perception of India has changed a lot”.

“If you look at tourism for example, India has tremendous potential. Technology has really helped the industry and has brought the world together,” Modi said.

Prompted by Zuckerberg to talk about his experience of being an early adopter of internet in India, Modi said: “I did not have the privilege to become a very educated person growing up. My world could revolve around a few words. “But social media has filled the gap for me,” he said.

“You are associated with the service sector, and I have seen the power of it,” Modi said.

Before the townhall began, Modi and Zuckerberg had a one-on-one meeting.

Modi Receives Rousing Welcome & Protests in New York

Indian-Americans gave a rousing welcome to Prime Minister Narendra Modi when he arrived in New York on September 23rd. He was in the U.S. to participate in the United Nations summit on development and give a boost to his “Make in India” and “Digital India” programs.

Arriving at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel, he stepped out of his vehicle and greeted at least 500 people, including drummers and dancers, waiting for him and waved to them. Secret service agents ran around him, trying to set up a cordon as the crowds surged and Modi tried to get closer to it. The supporters chanted, “Modi, Modi” and distributed sweets. They gathered about four hours before his arrival.

Modi informally met members of the Indian community from the New York and Chicago areas. Vasudev Patel, a physician from Atlanta who met Modi, said some of those meeting him offered their expertise. Modi, he said, welcomed their offers and asked the Indian community in the U.S. to contribute to India’s development efforts.

According to a press release by the organizers of the reception to the Indian Premier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi whose popularity graph has reached 87%  was  jubilantly  and enthusiastically welcomed by Indian-Americans who thronged under the banner of  “ Indian American Community”,   on September 23  in front of Waldorf Astoria Hotel where he will be staying  in New York City.

They carried the  playcards  depicting “AMERICA WELCOMES MODI”,  “NEW YORKERS LOVE MODI”  and uncontrollably shouted “MODI, MODI, WELCOME MODY” to express their love, respect and exhilaration for Modi who is determined to make India an economically prosperous and militarily strong nation.

As seen from the following political developments  Modi is expected to take Indo-American relationship to new heights. Secretary of State John Kerry announced his intention to take bilateral trade between India and USA to 500 billion dollars  from the present 100 billion dollars. Vice President  Joe Biden has said that he would like  India  to make the best friend of America.

Pentagon has established Rapid Reaction Cell to speed up its defense ties with India and accelerate the process of co-development and co-production of hi-tech military equipment in the country. Indian Cabinet has cleared the purchase of Boeing’s Apache and Chinook helicopters in a deal worth around $3.1 billion.

Recognizing the threat posed by outfits like the al-Qaeda, LeT and the D-Company, India and the US today agreed to deepen cooperation in fighting terrorism and asked Pakistan to bring to justice to the 2008 Mumbai attack perpetrators. According to some press reports, US National Security Advisor Susan Rice recently met Chief of Army Staff of Pakistan, Raheel Sharif and warned him to desist from issuing  the threats of nuclear attack  to India otherwise USA would rethink its financial and military relationship with Pakistan. In order to contain China’s naval presence in the Indian Ocean Region, USA is nudging India to cooperate with it.

Meanwhile, a group of Sikhs and the Patidar community supporters demonstrated outside the UN headquarters, coinciding with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s speech on Sustainable Development at a special UN summit. Under the banner of Sikhs for Justice, over 200 Sikhs, alleging human rights violations in Punjab, demanded referendum in 2020 for a separate Khalistan. The protesters, raising anti-India and anti-Modi slogans, urged the world body to take steps to meet their demand.

“There is massive violations against minorities, in particular against Christians, Sikhs and Muslims,” SFJ leader Bakhshish Singh Sandhu claimed Friday. Side by side in a separate enclosure were a few dozen members of the Patidar community from Gujarat who are living in different parts of the country. “We want justice from police brutalities. As many as 4,000 youths are still in police custody. There has been police brutality against innocent people. So far no action has been taken against the police officials responsible for this,” one Anil Patel claimed.

Amidst beating of drums and shouting of ‘Modi-Modi’ slogan, a few hundreds of community members gave the visiting Prime Minister a boisterous welcome as the Prime Minister’s entourage entered Waldorf Astoria Hotel straight from the JFK Airport. The people had been patiently waiting on the barricaded sidewalks for long, much before he entered the hotel to have a glimpse of their leader. There were men and women, both young and old, even a few young children standing next to their parents. And the wait was worthwhile.

Modi meets with Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg

India is the world’s fastest-growing major economy, and use of the Internet and smartphones is growing rapidly, providing new markets for American companies. In addition, tens of thousands of Silicon Valley technology workers are of Indian descent and eager to give something back to their country of origin.

Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, an avid user of Twitter and Facebook, sees technology as a way to lift India out of poverty. “In this digital age, we have an opportunity to transform the lives of people in ways that were hard to imagine just a couple of decades ago,” Mr. Modi said in San Jose on Saturday in a dinnertime speech to about 500 technology leaders, including the chief executives of Microsoft, Google, Adobe and Uber.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg and discussed bringing India fully into the digital world. Modi is an avid user of Twitter and Facebook, and believes technology can lift India out of poverty.

Modi, the prime minister of India, oversees a nation of 1.25 billion people. Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Facebook, runs a social network with 1.5 billion active users. Both see themselves as global leaders pushing for broad social change, and both routinely use social media to communicate with their many millions of fans.

On Sunday, September 27th, the two men engaged in a mutual admiration session at Facebook’s Silicon Valley headquarters, with Modi fielding preselected questions from a crowd of Facebook employees and guests invited by the Indian Embassy. Modi praised social networks like Facebook, Twitter and even China’s Weibo as useful tools for governing and diplomacy.

“The strength of social media is it can tell government where they are going wrong,” Mr. Modi said. “We used to have elections every five years. Now we have them every five minutes.”

Modi’s visit to Facebook came halfway through his weekend tour of Silicon Valley, where he has been meeting with technology executives and seeking their ideas and assistance in bringing India fully into the digital world.

Modi’s message of partnership with American technology companies has been carefully choreographed to appeal to his constituents back in India, a country that is rapidly discovering the Internet and the start-up culture.

A group of academics raised concerns about the free speech and privacy policies of Mr. Modi’s government in an open letter before his visit. Outside Facebook headquarters, Sikh separatists also protested his visit. On Saturday, Modi stopped by Tesla Motors, the electric-car maker, and held private meetings with three of the technology world’s most powerful executives: Timothy D. Cook of Apple, Sundar Pichai of Google and Satya Nadella of Microsoft.

At the subsequent dinner, the tight connections between American companies and the Indian government were apparent. Modi announced that Google had agreed to provide free public Wi-Fi in hundreds of Indian railroad stations, which are major transit and social hubs for their communities.

Recalling his childhood in India, Nadella pledged that Microsoft would help India bring wireless Internet to its 500,000 villages, but offered no details. “What opportunities can we unlock, what changes can we spark?” he said. Qualcomm, a chip maker with thousands of employees in India, promised $150 million to finance Indian start-ups.

After the Facebook visit on Sunday, Modi visited Google and Stanford University, and to drop by a meeting of Indian tech entrepreneurs. In the evening, he was scheduled to address a sold-out crowd of about 18,000 people, mostly Indo-Americans, at an arena in San Jose.

Climate Change & UNSC Reform On Modi-Obama Agenda In New York

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Summit on Monday, September 28th, 2015 with the U.S. President Barack Obama focused on climate change and India’s appeal for reform of the U.N. Security Council. Modi’s America visit saw him travel to the West Coast, visiting San Jose, Calif., where he interacted with the tech giants. In a message before leaving for home, Modi said his U.S. visit demonstrates the “extraordinary depth and diversity” of the bilateral relationship and that a lot of ground had been covered in his five days in the U.S.

Modi said, “As terrorism threats grow, we have resolved to deepen our cooperation.” He also thanked Obama for the U.S.’ support to India for a permanent seat in a reformed U.N. Security Council and appreciated its support for India’s membership of the international export control regimes within a targeted time frame.

This was the third meeting between the leaders of the world’s oldest and the largest democracy in about a year. They met last year during Modi’s US visit and then in January earlier this year. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday met US President Barack Obama in New York and discussed a host of issues. Obama warmly received Modi by hugging him before their meeting, the third between them since May last year. “I am encouraged by India’s commitment to clean energy. Its leadership on climate change will set tone for decades,” President Obama said after the meeting.  We appreciate our friendship and partnership with India,” the US president said.

As per reports, Modi flew down from San Jose, holding bilateral meetings with British Prime Minister David Cameron and later with French President Francois Hollande. In his address at the Leaders’ Summit on U.N. Peacekeeping, hosted by the U.S., Modi said India is ready to contribute monetarily to a memorial for slain U.N. Peacekeepers. He announced new contributions to the U.N. Peacekeeping Operations including additional battalion of up to 850 troops.

The peak of the 5 day visit was the India-U.S. summit meeting, lasting an hour, saw Modi and Obama exchange warm hugs in greeting, in a reiteration of the personal chemistry between the two leaders. Obama in his media statement, said his talks with Modi focused on climate change and the upcoming climate change talks in Paris. He said both sides agreed that it is a crucial issue and all countries have responsibility for fighting climate change. Obama said he was “encouraged by the impressive nature of Modi’s commitment to clean energy. And I really think the Indian leadership in the upcoming Paris conference will set the tone not just today but in the decades to come (on climate change).”

India and the US discussed trade, investment, defense and education. Modi, in his statement, said the U.S. president and he “share an uncompromising commitment on climate change, without affecting our ability to meet the development aspirations of humanity. We have both set ambitious national agendas.”

Talking about his visit to the West Coast, the PM said, “I was in Silicon Valley over the weekend and experienced the strength of American innovation and enterprise. Youth, technology and innovation are the driving forces for the natural partnerships of Indians and Americans in advancing human progress,” the PM said. The meeting gave the two leaders an opportunity to build on the discussions they had in New Delhi in January when Obama travelled to India to attend the Republic Day Parade as its chief guest.

In the dialogue, India and the US on Monday agreed to deepen cooperation in fighting terrorism and asked Pakistan to bring to justice the 2008 Mumbai attack perpetrators. The Modi-Obama meeting comes close on the heels of the conclusion of the inaugural strategic and commercial dialogue between the US and India.

Narendra Modi’s US Visit: A Missed Opportunity

The UN General Assembly was an important forum for India and PM Modi to reaffirm the country’s commitment to the sustainable development goals, said Himanshu, an author and an associate professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University and visiting fellow at Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi.

“The media euphoria about the US visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi is yet to die down. While the visit has been termed successful for the excitement it generated over Modi’s meeting with top corporate honchos, and the primary reason for the world leaders to assemble at the UN General Assembly was to launch these ambitious goals and targets, the cacophony of the historic reception accorded by the corporate giants to the Prime Minister meant that SDGs, which would have been guiding principles of governance, remained at best at the periphery,’ he stated.

Describing it to be a historic opportunity where the world community led by the UN had agreed on basic principles and goals of development to be pursued by individual countries for the next 15 years, which is a follow-up to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which were launched 15 years ago with 8 goals and 12 identifiable targets, anchored to specific targets with the objective of reducing the extent of these deprivations to half by 2015, including poverty eradication, gender empowerment, sanitation, and maternal and child health, the Indian writer said, “The overall performance of MDGs may be questionable, with many countries, particularly in Africa and Asia, falling behind most targets on health, gender and nutrition, but they were successful in initiating a debate on key targets for measuring and tracking development in the last 15 years.”

According to Himanshu, India’s own performance on many of the MDG indicators has not been great, with the country missing targets on nutrition, health, sanitation and education, he pointed out that, of the 12 indicators, India is on course to meet the target of poverty reduction, reducing the spread of HIV/AIDS, reducing gender disparity in primary education and making technology accessible to the poor, but is lagging behind on all other indicators. “Notable among these are the targets of reduction in hunger, universal primary education, reduction in under-5 mortality rates, reduction in maternal mortality rates, reduction in the spread of malaria and other diseases, and basic provision of safe water and sanitation. This, despite the fact that the last 15 years were the years of fastest rate of growth for the Indian economy since independence and also the years of significant reduction in poverty,” Himanshu wrote.

As per Himanshu, SDGs remain merely guiding documents agreed upon by the members of the UN. They do not impose any obligation on nation states to include them in national social and economic policies. This has been the problem with MDGs and will continue to be the issue with SDGs. But they do suggest issues of convergence on some of the vexed topics of development. In that sense, these are like the directive principles of state policy in our Constitution.

India’s own performance has not been satisfactory, although there are signs of marginal improvement in recent years, Hinshu states. “We continue to remain the country with the highest rate of open defecation, the highest rate of malnutrition and the lowest work participation of women. The improvements in these are not just necessary as development indicators, but also for growth to be sustainable.

“While the present National Democratic Alliance government has been sensitive to these issues, with the Prime Minister making sanitation, hygiene, protecting and educating the girl child and education important national issues, these have not been backed by adequate attention to planning. Nor has there been any increase in additional spending for these.:

Himanshu is of the opinion that the UN General Assembly was an important forum for India and Prime Minister Modi to reaffirm the country’s commitment to these development goals. This was also an opportunity to build consensus on the urgency of undertaking reforms to tackle these persistent problems. “However, the priority given to India’s demand for permanent status in the Security Council and the focus on “Digital India” meant that this was another missed opportunity.”

NRIs Responsible for changing the world’s perception of India: PM Modi in San Jose

Indians living abroad are responsible for changing the world’s perception of India, Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India told the Indian American community in California here on Sunday, September 27th, 2015. Using the analogy of cricket broadcasts, he said Indians in the US had a better view of what was happening in India than those who live in the country. “You are making the world change from here. Those who resist change will become irrelevant in the 21st century,” addressing thousands of Indian-Americans at the SAP Centre in San Jose, Modi said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the 21st century belongs to India and the world has begun to acknowledge the fact, as he addressed an 18,000-strong cheering crowd of Indian community members at the SAP Centre in San Jose. According to reports, Modi, in an over hour-long address to a “Modi, Modi” chanting crowd, also said that terrorism and climate change are the main challenges facing the world and urged all nations to unite in facing the twin threats. In a rock star reception like the one he had received at Madison Square Garden last year, Modi also asked the crowd for a “certificate” of his performance in the 16 months he has been in power.

He said the world now acknowledges that the 21st century belongs to India, to loud cheers.

“Sometime ago India was striving to join with the world, but today the times have changed and the world is thirsting to join with India,” he said. He also said he will give his every moment and every particle of his body in working for India’s betterment.

Asking the crowd for a certificate of his 16 months in power, Modi asked the rapturous crowd: “Did I live up to my promises, working day and night, and the responsibility that I have undertaken…Have I lived up to that?” to loud cheers and chants of “Modi, Modi”.

Modi, who said he was visiting the West Coast after 25 years, said he was seeing a “vibrant picture” of India in the large Indian tech community that lives and works here. Modi praised the “nimble fingers” of the Indian tech experts who “have made the world acknowledge India” with their competence, innovations.

He said he did not see the large numbers of Indians working in the US and other foreign countries as a brain drain, but as a “brain deposit”. Modi called terrorism and global warming as world’s main challenges and asked all nations to unite to fight this scourge as there was no such thing as good or bad terrorism.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi said terror and global warming were the two big threats the world was facing. Modi said the world should stop differentiating between “good terrorism and bad terrorism. The UN is celebrating its 70th anniversary but till now it has not been able to arrive at a definition for terrorism. If defining it takes so much time, how many years will it take to tackle terrorism,” he said.

“Humanist forces in the world will have to put pressure so that it is decided in black and white what is terrorism. Since there is no definition, talk about good terrorism and bad terrorism is going on. We cannot protect humanity with this good and bad terrorism,” Modi said, adding that “terrorism is terrorism”.

Standing on a podium that turned slowly so that he could address everyone, Modi said the brain drain that was discussed for many years has now become brain gain. “I look at it differently. This is actually a brain deposit that is waiting for an opportunity to be of use to the motherland,” he said, adding that the time for that had arrived.

Highlighting how he had opened a new silent front against corruption, he said Aadhaar cards had helped weed out five crore fake gas connections and subsidy was now being given only for 13 crore units. This, he said, led to a saving of at least Rs 19,000 crore. He added that 30 lakh people had given up their gas subsidy under the Give It Up campaign.

Recalling the Ghadar movement in the US by Sikh migrants in the early 20th century, Modi said, “If those who came to work on the farms then wanted to do something for the Independence movement, the youth of today want to work for alleviating poverty back home.” The speech also mentioned the first Indians who made a mark in West Coast, including Jayaprakash Narayan, who studied in California.

“The world now accepts that this century will be India’s. And this has happened not because of me, but the 1.25 billion Indians,” he said, adding that India has now moved from the fringes to become the focal point. Often having to pause for the cheering crowd to settle down, Modi said his confidence in the country stemmed from the fact that India was young. “A country with 800 million youth and 1.6 billion young arms cannot be held back,” he said. The PM finished his address by announcing a direct Delhi-San Francisco Air India flight thrice a week from December 2 onwards.

Narendra Modi Concludes Historic Visit to USA

After a highly successful visit, Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India, on a visit to the United States from September 23 to September 28, 2015, to attend the 70th session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, USA, returned on Monday, September 28th after a historical visit, winning many a heart.

During the visit Prime Minister Narendra Modi attended and spoke at the United Nations General Assembly in New York City at the headquarters of the United Nations. India also hosted a G-4 summit in New York, which was attended by Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel, Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe, President of Brazil, Dilma Roussef.

In a first for the Premier of India, Modi visited the Silicon Valley, and the West Coast of USA on September 26 and September 27, 2015. During which he met several business leaders and the Indian diaspora in USA. Modi, who is known for using the social media extensively, visited the headquarters of the social networking site ‘Facebook’ and held meetings with Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Satya Nadella of Microsoft, Tim Cook CEO of Apple, Sundar Pichai CEO of Google, Paul Jacobs of Qualcomm, John Chambers of Cisco Systems. Prime Minister Narendra Modi garnered support for ‘Digital India’ campaign by these top Chief Executive Officer’s of different companies.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi also met several world leaders on September 28, 2015 in New York and also attended the peacekeeping summit. He held bilateral talks with the President of United States of America, Barack Obama, President of France, Francois Hollande, Prime Minister of United Kingdom, David Cameroon, President of Mexico, Enrique Pena Neto, President of Palestine Mahmoud Abbas, President of Cyprus Nicos Anastasiades, President of Sri Lanka Mathripala Sirisena, President of Arab Republic of Egypt Abdel Fateh el- sisi, President of Guyana David A. Granger.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi began his United States visit from New York last week with unmistakable signals that he wishes to take India on a higher growth path through American investments and technology collaboration, inviting U.S. business to enter India without inhibitions and join his “Make in India” campaign.

That Modi, during his second visit to the U.S since becoming the prime minister, devoted his five-day visit largely to wooing the investment community, and the tech-entrepreneurs later in California to make his dream of digital India program, an emphatic success, was evident from the list of people he was to meet both in New York and California – Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation and CEOs from other media entities as well as Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JP Morgan, Steve Schwarzman, chairman, CEO of Blackstone, Charles Kaye, Co-CEO of Warburg Pincus, and Peter Hancock, president and CEO, AIF Insurance, all in New York and, Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, Satya Nadella of Microsoft, CEO of Google Sundar Pichai, Paul Jacobs of Qualcomm, John Chambers, CEO of Cisco and Shantanu Narayen, the president and the CEO of Adobe. The Prime Minister visited Google while in California where he will reach evening of Sept. 26.

Starting in New York Sept 24, Modi made a strong pitch for investment in India during a roundtable with top Wall Street CEOs at Waldorf Astoria where he is staying. He touted India’s 7.3 percent GDP growth last year, noting that there has been a 40 percent increase in Foreign Direct Investment. He talked about his government’s efforts during the last 15 months to increase investment in areas of taxation, infrastructure and FDI.

By and large, the CEOs appreciated the steps taken by the government on ease of doing business, on economic growth and reforms. All of them, MEA spokesperson Vikas Swarup told reporters, were very bullish on India and said that India has a lot of potential for investment. They also acknowledged that financial market reforms have already started and more reforms would happen in the days to come.

Together, these companies like JP Morgan, Blackstone, Warburg Pincus and AIF Insurance, at the roundtable, manage billions and billions of dollars. “Most of them have exposure to India. So, this was a very good opportunity for the Prime Minister to listen to their experience of doing business with India, to see what concerns they had and how we could work to remove those concerns,” Swarup said.

“CEOs were very interested in India’s start-up sector. They appreciated steps taken by government to make business easier,” Modi tweeted after the hour-long meeting with CEOs.

The Prime Minister assured the investors that “work is already underway” to resolve their issues and asked the CEOs to give him a detailed note on all the concerns raised during the meeting which will be examined in detail and responded to. Modi “took on board” suggestions made by the executives as he outlined the scale of development he expects to happen in India and the tremendous opportunities it offers to foreign institutional investors and for FDI.

Giving the CEOs an indication of the quantum of investment required, Modi told them that India is going to construct 50 million houses, 600 villages are going to be connected with broadband and 24×7 electricity would be provided to all in an environmentally sustainable way. For these developments, 175 Giga watts of renewable energy are going to be created, 50 big cities are going to have metros. Modi’s point was India was not just among the fastest-growing economies but had also done much towards the ease of doing business, something that should attract investors.

Before flying back to India after his 5-day visit to US, Prime Minister Narendra Modi made another pitch for reforms in the United Nations Security Council, during the world body’s peacekeeping summit today. At the summit, he also acknowledged his Pakistani counterpart, Nawaz Sharief, with a wave.

In New York, PM Modi and President Barack Obama decided to “further refine” the Indo-US strategic partnership while pushing ahead with cooperation in the areas of security, counter-terrorism, defence, economy and climate change. However, linking with the diaspora comprises an important facet of Modi’s foreign visits, including the current visit to the United States.

Modi makes strong pitch for UNSC reforms

Prime Minister Narendra Modi pressed for reforms in the UN Security Council in order to maintain its relevance and credibility as an international body and for proper representation in the core UN body so that countries can strive to reach their goals more effectively.

In an address on Friday at the UN Sustainable Development Summit, Modi, speaking in Hindi, also outlined India’s goals for fighting climate change and said he hoped developed countries would make separate provisions for fighting climate change without slotting it under the head of development.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi greeted the audience at the opening session of the UN summit with ‘namaste’.

New York (US): Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressing the United Nations Summit
New York (US): Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressing the United Nations Summit

Wearing a brown bandgalla, the prime minister came to the podium and turned to the dais where those presiding over the session on Friday were seated and greeted them with a ‘namaste’.

On either side of the dais, large TV monitors showed Modi speaking while on a split screen a sign language interpreter relayed his speech.

His Hindi speech was simultaneously translated into English, Russian, French and Spanish and made available on earphones and on the internet.

Making a strong pitch for reforms in the UNSC and its expanded membership, Modi said: “Change is necessary in the UNSC in order to maintain its relevance and credibility, as also proper representation by countries so that we are able strive for our goals more effectively.”

Modi spoke of the need for reducing dependence on energy so that the world can strive towards “sustainable consumption”. He suggested a global education programme to prepare future generations to protect the environment to make it sustainable.

“I hope that developed countries will fulfill their financial commitments towards development and climate change without in anyway putting the two under the same head,” he said.

Modi outlined India’s climate change goals saying he represents a culture that calls the earth “mother” and that India over the next seven years will create 175 GW of renewable energy capacity.

“I represent that culture that calls the earth Ma.. The Vedas says that the earth is the mother and we are its sons,” he said in Hindi at the summit.

He said that India has outlined ambitious programmes to fight climate change.

Besides creating 175 GW renewable energy capacity, the country would also stress on energy efficiency, tree plantation, coal tax, clean environment, cleaning up of rivers, waste to wealth movement and sustainable development.

He outlined the government’s programmes towards financial inclusion, saying 180 million new bank accounts had been opened, which he termed as the biggest empowerment for the poor. He said the government was working towards a Pension Yojana to ensure pension reaches the poor.

Modi said earlier there was talk only of the private sector or public sector, but his government has focused on the “personal sector”, like individual enterprise through micro finance, innovation, start ups, creating opportunities and providing clean water, power, health, education, hygiene for all — all that is needed to live a decent life.

He said the government has fixed a time limit for the programmes, and added that women empowerment is a major part of his government’s policy through “Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao” (Save the girl child, educate the girl child), which the government has made into a household mantra. Another was to make agriculture more remunerative by connecting fields to markets.

Modi said his government is taking steps to mitigate the agrarian crisis, revive the manufacturing sector, improve the services sector, and stressing on investments in the infrastructure sector and focusing on creating smart cities, which are sustainable and the centres of development.

He said India’s path is linked to sustainable development as it is linked to India’s tradition of calling the earth Ma.

He said in the UN international cooperation should be at the centre of sustainable development and to fight climate change.

“The principle of common but differentiated responsibilities is the bedrock of our enterprise for a sustainable world,” he stressed.

He called for international partnership to fight climate change. Modi ended his speech with a ‘namaste’ to his audience.

HE NAMED ME MALALA

Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai took New York City by storm ahead of the release of her new documentary film HE NAMED ME MALALA which opens in New York and Los Angeles this Friday October 2, and in theaters nationwide on October 9.

Championing the right for girls worldwide to have equal access to education, the teen activist attended the red carpet premiere of the film at the historic Ziegfeld theater, delivered a passionate address to the United Nations General Assembly, sat down for a candid interview on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and spoke at the Global Citizen Festival in Central Park where she was introduced by Bono.

HE NAMED ME MALALA is an intimate portrait of Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Malala Yousafzai, who was targeted by the Taliban and severely wounded by a gunshot when returning home on her school bus in Pakistan’s Swat Valley.  The then 15-year-old (she turns 18 this July) was singled out, along with her father, for advocating for girls’ education, and the attack on her sparked an outcry from supporters around the world. She miraculously survived and is now a leading campaigner for girls’ education globally as co-founder of the Malala Fund.

Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim (An Inconvenient Truth, Waiting for Superman) shows us how Malala, her father Zia and her family are committed to fighting for education for all girls worldwide.

The film gives us an inside glimpse into this extraordinary young girl’s life – from her close relationship with her father who inspired her love for education, to her impassioned speeches at the UN, to her everyday life with her parents and brothers.

Photos attached from the HE NAMED ME MALALA premiere which was attended by Malala, her father Ziauddin Yousafzai, as well as many celebrity guests including Scarlett Johansson, Ivanka Trump, Elizabeth Shue, and Grammy winner Alicia Keyes.

Watch Malala’s speech at the Global Citizen Festival in Central Park:

http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc-news/watch/malala–every-child-deserves-an-education-533033539665

Watch a clip from Malala’s interview with Stephen Colbert:

http://www.cbs.com/shows/the-late-show-with-stephen-colbert/video/53DAC816-112D-723F-AC4C-07D96B8DD7C0/malala-yousafzai-stephen-do-card-tricks/

Download over 100 premiere photos here:

http://wdrv.it/1MtiOPK

Press downloads – movie stills, poster and trailer file:

https://www.dropbox.com/sh/4f8j9afm2v7sghs/AACzgWn_bpbfdtj2aIrI8wPoa?dl=0

HE NAMED ME MALALA opens exclusively this Friday, October 2, at the Lincoln Square and Sunshine theaters in New York City and the Arclight and Landmark theaters in Los Angeles. For more information on the film visit www.HeNamedMeMalala.com.

Rigveda to Robotics – Exhibition focuses on Historicity of ancient Hindu scriptures

The Institute of Scientific Research on Vedas (I-SERVE) on Thursday last week launched the ‘Unique Exhibition on Cultural Continuity from Rigveda to Robotics’ at the Lalit Kala Akademi, New Delhi. A unique exhibition going on at the Lalit Kala Akademi provides “astronomical references and scientific evidences” which dismiss the Aryan invasion theory and argue that the Mahabharata and Ramayana are historical texts, not mythological epics.

The Institute of Scientific Research on Vedas (I-SERVE) on Thursday launched the ‘Unique Exhibition on Cultural Continuity from Rigveda to Robotics’ at the Akademi, in the presence of Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma, RSS joint general secretary Krishna Gopal and classical dancer Sonal Mansingh, who were the chief guests.

The show “Cultural Continuity from Rigveda to Robotics,” at the Lalit Kala Akademi uses different fields of study like astronomy, archeology, paleo-botany and oceanography among other science disciplines in an attempt to establish a synergy between ancient Hindu scriptures and modern sciences.

Some of the other issues explored in the exhibition are the “earliest evidence of dentistry at Mehrgarh in 7000 BC”, astronomical charts displaying the lunar eclipse at the time when “Hanumanji met Sitaji in Ashok Vatika” in 5067 BC, a solar eclipse of 3153 BC when the “Pandavas left for 13 years of exile after losing everything in a game of dice” and the identification of “63 predecessors and 59 successors of Ram”.

To be more specific on dating, When was Ram born? January 10, 12.05 hours, 5114 BC. When did the war in Mahabharata start? October 13, 3139 BC. And when did Hanuman meet Sita in Ashok Vatika? September 12, 5076 BC.

What historians, here and abroad, say is impossible to establish, has been accomplished by one Institute of Scientific Research — or so the institute claims in its ongoing Exhibition on ‘Rig Veda to Robotics’. And India’s culture minister, Mahesh Sharma, says his ministry will take cognisance of this information and has sought a report.

How was this dating done? “Considerable research” and a software procured for around Rs 7,000 from the US were the keys apparently. “Planetary information” from the Rig Veda, Ramayana and Mahabharata was used to find the exact dates, said Saroj Bala, director of the institute, I-SERVE, Delhi Chapter. As per report, the institute has been submitted its ‘findings’ to the Union culture ministry. The Union Minister said, “I spent a good one-and-a half hours at the exhibition and there is a lot of material there which merits attention.”

Sonal Mansingh said she got “goosebumps” when she heard about the exhibition. “As a systematic conspiracy, scholars like Wendy Doniger have written about our ancient saints being sex maniacs to belittle us. Yet, we only read the history written by these people”.

Culture Minister Mahesh Sharma said it was important to hold such an exhibition, which was based on “scientific facts”. “The next generation may say that somebody wrote Ramayana and Mahabharata sitting in their bedrooms, so it is necessary to collect scientific basis for their historicity,” he said.

Krishna Gopal, the RSS ideologue,  said that “Christian scholars” could not imagine history older than 4,000 years and the idea of continuity from Rig Veda till the present times was unimaginable for many. “Even Max Mueller could not go beyond 5,000 BC,” he said.

“Our history is at least 10,000 years old, much before Muslims and Christians arrived. We found that planetary formations mentioned in Ramayana and Mahabharata corresponded to actual formations at the time. We have also studied genealogy which proves that Aryans were indigenous,” said Saroj Bala, director, Delhi Chapter of I-SERVE.

While most Indians have been known to worship Ganga as a holy river since time immemorial, the ancient Indian text Rigveda has a different story to tell, according to I-SERVE. “We were very surprised that there was no mention of the river Ganga in the first nine mandals of Rigveda. All 22 rivers were mentioned in a geographically correct way with not a single mistake. But the great river Ganga was not mentioned until the tenth mandal of Rigveda,” says Saroj Bala, Director, Delhi chapter I-Serve.

The Rigveda mentions Saraswati, which is often believed to be a mythical river, to be “the most celebrated river.” A poster put up by I-Serve stated that around 6000 BC, efforts by Suryavanshi kings Sagar and Bhagirath helped to facilitate the flow of Bhagirathi waters into Ganga, thus vindicating its description as the holiest river in post Rigvedic literature, while Saraswati becomes non-perennial.

“While Ganga is referred to as a holy river in the Ramayana, in Mahabharata it is said that it remains dry in some places. In this exhibition we have tried to present the entire story,” says Bala. According to organisers, the exhibition aimed to carry out research into the authenticity and historicity of events narrated in ancient books by making use of modern scientific tools.

We wanted to know the truth through the means of pure scientific medium and find out whether these scriptures contain any true events,” says Bala

Through the process of scientific dating, the exhibition also says that indigenous civilisation has been developing in Indian sub-continent for last 10,000 years and that Aryans were originals of India. “There was no Aryan invasion. It is often believed that the Dravidians were pushed down south, but there was nothing like that” says Peeyush Sandhir, Associate director, I-Serve.

Sky views of important events in Ramayana and Mahabharata including determining the date and time of birth of Lord Ram and the infamous game of dice where the Pandavas lose to Kauravas have been showcased.

Besides astronomical evidences, the show also presents archaeological evidences in form of utensils, ornaments, weapons and infrastructure that support dates of references in these scriptures. The exhibition supported by the Culture Ministry is set to continue till September 23.

Harish Jajoo Bids To Be A Mayor Of Texas City

Harish Jajoo, an Indian-American engineer is making a bid to become the first South Asian mayor of Sugar Land in the US state of Texas, a media report said. Harish Jajoo, who has been a Sugar Land City Council member since 2011, has lived in the city, which has 35 percent Asian population, since 1985 after migrating first to Canada and then the US.

Harish Jajoo, an Indian-American engineer is making a bid to become the first South Asian mayor of Sugar Land in the US state of Texas, a media report said. Harish Jajoo, who has been a Sugar Land City Council member since 2011, has lived in the city, which has 35 percent Asian population, since 1985 after migrating first to Canada and then the US. Jajoo, who is one of two Indian-Americans on the six-person city council, will face colleague Joe Zimmerman — and possibly others who have not declared yet — in the 2016 election to replace mayor James Thompson, Houston chronicle.com reported Sept. 17. “I look different, I talk different, maybe I eat different… But my values for the city are no less than the next person,” Jajoo was quoted as saying. He said he knows that eventually a South Asian will be mayor of the city, but stressed that he was “not looking for that label”. Founded as a sugar plantation in the mid 1800s and incorporated in 1959, Sugar Land is located in Fort Bend county, some 18 miles southwest of Houston. The county’s Asian population has grown more quickly than any other group, according to a 2013 report by Stephen Klineberg, sociology professor at Rice University, about Houston’s increasing diversity, and his colleague Jie Wu. Between 2015 and 2040, the population of voting age Asian-Americans is expected to grow by 80 percent while the population of Asian-Americans in general is expected to grow by 74 percent, according to a study by Paul Ong and Elena Ong of the University of California, Los Angeles’ Center for the Study of Inequality and the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies.
Harish Jajoo

Jajoo, who is one of two Indian-Americans on the six-person city council, will face colleague Joe Zimmerman — and possibly others who have not declared yet — in the 2016 election to replace mayor James Thompson, Houston chronicle.com reported Sept. 17. “I look different, I talk different, maybe I eat different… But my values for the city are no less than the next person,” Jajoo was quoted as saying. He said he knows that eventually a South Asian will be mayor of the city, but stressed that he was “not looking for that label”.

Founded as a sugar plantation in the mid 1800s and incorporated in 1959, Sugar Land is located in Fort Bend county, some 18 miles southwest of Houston. The county’s Asian population has grown more quickly than any other group, according to a 2013 report by Stephen Klineberg, sociology professor at Rice University, about Houston’s increasing diversity, and his colleague Jie Wu.

Between 2015 and 2040, the population of voting age Asian-Americans is expected to grow by 80 percent while the population of Asian-Americans in general is expected to grow by 74 percent, according to a study by Paul Ong and Elena Ong of the University of California, Los Angeles’ Center for the Study of Inequality and the Asian Pacific American Institute for Congressional Studies.

Sundaram Narayanan, Wright State University Provost Fired in Wake of H-1B Probe

Sundaram Narayanan, Provost of Wright State University, in southwest Ohio, has been fired, in addition to Phani Kidambi, head of the university’s International Gateway program, and Ryan Fendley, senior advisor to the provost. According to Wright State University, the foreign-worker visa program is under federal investigation and that it has disciplined three administrators, including its Indian American provost, in connection with the probe.

School leaders said in a statement first issued Sept. 14 that they were informed earlier this year of “credible evidence” that, sometime between two and five years ago, not every employee sponsored by the school under H-1B work visas was actually working for the school.

“That would violate federal law, and it concerns us greatly,” said the joint statement from university president David Hopkins and Michael Bridges, chairman of the board of trustees.

The H-1B visas are for foreign workers in specialty occupations such as computer science, engineering and biotechnology. The school says it usually sponsored fewer than 50 of the visas each year.

The university, near Dayton, could face suspension of its ability to sponsor H-1B visas, and also fines and legal fees. The school says it is cooperating with federal investigators who are trying to determine whether criminal statutes were violated. School officials said they have been working with the Ohio attorney general’s office to uncover the facts, coordinate with federal authorities, and make sure the school is in compliance.

“We are taking strong actions to solve these problems,” their statement said. “We expect to take more actions in the near future and will announce them as soon as conditions permit.” Wright State said that Sundaram Narayanan has been demoted from provost, while retaining his faculty status. Two university vice presidents will take over the provost’s duties. The school had placed him on paid leave in May.

The school said the fact-finding process at a university of more than 20,000 students, faculty and staff total is complex and time-consuming, but the officials pledged to “get this right” and said that those who failed to comply with the law “must be held accountable.” A school spokesman declined any further comment Sept. 15, citing the ongoing federal investigation. He declined to say which federal agencies were investigating.

“As a matter of policy, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement can neither confirm nor deny the existence of an investigation unless or until an enforcement action is pursued,” said Khaalid Walls, an ICE spokesman. An FBI spokesman said he wasn’t aware of any bureau involvement.

Anthea Bhargava Wins Emmy for ‘The Voice’

Anthea Bhargava, an Indian American producer won her first Emmy Award for “Outstanding Reality-Competition Program” as part of the production team responsible for the reality singing competition, “The Voice,” at the 67th Annual Emmy Awards in Los Angeles Sept. 20.

Bhargava beat out the production team of Indian American model and television personality Padma Lakshmi’s reality cooking show “Top Chef,” which was nominated in the same category.

The 37-year-old line producer of “The Voice” was also a production manager for the 45th and 46th annual Grammy Awards before becoming an associate producer for the 47th edition of the show, and has worked as a production manager, associate producer and line producer on several other award shows, including the BET Awards and Latin Grammy Awards, according to IMDB.

Indian American Businessmen Charged With Tax Evasion

Seven Indian American liquor store operators in Chicago have been charged with sales tax evasion and could be jailed for three to 15 years, a media report said. Law enforcement authorities filed charges against Cherag Patel, Dipakkumar Patel, Jiggarkumar Patel, Mukesh Patel, Nishant Patel, Rajanikant Patel and Vishal Patel following a two-year criminal tax investigation, NBC Chicago reported Sept. 18 citing a statement from the attorney general’s office.

Charges were also framed against two other operators identified as Abdel Fattah Hammad and Yasir Kanan. The nine defendants collectively defrauded the state of Illinois out of more than $3.5 million in sales taxes between July 2010 and December 2013, according to the authorities.

“This should send a message that doing business in Illinois means following the state’s laws without exception,” Attorney General Lisa Madigan was quoted as saying in a statement.

Study Ranks U.S. Cities Based on the Urban Heat Island Effect on Temperatures

Athens, Ga. – Inner cities as well as suburbs show distinctly warmer temperatures—known as the urban heat island effect—than rural areas as a result of land use and human activities, which can affect rainfall, air quality and public health. A University of Georgia study using a new method for calculating urban heat island intensities clarifies the conflict on whether urban density or sprawl amplify these effects more. It also provides a ranking of the top urban heat island cities among the 50 largest metropolitan statistical areas.

The urban heat island effect describes how the spatial configuration of cities, the materials in them (such as asphalt), lack of vegetation and waste heat can modify temperature. The study, published in the journal Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, identifies Salt Lake City, Miami and Louisville as the top three urban heat island cities in the U.S.

Urban morphology—the patterns of a city’s physical configuration and the process of its development—has long been associated with the formation of urban heat islands. By examining the UHI intensities of 50 cities with various urban morphologies, the researchers evaluated the degree to which city configuration influences the UHI effect.

“The overall goal of our study was to clarify which urban form—sprawl or more-dense development—is most appropriate for UHI mitigation,” said the study’s lead author Neil Debbage, doctoral student in the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences’ department of geography.

The study establishes a method for estimating UHI intensities using PRISM—Parameter-elevation Relationships on Independent Slopes Model—climate data, an analytical model that creates gridded estimates by incorporating climatic variables (temperature and precipitation), expert knowledge of climatic events (rain shadows, temperature inversions and coastal regimes) and digital elevation.

The use of spatially gridded temperature data, rather than urban versus rural point comparisons, represents a new method for calculating a city’s canopy heat island intensity. The results identify the spatial contiguity of developed areas as a significant factor influencing the magnitude of the heat island effect.

“Not just whether cities have high-density development, but how the built infrastructure is connected—and disconnected by green spaces—has a great impact on heat island intensity,” said study co-author Marshall Shepherd, the UGA Athletic Association Distinguished Professor of Geography and Atmospheric Sciences.

“We found that more contiguous sprawling and dense urban development both enhanced UHI intensities. In other words, it does not appear to be a simplistic either-or situation regarding sprawl or density,” Debbage said.

The researchers hope the results can help influence local governments and city planners in the formulation of effective codes and policies to mitigate the urban heat island effect.

“It’s crucial to work toward a better understanding of the complex processes at the intersection of urbanization, climate and human health,” Shepherd said. “Current and future cities will be modified or designed with weather and climate in mind, and research at UGA will play a key role.

The study on “The Urban Heat Island Effect and City Contiguity” is available at www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0198971515300089.

Cisco Executive Chairman John Chambers Elected Chairman of U.S.-India Business Council

September 21, 2015 – WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC) Board of Directors announced that Mr. John T. Chambers, Executive Chairman of Cisco, has been elected as the Council’s next Chairman. The formal announcement of the appointment was made at the Council’s 40th Anniversary Leadership summit that kicked off the U.S.-India Strategic and Commercial Dialogue.

The transition will come at the end of a four-year term by Ajay Banga, President and CEO of MasterCard. Mr. Banga has been the Council’s longest-serving Chairman. “On behalf of the USIBC Board, it’s my privilege to announce and to welcome USIBC’s incoming chairman, John Chambers. John will of course be building on USIBC’s 40-year legacy which we’re celebrating tonight. We look forward to working with John and supporting him as his tenure officially begins the first of next year,” said Ajay Banga through a video message at the Council’s 40th Anniversary Leadership Summit.

“As a longtime supporter of USIBC, I have witnessed the Council’s influence rise dramatically as a direct result of the leadership provided by current chairman, Ajay Banga, and former chairs such as Terry McGraw and Indra Nooyi,” said John Chambers. “It is an exceptional honor to be entrusted with such a legacy and I look forward to building on their successes as USIBC’s next Chairman. With Prime Minister Modi’s upcoming visit to the Silicon Valley, the important focus on building a digitally empowered nation through Digital India and the ongoing strategic and commercial dialogue, it is an exciting time to join the Council.”

“We are grateful for Ajay’s leadership and commitment to furthering U.S.-India ties over the last four years. During his tenure, he blazed an equally impressive path by adding top American and Indian companies to the Council’s membership, increasing Council revenue and adding staff capacity at the Council’s regional offices to serve members. Due to Ajay’s leadership, the Council’s board of directors now includes 14 global Presidents and CEOs. The Council and its board are delighted to welcome John Chambers as the new Chairman. His global business acumen will be instrumental as we move forward to realize the full potential of U.S.-India relations. I look forward to working closely with John and the USIBC board to build on the Council’s proud, 40-year history,” said Mukesh Aghi, President of USIBC.

Formed in 1975 at the request of the U.S. and Indian governments, the U.S.-India Business Council is the premier business advocacy organization, comprised of top-tier U.S. and Indian companies advancing U.S.-India commercial ties. USIBC is the largest bilateral trade association in the United States, with liaison presence in New York, Silicon Valley, and New Delhi.

Social Support in Schools Is Key to Student Success

Tallahassee, Fla. — A new Florida State University study of underrepresented high school students suggests that schools can increase student success by facilitating social support structures that enhance students’ perceptions of value and esteem for their potential.

Lara Perez-Felkner, an assistant professor of higher education and sociology and a senior research associate at Florida State’s Center for Postsecondary Success (CPS), published the study in the journal Teachers’ College Record. The three-year study analyzed the variation in students’ educational pathways to college by specifically asking “How can the social context of schools keep underrepresented minority students on track to transition to college?”

Perez-Felkner, using a case study of a predominantly Latino and low-income urban charter school, found that students observe and value support from teachers and peers, embedded within the school’s social context. Collectively, highly structured support networks appear to have a positive effect on student’s college transition outcomes.

“These kids work hard to get ready for college, and the stress on them and their families can take a toll,” Perez-Felkner said. “Some students seemed more likely to persist through these challenging years if they perceive support from their teachers and peers.”

The study responds to the myriad school reform efforts that are attempting to address stratification in black and Latino students’ access to higher education through extensive reform initiatives, including these focused on social supports. Crucially, these efforts have not sufficiently focused on how students experience these reforms, which is essential to improving the effectiveness of support mechanisms and understanding why they have been insufficient.

“Even today, the schools most often attended by underrepresented students tend to offer fewer resources and support,” Perez-Felkner said. “While local, state and national reform efforts have targeted academic and structural dimensions of schooling, measures of their success rarely take the student perspective into account.”

The study employed traditional metrics such as college placement and academic preparation, while leveraging detailed analysis of the social fabric of the school as a potential support network to paint a detailed picture of the nuanced and at times fraught pursuit of what is increasingly a universal aspiration: college.

Nearly all students in the study encountered hurdles threatening to derail their college ambitions. Five primary and at times interrelated stressors emerged: academic grades, predicted stereotype threat, family responsibilities, family estrangement and burnout.

Among other things, the researcher measured school regard — the feeling students had that adults at school as well as their peers believed in them during stressful times, and specifically, how they regarded their capacity for educational success.

“School regard was associated with students’ persistence through the transition to college — and to stronger colleges — even in the face of academic, socioeconomic, and personal challenges,” Perez-Felkner said.

As recommendations for school and policy leaders, the study underscores that while enhancing rigor and pedagogy are effective for well-resourced students, the non-academic challenges often encountered by underrepresented students can get in the way of their ability to respond to these reforms. Therefore, interventions to help students achieve a more positive school-life balance and manage non-academic stress may enhance underrepresented students’ successful transitions to college.

“Having school-based allies who think they are intelligent, capable, and worthy of pursuing and realizing their college ambition can be a crucial factor in keeping underrepresented students on-track to successfully transition to college,” Perez-Felkner said. “Schools should be organized in a way that students have the opportunity to develop close relationships at school, which can enhance and reinforce their aspirations to go to and graduate from college.”

Finally, the study notes that attempts to evaluate school effectiveness may problematically underemphasize students’ interpretation of these reform efforts. Rather, students’ perceptions of their school context may be more accurate measure of their success.

The research was funded by the Spencer Foundation Dissertation Fellowship for Research Related to Education, with additional support from National Science Foundation, the American Educational Research Association and the Pathways to Adulthood Programme.

For more information, read the CPS policy brief with a summary of key findings and implications or the full article

India Can Establish Leadership Role In The World Economy: Study

Ahead of the first India-U.S. Strategic and Commercial Dialogue, a new study has suggested that India could establish its leadership role in the world economy by greatly expanding engagement in global markets. The study “India’s Rise: A Strategy for Trade-Led Growth” by C. Fred Bergsten of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, argues trade liberalization would enable India to increase its annual economic growth from the current 7 to 8 to 10 percent.

The study released here Thursday noted the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has proposed a series of sweeping reforms to reach the goals of employing its rapidly rising population and to eliminate its sizeable pockets of remaining poverty.

“But even this ambitious programme will not be enough. India must also greatly expand its engagement in global markets to both meet its economic objectives and establish its leadership role in the world economy,” it said.

“In particular, India must sharply increase its exports of both manufactured goods and services to achieve its target growth rate with the corresponding job creation and poverty reduction,” the study suggested.

India could increase its exports by $500 billion per year by joining the next stage of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, Bergsten said. Alternatively, it could proceed step-by-step, perhaps starting with investment concerns via the bilateral investment treaty (BIT) now under consideration between India and the U.S.

As major services economies and exporters, the two countries could negotiate a services-only agreement en route to comprehensive free trade. “The United States has strong economic and foreign policy interests in pursuing such a course with India,” Bergsten said.

“As the soon-to-be third largest economy in the world, India can provide strong support for global prosperity and enhance regional stability and balance throughout Asia.” Under free trade with India, the U.S. could double its services exports to that country and increase its merchandise exports by 50 to 60 percent, the study suggested.

The crucial starting point for enhanced Indian trade must be the reform programme proposed by Modi, Bergsten said. Its success, coupled with new policies toward international trade and investment, can propel India to a new “growth miracle”.

As both the domestic reforms in India and the international negotiations involved are complex and highly political processes, Bergsten said, India and the U.S. must urgently begin the process “to enable the earliest possible payoff for both countries.”

“The bonding between President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Modi has re-established a strong rapport between India and the U.S., dramatically reversing the difficulties that prevailed as recently as early 2014,” he said.

They have instituted consultations on a wide range of economic (and other) issues in an effort to deepen the relationship, with 77 initiatives emerging from their January 2015 summit alone, Bergsten noted.

Meanwhile, State Department spokesman John Kirby noted during President Barack Obama’s January visit to New Delhi he and Modi had elevated the U.S.-India Strategic Dialogue to the Strategic and Commercial Dialogue. This reflected “the United States and India’s shared priorities of generating economic growth, creating jobs, improving the investment climate, and strengthening the middle class in both countries,” he said.

The dialogue, Kirby said, “will be an opportunity for the United States and India to further strengthen their partnership to meet the challenges of the coming decades, from climate change to regional security, and of course, to deepen the economic and commercial ties between our two countries.” Thus the U.S. was “very much looking forward to that dialogue next week,” he said.

Top U.S., Indian CEOs Like Cyrus Mistry, Anil Ambani, Mary Barra, Others Converge In Washington

Top corporate leaders from India and the U.S. have converged here to hold a series of discussions among themselves and with the leadership of the two countries to find ways for an active private sector engagement in strengthening bilateral ties.

These meetings gain importance given India’s need for massive funding in infrastructure and the ambitious goal set by the two countries to increase bilateral trade to $500 billion per annum from the existing about $100 billion. Leading the Indian side of the corporate honchos are Cyrus Mistry, chairman ofTata Group, Kiran Mujumdar Shaw (Biocon), Preeta Reddy ( Apollo Hospitals), Sunil Bharti Mittal (Bharti Enterprises), and Anil Ambani (Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group).

The group of U.S. CEOs is led by David Cote, Chairman and CEO of Honeywell International. He is also Co-Chair of the India-U.S. CEO Forum. The forum has four Indian-American CEOs – Ajay Banga, president and CEO of MasterCard; Sanjay Bhatnagar, president and CEO of WaterHealth International, Shantanu Narayen, president and CEO of Adobe Systems, Indra Nooyi, chairman and CEO of PepsiCo, and Dinesh Paliwal, chairman, president and CEO of Harman International Industries.

Other American CEOs include Mary Barra of General Motors, Michael Burke of AECOM Technology Corporation, Ahmad Chatila of SunEdison, Andres Gluski of AES Corporation Paul Jacobs executive chairman of Qualcomm; Charles R Kaye, co-CEO of Warburg Pincus, Ellen Kullman of DuPont, Andrew Liveris of Dow Chemical Company, Michael Mahoney of Boston Scientific Corporation, Douglas Peterson, of McGraw Hill Financial and James Taiclet of American Tower Corporation.

To increase the role of the private sector, for the first time ever, the Department of Commerce will host its U.S.-India CEO Forum on September 21, in close proximity to the Strategic and Commercial Dialogue (SCD), a media statement said.

The CEO Forum — chaired by U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker and Caroline Atkinson, Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy U.S. National Security Adviser for International Economics — is the primary mechanism for engaging the US and Indian private sectors and leveraging business leaders’ recommendations to shape policymaking discussions.

The private sector co-chairs will give a readout of their recommendations at the SCD meeting on September 22. As part of the CEO Forum, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace will host a half-day event featuring remarks from Pritzker and Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Nirmala Sitharaman, and a discussion between US and Indian CEOs on efforts to deepen bilateral economic engagement.

India, United States Will Continue To Push Ties To New Heights: U.S. Ambassador

Houston:  U.S. and India have strengthened their ties in defence and counter-terrorism, global health, cyber security and deep space exploration, and will continue to push the bilateral cooperation to “new heights” in the months ahead, a top American diplomat has said.

“In our strategic cooperation, we’ve deepened our military-to-military relationships. We now train for joint operations, we’ve moved to joint production of defence items, and have developed a close and consequential counter-terrorism partnership to help keep both our populations safe”, U.S. Ambassador to India, Richard Verma, said. He was speaking at the Indo-American Chamber of Commerce of Greater Houston (IACCGH) 16th Annual Gala.

Both as “natural allies” and “best partners”, we continue to push our cooperation to “new heights” from global health security, to agriculture, deep sea and deep space exploration, cyber security and law enforcement we are expanding our work together, and we will continue to do so in the months ahead. We have aligned our vision for cooperation in the Asia-Pacific ocean region, standing up for the post-World War II rules-based order that both our countries hold so dear, he said.

Addressing a packed gathering of over 600 prominent businessmen, community leaders, Mr Verma also said, “We support India’s move to become a rising power, with global political, strategic and economic influence. That’s why President Obama has explicitly called for India’s permanent seat on a reformed UN Security Council,” he said.

“During past nine months, I’ve witnessed first-hand the excitement of the U.S.-India relationship; I’ve seen the impact that our people and our programmes can make; and I’ve seen the great promise of our strategic partnership what clearly has become the critical strategic alliance for the 21st Century”.

Since the Prime Minister’s visit to Washington last September, we launched or re-energised some 30 different working groups, from trade to the environment. And, following the President’s January visit, we are working on some 80 different lines of work, Mr Verma said.

But perhaps most significantly, we are becoming increasingly aligned on the key strategic questions of our time. “In last one decade we’ve achieved a strong, solid record of performance. In 2005, our two-way trade numbers were around U.S. $ 30 billion, now it is U.S. $ 105 billion.

“10 years ago, we had around 30,000 Indian students studying in the U.S., but last year, it rose to highest number ever of was 1,05,000 students. Indian visitor visiting the U.S. in 2005 were 400,000, past year number soared to over 1.2 million. And in defence, we went from U.S. $ zero in defence sales to well over U.S.$ 10 billion, in just a few short years,” Mr Verma said.

Naperville Unites and Pledges Support to Combat Hate Crime

Naperville, IL: A strong contingent of religious leaders and elected representatives from Naperville and DuPage County along with over 250 community members, representing a diverse set of religious denominations, got together to express solidarity with the Sikh community and the recent hate crime victim, Inderjit Singh Mukker, a Sikh American. The interfaith event, “United We Stand”, hosted by the Naperville Interfaith Leaders Association (NILA), along with the Islamic Center of Naperville (ICN) was held on Sunday, September 20 th, 2015 at the ICN facility in Naperville, Illinois.

A large number of eminent speakers, including Congressman Bill Foster, State Representative Linda Chapa LaVia and DuPage County Board Member Tony Michelassi were among those who came together to deliberate on the contemporary challenges of hate crime and the ways and means to combat violence based on an individual’s race and ethnicity.

Love Wins; Hate Loses – Congressman Bill Foster, 11th Congressional District, said that the government has been seriously engaged in the effective implementation of a zero-tolerance policy towards hate crimes.

“The US has always been proud of diversity and, in this backdrop, the struggle against all forms of hate against any segment of society must be the great cause of our generations, and all generations”, he opined. “By rallying around Mukker and the Sikh community, we are sending a strong message that the force of hate is tiny when compared to the force of love in our country”, he stated.He congratulated the Sikh community for using this tragedy as an opportunity to spread the message of love and acceptance and to set an inspiring example to be emulated by others.

Linda Chapa LaVia,  State Representative – 83rd Representative District, also underscored the need to demonstrate love and tolerance for all humanity and to believe in one core ethnicity – mankind. Ms. Lavia also referred to the role of media and its responsibility to better handle sensitive topics and those with religious and racial undertones.

“We Are All Americans – No American Should Become a Hate Victim” Mukker’s son, Kanwar Singh, expressed gratitude for the broad based community support extended to his father. “The United States is our country. We are Americans – and no American should become a victim of hate because of his religion, color, race, ethnicity, and sex”, he added.

Rev. Dr. Lynn Pries, President, NILA stressed the importance of empathy and learning to coexist without changing anyone’s religious commitments. He urged people to develop an objective understanding of differences and commonalities among different religions. “We must learn to celebrate our commonalities and respect our differences and thereby further enrich the core of the civilized culture of the US”, added Rev. Dr. Lynn Pries.

Tisleen Kaur Singh, a first-generation American from the National Sikh Campaign said that absence of an open dialog among practitioners of different religions is resulting in the lack of understanding and tolerance for each other. Tisleen also highlighted the need to ensure that mutual dialogues in our educational institutions, homes, and social media are free of hate and bigotry. “This would enable people to acknowledge differences, promote tolerance, live peacefully, uphold justice, and thereby bring peace and progress to all”, she added.

Aadil Farid, President, ICN, after having welcomed the guests, condemned all acts of violence, wherever they erupt, whatever shape they may take, and whoever they are committed against, including the present one against Mukker.   He wholeheartedly applauded the decision of the State Attorney’s office to investigate the attack on Mukker as a hate crime. “The propaganda on TV and movies, built on fear and hate, which is poisoning the minds of youth and tearing apart the fabric of American society, is the root cause of the hate crimes. This menace must be tackled by the government with an iron hand”, said Farid.

“In the end, America, which stands for religious freedom, liberty, and justice for all, will come out in flying colors in its war against the hate crime. We as Americans should come together to create an egalitarian society wherein the country is free of bigotry, hate mongering, anti-Semitism, and Islamophobia”, Farid added emphatically.

Sadia Covert, Attorney and Social Activist, put forth staggering statistics from the Dept. of Justice which suggest that approximately 250,000 hate crimes occur each year and that most of them go unreported. She also spoke about the pressing need to reform hate crime laws to lay down clear criteria to prove the motive of crime and to impose increased penalties for those prosecuted for violent hate crimes.  Imam Sk Mir Rizwan Ali (Islamic Center of Naperville), Suggested having an alliance of faith leaders/communities to stand together against all forms of violence and hate crimes.

The speakers that represented a wide range of organizations included Amarjith Singh (Illinois Sikh Community Center, Wheaton), Sharan Kaur Singh (Sikh Coalition), Bernie Newman (Congregation Beth Shalom, Naperville), Rev. Greg Skiba (HOPE United Church of Christ), Prasad Garkhedkar (Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh, Naperville), Rev. Tom Capo (DuPage Unitarian Universalist Church, Naperville),and Tom Cordaro (St. Margaret Mary Parish, Naperville), Sunil Shah, President FIA. The speakers extensively referred to different religious texts which direct people to support and speak on behalf of those who are marginalized, particularly those facing dark times.

Other community leaders who graced the event included Regina Brent – Precinct 44 Committeewoman, Gladson Varghese – President, GOPIO Chicago, Rasheed Ahmed – Executive Director, Islamic Medical Association of North America and President, US India Policy Institute, Saily Joshi – Board Member, Naperville Indian Community Outreach and Gautam Grover – Board Member, Naperville Indian Community Outreach.

The event began with the Flag Ceremony by the Boy Scouts Troop 99 followed by the Pledge of Allegiance by both the Boy Scouts Troop and Girl Scouts Troop 51062– a pledge that inspired speakers to focus attention on the country’s promise for “justice and liberty for all”.

Zayd Baig read out an inspirational verse from the Holy Qur’an highlighting the importance of standing firmly for justice. Shoaib Khadri, Secretary, ICN was the Master of Ceremony and reminded the audience that “whenever the social fabric of a community gets ripped, it is incumbent on all community leaders to not only mend this tear but to work together to stop the next potential mishap.” Closing remarks were made by the event organizer Shafeek Abooubaker of ICN who thanked all the attendees as well as all volunteers who helped make this solidarity event a grand success.

The Naperville Interfaith Leaders Association (NILA), established in 1999 is an organization of religious leaders from a diversity of religious traditions.  The Islamic Center of Naperville (ICN) is a non-profit 501 c(3) organization dedicated to providing religious services, youth programs, charitable donations, education and promoting communal harmony through interfaith activities. ICN upholds the values of Tolerance, Justice, Peace, and Prosperity.

Punjab Sports & Cultural Club Organizes Kabaddi and Volleyball Tournaments in Chicago

Chicago IL : Punjabi sports lovers from the States of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Ohio turned out, in huge numbers, to enjoy Kabaddi and Vollyball Tournaments, followed by a vibrant cultural program. The event was organized by Punjab Sports & Cultural Club at Elk Grove Village, Forest Preserve grounds in Chicago.

In the Kabaddi Cup Tournament, there were three Teams from India, USA, and Canada. In the final match, USA Kabaddi Team defeated the Indian Team by scoring 38 points against 19 and won the first prize. The second prize went to the Indian Team.

The first prize of $13,000 was sponsored by prominent businessman, Darshan Singh Dhaliwal from Milwaukee, in the memory of his father, late Subedar Kartar Singh Dhaliwal. The second prize of $11,000 was sponsored by the host Punjab Sports & Cultural Club.

The people watched the Kabaddi Tournament with great enthusiasm, as Kabaddi  is affectionately called the mother of all sports in Punjab. In the Volleyball Tournament, Shaheed Bhagat Singh Sports Club won the first prize of $1500 and Glenview Spykar, the second prize of $1100.

Raja Krishan Murti, the candidate for US Congress, in his address, appreciated the efforts of the Punjab Sports & Cultural Club in promoting love for sports among the people of Punjab. He urged the young generation to give up their sedentary life style. He called upon them to take active interest in their physical fitness and eat healthy food.

Murthi also appealed to the audience to support him in the ensuing Congress elections and give him an opportunity to serve them. OP Meena, Consul at the Consulate General of India in Chicago, who also spoke on the occasion, said that the love for sports among people of Punjab should be a source of inspiration to their counterparts from other parts of India. “This would go a long way in enriching the culture of physical fitness and enabling people to lead a happy life”, he added.

In the evening, the popular singers, Harbhjan Mann and Gursewak Mann, entertained the audience for more than two hours with their hit Punjabi folk songs. The people thoroughly enjoyed the cultural program and many of them, especially youngsters, were seen dancing energetically to the melodious tunes.

Typical Punjabi food, coupled with hot tea, was served throughout the day to the spectators, free of cost. The weather, which was highly pleasant, was instrumental not only in attracting people but also in retaining them throughout the tournament.

Harvinder Singh, President of the Club, Amrik Singh (Amar Carpet), Finance Secretary & Media In-charge, Happy Heer, Jaskaran Singh Dhaliwal, Lovedeep Singh Dulat, Narinder Singh Sra, Gian Singh Seehra, Gurmeet Singh Bhola, Rajinder Singh Dyal, Manminder Singh Heer, Lucky Sahota and Swaran Singh Sidhu, Board Members of the Club, contributed their best efforts in making the event a grand success.

Hindus find Selena’s “Om” thigh tattoo “out of line”

Hindus have described American actor/singer Selena Gomez’s reported new “Om” tattoo on her upper left thigh as highly “irreverent and disrespectful”. Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada today, said that Hindus usually started and ended their prayers with “Om”, the mystical syllable containing the universe, which in Hinduism was used to introduce and conclude religious work.

Such trivialization of “Om” was upsetting to Hindus; and it was highly inappropriate for Selena to place such revered and sacred symbol of Hinduism with high religious significance on her thigh; Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, noted.

In April 2013, Hindus described Selena’s sultry debut performance of “Come & Get It” at MTV Awards ceremony in California wearing bindi as “insensitive”. Rajan Zed suggested that as a renowned performer, Selena should get acquainted with the basics of world religions.

Hindus find Selena’s “Om” thigh tattoo “out of line”Zed pointed out that Hollywood needed to understand that Hinduism, with about one billion adherents, was oldest and third largest religion of the world with a rich philosophical thought. Its concepts and symbols had well-defined meanings and purposes and these were not created just for Hollywood’s usage to add dramatic affects as some sanctity and spirituality was attached to these, Zed stated.

Hindus welcomed Hollywood and other celebrities to immerse in Hinduism but taking it seriously and respectfully and not just for indecorous showing of Hindu symbols and concepts to advance their selfish agenda. Casual flirting sometimes resulted in pillaging serious spiritual doctrines and revered symbols and hurting the devotees, Rajan Zed indicated.  If Selena or other entertainers needed any assistance about Hinduism, he or other Hindu scholars would be glad to help, Zed added.

PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi on Fortune’s ‘Most Powerful Women’ List

India ranked 131 out of 189 countries on fixed-broadband subscriptions in 2014, a drop from the 125th rank a year before. On active mobile-broadband subscriptions, India ranked 155, a significant drop from the 113th rank in 2013. India ranked 136th in individuals using the Internet in 2014, with 18 per cent individuals using the net, an improvement over the 142nd rank in 2013 when 15.1 per cent individuals used the internet.  India ranked 80 among 133 developing countries on percentage of households with internet in 2014 with a 15.3 per cent penetration as compared to the 75th rank and 13 per cent penetration in 2013.

India has slipped in global rankings on broadband penetration but has made slight progress in the percentage of individuals using internet in the country, according to a United Nations report. The UN Broadband Commission released ‘The State of Broadband’ report yesterday just ahead of the forthcoming Sustainable Development Goals Summit here and the parallel meeting of the Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development on September 26.

The report says that 57 percent of the world’s people remain offline and unable to take advantage of the enormous economic and social benefits the Internet can offer. The report said that in order to connect everyone, it is vital to increase the online representation of many of the world’s languages, especially for regions and countries with high linguistic diversity such as Africa, India and South-East Asia.

“The UN Sustainable Development Goals remind us that we need to measure global development by the number of those being left behind,” said Houlin Zhao, who serves as co-Vice Chair of the Commission with UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.  “The market has done its work connecting the world’s wealthier nations, where a strong business case for network roll-out can easily be made. Our important challenge now is to find ways of getting online the four billion people who still lack the benefits of Internet connectivity, and this will be a primary focus of the Broadband Commission going forward,” Zhao said.

The report said 3.2 billion people are now connected, up from 2.9 billion last year and equating to 43 per cent of the global population. But while access to the internet is approaching saturation levels in the developed world, the net is only accessible to 35 per cent of people in developing countries. The situation in the UN-designated Least Developed Countries is particularly critical, with over 90 per cent of people without any kind of Internet connectivity.

Combatting Terrorism Is Top Priority For India, US

Washington, DC: September 22, 2015: Describing Indo-US relationship into “a defining counter-terrorism partnership for the 21st century” India and the US have called on Pakistan to bring perpetrators of 2008 Mumbai terror attacks to justice on Tuesday in an India-US Joint Declaration on Combating Terrorism issued at the end of the first India-US Strategic and Commercial Dialogue that set the stage for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s third summit with President Barack Obama next week.

Both the nations reaffirmed the commitment to combat terrorism in all its forms, which constitutes a profound threat to global peace and security, and to uphold our common values of democracy, justice, and the rule of law. They reaffirmed President Obama’s and Prime Minister Modi’s vision to transform the U.S.-India relationship into a defining counterterrorism partnership for the 21st century, while reiterating the threat posed by entities such as Al-Qa’ida and its affiliates, Lashkar-e-Tayibba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, D Company, and the Haqqani Network, and other regional groups  that seek to undermine stability in South Asia.

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and US Secretary of State John Kerry, who led the dialogue, “reaffirmed the commitment of India and the United States to combat terrorism in all its forms,” the declaration said. Describing terrorism as “a profound threat to global peace and security, and to uphold our common values of democracy, justice, and the rule of law,” the declaration reaffirmed Obama and Modi’s “vision to transform the US-India relationship into a defining counterterrorism partnership for the 21st century.”

The declaration also “reiterated the threat posed by entities such as Al-Qaeda and its affiliates, Lashkar-e-Taeba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, D Company, and the Haqqani Network, and other regional groups that seek to undermine stability in South Asia.” Calling on Pakistan to bring to justice the perpetrators of the 2008 Mumbai attack, Swaraj and Kerry strongly condemned the July 27, 2015 terrorist attack in Gurdaspur, Punjab, and August 5, 2015, attack in Udhampur, Jammu and Kashmir.

Swaraj and Kerry, the declaration said, had also commended the continuing efforts to finalise a bilateral agreement to expand intelligence sharing and terrorist watch-list information.

They also commended progress toward India’s entry into the US Department of Homeland Security Global Entry Programme and the inclusion of Mumbai in the Strong Cities Network, a forum to build sub-national resiliency against violent extremism,

Swaraj and Kerry also commended progress toward a Memorandum of Understanding between the Indian National Police Academy (Hyderabad) and the New York Police Department.

The proposed next meeting of the Homeland Security Dialogue will be held in early 2016.

The declaration also recognised the serious threat posed by ISIL/Daesh to global security and affirmed efforts to degrade and defeat this threat in accordance with the provisions of UN Security Council Resolutions. The declaration recalled the signing of the US-India Counter-terrorism Cooperation Initiative (CCI), establishment of the Homeland Security Dialogue in 2010, and several other joint initiatives.

It also reaffirmed their support for a UN Comprehensive Convention against International Terrorism that advances and strengthens the framework for global cooperation and reinforces that no cause or grievance justifies terrorism. Swaraj and Kerry also commended the meeting of the US-India Terrorist Designations Exchange in July 2015 to strengthen cooperation on domestic terrorist designations. Also commended was the proposed next round of the Counter-terrorism Joint Working Group in early 2016.

Innovation, Digital Economy, Clean Energy On Modi’s Agenda During U.S. Visit

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi sets out to win over America again with an outreach to the Indian-American community, three themes would animate his journey-entrepreneurship and innovation, digital economy and renewable energy. According to reports, landing in New York on Sep 23 evening, Modi will have an interaction with potential investors, a discussion with media and communication majors and a dinner with CEOs of 40-plus companies focusing on infrastructure and manufacturing in aid of his “Make in India” initiative, next day.

Modi is the first Indian prime minister to visit the Bay Area since Morarji Desai picked up an award at University of California, Berkeley in 1978 and Indira Gandhi visited Los Angeles in 1982.

Among the leaders of Fortune 500 companies expected at the dinner meeting with Modi at New York’s Waldorf Astoria hotel are Lockheed Martin chairman Marillyn A Hewson, Ford Motor president Mark Fields, IBM CEO Ginni Rometty, PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi and Johnson & Johnson chairman Jorge Mesquita. Modi will then head to the Silicon Saturday after addressing the UN global summit Friday.

The first Indian Prime Minister to visit California in more than three decades, Modi is set to have meetings among others with Apple CEO Tim Cook, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerbergand electric carmaker Tesla’s iconic CEO Elon Musk. Besides a town hall style question-answer session at Facebook’s Menlo Park headquarters, Modi will also be meeting Satya Nadella, Sundar Pichai and Shantanu Narayen, India-born CEOs of Microsoft, Google, and Adobe respectively. His first stop in California will be at Tesla’s Fremont plant on Saturday. Here more than the zero emissions cars that it makes, Modi would be interested in its “Powerwall”, a home battery charged by solar panels, for India’s clean energy initiative.

With many an Indian at the forefront of innovation in the Silicon Valley, Modi will be looking at how to maximise opportunities at a digital economy dinner that evening attended by several Indian-American tech leaders as also Cisco Chairman John Chambers, and QualcommChairman Paul Jacobs among others.

Next day after discussing “how communities can work together to address social and economic challenges” at the Facebook townhall, Modi, who has more Facebook fans than any politician except Barack Obama, will head to the Googleplex in Mountain View, Santa Clara. Besides Pichai, Modi will also be meeting Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of Google’s new holding company Alphabet Inc, there.

At Googleplex, Modi will also witness the start of a 15 hour hackathon or a marathon software coding session with some 150 Indian programmers looking to produce software and applications relevant to India for Modi’s Digital India and Skill India missions. Hosted by the Indian IT industry trade body, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), along with a clutch of start-ups in India and the U.S., the hackathon will have a simultaneous session at Tech Mahindra’s Noida facility.

Later that day he would participate in a roundtable on renewable energy hosted by Precourt Institute for Energy of Stanford University in cooperation with the U.S. Commerce Department.

Modi, who last year got a rockstar like reception when he gave a speech at New York’s Madison Square Garden, would be hoping to recreate that magic at a community reception in San Jose on the evening of September 27.

More than 45,000 people have registered for free passes for the event at the 19,000-seat SAP Centre organised by an Indian American group. Back in New York on September 28 after his two-day visit to the Silicon Valley, Modi will have his third summit with Obama within a year in the backdrop of the first India-U.S. strategic and commercial dialogue in Washington on September 21 and 22.

India Ranks 81 In The Global Innovation Index 2015

Indians around the world are known for their innovations and creativity, the rank of India in the list of Global Innovation Index has gone down further to 81 in comparison to its last year’s ranking. Switzerland, the UK, Sweden, the Netherlands and the US are the top 5 position of this list. This study on Global Innovation Index was published collectively by Cornell University, INSEAD France and World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).

The index enlisted 141 economies around the globe taking into account their innovation capacity and efficiency. The study shows that the nation has outpaced other countries in the Central and Southern Asian Region (CSA). China, Brazil and India, the leading nations in the lower middle income categories are competing close against developed world on innovation quality.

India has witnessed a consistent downfall in ease of doing business, decision-making on policies have been slow and the political environment has not been consistent. India has been falling positions in the overall rankings since the last 4 years. India’s was holding the ranking of 76 last year. However, the nation has bagged a place amongst the leading 10 outperformers.

“This change in ranking can be primarily attributed to two major factors. The first concerns the changing dynamics of the country’s political, educational and business environment, and the second concerns the structural change GII has undergone to improve itself as an assessment tool over the years,” the GII report pointed out.

According to this study, India has been performing well in innovation quality, knowledge diffusion, general infrastructure, research & development and investment. However, the nation has witnessed a poor performance in institutions and infrastructure, business sophistication, human capital and research, creative outputs and market sophistication.

“We believe that with the present growth trend the future ranking for India is going to improve as the data get revised and as the government continues to perform towards a development oriented growth path,” said CII Director General Chandrajit Banerjee. As per the report, the data collected is the perception of the local citizens owning to inactivity of the government for the given period.

This inactivity is due to slowing economy, high inflation and the widespread corruption.

Tech Industry Supports 400,000 U.S. Jobs, Helps America Innovate

People with common heritage of Madhya Pradesh (MP) and residing in New York New Jersey Tristate area came together and celebrated their  First Friends of MP Family Picnic in New Jersey  on Sun 20th Sept, 2015. The whole day Picnic was a grand success, with participation from people of all parts of New York New Jersey Connecticut, and with origins in Indore, Bhopal, Gwalior, Khandwa, Dewas and other towns of MP.  The pleasant sunny weather and ambience of Liberty State Park, NJ right next to Statue to Liberty added to the fun atmosphere. The Friends of MP Conclave in New York in early 2015 gave a booster to the NRIs from MP to coalesce for a friendly family get- together.

With around 120 attendees of all ages, the day started with Indore’s traditional  Poha -made on the site by men participants – laced with Ratlami Sev, Jeeravan and accompanied by Jalebi/Kachori. Then followed sports and games and catching up of friends, many meeting each other after many years and connecting on many common roots / relationships. Lunch again was MP’s signature  Choorma – Dal – Batee, which was really relished by all. Future years may see  Baflaa, which is truly a Malwa Cuisine. Lunch was followed by a Social Hour of introductions and plans for future such get – together and with much larger participation. While thousands of people from MP may be in the NY Tristate area, this was the first such gathering of its sort at the people’s level in many years, making attendees happy and nostalgic.

The planning and execution for the event was managed by a Core Team of Jitendra Muchhal, Rakesh Bharagava, Dr. R Kakani, Rajiv Goyal, Rajesh Mittal, Raj Bansal, Pankaj Gupta and Navneet Trivedi over last few months . Right from name labels to conversations, usage of Hindi and Malwee language was encouraged through out the day, also coinciding with MP’s hosting of World Hindi Conference this month.

Joe Biden, John Kerry, & Sushma Swaraj Renew Commitment to Grow U.S.-India Trade Relations

Washington, D.C., September 21, 2015 – Kicking off the inaugural U.S.-India Strategic and Commercial Dialogue and commemorating the 40th anniversary of the U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC), the annual USIBC Leadership summit featured addresses by Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, Indian Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj, and other high-ranking officials from both governments and industry leaders.

Continuing the dialogue established by President Obama and Prime Minister Modi in the last year, Vice President Biden delivered an address highlighting the importance of the U.S.-India trade relationship and the U.S. commitment to growing bilateral trade to $500 billion over the next few years. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke to the importance of building stronger U.S.-India ties and reinforcing India’s position as an ally in the region.

USIBC Chairman Ajay Banga – who is President and CEO of MasterCard – delivered the State of the Council address. “The eyes of history remain fixed on India and the United States as they move closer to ushering in what could be a whole new era.  A new era for India.  A new era for India-U.S. Relations. It’s a new era that could see global trade accelerate and increase with Indian membership in organizations like the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum,” said Banga.

The summit welcomed addresses from Penny Pritzker, Secretary of Commerce, Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman, Minister of State, Independent Charge, for the Ministry of Commerce & Industry, and Shri Piyush Goyal, Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Power, Coal and New & Renewable Energy.

The summit also featured a panel discussion on “Why Make in India?” moderated by CNBC anchor Seema Mody, featuring Secretary, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion Amitabh Kant; Emerson President Ed Monser; Chairman of HDFC Deepak Parekh and Founder and Chairman of Bharti Enterprises Sunil Bharti Mittal.

USIBC presented its prestigious Global Leadership Awards to Indra Nooyi, Chairman and CEO of PepsiCo
Indra Nooyi, Chairman and CEO of PepsiCo

USIBC presented its prestigious Global Leadership Awards to Indra Nooyi, Chairman and CEO of PepsiCo, and Shobhana Bhartia, Chairperson and Editorial Director of HT Media, one of India’s largest publicly listed media companies. Both were honored for their contributions and commitment to driving a more inclusive global economy and for their roles as women leaders.

The awardees were introduced by Purna Saggurti, Chairman Global Corporate & Investment Banking, Bank of America Merrill Lynch who also serves as one of USIBC’s board of directors.

“These extraordinary leaders have made a lasting impact on their industries and on U.S.-India relations,” said Saggurti. “They have been a true inspiration to business and leaders across the globe and have raised the bar for all of us.”

 

“The USIBC plays a critically important role in strengthening the relationship between two great nations,” said Indra Nooyi. “There are tremendous opportunities ahead to work together in new ways that capitalize on our collective strengths and pave the way to shared prosperity for our countries, our companies and our citizens. PepsiCo is deeply committed to being part of this dialogue, and it is humbling to be honored at this year’s historic celebration.”

“As the representative of a media group that realizes the importance of looking at both India Shining, and the Other India to get a real picture of what is happening in our country, and as a woman leader in a nation where women are finally coming into their own, I am delighted to receive this award. Our two countries, both democracies, have a strong and free media and I see increasing opportunities for collaboration as media and technology companies from India and the U.S. navigate the evolving digital landscape,” said Shobhana Bhartia.

Renowned Indian-American artist, Natvar Bhavasr who is known for his abstract expressionism and “color-field” painting was awarded the Artistic Achievement Award. “My work aims to transcend boundaries and I am honored to receive this award that recognizes my Indian roots and my training in arts that took place in the United States. I would not be the artist I am today had it not been for the inspirations that have guided me in my absorbing the gifts offered by both cultures, my birthplace India and my half a century’s participation in the creative life of New York City,” said Natvar Bhavsar.

USIBC President Mukesh Aghi said, “In a world filled with complex security and economic challenges, the U.S.-India relationship matters more now than ever before. It is no surprise that Prime Minister Modi’s next stop is in Silicon Valley, the bedrock of entrepreneurship and innovation – those are the areas that will grow our economies, but also an area that requires strong talent and a continual commitment to foster a strong business environment. To achieve this end a crucial step is being taken to launch U.S. Business Centers in India to support the entry of U.S. small and mid-sized companies, universities, and skills’ providers into the market.”

Attending companies included leaders from MasterCard, PepsiCo, Bank of America, Boeing, American Tower Corp, Amway, Cigna, Dow, Pfizer, and UST Global.

‘Pushtimarg’ Art Exhibit Comes To U.S.

“Gates of the Lord: The Tradition of Krishna Paintings,” the first major U.S. exhibit of the art of the Pushtimarg, a Hindu sect of western India, is on exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago from Sept. 13 to Jan. 3, 2016. The exhibit, which features more than 100 objects celebrating Shrinathji, a form of Krishna, is being funded by the Reliance Foundation — a non-profit organization started by Mukesh and Nita Ambani in 2010 to focus on the areas of rural transformation, education, health, urban renewal, and arts, culture and heritage. Anita and Prabhakant Sinha, Indian American philanthropists in Chicago also supported the exhibit through their generous contributions.

“Gates of the Lord: The Tradition of Krishna Paintings,” the first major U.S. exhibit of the art of the Pushtimarg, a Hindu sect of western India, is on exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago from Sept. 13 to Jan. 3, 2016. The exhibit, which features more than 100 objects celebrating Shrinathji, a form of Krishna, is being funded by the Reliance Foundation — a non-profit organization started by Mukesh and Nita Ambani in 2010 to focus on the areas of rural transformation, education, health, urban renewal, and arts, culture and heritage. Anita and Prabhakant Sinha, Indian American philanthropists in Chicago also supported the exhibit through their generous contributions.   Douglas Druick, president and director of the AIC, said he had never encountered the art of the Pushtimarg before Indian American Madhuvanti Ghose, Alsdorf Associate Curator of Indian, Southeast Asian, Himalayan and Islamic Art, brought it to his attention, but it definitely left an impression on him. “It was big and bold and decorative and joyous and intriguing and sometimes even a little funny,” Druick said. “You don’t have to know much about what you’re seeing to respond, but it does encourage you to learn more and of course that’s what we want in a museum context.”   Set to ragas highlighting each season, the exhibit takes museum-goers through the progression of Pushtimarg art from the 17th century to today, while also displaying the different tones of the pichvais, or intricately painted cloth hangings, depending on the season. Ghose explained how the pichvais are meant to hang behind svarups (sacred images) of Shrinathji in shrines. Not only the pichvai, but the shrine furnishings are changed daily and especially for festivals to represent the mood of that season.   For instance, in the summer pichvais, devotees can be seen fanning and helping cool Shrinathji, while in autumn the mood is more celebratory because of the harvests. Comprised of drawings, pichvais, paintings and historic photographs from two major private collections — the TAPI Collection of Praful and Shilpa Shah in Surat, India, and the Amit Ambalal Collection of Ahmedabad, India — the exhibit also offers information about the history of the Pushtimarg. Vallabhacharya, the founder of the Pushtimarg sect, stressed simple seva, or loving service or worship, to reach spiritual enlightenment.   Ghose explained how the art of the sect was maintained through the years by individual families who descended from Vallabhacharya, with this exhibition being the first time many of these pieces are on public display. Druick explained how the exhibit was inaugurated Sept. 11 to commemorate the speech given by Swami Vivekananda 122 years ago at the 1893 World Parliament of Religions at the AIC.   “What he preached was tolerance and understanding of difference and of different religions,” Druick said. “And that’s of course what an encyclopedic museum is about. So his message and our mission were perfectly aligned then as they are now.” The transportation of the exhibit’s delicate pichvais required a substantial sum of money that Druick said would have made the show difficult to accomplish. “That’s why the support of the show by the Ambani family and Reliance has been absolutely critical,” Druick told the media. “Because without their support, we could not have realized the show.”   Ambani said that when she was approached by AIC to sponsor the exhibit, “It was an instant yes. First and foremost, I thought it was a good way to represent the diversity of our art and culture outside India,” Ambani said. “And secondly, the most important reason was that our family is a big believer in Shrinathji.”Douglas Druick, president and director of the AIC, said he had never encountered the art of the Pushtimarg before Indian American Madhuvanti Ghose, Alsdorf Associate Curator of Indian, Southeast Asian, Himalayan and Islamic Art, brought it to his attention, but it definitely left an impression on him. “It was big and bold and decorative and joyous and intriguing and sometimes even a little funny,” Druick said. “You don’t have to know much about what you’re seeing to respond, but it does encourage you to learn more and of course that’s what we want in a museum context.”

Set to ragas highlighting each season, the exhibit takes museum-goers through the progression of Pushtimarg art from the 17th century to today, while also displaying the different tones of the pichvais, or intricately painted cloth hangings, depending on the season. Ghose explained how the pichvais are meant to hang behind svarups (sacred images) of Shrinathji in shrines. Not only the pichvai, but the shrine furnishings are changed daily and especially for festivals to represent the mood of that season.

‘Pushtimarg’ Art Exhibit Comes To U.S.For instance, in the summer pichvais, devotees can be seen fanning and helping cool Shrinathji, while in autumn the mood is more celebratory because of the harvests. Comprised of drawings, pichvais, paintings and historic photographs from two major private collections — the TAPI Collection of Praful and Shilpa Shah in Surat, India, and the Amit Ambalal Collection of Ahmedabad, India — the exhibit also offers information about the history of the Pushtimarg. Vallabhacharya, the founder of the Pushtimarg sect, stressed simple seva, or loving service or worship, to reach spiritual enlightenment.

Ghose explained how the art of the sect was maintained through the years by individual families who descended from Vallabhacharya, with this exhibition being the first time many of these pieces are on public display. Druick explained how the exhibit was inaugurated Sept. 11 to commemorate the speech given by Swami Vivekananda 122 years ago at the 1893 World Parliament of Religions at the AIC.

“What he preached was tolerance and understanding of difference and of different religions,” Druick said. “And that’s of course what an encyclopedic museum is about. So his message and our mission were perfectly aligned then as they are now.” The transportation of the exhibit’s delicate pichvais required a substantial sum of money that Druick said would have made the show difficult to accomplish. “That’s why the support of the show by the Ambani family and Reliance has been absolutely critical,” Druick told the media. “Because without their support, we could not have realized the show.”

Ambani said that when she was approached by AIC to sponsor the exhibit, “It was an instant yes. First and foremost, I thought it was a good way to represent the diversity of our art and culture outside India,” Ambani said. “And secondly, the most important reason was that our family is a big believer in Shrinathji.”

India to become the fastest-growing emerging market this year: Goldman Sachs

“We forecast India’s potential growth could rise to 8 per cent over the period FY16-20 from 7 per cent in FY12-15, under the new GDP series, based on bottom-up factors and structural reforms,” Goldman Sachs said on Monday, September 21st, 2015. As per the firm, India is likely to become the fastest-growing emerging market this year and its potential growth could rise to 8 per cent over the next five years driven by Technology, gains in Education and Ease of doing business due to less red tape,

Terming these three factors as TEE’s, the global brokerage firm said these could be the key drivers of growth and can contribute 3.6 percentage point to GDP growth annually. Moreover, in a faster reform scenario, India’s potential growth could rise to 9 per cent over this period due to reforms in labour, infrastructure and education, it said.

“With the government focusing its efforts on improving the business climate, we think that micro conditions could see an improvement in contribution to GDP growth over the period,” Goldman Sachs Chief India Economist Tushar Poddar said in the research note.

“The areas in ease of doing business where the brokerage expects some improvement are dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, and registering property due to a big push by the government to move these permits online, as well as resolving insolvency due to a new bankruptcy code, expected in FY16,” Poddar added.  The report further noted that it has taken more time in India for each factor of productivity to affect the economy, while in China, every variable has had a faster impact.

Urbanisation has contributed to growth twice as fast in China compared to India, and in agricultural productivity it was three times as fast. Goldman Sachs said that by 2020, India’s economy could gain over 300 million more internet users and 50 million more high-school graduates.

It is already adding 200 thousand bank accounts every day, and nearly 800 government services have moved online, reducing red tape. These changes can allow the economy to leapfrog a generation of creating physical infrastructure in retail, banking, and government services, and lead to a jump in productivity, the report said. The report, however, cautioned that there are several caveats to our forecasts for potential growth. First, the baseline forecasts are predicated on a set of reforms playing out, as discussed above.

Clearly, if they were not to play out, then the growth potential would be reduced. India will likely add more people to its labour force over the next decade than any other country, it said.

Over the next few years, large-scale capex in manufacturing may be constrained due to weak global demand, as well as local impediments.  “We think it is more likely that services will drive economic growth and jobs, and this can play to India’s strengths,” Poddar said.

Brookings Study Finds PM Narendra Modi’s PMJDY makes India #1 in commitment to financial inclusion

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s push for financial inclusion has enabled India to earn the no. 1 rank in commitment to financial inclusion in the latest Brookings Institution’s 2015 Financial and Digital Inclusion Project (FDIP) Report and Scorecard. The report that aims at evaluating the access to and usage of affordable financial services by underserved people across 21 countries gave India ninth rank overall. The scorecard is prepared upon examining individual countries on four key parameters: country commitment, mobile capacity, regulatory environment, and adoption of traditional and digital financial services.

According to the report, India accounts for 21 per cent of world’s and 67 per cent of South Asia’s unbanked population. “Current guidelines, such as those for payment banks, and the overall JAM framework (Jan Dhan-Yojana, Aadhaar and Mobile numbers) are expected to facilitate a more enabling environment for digital financial services by allowing a multiplicity of providers to offer innovative financial services to underserved populations,” the report states. It notes the importance of recent government initiatives in helping India enhance its access to formal banking services by the underserved population, remarkably. It goes on to commend the prime minister’s Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana — one of the biggest financial inclusion initiatives in the world — for helping the country make huge strides in financial inclusion and financial literacy.

The initiative launched on August 28th, 2014 has already facilitated the opening of 185 million bank accounts as of September 2015. The report credited the government for its JAM (Jan-Dhan, Aadhar and Mobile) framework which seeks to allow government to transfer benefits and subsidies directly to the bank accounts of entitled households. “Further digitization of government payments could benefit both the government and recipients alike, as some sources project the government could save over $22 billion a year by paying subsidies for services like health care and education directly to the beneficiaries,” the report states.

Prime Minister Modi’s Approval Ratings Spike: Pew Research Study Finds

Almost three-quarters of Indians now think economic conditions are good. And about two-thirds have a very favorable view of current Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This high level of approval is two to three times that for other leading Indian politicians, according to a new 2015 Pew Research Center survey conducted among 2,452 respondents in India from April 6 to May 19, 2015.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is, by far, India’s most popular political figure. And the intensity of his support is much stronger than that enjoyed by other leading politicians. He enjoys robust backing among both his own party members and adherents of the opposition, and in rural areas as well as in cities. Fully 87% of Indians say they have a favorable opinion of Modi. This backing is up from 78% in 2013, prior to his election as prime minister. (See this Pew Research Center survey for pre-election sentiment.) And this support is quite intense. Almost seven-in-ten Indians (68%) have a very favorable view of the BJP leader today.

Modi’s appeal is a driving force behind this upsurge in Indians’ positive mood. Those who have a lot of confidence in Modi voice greater satisfaction with the direction of the country today than those with only some confidence in the prime minister. Respondents who have a lot of confidence in Modi also say the nation’s economic situation is very good.

And those who have a lot of confidence in Modi are more likely to expect the economic situation in India to improve a lot over the next 12 months.

In 2015, a year after an election swept the opposition Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) into power, public satisfaction with India’s direction has nearly doubled and pride in the country is up compared with findings from a Pew Research Center survey conducted in December 2013 and January 2014.

Moreover, Modi’s aura has reinvigorated Indians’ faith in their government. About two-thirds of respondents who have a lot of confidence in the prime minister say the influence of the national government is now very good. On the world stage, Indians still feel underappreciated. But their belief that India gets the respect it deserves is up 12 percentage points after Modi’s first year in office. Moreover, more than seven-in-ten of those surveyed express a lot of confidence in Modi’s handling of international relations.

The Modi phenomenon transcends India’s traditionally partisan politics. On most of the challenges facing the nation, the prime minister and his party enjoy support from both the BJP party faithful and followers of the opposition Congress party. Moreover, Modi and the BJP now have greater backing than Congress in rural areas, traditionally a Congress stronghold.

Roughly six-in-ten or more self-identified Congress supporters approve of Modi’s handling of a range of issues: access to clean toilets (66%), unemployment (62%), helping the poor (61%) and inflation (61%). And majorities of Congress backers approve of the prime minister’s efforts against terrorism (56%) and corruption (56%). Only on Modi’s dealing with communal relations do less than half of Congress followers approve of his efforts.

Modi has also succeeded in winning over rural Indians, both for his party and himself. The BJP is now slightly more popular in the Indian countryside than in its cities. And the party’s favorability now exceeds that of Congress in urban areas by 31 points (83% for BJP, 52% for Congress) and in rural India by 25 points (89% for BJP, 64% for Congress). Modi is more popular than presumptive Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi in both rural areas by 23 points (Modi 89%, Gandhi 66%) and in cities by 31 points (Modi 84%, Gandhi 53%).

Nevertheless, Indians believe their country still faces myriad challenges. More than eight-in-ten say crime, jobs, inflation and corruption are very big problems. Concern about air pollution is up 22 points in just the past year, complaints about poor-quality schools are up 20 points and worry about health care is up 15 points. And Indians see the world as a challenging place. Nearly three-quarters say they are very concerned about global climate change. A similar proportion say neighboring Pakistan poses a very serious threat to India.

Pope Francis Arrives in the U.S. To A Rousing Welcome

The popular 78-year-old Argentina-born Pope Francis, who has softened the church’s tone, focused on climate change and the poor, and seized a spot on the global stage, launched his maiden visit to the United States with a characteristic gesture of humility on Tuesday, September 22, 2015 and sent a conciliatory message to the world’s wealthiest nation about his frequent criticism of capitalism. He plans to visit the White House and address Congress and the United Nations.

Obama, his family and Vice President Joe Biden greeted the pope in an honor given only to a select world leaders. The pope took off his white skullcap as he walked down the steps from the jet to the windy tarmac to greet first lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Biden, Jill Biden and Cardinal Donald Wuerl, archbishop of Washington, among others. After a red carpet welcome by President Barack Obama at an air base near the capital, the 78-year-old Argentine headed off to Washington not in a limousine as is customary but in a modest Fiat. According to reports, schoolchildren cheered the pontiff as his Alitalia plane landed, chanting “We love Francis, yes we do. We love Francis, how about you?” In a news conference held in the District after the pope’s arrival, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, called the visit a “new encounter.” Francis “has an attitude of one to receive, not just to give,” he said.

Pope Francis Arrives in the U.S. To A Rousing Welcome
Pope Francis Arrives in the U.S. To A Rousing Welcome

On Wednesday, the pope is scheduled to visit the White House and Washington’s Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle. On Wednesday afternoon, the pope is scheduled to celebrate a Mass with 25,000 people to canonize Junípero Serra, an 18th-century Franciscan priest who founded historic missions in California. The Mass is scheduled to take place at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Northeast Washington.

He will also greet tens of thousands of people during a pope-mobile parade around the Ellipse, south of the White House. Large crowds from across the region are expected to gather early, and streets will be thronged and periodically cordoned off across the city as the pope crisscrosses the District on Wednesday. On Thursday, Francis will make the first address by a pope to a joint meeting of the U.S. Congress, in the Capitol. Afterward, he is scheduled to appear on the balcony of the West Front of the Capitol to greet a crowd of about 50,000 that is expected to gather.

The pope has drawn attention with recent statements about the dangers of global warming. He softened the tone of the church on its opposition to homosexuality and recently moved to ease the granting of marriage annulments. He is scheduled to leave for New York on Thursday, then travel Saturday to Philadelphia to visit Independence Hall, where he will speak at the lectern used by Abraham Lincoln for the Gettysburg Address, and celebrate Mass on Sunday at the World Meeting of Families. He will return to Rome on Sunday evening.

Aasif Mandvi Among Asia Society’s ‘2015 Asia Game Changers’

Aasif Mandvi, an Indian American comedian and two Indian entrepreneurs are among Asia Society’s “2015 Asia Game Changers” as per a press release issued here on September 16th.

The list of eight ‘Game Changers’ were recognized for making a transformative and positive difference for the future of Asia and the world.

Indian American comedian, activist and spokesman for Muslims and Asian Americans Aasif Mandvi received one of the honors. Asia Society recognized Mandvi as a ‘Game Changer’ for using comedy to challenge perceptions and work for good. Mandvi initially gained popularity in 2006 as the senior Middle East correspondent on Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” where he seized the spotlight to become a powerful spokesperson for Muslims and Asian Americans.

Originally from Mumbai, Mandvi grew up in England and Florida before moving to New York to pursue acting. As his fame rose, Mandvi challenged stereotypes and provided a voice for Muslim Americans, changing the game in terms of how Asians are viewed on television.

In 2015, he co-wrote, produced and acted in the Web series “Halal in the Family” for the popular comedy site Funny or Die, using the sitcom format to tackle Islamophobia. Outside of acting, Mandvi is an advocate for a number of charity organizations such as Relief 4 Pakistan, Partners In Health and Planting Peace.

Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India Bank CEO Chanda Kochhar is the first woman to head an Indian bank and was honored for transforming an industry and empowering the masses, according to Asia Society. She was just 22 years old when she joined ICICI Bank as a management trainee in 1984. By the time she was 47, she was the bank’s CEO. Not only did she make history by becoming the first woman to lead an Indian bank, she also transformed the entire Indian retail banking industry.

Under Kochhar’s leadership, ICICI Bank has achieved great milestones year-after-year by expanding its businesses, leveraging technology to bring value to its urban and rural customers, and partnering with the public and private sectors to create new opportunities. While inspiring many young women, Kochhar has racked up numerous awards and accolades, including the Padma Bhushan, one of India’s highest civilian honors, in 2011; being featured in Time’s “100 Most Influential People in the World” in 2015; ranking 36th on the Forbes “World’s 100 Most Powerful Women” in 2015; and ranking second in Fortune India’s list of “Most Powerful Women in Business” in 2014.

Kiran Bir Sethi, the founder of Design for Change and The Riverside School, was honored for empowering children to change the world. The society said Sethi is the champion of youth volunteerism. Sethi noticed that teachers rigidly stuck to the textbooks and punished students who deviated from the prescribed lesson plan when her son was in school in Ahmedabad. Noticing this issue, she founded The Riverside School in Ahmedabad in 2001 to provide an alternative model which focuses on quality of learning, student well-being and empathy in education.

Sethi used one lesson to have children roll incense sticks for several hours, which led to the children pushing for child labor to be abolished. The teaching methods have resulted in Riverside rivaling India’s top schools on national assessment scores in math, English and science.

In 2009, Sethi expanded on the principles practiced at Riverside to found the “Design for Change” movement with the goal of getting children to drive change in their communities.

The movement to encourage youth volunteerism, which has since spread to more than 300,000 children in 35 countries, is based on a simple model of having kids act on changing problems that bother them.

The “Asia Game Changer of the Year” award went to Philippine boxer Manny Pacquiao. He is a member of the Philippines House of Representatives and was awarded this highest honor for using his sport and fame for good. “This year’s honorees could not be more different from one another,” said Asia Society president Josette Sheeran in a statement. “What they share in common is that they all fight for a better today and inspire the world to do things differently.”

The group of ‘Game Changers’ were selected through a global survey of more than 1,000 leaders. They will be recognized formally for their honors at an Oct. 13 event at the United Nations.

First Friends of MP Family Picnic in New Jersey

People with common heritage of Madhya Pradesh (MP) and residing in New York New Jersey Tristate area came together and celebrated their  First Friends of MP Family Picnic in New Jersey  on Sun 20th Sept, 2015. The whole day Picnic was a grand success, with participation from people of all parts of New York New Jersey Connecticut, and with origins in Indore, Bhopal, Gwalior, Khandwa, Dewas and other towns of MP.  The pleasant sunny weather and ambience of Liberty State Park, NJ right next to Statue to Liberty added to the fun atmosphere. The Friends of MP Conclave in New York in early 2015

gave a booster to the NRIs from MP to coalesce for a friendly family get- together.

With around 120 attendees of all ages, the day started with Indore’s traditional  Poha -made on the site by men participants – laced with Ratlami Sev, Jeeravan and accompanied by Jalebi/Kachori. Then followed sports and games and catching up of friends, many meeting each other after many years and connecting on many common roots / relationships. Lunch again was MP’s signature  Choorma – Dal – Batee, which was really relished by all. Future years may see  Baflaa, which is truly a Malwa Cuisine. Lunch was followed by a Social Hour of introductions and plans for future such get – together and with much larger participation. While thousands of people from MP may be in the NY Tristate area, this was the first such gathering of its sort at the people’s level in many years, making attendees happy and nostalgic.

The planning and execution for the event was managed by a Core Team of Jitendra Muchhal, Rakesh Bharagava, Dr. R Kakani, Rajiv Goyal, Rajesh Mittal, Raj Bansal, Pankaj Gupta and Navneet Trivedi over last few months . Right from name labels to conversations, usage of Hindi and Malwee language was encouraged through out the day, also coinciding with MP’s hosting of World Hindi Conference this month.

Indian-Americans Form New Group to Boost Republicans

Although Indian Americans are known for their leanings towards the Democratic Party, conservative-minded Indian Americans are forming a new Republican group to mobilize the community to back Republican candidates in what the founder calls “a very important time in history,” according to a media report.

Shalabh “Shalli” Kumar, a prominent Indian-American businessman and a major supporter of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has taken the lead in forming the Republican Hindu Coalition (RHC). The coalition aims to promote conservative principles such as free markets and limited government, with a focus on how they relate to Indian Americans, Fox News reported.

According to reports here, the organization is modeled after groups like the Republican Jewish Coalition, and plans to spend big in next year’s elections, it said. “This is a very important time in history. The country has suffered so much so dramatically in the last eight years, and another four or eight years of the same direction, the US as we know it will come to an end,” Kumar told FoxNews.com.

While many Hindus are ideologically conservative-leaning, they have not yet mobilized to vote for Republicans, he said. “Hindu Americans tend to be like other minorities when it comes to voting – they are Democrats or are neutral, or they just don’t vote,” said Kumar, chairman of AVG Advanced Technologies.

Yet the RHC is hoping to change this, and has gained the backing of some big-name Republicans, with former House Speaker Newt Gingrich agreeing to serve as honorary chairman for the group. Kumar said they have received a great deal of support from the Republican National Committee and high-ranking congressional Republicans. They are also hoping to organize a congressional delegation to travel to India after they formally launch the coalition next month.

Kumar said that while the RHC is proud that Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal – whose family is from India – is running, they have not yet backed any of the candidates seeking the Republican nomination in 2016. However, Kumar has pledged to personally donate at least $2 million and raise millions more for the eventual Republican nominee, Senate and House candidates and Republican groups.

Salman Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh to Headline the Fall 2015 Distinguished Thinkers

WELLESLEY, Mass. – Wellesley College welcomes renowned writers Salman Rushdie and Amitav Ghosh to the Boston area this fall for the new program, entitled, “Distinguished Thinkers” at the Susan and Donald Newhouse Center. Both authors will read from selected work then engage in an open dialogue with the audience.

One of the most celebrated writers of our time, Salman Rushdie has penned several classic novels, influenced a generation of writers, and received a Queen’s Knighthood for “services to literature.” He stands as both a pop icon and one of the most thought-provoking proponents for free speech today. Rushdie will read from his latest work, Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights and then accept questions from the audience in the Diana Chapman Walsh Alumnae Hall auditorium, on November 12 at 6:30 p.m.

Award-winning writer Amitav Ghosh was to read from and discuss his newest novel and the final book, Flood of Fire, which completes his bestselling Ibis trilogy at the Newhouse Center, Wellesley on September 22 at 4:30 p.m.

Formerly called the Distinguished Writers Series, the renamed Distinguished Thinkers program, is integrated into the campus community and draws from a broad range of humanistic activities by artists, performers, and intellectuals that invite us to think more deeply about the global world we live in.

“It’s important to celebrate diverse representations of human accomplishment not just to feel good about ourselves but also to know more about ourselves: how we think, what our notion of collectivity is, what sorts of places call for recognition of plurality or stark difference, and when differences can fall away,” said Anjali Prabhu, Director of the Newhouse Center for the Humanities. “This is crucial for a place like Wellesley, where students and faculty in all disciplines are quite consciously looking for meaningfulness in their work that will go beyond the specific question, problem, or subject they might spend months and years studying. Our liberal arts curriculum and the philosophy behind it emphasize our place in the world as individuals and encourage us to seek out participation in collective gestures.”

Both events are free and open to the public.

Amitav Ghosh
Amitav Ghosh

Amitav Ghosh was born in Calcutta and grew up in India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. His is the author of The Circle of Reason, The Shadow Lines, In an Antique Land, Dancing in Cambodia, The Calcutta Chromosome, The Glass Palace, The Hungry Tide and the first two volumes of The Ibis Trilogy; Sea of Poppies, and River of Smoke. He is the recipient of many awards, and his novel Sea of Poppies (2008) was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. His books have been translated into more than 20 languages and his essays have been published in The New Yorker, The New Republic and The New York Times. He has taught in many universities including Delhi University, Columbia, Queens College and Harvard.

Salman Rushdie
Salman Rushdie

An eclectic writer and noted public intellectual, Salman Rushdie has won many of the world’s top literary prizes. Rushdie’s novels include The Satanic Verses, The Moor’s Last Sigh, The Ground Beneath Her Feet and The Enchantress of Florence. For his masterwork of magic realism, Midnight’s Children, he won the prestigious Booker Prize, and later, the Best of the Booker. He is also the author of bestselling memoir Joseph Anton. His newest novel, published in September 2015, is Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2007, and has served as President of the PEN American Center.

For more information, please visit wellesley.edu/newhouse

Since 1875, Wellesley College has been the preeminent liberal arts college for women. Known for its intellectual rigor and its remarkable track record for the cultivation of women leaders in every arena, Wellesley—only 12 miles from Boston—is home to some 2400 undergraduates from every state and 75 countries.

Columbia’s College of Dental Medicine Receives 2015 Higher Education Excellence in Diversity Award

NEW YORK, NY (September 18, 2015) —The Columbia University College of Dental Medicine (CDM) received the 2015 Higher Education Excellence in Diversity (HEED) award from INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine, the oldest and largest diversity-focused publication in higher education. As a recipient of the annual HEED Award—a national honor recognizing U.S. colleges and universities that demonstrate an outstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion—CDM will be featured along with 91 other recipients, including Columbia University, in the November 2015 issue of INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine. This is the second year that CDM has been named as a HEED Award recipient.

“At the College of Dental Medicine, we continue to foster a student body diverse in thought, background, and experience within an inclusive environment,” said Dr. Dennis Mitchell, vice provost for faculty diversity and inclusion at Columbia University, and senior associate dean for student development at CDM. “Accomplishing this requires that diversity be a fundamental academic priority for our University and our school, as exemplified through equity in recruiting, advancement and retention.”

INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine selected the College of Dental Medicine based on our exemplary diversity and inclusion initiatives, which include embracing a broad definition of diversity on our campus, including gender, race, ethnicity, veterans, people with disabilities, members of the LGBT community, and well as all other underrepresented communities.

The CDM admissions policy for diversity affirms the College’s commitment to assuring a “critical mass” of Underrepresented in Dentistry students. Our Predoctoral classes include unprecedented numbers of students underrepresented in the dental profession. CDM ranks first among our peer northeast private dental schools for enrollment of underrepresented minority dental students, and we continue to support 3 half-tuition scholarships for these students.

The Summer Medical and Dental Education Program (SMDEP), funded through a grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and administered with the College of Physicians & Surgeons (P&S) Office of Diversity, is one of our most successful pipeline programs. Staff members in the Office of Diversity attend annual conferences targeting promising UID students, including the Hispanic Dental Association Annual Conference, the National Dental Association Conference, the Morehouse College Public Health Awareness Conference, and the SMDEP annual recruitment fair sponsored by the Northeast SMDEP sites.

Student organizations work with the Office of Student Affairs and Admissions to provide recruitment events on campus and participate in our successful hosting program for UID applicants during interview season.

“The HEED Award process consists of a comprehensive and rigorous application that includes questions relating to the recruitment and retention of students and employees — and best practices for both — continued leadership support for diversity, and other aspects of campus diversity and inclusion. We take a holistic approach to reviewing each application in deciding who will be named a HEED Award recipient. Our standards are high, and we look for institutions where diversity and inclusion are woven into the work being accomplished every day across a campus,” said Lenore Pearlstein, publisher of INSIGHT Into Diversity magazine.

Columbia University College of Dental Medicine
Columbia University College of Dental Medicine

Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, one of the first dental schools in the United States, was founded in 1916 with the mission to train general dentists and dental specialists in a setting that emphasizes comprehensive dental care; to support research to advance the professional knowledge base; and to provide dental care to the underserved communities of Northern Manhattan. Insight Into Diversity is the largest and oldest diversity publication in higher education today and is known for its annual Higher Education Excellence in Diversity (HEED) Award, the only award recognizing colleges and universities for outstanding diversity and inclusion efforts across their campuses.

New Jersey Duo Arrested For Allegedly Bilking $150,000 From 70 People

Akash Satish Patel, 32, and Nikita Natvarlal Patel, 25, two Indian Americans from Middlesex County in New jersey were arrested and charged with bilking over $150,000 from at least 70 people in 32 states, by falsely claiming that they owed back taxes to the Internal Revenue Service and would be arrested if they did not pay up immediately, authorities said on September 15.

The two were arrested in Union as they arrived at a CVS store to claim the proceeds of a MoneyGram sent to them by one of their victims, according to a northjersey.com report.

Police said the two, who are Indian citizens, were not related although they have the same last name and they both reside at the same address in Iselin, in Middlesex County. Nikita Patel is in the United States on an expired visa.

Both Patels were arrested on September 4th after an investigation that started two days earlier when Detective Michael Jennings received a call from a man in Lexington, Ky., who reported that he had been the victim of an IRS scam. The man told Jennings he had been told in a phone call that he owed $1,400 to the IRS, and that he would be arrested if he did not pay. He was asked to send the money to a MoneyGram account in the name of Vincent Arora at a CVS store on Broad Avenue in Leonia.

Jennings was able to obtain a security camera video recording of a man making the pickup of the wired money at the CVS, and created still shots to put out a statewide bulletin. The next day, the detective contacted MoneyGram and learned that a man identified as Vincent Arora, an alias for Patel, had made about 30 transactions in the previous week at MoneyGram locations across the state. A few days later when “Arora” was about to cash in a MoneyGram at a CVS store in Elizabeth, stopped their car with both Patels inside and were arrested. Police subsequently seized $10,822 from their apartment. The two used to obtain information about the victims from people working in call centers in India.

The Patels were each held on $150,000 bail at the Bergen County Jail, charged with conspiracy to commit theft by deception, a second-degree crime. Leonia Police Chief Thomas P. Rowe said that so far about $150,000 has been seized from six bank accounts in the names of the suspects. He said many victims will be able to recover the money they lost. “In some cases, the victims lost their life savings. Rowe said he did not yet know the total amount of money the Patels were able to talk their victims into sending them, but “we do know it is more than we seized,” according to the northjersey.com report.

Flushing Temple’s Ganesh Chuturthi Ratha Yatra Attract Thousands of Devotees

As the largest Hindu religious event of North East America, Ganesh Chathurthi Celebrations attract thousands of devotees everyday to offer prayers to Sri Maha Vallabha Ganapati and to participate in various activities every year at the popular Ganesh Temple in Flushing, New York. The nine day-festivities featuring Annadanam (free food donation) is offered to everyone on all nine days. And, the Ganesh Chathurthi Celebrations end with a grand Ratha Yatra which goes around the major streets of Flushing, Queens in New York.

This year the youth played an important part in helping draw people to the Ganesh Chaturthi festival Sept. 11 to 20. The 9-day annual festival drew close to a thousand people daily and more than 5,000 on just the last day for the Rath Yatra according to organizers.

The nine-day Ganesh festival went off extraordinarily well, she said with around 700-800 devotees coming in on weekday evenings, and around 200 during the daytime on work days. Weekends brought extremely large crowds numbering in the thousands. “And the Rath Yatra which carries Lord Ganesh seated in a 16-foot silver chariot brought 5,000 people at the very least,” organizers said, calculating it by the 10,000 packets of food distributed on that day alone.

According to Dr. Uma Mysorekar, president of the Hindu Temple Society of North America, the participation of devotees at the celebrations this year was the largest compared to previous years. And as more people come, she wants the temple and its services to grow and get better. The Ganesh Temple has become a magnet for every generation of Hindu devotee including the young who may be born and brought up in the United States. Hindus in the Tristate area and beyond use the temple for family and community functions as well as renew their faith in all manner of ways.

“The temple has to grow, everything has to get better. We must be able to improve our two main – religious and outreach – tasks,” she said. This year, the temple mobilized young volunteers to reach out to the community through social networks like Facebook and Twitter, apart from email, she said.

This Sept 25, Dr. Mysorekar, a physician by training, will be one of 10 faith leaders who will meet Pope Francis at the ‘Multi-religious Meeting for Peace’ inside the 9/11 Memorial Museum. “I will be chanting a Hindu prayer in Sanskrit,” she told Desi Talk, which will be read out in English by another devotee.

“Lord Ganesh was taken in procession every evening by young people and they danced with the Lord,” Mysorekar said. Sivacharya also spent time explaining the rituals taking place at the temple. “The Japam (chanting of mantras) was very energizing and people came morning and evening to participate in it,” she added. The goal was to recite the “Chatur Laksha Moola Mantra” 400,000 times over the 9-day festival. “Every year there’s a difference. Every year has more than last year and depends on what new things we do,” she said.

“The festival draws people from the whole Tristate area and if relatives are visiting, they decide to spend their days in New York at the festival,” Mysorekar noted. “If you’ve seen it once, you want to come back.”

ABC Network Releases First 8 Minutes of ‘Quantico’ Episode 1, Featuring Priyanka Chopra

ABC Network released the first eight minutes of its much-anticipated FBI drama “Quantico,” starring Priyanka Chopra as FBI agent Alex Parrish, this week. Priyanka Chopra, the ‘Mary Kom’ star is shooting for the ABC Network show ‘Quantico’ in New York City. For Priyanka, the Quantico pilot is her first assignment in the US after she spent the past few years trying to foray into the American showbiz industry. Earlier, she had cut three singles – In My City, Exotic and I Can’t Make You Love Me – for the international music market, but none of them managed to set the global charts on fire. She now hopes Quantico is a success, and her role is noticed, if her international ambition is to get a push.

Quantico revolves around a bunch of young FBI recruits, each one of whom has a secret behind joining the bureau. The show will narrate their adventures and experiences as they train on Quantico base in Virginia, even as secrets of their past start emerging.  One of the trainees will subsequently even turn out to be a sleeper terrorist who played a role in 9/11.

The show opens with Priyanka lying at the site of a terrorist attack in New York City (note how the first shot of the show is of Priyanka’s ‘Om’ bracelet) and goes back to the time when each of the agents – played by Priyanka, Johanna Braddy, Jake Mc Laughlin, Yasmine Al Massri, Tate Ellington and Brian J Smith – are on their way to FBI training base in Quantico.

Priyanka is effortlessly good from the word go. Apart from the fact that she looks hot from the very first shot, she pulls you in with her nuanced acting. Yes, we can say that just from watching the first eight minutes!

The opening is thrilling and slick, hooks you instantly. If you watch these first eight minutes, you are bound to watch the whole episode, and then comeback to it the next week, as you will be left wanting for more. Priyanka is effortlessly good from the word go. Apart from the fact that she looks hot from the very first shot, she pulls you in with her nuanced acting. Yes, we can say that just from watching the first eight minutes!

The opening is thrilling and slick, hooks you instantly. If you watch these first eight minutes, you are bound to watch the whole episode, and then comeback to it the next week, as you will be left wanting for more. This sneak preview of “Quantico” gets our thumbs up.

Pope to UN: Lack of Ethical Limits Can Enable Corruption and Ideological Colonization

Addressing the 70th Session of the U.N. General Assembly, Pope Francis warned that without recognizing certain ethical limits, social progress risks becoming a cover for abuse, corruption and ideological colonization.

Pope Francis addressed the members of the international organization on the second leg of his Apostolic Visit to the United Nations. He is the fourth Pontiff to address the United Nations, preceded by Blessed Paul Vi in 1965, St. John Paul II in 1979 and 1995, and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI in 2008.

Recalling the organization’s 70th anniversary, the Pope praised the UN’s achievements in codifying international law, establishing human rights norms, as well as conflict resolution and peacekeeping missions around the world.

“Beyond these achievements, the experience of the past seventy years has made it clear that reform and adaptation to the times is always necessary in the pursuit of the ultimate goal of granting all countries, without exception, a share in, and a genuine and equitable influence on, decision-making processes,” he said. “The need for greater equity is especially true in the case of those bodies with effective executive capability, such as the Security Council, the Financial Agencies and the groups or mechanisms specifically created to deal with economic crises. This will help limit every kind of abuse or usury, especially where developing countries are concerned.”

Rights of the Environment and the Poor

The Pope called for the UN member states to protect the environment and to put an end to the exclusion of the weak and disadvantaged.

As part of the environment, he said, the care for the environment to mankind’s survival. “Any harm done to the environment,” he said, “is harm done to humanity.” Drawing applause from the delegations present, the Pope aligned with Christian and monotheistic religions in affirming that mankind is entrusted with the care for Creation by God and “is not authorized to abuse it, much less to destroy it.”

The Pope also highlighted the consequences of the misuse and destruction of the environment, which leads to the detriment of the weak and disadvantaged. Ultimately, both the environment and the poor become casualties of the current throwaway culture.

“Economic and social exclusion is a complete denial of human fraternity and a grave offense against human rights and the environment. The poorest are those who suffer most from such offenses, for three serious reasons: they are cast off by society, forced to live off what is discarded and suffer unjustly from the abuse of the environment. They are part of today’s widespread and quietly growing ‘culture of waste,’” he said.

Human Rights and ‘Ideological Colonization’

Continuing his address, Pope Francis also stressed the importance of place all people at the center of the UN activities, saying that integral human development and the full exercise of human development must be “built up and allowed to unfold” for each individual and family.

He also stressed that the right to education especially for young girls who are often excluded, must be respected and reinforced.

The 78 year old Pontiff called on government leaders to ensure the proper support for families, namely: lodging, labor and land. Religious freedom, education and civil rights, he said, are also crucial in creating support.

“These pillars of integral human development have a common foundation, which is the right to life and, more generally, what we could call the right to existence of human nature itself,” he said.

“The baneful consequences of an irresponsible mismanagement of the global economy, guided only by ambition for wealth and power, must serve as a summons to a forthright reflection on man: ‘man is not only a freedom which he creates for himself. Man does not create himself. He is spirit and will, but also nature’”

Pope Francis, however, reminded the UN of their duty to recognize ethical limits, warning that promoting the social progress and better standards of life can risk becoming an unattainable illusion or “for carrying out an ideological colonization by the imposition of anomalous models and lifestyles which are alien to people’s identity and, in the end, irresponsible.”

War and Arms Trafficking

The Pope also denounced war as the negation of all rights and an assault on the environment.

“If we want true integral human development for all,” he stressed, “we must work tirelessly to avoid war between nations and between peoples.”

Calling for the transparent application of the UN Charter, the Holy Father warned that a “Pandora’s Box is opened” when it is ignored. This particularly applies to the proliferation of arms and weapons of mass destructions.

“There is urgent need to work for a world free of nuclear weapons, in full application of the non-proliferation Treaty, in letter and spirit, with the goal of a complete prohibition of these weapons,” he said.

The Pope also lauded the recent nuclear agreement with Iran, saying that it was proof “of the potential of political good will and of law.”

“I express my hope that this agreement will be lasting and efficacious, and bring forth the desired fruits with the cooperation of all the parties involved,” he said.

However, the Pope also appealed for the current conflicts in the Middle East and Africa where Christians, minority religions, cultural and ethnic groups are made to witness the destruction of their “places of worship, their cultural and religious heritage, their houses and property, and have faced the alternative either of fleeing or of paying for their adhesion to good and to peace by their own lives, or by enslavement.”

The Jesuit Pope also recalled the conflicts in Ukraine, Syria, Iraq, Libya, South Sudan and the Great Lakes region.

“In wars and conflicts there are individual persons, our brothers and sisters, men and women, young and old, boys and girls who weep, suffer and die. Human beings who are easily discarded when our only response is to draw up lists of problems, strategies and disagreements.”

Sacredness of Life

Finally, the Pope rounded out his address defending the fundamental right to life in all stages of development.

He called for respect for the sacredness of every human life: “of every man and every woman, the poor, the elderly, children, the sick, the unborn, the unemployed, the abandoned, those considered disposable because they are only considered as part of a statistic.”

The Argentine Pope cited the words of his predecessor Blessed Paul VI, saying that such an understanding of respect for life calls for a higher degree of wisdom for the respectful use of creation for the common good.

Concluding his address, Pope Francis said that United Nations, like any human endeavor, “can be improved yet it remains necessary.”

“I pray to Almighty God that this will be the case, and I assure you of my support and my prayers, and the support and prayers of all the faithful of the Catholic Church, that this Institution, all its member States, and each of its officials, will always render an effective service to mankind, a service respectful of diversity and capable of bringing out, for sake of the common good, the best in each people and in every individual,” he concluded.

Hindu statesman Zed awarded at “Global Dharma Conference” in New Jersey

Hindu statesman Rajan Zed was honored with “Pride of Dharma Award” at Global Dharma Conference in Edison (New Jersey, USA) on September 11 evening. The “Pride of Dharma Award” citation said: “In appreciation of the significant contributions made towards the protection, preservation and propagation of Dharma”. This Award “recognizes the outstanding contributions of those Hindus who have made a major impact on Hindu society”.

Rajan Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, has taken-up interfaith, religion, Roma (Gypsies) and other causes all over the world. He has read opening prayers in United States Senate and US House of Representatives in Washington DC, various State Senates and State Assemblies/Houses-of-Representatives, various County Commissions and City Councils all over USA. Bestowed with “World Interfaith Leader Award”, many cities in USA have named October 25 as “Rajan Zed Day”. Others who received this Award at the Conference were Dr. Mahesh Mehta and Rajiv Malhotra.

Opening ceremony on September 11 of this three-day Conference, attended by a few hundred people, included Bharatnatyam performance by Arsha Kala Bharati founder Pavithra Srinivasan; addresses by Swami Tattwamayananda of Vedanta Society of Northern California, Dr. Mahesh Mehta, Infinity Foundation founder Rajiv Malhotra, American Institute of Vedic Studies founder Vamadeva Shastri, Sreepeetham founder Swami Paripoornananda; Shiv Pachakshara Stotra by Sparsh Shah; and Garba and Bhangra folk dances and musical performance.

Over 50 eminent spiritual, business, science, social, arts and political leaders/experts are participating in this Conference whose tagline is “Reconnect-Rejuvenate-Realize”, an initiative of Hindu Students Council, which has chapters in over 50 university campuses in North America and which was launched in 1990.

Conference Executive Committee included: Nikunj Trivedi, Ravindra Jaishankar, Shaivi Sukhadia, Sohini Sircar, Harshit Agarwal, Parth Parihar and Darshna Modi.

A.R. Rahman’s letter on blasphemy controversy

“This letter is for all those people, who have been aware of the recent events concerning me. I’m not a scholar of Islam. I follow the middle path and am part of traditionalist and part rationalist

I live in the western and eastern worlds and try to love all people for what they are, without judging them

I didn’t direct or produce the movie Muhammad (PBUH), Messenger Of God.” I just did the music. My spiritual experiences of working on the film are very personal and I would prefer not to share these.

Mr. Noori, a member of the Raza Academy, has said in an interview featured in “The Bayside Journal”, why he believes it is important to voice a complaint: Mr Noori: “See, as Muslims we have to do something about it since it is against our religion so that tomorrow, if and when we face Allah he doesn’t say that you didn’t do anything to stop this from happening. So we have to try”.

My decision to compose the music for this film was made in good faith with no intentions of causing offence.

In fact, the decision was based on similar point of view as expressed by Mr. Noori. What, and if, I had the good fortune of facing Allah (Sbt), and he were to ask me on Judgement Day: “I gave you faith, talent, money, fame and health…why did you not do music for my Beloved Muhammad (sals) film? A film whose intention is to unite humanity, clear misconceptions and spread my message that life is about kindness, about uplifting the poor, and living in the service of humanity and not mercilessly killing innocent in my name”.

Today there is a blur between the real world and the virtual world and I have taken aback to see that, for some years now, unethical, unacceptable and unkind remarks are made online concerning the Holy Prophet. These abhorrent comments are no doubt due to the lack of understanding. I have always felt that we must counter this reaction with love and kindness, and through the audio-visual media reach out to people who wish to broaden their understanding

We are indeed fortunate and blessed to live in a country like India where religious freedom is practiced and where the aim of all communities is to live in peace and harmony sans confusion and violence.

Let us set a precedent in clearing conflict with grace and dignity and not trigger violence in words or actions Let us pray for forgiveness, and from our hearts bless those who suffer in the world and bless the country that we live in. To so pray is to reflect the noble and enlightened nature of our Beloved Muhammad (PBUH).”

Sameer Hinduja, Cyberbullying Expert Gets Funds From Facebook

Sameer Hinduja, a prominent Indian American and cyberbullying expert from Florida Atlantic University, has received a $188,776 grant from social networking site Facebook to study cyberbullying and dating violence among teenagers. The overarching goal of the study is to illuminate the nationwide prevalence, frequency and scope of cyberbullying and electronic dating violence among a population of youth in the US.

“Cyberbullying is a unique form of digital abuse that involves a range of tormenting, humiliating, threatening, embarrassing and harassing behaviors and has gained a lot of attention in recent years,” explained Hinduja in a university statement last week.

“Many teenagers across the United States also experience dating violence that typically consists of various forms of mistreatment from insults and rumour spreads to threats and physical assaults, added Hinduja, co-director of the Cyberbullying Research Centre and professor of criminology and criminal justice.

Hinduja and his collaborator Justin Patchin, co-director of the Cyberbullying Research Centre, will rigorously construct a nationally-representative panel of teens – ages 12 to 17 years old – who will be surveyed with parental consent.

Apart from descriptive findings by age, gender, grade, and other important demographics, they also will collect data on contributing factors to perpetration and victimisation, as well as the negative outcomes that stem from cyberbullying participation as an aggressor or a target.

There are a number of similarities between cyberbullying and electronic dating violence. Both naturally employ technology and lead to specific emotional, psychological, physical, and behavioural consequences. Cyberbullying tends to occur between individuals who do not like and do not want to be around each other. Electronic dating violence transpires between two people who are attracted to each other, at least on some level.

“Most previous studies have focused on local schools or school districts as data sources. This leads to a key methodological limitation – the potential lack of generalizability – which can be addressed with a nationally-representative replication,” Hinduja commented.

Results of this study will be disseminated through blogs and fact sheets posted on the Cyberbullying Research Centre’s website. Hinduja received the “Global Anti-Bullying Hero Award” for 2015 from Auburn University for his efforts and contributions on the subject.

He recently spoke on Capitol Hill at a Congressional Briefing about cyberbullying and dating violence among teenagers.

Spirit of Vivekananda Invoked At Conference On Spirituality And Leadership

A three-day conference to bring spiritual traditions of the East and the West under one platform and to discuss the role of spirituality in global economic and sustainable development was held in Chicago last week, coinciding with the 122nd anniversary of Swami Vivekananda’s famous speech at the Parliament of World Religions in Chicago. The Sept. 11-13 conference was organized by Integrating Spirituality and Organizational Leadership Board at the Art Institute of Chicago in honor of Vivekananda.

The conference kicked off with the inauguration awards ceremony, announcing release of ten volumes of a compendium of research on ‘Spirituality and Organizational Leadership. ISOL chairman J L Raina presented the annual Trinity Awards honoring individuals and organizations that have made outstanding contributions to spirituality and organizational leadership.

The two primary award recipients were Vivek Kendra Kanyakumari organization and Connie L. Lindsey, executive vice president and head of corporate social responsibility and global diversity and inclusion at Northern Trust, Chicago. The Kanyakumari organization received the award for helping with more than 1,000 educational and medical programs for rural communities across India. The ISOL annual Trinity Ma Sharda Award on Women Leadership presented to women leaders with the highest standards of excellence who integrate the values of compassion, love and wisdom based on moral and spiritual principles went to Lindsey.

The initiative was planned in 2002 at the 1st International Conference on ‘Business and Social Partnership: Beyond Philanthropy’ organized at the Indian Institute of Management, Calcutta.

Topics of discussion at last week’s conference included spirituality and business governance, remembering the legacy of Swami Vivekananda, his thoughts on management and economic development, women in leadership and economic development, spirituality and sustainability and fast transcendence.

Inspired by Vivekananda, one of the first Indian leaders to promote spiritual values in the West, the event highlighted prominent Chicago and United States-based Indian-American business leaders and community members, including Swami Ishatmananda from the Chicago Vedanta Center, Dr. Sudhir Parikh, a Padma Shri award winner, Ausaf Sayeed, consul general of India in Chicago, representatives from Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s office and business leaders Niranjan Shah and Santosh Kumar Kulshrestha.

Parikh, who was the chief guest at the event, spoke on the topic of spirituality and leadership, saying he wears many hats daily – being a doctor, a publisher, a businessman, a philanthropist, a husband, a friend, and a father. “I hope to embody the values I am trying to inculcate in my colleagues, my community, my family, and my children. For a leader, spirituality is extremely important as people look to you for answers and look to you as a role model,” Parikh told the audience.

The 150-member audience comprised scientists, economists, business leaders, philanthropists and community groups from India, Nigeria, U.K., Germany, Italy, Zimbabwe, Dubai, and Jordan. “As a Hindu, I believe that there is no one path to spirituality or God and that all paths are correct. In modern times, spirituality can mean religion, but also connection to nature, to community, to family, and even connecting to your own self through yoga and meditation. All of these are correct and true,” he said.

Other speakers included Swami Ishatamanda who talked about the experiences of Vivekananda 122 years ago when he came to visit Chicago. “Swami Vivekananda was fearless in his speech and today has impacted thousands on this very day. Let’s embody his spirit,” he said.

Tony Nader from Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Worldwide Transcendental Meditation Movement, talked about the link between the human body and the Vedic texts. Emily Rosenbaum, CEO, Akshaya Patra Foundation, a not-for-profit organization based in Bengaluru, also spoke at the inauguration.

Among other local honorees was Niranjan Shah, CEO, Globetrotters Group of Companies, USA, who received the Swami Vivekananda Leadership Award. In addition to leading one of Chicago’s earliest large-scale, minority-owned corporations, Shah has also served on the Economic Development Committee for Chicago. Kulshrestha, executive director of Metropolitan Asian Family Services who founded Metropolitan Asian Family Services in 1993 to provide comprehensive and integrated services to immigrant populations from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and East European communities, received the ISOL Social Entrepreneur Award for her contribution to the Chicago land community.

Infosys says cleared in U.S. visa probe by Labor Department

The U.S. Labor Department has cleared Infosys Ltd of any wrongdoing and closed its investigation after American technology workers at Southern California Edison complained their jobs were wrongfully outsourced to foreigners working on H-1B visas, Infosys has confirmed.

“Infosys fully cooperated with the (Department of Labor) in this activity,” the company told Reuters in a statement, noting the company was confident from the start that it had complied with U.S. immigration laws.

As per reports, the Labor Department is still investigating similar complaints by U.S. workers into Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., a second IT firm hired by Southern California Edison, and HCL Technologies, an IT firm that Disney hired last year as part of a restructuring of its Orlando-based IT division, a department spokesman said.

H-1B visas are often used by the technology sector to bring highly skilled foreign guest workers to the U.S. Critics say the laws governing the visas are lax, and make it too easy to replace U.S. workers with cheaper, foreign labor. Separately, the Justice Department is looking at whether HCL, Tata, Infosys, Disney and Southern California Edison discriminated against U.S. workers on the basis of citizenship, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The review, which may not become a formal investigation, was sparked after the Labor Department referred complaints it had received from workers. Infosys said it had not received “any indication” of a review by the Justice Department.

The scrutiny by U.S. officials comes after the New York Times and other publications reported that laid-off American IT workers at Disney and Southern California Edison were being forced to train their H-1B replacements in order to receive severance.

Tata said the company is cooperating with the Labor Department’s ongoing probe and is “fully compliant” with U.S. immigration laws. Southern California Edison said its contracts with Infosys and Tata require both firms to follow all “applicable laws.” Disney declined to comment on the U.S. government reviews. A spokesman said the company’s IT restructuring has led to a net increase of about 70 new in-house jobs. HCL declined to comment. The lay-offs have prompted an outcry from some U.S. senators, several of whom also called for probes into abuses.

Companies such as Infosys that have a workforce composed of 15 percent or more H-1B workers are required to try recruiting U.S. workers first and attest they are not displacing Americans.

But they are exempt from these requirements if they pay H-1 B workers more than $60,000 or hire those with a graduate degree.

Experts who have studied federal H-1B pay data say that in the vast majority of cases H-1B workers are paid more than $60,000, complicating enforcement of discrimination claims by the Justice Department or wrongful displacement at the Labor Department.

Further, the Labor Department cannot launch an investigation into alleged H-1B visa abuses unless it receives a complaint from a worker or credible third party. “Qualified American workers are going to keep getting replaced by less expensive foreign workers,” said Iowa Republican Senator Charles Grassley, one of several lawmakers planning to introduce a bill this year to bolster the Labor Department’s powers. “Current law hamstrings the Labor Department so bad actors go unchecked.”

India plans to stop issuing a certificate that allows Indian doctors headed abroad

India plans to stop issuing a certificate that allows Indian doctors headed to the United States for higher studies to work in that country, a report said. The Ministry of Health has decided that it will no longer give the doctors the certificate that says there is no obligation for them to return to India, NDTV reported.

The certificate is key to the doctors finding jobs in the U.S. Under normal circumstances, U.S. immigration laws mandate two years of home residency for doctors holding J-1 study visas. But when doctors have the “No Obligation to Return to India” certificate, the U.S. waives the residency, allowing them to apply for work visas and accept employment.

The Indian health ministry’s move is a bid to tackle an acute shortage of doctors in India.

According to the Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, a healthcare organization, India has an 81% shortage of specialist doctors, and a 12% shortage of general physicians. India has one doctor for every 1,800 people, three times higher than the WHO mandate of one doctor for every 600 people.

Dr. Naresh Trehan, a leading heart surgeon who for many years worked in the U.S., backed the Indian plan.

“All countries have this rule. India has been very lax in (implementing) it. Very few of us have come back and I think this should be an obligation that you come and serve your country,” he told NDTV.

V.V.N. Phani Babu Tiruveedhula Offers Creative Way to Combat Alcoholism

V.V.N. Phani Babu Tiruveedhula, an Indian American student at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, has discovered new compounds that can reduce an alcoholic’s impulse to drink.

A new drug to help combat these urges could be ready for the market within five to six years.

Scientists found in tests using rats bred to crave alcohol that the compounds drastically diminished drinking.

In addition, the scientists observed limited side effects traditionally seen in alcoholism treatment drugs, such as depression and losing the ability to experience pleasure. The drugs also appeared to reduce anxiety in the rats who craved alcohol, but not the control rats.

“Alcoholism is a major problem. We need a better treatment right now,” said Tiruveedhula, a graduate student at U.W. Milwaukee. Studies found that alcohol triggers the brain to release dopamine, a neurochemical whose levels increase in response to eating, sex or listening to music.

Some of the drugs now available to treat alcoholism are geared toward dopamine, which prevents people from becoming happy when consuming an alcoholic beverage.

The medications, however, come from a class of compounds called opioid antagonists, which can lead to depression. They also are addictive and could lead to drug abuse. Tiruveedhula has made several new beta-carboline compounds – which may be less addictive – that could represent the future of treatment of alcoholism. Tiruveedhula and his team will present the results at the national meeting and exposition of the American Chemical Society in Boston this month.

Juvenile in Attack on Illinois Sikh Charged With Hate Crime

In a huge victory for the Sikh American community, the DuPage County, Ill., State Attorney’s office reversed an earlier decision and announced Sept. 14 that it would charge a young assailant who attacked an elderly Indian American a week earlier with a hate crime.

The assailant – who is not being named as he is a juvenile – is in custody. On the evening of Sept. 8, the 17-year-old white male tailed the car of Indian American businessman Inderjit Singh Mukker, 53, in Darien, Ill., a suburb of Chicago. Shortly after the attack, Mukker told India-Westthat the young man tailed his car for several blocks in the right lane. Mukker was in the left lane.

At some point, the juvenile pulled into Mukker’s lane, completely blocking him off. He then got out of his car, according to the victim, and began repeatedly beating Mukker through an open window.

“He started punching me repeatedly like a rubber ball,” Mukker emotionally told India-West. “He kept yelling at me: ‘Bin Laden, why are you driving this Prius? Go back to your own country,’” said the Sikh American.

“I have lived in this country for 28 years. I never expected racism to happen to me,” said Mukker, who manages rental property and drives for Uber. The businessman was treated on the scene and spent a day in the hospital receiving treatment for lacerations and bruises on his face.

The DuPage, Ill., State Attorney’s office initially charged the assailant with five counts of felony aggravated battery, characterizing the attack as a road rage incident. But in a decision released Sept. 14 – after the office met with members of the Sikh Coalition and Mukker – DuPage County State Attorney Robert Berlin announced that the attacker would also be charged with one felony count of a hate crime.

Paul Darrah, a spokesman for the DuPage County State Attorney’s office, told India-West: “We came upon some new information that we were initially unaware of. It is not unusual for that to happen in these types of cases.”

Illinois statutes on hate crimes are broader than most states: race, religion or national origin can be involved in whole or in part for a hate crime to be charged, said Darrah. If convicted of the charge, the assailant could receive a number of punishments at the judge’s discretion, including 200 hours of community service, writing a letter of apology to Mukker and the local Sikh community, or speaking out against hate-motivated crime.

Darrah said the decision was not based on the emotional plea by Mukker nor the meeting with the Sikh Coalition but solely on the additional incriminating evidence that had come to light. No court date has yet been scheduled, he said, noting that the assailant is in the hospital for an illness unrelated to the incident with Mukker.

At a press conference Sept. 15 at the site of the attack, Mukker told reporters and members of the Indian American community that he was viciously attacked. “No American should feel threatened while going for a simple trip to the grocery store.” “He called me ‘Bin Laden’ and told me to go home to my country.”

Narinder Singh, chairman of the board of the Sikh Coalition, said at the press conference: “Identifying this assault properly as a hate crime is not about the potential length of the punishment. In this case the sentence would be no more severe.” Brown said he has been in contact with the Sikh Coalition and the Department of Justice and is looking into training for his officers in regards to the handling of hate crimes against minorities. He characterized Darien as “one of the safest cities in the U.S. with an extremely diverse population,” including many Indian Americans.

Christian activist John Dayal threatened

Christian lay leader and rights activist John Dayal said he has been threatened online after making comments on a social media network linking an arrested school principal to the country’s ruling political party.

Dayal, who is a member of the National Integration Council of India, said he was threatened after posting online comments on his Twitter account about the arrest of a school principal who had been accused of molesting one of his students in Mumbai.

Dayal wrote that the owners of the school were known to be associated with the ruling Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, or Indian people’s party. In one response to his tweet, Dayal said he was compared to pedophiles and potential rapists. The writer used the hashtag #ShameOnJohnDayal. In another, he was accused of selling his mother. Dayal said some responses tweeted to him included death threats.

“I feel threatened and coerced but not frightened,” said Dayal, who is also a member of ucanews.com‘s board of directors and an occasional op-ed contributor.  “I mourn the strangulation of dissent in India, the attempt to foist religious nationalism, to relate and equate patriotism with religion,” added Dayal, who is secretary general of the All India Christian Council and a former president of the All India Catholic Union.

In a complaint filed to police in New Delhi, Dayal stated that he has frequently been the subject of online abuse.  “I regularly receive threats to my life and liberty and live under constant fear,” he said in his statement. “Previously I made complaints to the concerned authorities, however, no action has been taken.”

Dayal said this campaign of abuse has been directed at the broader Christian community.  “There appears to be a deliberate and concerted attempt to prejudice religious harmony and hurt the sentiments of the Christian community and other Indians as well,” he said.  A delegation including the spokesman of the Archdiocese of Delhi was scheduled to meet with the Delhi police commissioner Sept. 14.

Indian-Americans in Chicago Celebrate Hindi Divas with Enthusiasm

Chicago IL: Hindi Lovers Club celebrated, in grand style, Hindi Diwas, the birth anniversary of Hindi being declared the national language of India, under the patronage of Consul General of India, on September 13, 2015 at Ashyana Banques in Downers Grove , Illinois . The program commenced with traditional lighting of lamp by OP Meena, Consul in the Consulate General of India and the Board Members of the Club. Vande Mataram was sung by Preetish Chakraborty, Indian National Anthem by Balodyan kids, and American National Anthem by Kiran. In attendance were over 350 guests.

OP Meena, who was the Chief Guest at the event, said that the demand for making Hindi as one of the official languages of the United Nations Organization is gaining momentum, at a fast pace, considering the staggering 457 millions Hindi speakers across the globe, including 337 millions in India.

Meena said that Hindi has been the most popular language among Indian immigrants in different parts of the world while at the same time it has emerged as the acceptable link language in India with 70 to 80 percent of the Indian population speaking or understanding it. He underlined the importance of Hindi in preserving the culture, identity, and unity among Indians, irrespective of the region to which they belong.

Meena laid emphasis on the need for popularizing Hindi among the new generation of Indian-Americans. He also pitched for a unified approach to advance the cause of Hindi in India and abroad.

The other highlight was a proclamation by Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner. Congratulating the organizers, the Proclamation underlined the importance of the efforts of the Consulate General of India and Hindi Lovers Club in popularizing Hindi in the USA.

Vinita Gulbani, President of the Hindi Lovers Club, said that serious efforts are being made to ensure that Hindi language is available in the class rooms of schools in Illinois.

Gurbachan Kaur Neelam, Club’s Founding President, who also spoke on the occasion, commended the efforts of the Indian-Americans in preserving Hindi language and Indian culture in the USA. Rich tributes were paid to APJ Abdul Kalam, Naren Patel and Prashant Bhargav.

There were quite a few highlights of the program, the foremost being Elocution Competition in Hindi for the second generation children on an interesting and relevant theme – “Hum Hindi Kyon Seekhen” (Why We Should Learn Hindi). The young participants were of the firm view that Hindi has assumed great importance in the worlds of work and education, both in India and across the globe, and, therefore, learning this language has become a functional necessity.

The cultural programs, which were presented by associations representing different regions and communities of India, were eye-catching. Some of the important programs which touched the hearts of the audience included: Ganesh Vandana and Sajda Dance Performance by Sheetal Dhanani , Hindi Bolo Song by Balodyan Kids, Unity in Diversity Dance Performance by Shanu and Group, “Mile Sur Mera Tumhara” by Shan and Group, Dance Performances by Suhanee Patel, Neepa Shah, Shalini Dixit and Prachi Jetly , Rajasthani Dance by Madhu Choudhary, Punjabi Dance by Shalini Dixit Group, Bollywood melodies by renowned Chicago Singer, Nipa Shah and Preetish Chakraborty, Saregama Lil’s Champ North America 2015 2nd Runner up, etc. A vote of thanks was proposed by Kamal Gupta. A sumptuous dinner was served and all those who were present enjoyed it thoroughly. Mrs Nipa Shah took over the stage to entertain the audience and they danced on a few Bollywood numbers.

Photographs and Press release by: Asian Media USA

Indian American Teen Creates Twitter Hashtag To Fight Racial Attacks in U.S.

An Indian American teen has created #AfterSeptember11 on the micro-blogging site Twitter to speak up against the racial attacks Indian Americans have been facing in the United States after the 9/11 terror attacks of 2001, according to an IANS report.

The hashtag was created by Jessica Talwar, a 19-year-old political science student from Loyola University in Chicago who tweets as @jesstalwar, according to a Los Angeles Times report.

The #AfterSeptember11 began trending since the evening of Sept. 10 — the day it was created — with more than 50,000 victims telling their stories using it. The victims said they were targeted for being Muslim, or often, just for having brown skin.

Many of the victims were children during the attacks on the World Trade Center towers, but their tweets reflect the impact of the racial abuse on their young lives. One said her father shaved his face and stopped wearing a turban after he was assaulted at work.

“America needs to recognize that the trauma and repercussions of these attacks were not confined to the day of Sept. 11, 2001, itself,” Talwar wrote in an e-mail to the Los Angeles Times. “Desis, Arabs and Muslims have felt the impact of this day for 14 years.”

Indian American poet Hari Kondabolu echoed Talwar’s views and wrote his “mother put the U.S. flag on their house, because she feared that people would throw rocks through the window.”

On Sept. 8, an elderly Sikh American man, Inderjit Singh Mukker, was attacked in Chicago and was dubbed a “terrorist” and “bin Laden” by the attacker (I-W Sept. 10, 2015,http://bit.ly/1i1SkdK).

Soon after its creation, the detractors used the hashtag to flood hate messages. They used racial slurs and threatened to kill Muslims. “It was as if there was some rigid dichotomy between American society and the South Asian, Muslim and Arab communities,” Talwar was quoted as saying. “This movement was not intended to belittle the tragic events of Sept. 11 itself,” she said.

According to an AP report, some Americans observed the anniversary in their own ways.

Jyothi Shah read names of victims in memory of her husband, Jayesh Shantitlal Shah, then paused with a message for the public.

Nikki Haley Among Four Indian Americans Recognized in Politico Magazine’s ‘Politico 50’

Four Indian Americans have been recognized in Politico Magazine’s “Politico 50” this year for their contributions to politics in the U.S. The magazine names a list of 50 people whom they deem to be “thinkers, doers and visionaries transforming American politics” in the current year.

Among those acknowledged on the list include South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, columnist Ramesh Ponnuru (and his wife, political adviser April Ponnuru), economist Raj Chetty, and surgeon and writer Atul Gawande.

Haley, coming in at No. 9 on the list, was integral in the removal of the Confederate flag from outside the statehouse in the wake of the Charleston shootings, noted Politico. “It was a bright spot in a year marked by racial tension,” according to the magazine’s bio on Haley.

Ramesh Ponnuru and his wife April both came in at No. 32 on the list. Politico describes them as “the young reigning couple of forward-thinking conservative ideas.” Ramesh is a senior editor at National Review and a columnist for Bloomberg View, and is a critic within the Republican party, according to Politico.

At No. 39 on the list is Chetty, an economist at Stanford and Harvard universities. Chetty and a team of researchers did a study and found out that growing up in different neighborhoods has a serious impact on social mobility. As stated in the magazine, “Little political attention has been paid to the role of neighborhoods in social mobility since civil rights reform efforts in the 1970s. But thanks at least in part to Chetty’s fresh approach to the data, politicians are taking note again.” Presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., is now using Chetty’s ideas in public speaking events.

Gawande came in at No. 50 on the list. His essay in 2009 on skyrocketing healthcare costs indirectly led to President Barack Obama’s push for what would become the Affordable Care Act. The surgeon wrote a book released in the fall of 2014 saying doctors are not prepared to help terminally ill people die well. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy topped the list. Other notable figures included Pope Francis (No. 4), Secretary of State John Kerry (No. 7) and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (No. 8).

Indian American Teen to Be Honored With Champions of Change Award

A 15-year-old Indian American teen has been selected by the White House for the prestigious Champions of Change award for empowering the community by imparting Internet coding through her non-profit organization. Swetha Prabakaran, whose parents immigrated from Tamil Nadu’s Tirunelveli in 1998, is a junior at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology. She hopes to continue inspiring young women to transform their future and the world.

Born in Indianapolis, Ind., Prabakaran is among 11 young women selected by the White House as “Champions of Change.” She is the founder and CEO of Everybody Code Now!, a non-profit body working to empower the next generation of youth to become engineers, scientists and entrepreneurs.

“Under Swetha’s direction, Everybody Code Now! has taught hundreds of students how to code and has raised thousands of dollars for STEM activities in schools,” the White House said.

“Her mentorship programs have transformed shy, young girls into confident students, community leaders and budding technologists,” the White House said in a statement.

In addition to her passion for science and computers, Prabakaran is an avid Bharatanatyam dancer; she did her Bharatanatyam arangetram — the debut on-stage performance of a classical art student after undertaking years of training — in Tirunelveli Aug. 2.

Her father, Prabakaran Murugaiah, is the founder and CEO of techfetch.com. He lives in Ashburn, Va., a suburb in Washington D.C.

Kuchipudi enthralls audience in greater Chicago

An evening of Kuchipudi dance organized by Sriranga Dance Academy at the Hindu Temple of Greater Chicago on Saturday, September 12th 2015 was a visual treat for those who had gathered. ‘ Dancing Tales from India’ , a Kuchipudi dance feature conceptualized and choreographed by the renowned Kuchipudi danseuse Vyjayanthi Kashi knit in a series of short yet interesting stories glorifying Indian culture. This was presented by Vyjayanthi Kashi, her daughter & disciple Prateeksha Kashi and Srivani Vokkarane, Artistic director of Sriranga Dance Academy.

The invocation item itself was a winning one. ‘Deham – Body the temple’, presented by the mother-daughter duo laid emphasis on the spiritual aspects of dance and a dancer. The importance of every part of the body known as the Anga of a dancer, the emotions and the energies that need to be prevalent in a dancer were intelligently conveyed through the dance language. The majesty of Lord Shiva’s tandava got manifested through Vyjayanthi’s powerful movements. On the contrary the lasya or delicate aspects of Goddess Gowri were gracefully exhibited by Prateeksha .Also seen was Vyjayanthi’s philosophical introspection into famous verse ‘Deham Devalaya Proktam’ reached beyond just an outer description of the lines.

Next came in the finest presentation on the five elements titled ‘Shrushti- the creation’. A short and crisp description of the five elements intertwined with musical notations,rhythmic segments with rare syllables like Hum, Vam, and Rum threw light on the choreographer’s creative abilities. All the three dancers on stage brought alive the five elements through their technique and body language.

Ramayana Shabdam, a traditional item of the Kuchipudi repertoire was well executed by Srivani Vokkarane, disciple of Vyjayanthi Kashi. Her neat presentation of this piece reflected the years of training that has gone in. Apart from being a good organizer, she proved her mettle as a danseuse too.

Prateeksha Kashi chose for her solo piece ‘Shankara Srigiri’, a composition of the celebrated poet Swati Tirunal. The item was an elaborative description of the vigorous dance of Shankara. Prateeksha executed the item with vigor and perfection. In spite of the song being fast paced, the dancer’s technique was crisp with well-balanced poses and dynamism in covering the stage. The choreography by Guru Vyjayanthi Kashi was commendable.

The different tales that the dancers narrated during the course of the event was an ecstasy to behold. The evening concluded with a story unheard and unsung; thestory of the ugly hunched woman Kubje, a staunch devotee of Lord Krishna. Kubje also known as Trivakra was employed by the wicked king Kamsa to prepare fragrance as she had magic in her hands. Disfigured, disheartened and dejected Kubje was looked down upon by the people of Mathura and wondered what she ever did to receive such a treatment. But it was her untiring love and faith which brought Krishna to Mathura to transform her.With her versatile capabilities Vyjayanthi proved her ability as a dancer and an actress conveying a gamut of emotions. The three dancers got together to create magic on stage justifying the roles they chose to play.

The highlight of the evening with Srivani honoring her Guru with the ‘VyjayanthiVibhooshithe’ Award for her outstanding contribution to the field of dance. This was handed over to Guru Vyjayanthi Kashi by Dr Saradapurna Sonty,  & Dr. Sriram Sonty , Founderof Sri Annamacharya Project of North America(SAPNA) .It was indeed a memorable evening!

Photographs and Press release by: Asian Media USA

India among few bright spots in global economy, says IMF

The IMF has said India is among the few bright spots in the global economy as G20 Finance Ministers began their two-day meeting here against the backdrop of concerns over Chinese economic slowdown looming large on world markets. The remarks from International Monetary Fund (IMF) Chief Christine Lagarde came at the meeting of G20 Finance Minister and Central Bank Governors where they also discussed monetary policy uncertainties.

Lagarde told the gathering that between advanced and emerging economies, there are problems in most places in the advanced world while in emerging economies, there are problems in China although not that big as stock markets are making it to be, according to officials present at the meeting.

Among emerging economies if there is any growth, that is in India. India is among the few bright spots in the global economy, the officials said quoting Lagarde. Officials said that RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said at the meeting that they are surrounded by economic gloom probably hinting at concerns over slowdown in China.

With plans for more investments in line with the ‘Make In India’ initiative, US conglomerate General Electric’s chairman Jeff Immelt is headed for India later this month.

Describing India as a “growth engine for Asia”, Immelt said there is huge manufacturing potential in the country.

GE, which has diverse business interests spanning manufacturing to healthcare, is keen to bolster its partnership with India and wants to be part of efforts to make the country a global manufacturing destination.

“India is a growth engine for Asia, and we see huge potential for the country in the manufacturing space,” Immelt said in a statement. “Infrastructure is a key driver of India’s growth. We are keen to invest much more in India and in projects to boost its infrastructure in sectors such as rail, power and healthcare. These efforts will have a ripple effect on the overall economic growth in India and beyond,” he said. GE has doubled its investment in the country over the last five years and the group is ensuring that investments and jobs created in India support the ‘Make in India’ initiative, the statement said.

Indian American Physician Couple Convicted of Health Care Fraud

Paramjit Singh Ajrawat and Sukhveen Kaur Ajrawat, two Indian American doctors in Maryland who owned and operated a pain management clinic, have been convicted of health care fraud.

A federal jury in Greenbelt Sept. 4 convicted 60-year-old Paramjit Singh Ajrawat and his wife, 57-year-old Sukhveen Kaur Ajrawat, of numerous offenses, including health care and wire fraud, obstruction of justice, and aggravated identity theft.

According to reports, the Ajrawats owned and operated Washington Pain Management Center in Greenbelt. According to evidence presented at trial, they filed claims for procedures that were not performed to Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, Federal Employees Health Benefits Program and the Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs.

According to a Department of Justice press release, specifically, the Ajrawats performed less expensive procedures but falsely billed for procedures that provided higher reimbursement amounts. They also submitted claims indicating that they had met the requirements for reimbursement, when in fact, they had not met those requirements.

For example, said the DOJ, the Ajrawats submitted claims that P. Ajrawat had performed nerve block injections with the use of an imaging guidance machine, when in fact he neither owned nor used such a machine. The government seeks forfeiture of at least $2.5 million, the proceeds of the scheme. U.S. District Judge Deborah K. Chasanow has scheduled sentencing for Feb. 1, 2016.

Oman’s Stephanie Lohale Crowned Miss India Worldwide 2015

Beating out 32 contestants from countries across the globe, Miss India Oman 2015 Stephanie Lohale was crowned Miss India Worldwide at the pageant’s grand finale at the Lalit Hotel in Mumbai Sept. 5.

“I don’t know where to begin,” Lohale, who was also the first runner-up at Miss India United Arab Emirates, posted on Facebook Sept. 8. “I’m so immensely happy and blessed. Thank you so so much to every single one of you, my supporters and everyone that truly believed in me. THANK YOU! It’s going to be one heck of a year!! So stay tuned for more, love you all.”

A design studies student at Heriot Watt University in Dubai, Lohale, 19, was the youngest contestant at the pageant this year, according to Muscat Daily.

The teenager told Muscat Daily she wants to contribute back to society with the help of the crown and spent most of her time mentally and physically preparing to win.

“I do a lot of running and attend zumba classes to stay fit. But I feel that success comes easily when you have good thoughts. You need to have the right mindset and attitude, and always feel good about yourself…That’s when a lot of doors open for you. Meditation has helped me in that sense. It’s essential to know the basis of success before venturing out to seize it,” she said.

India’s Miss India 2015 Apeksha Porwal was the first runner-up while the second runner-up was Miss India South Africa 2015 Shivani Govender.

The winners were crowned by last year’s Indian American winner from the U.S., Monica Gill.

The pageant also gave out several subtitle awards to contestants for specific qualities, such as friendliness. Miss India Netherlands 2015 Soesoe Mustafa was crowned Miss Congeniality, Miss India Qatar Jyotsna Arora was crowned Miss Talented, and Miss India Indonesia Grace Walia was awarded the title “Miss Bollywood Diva” at the 24th edition of the pageant.

Joe Biden, John Kerry, Sushma Swaraj to Address USIBC 40th Annual Leadership Summit

Washington, D.C., September 15, 2015 – Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, Indian Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj, and other high-ranking officials from both governments, along with captains of industry from both countries, will address the U.S.-India Business Council on the occasion of its 40th anniversary on September 21 in Washington, DC, to kick off the first U.S.-India Strategic and Commercial Dialogue.

“It’s a privilege for USIBC to host government and business leaders from both countries on the eve of the U.S.-India Strategic and Commercial Dialogue and on the occasion of the council’s 40th anniversary. The founding principle of the council four decades ago – which grew out of the vision of then-U.S. Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger – remains even more true today:  the world’s largest democracies share a love of freedom and an entrepreneurial spirit that – if nurtured – can help realize the full potential of India-U.S. relations,” said USIBC Chairman and MasterCard President and CEO, Ajay Banga.

“The U.S. business relationship with India is one of the most valuable in the world, and we have seen great progress over the last 40 years,” said President of USIBC Mukesh Aghi. “We are honored to welcome these distinguished speakers from both countries – from both public and private sectors – on the occasion of this milestone anniversary.  This level of bilateral engagement and commitment to furthering trust and cooperation has been one of USIBC’s hallmarks for the past four decades and will be for decades more to come,” said USIBC President, Mukesh Aghi.

The government to government dialogue at this year’s summit will also include U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Nirmala Sitharaman, Minister of State with Independent Charge for Power, Coal and New & Renewable Energy Piyush Goyal.

The Council also honors business and government leaders for their commitment towards building a more inclusive global economy. This year’s honorees include CEO and Chairman of PepsiCo Indra Nooyi and Chairperson and Editorial Director of the Hindustan Times Group, Shobhana Bhartia.

Formed in 1975 at the request of the U.S. and Indian governments, the U.S.-India Business Council is the premier business advocacy organization, comprised of top-tier U.S. and Indian companies advancing U.S.-India commercial ties. USIBC is the largest bilateral trade association in the United States, with liaison presence in New York, Silicon Valley, and New Delhi.

India’s Bid To Security Council Seat Gets A Boost As UN Adopts Negotiations On Reforms

United Nations: The UN General Assembly on Monday, September 14th, 2015 adopted a negotiating text by consensus for the long-pending Security Council reforms, setting the stage for talks on the issue at its 70th session, boosting India’s bid for a permanent seat in the revamped world body.

India termed as “historic” and “path-breaking” the adoption of the document, saying the decision puts the Inter-Governmental Process formally on an “irreversible text-based negotiations path” and changes the “dynamics” of the negotiations on achieving UNSC reforms. India’s Ambassador to the UN Asoke Mukerji said the “most important aspect” of Monday’s decision is the text circulated by Kutesa in July which “we have agreed will be the guiding basis for our deliberations in the 70th General Assembly session”.

UN General Assembly President Sam Kutesa convened a plenary meeting to take action on the draft decision on the “Question of equitable representation on and increase in the membership of the Security Council and related matters”. During the meeting, he also circulated letters containing the positions of key countries, including Russia, the U.S. and China which refused to contribute to the negotiating text.

There was no voting on the decision to continue text-based UNSC reforms in the 70th session of the General Assembly and it was adopted by consensus. The draft decision contains a negotiating text which has positions of UN member states on Security Council reforms and how the powerful 15-nation body should be expanded in its permanent and non-permanent categories.

The adoption is a significant step towards beginning talks on the long-stalled reforms process in the 70th session of the Assembly on the basis of a negotiating text, a first in the last seven years of Inter-Governmental Negotiations that have been conducted so far without the basis of any text.

“What you have delivered today… to all 193 Member States of the United Nations, is truly historic and path-breaking on several counts,” Mukerji told the Assembly. “It becomes especially memorable taking into account the stiff challenges and pressures that were brought upon you and your office to step back from this issue, which has been on the agenda of the UNGA for nearly 23 years,” he added.

It was a breakthrough of sorts by circulating the text to UN members that will form the basis for the Inter-Governmental negotiations on the UNSC reforms. With the adoption, the General Assembly decided to “immediately continue Inter-Governmental Negotiations on Security Council reform in informal plenary of the General Assembly at its 70th session, building on the informal meetings held during its 69th session, as well as the positions and proposals made by member states…”

The draft also states that an open-ended Working Group on the negotiating text will be convened during the 70th session “if member states so decide”. Kutesa had appointed Jamaica’s Permanent Representative Courtenay Rattray to chair on his behalf the Intergovernmental Negotiations (IGN) on Security Council reforms.

Kutesa, in a letter to all UN members in July, had circulated the text containing the positions of countries on Security Council reforms and how the UN body should be expanded in its permanent and non-permanent categories. He also circulated letters containing the positions of groups and member states that indicated they did not wish their proposals to be included in the body of the negotiating text. These countries include the U.S., Russia and China.

Mukerji on Monday said the need for a supportive international peace and security environment is urgent and “if the Security Council continues to be ineffective, the lives of millions of people and the uninterrupted flow of trade, investment and technology, all of which depend on a stable and predictable global political environment will be jeopardised”. He said the decision to carry forward the reforms process is not just a “technical decision, nor is it a rollover but highly substantive”.

“This is the first time in the history of the Inter-Governmental Negotiation (IGN) process that a decision on UNSC reform has been adopted through an official formal L Document of the UNGA. This is the most positive and unique development, as so far, over the last seven years we have only been making statements in the air, or at each other, with easily deniable or disputable summaries, or at times compilation text(s), to register our endeavours,” he said. He said the adoption of such a “substantive decision” on UNSC Reforms “changes the dynamics of the Inter-governmental negotiations” completely.

Mukerji noted that India was among the first to seek to conclude the UNSC reform process by the 70th anniversary of the United Nations. “This decision sets the IGN process formally on an irreversible text-based negotiations path, which had been your priority from the first day of your Presidency,” Mukerji said. “The twin objectives of saving our work done in the 69th UNGA and carrying it meaningfully forward have therefore both been achieved,” he added.

He added: “This is as clear and explicit as any mandate could ever be. We now know that with the adoption of this truly historic decision, we can meet in the 70th Session of the UNGA under the leadership of our Chair, the Permanent Representative of Jamaica, Ambassador Courtenay Rattray and build upon the significant work undertaken by him in the 69th Session.

“It is our hope that with the adoption of this Decision, we will now move purposefully towards concluding our negotiations during the 70th Session, so that we fulfil the unanimous mandate given by our leaders in the World Summit of 2005 for ‘early reform’ of the Security Council to make it… ‘more broadly representative, efficient and transparent and thus to further enhance its effectiveness and the legitimacy and implementation of its decisions’.”

“We have got something after 23 years which is a document on the table. From now it is going to be much more in terms of what they are used to doing at the UN which is to negotiate with a text in front of us,” India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Asoke Mukerji said.

The 193-member General Assembly adopted by consensus, on the last day of the 69th session, a text that sets the stage for negotiations on the long-pending issue of UNSC reform during the 70th session that commenced on Tuesday, September 15, 2015.

Sustainability Award For Artificial Milk Firm Led By Indians

A U.S. based company founded by a group of Indian-origin entrepreneurs which produces artificial milk has won a Dutch sustainability innovation prize of 200,000 euro, media reported.

An international jury chaired by Steve Howard, chief sustainability officer at multinational IKEA Group, awarded Ryan Pandya of Silicon Valley startup Muufri the runner-up prize of the Postcode Lottery Green Challenge 2015.

It is the largest annual international competition in the field of sustainability innovation, green challenge. Muufri has identified the proteins, fats, vitamins and minerals in milk and is developing a blending process that has the potential to eliminate vast amounts of greenhouse gas emissions being generated by commercial dairy farming.

The biotech startup was founded in 2014 by bio-engineers Pandya, Perumal Gandhi and Isha Datar. The winner of the Dutch Postcode Lottery-organised award was Jurriaan Ruys (47), co-founder of the Dutch start-up Land Life Company. Ruys won 500,000 euro for his technology for nature restoration.

“It is inspiring to see how these green entrepreneurs are contributing to a better world… All of these ideas have potential for business success and to go to scale — which is the only way we are going to tackle CO2 emissions,” Howard was quoted as saying.

India, U.S. Working On Pact To Exempt Certain People From Immigration Checks

India and the U.S. are working on a pact that will exempt a certain category of Indians, like former Presidents, Prime Ministers and other “high dignitaries”, big industrialists and some film stars, from immigration checks in America.

Top immigration officials of the two countries recently held a meeting for implementation of the Global Entry, a US Customs and Border Protection programme that allows expedited clearance for pre-approved, low-risk travellers upon arrival in the United States.

The meeting discussed what categories of people from India could be exempted from the immigration checks in the US, sources said. In this context, the names of former President Pratibha Patil, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, industrialists Mukesh Ambani and Gautam Adani and film stars Amitabh Bachchan and Shahrukh Khan were specifically mentioned, they said.

Significantly, Shahrukh was once detained at a US airport because his name resembled that of somebody on the watchlist. “The US has been pressing for India’s inclusion in the Global Entry so that high dignitaries, frequent flyers and top industrialists could visit America without any hassle,” a source said.

Individuals included in the list enter the US through automatic kiosks at select airports. At airports, programme members proceed to Global Entry kiosks, present their machine-readable passport or US permanent resident card, place their fingerprints on the scanner for fingerprint verification and complete a customs declaration.

The kiosk issues the traveller a transaction receipt and directs the traveller to baggage claim and the exit. Two foremost criteria for inclusion of the Global entry programme for any individual is that he or she should not have any criminal record or anyway connected with any money laundering case.

So far, citizens of seven countries are getting benefits of America’s Global Entry programme. The countries are The Netherlands, Panama, South Korea, Germany, Peru, Mexico, Canada. Brazil and India are likely to be part of the programme next year.

“Discussions are continuing. We expect it to kick off for Indian citizens some time in next year. If the programme becomes successful, the list would be enhanced,” the sources said. India proposes to prepare a list, which will initially have around 2,000 individuals like top industrialists, film stars, former occupants of high ranking posts and frequent flyers, the sources said.

Every applicant will have to go through a rigorous background check by Indian security agencies before sending the name to the US authority which will give the final nod after again doing a thorough background check.

Security agencies will keep doing background check of every individual included in the list periodically and if any adverse report comes in-between, the individual will be removed from the list, they said. However, even in case someone is removed from the elite list, such person can still enter USA but will have to go through the routine processes.

The idea behind the Global Entry programme is to reduce pressure on US immigration officials as they would have no role if anyone carrying the machine-readable passport arrives at the designated airports.

The official said in later phases, the government would launch a dedicated website where any Indian can apply online to be included for the programme. Travellers must be pre-approved for the Global Entry program. All applicants undergo a rigorous background check and in-person interview before enrolment.

While Global Entry’s goal is to speed travellers through the process, members may still be selected for further examination when entering the United States. Any violation of the program’s terms and conditions will result in the appropriate enforcement action and termination of the traveller’s membership privileges. As of December 2014, Global Entry was available at 42 US airports and 12 preclearance locations.

India to join UN-based ‘Better Than Cash Alliance’

India is joining the UN-based ‘Better Than Cash Alliance’, which promotes transition from cash to digital payments to reduce poverty and drive inclusive growth, the government said today.

“The new partnership with the Better Than Cash Alliance, made up of governments, companies, and international organisations, is an extension of Indian government’s commitment to reduce cash in its economy,” the Finance Ministry said in a statement.

India joins the Alliance for digitisation of payments to achieve financial inclusion and to share success stories from PMJDY, the world’s largest financial inclusion programme, the statement said. Under PMJDY, in one year, about 180 million new accounts have been opened, with deposits totaling more than USD3.4 billion (223 billion Rupees).

The announcement has come ahead of United Nations Special Summit in New York, where Prime Minister Narendra Modi along with other world leaders will launch Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Commenting on the development, Better Than Cash Alliance Managing Director Ruth Goodwin-Groen said that India’s leadership and progress are inspirational for countries around the world.

The Better Than Cash Alliance is a partnership of governments, companies, and international organisations that accelerates the transition from cash to digital payments in order to reduce poverty and drive inclusive growth.

36th annual convention of the Association of Kerala Medical Graduates held in Philadelphia

The 36th annual convention of the Association of Kerala Medical Graduates (AKMG) at the Downtown Marriott in Philadelphia, September 5-7, was attended by hundreds of doctors and their family from the US, Canada, England and India. The AKMG is a pioneering organization of Indian physicians in the US, which was formed three years earlier than the American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin.

Dr. Seema Jain, president of AAPI, noted that AKMG inspired the formation of AAPI. At the concluding public meeting, Dr. Jain said there are more than 110,000 doctors and medical students of Indian origin in the US. The number of medical students is estimated at 38,000. In some universities, more than 30 percent of the students are of Indian origin.

“In several states, one in four patients, consult a doctor of Indian origin. Nationally it is one in seven. It means that the Indian physicians play a major role in the healthcare in the US and their absence would disrupt the health sector,” Dr. Jain said. “AAPI continues to play a major role in in the health care in this country. We played a crucial role in securing the approval of Dr. Vivek Murthy as Surgeon General.” Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whom she met recently, is keenly watching the activities of AAPI and in his future plans AAPI has a special place. She asked all the Indian physicians to join AAPI.

Anto Antony MP, the only political leader from India to attend the event, praised the achievements of the Indian doctors using the knowledge gained from India. Once their departure from India was considered as brain drain, but now they are the brain bank of the country.

He pointed out the fast changing technology and the difficulties to cope up with it. More than 85 percent of technology and innovation happens in the US. America conquers the world with it. People may say that America gains importance through its armed strength. “The truth is that their gains are mostly through technology. Many nations tried to compete or challenge America and are unsuccessful till now.” Companies from India have employed 10,000 Indian is the US while they have given jobs to more than 22,000 Americans. He also congratulated the organization for keeping its unity even after 36 years, which should be a model for other organizations that split frequently.

Dr. Azad Mooppan, who runs upscale hospitals in several countries and five states in India, employing more than 13,500 people, quoted Silicon Valley experts who said that machines will replace 80 percent of the work currently done by the doctors. In future, the patient could sit at home and consult the doctor. “Yet the importance of the physicians or the profession will not be diminished. The roles may change,” he said.

Dr. Alex Thomas, president of AKMG, noted the revival of AKMG in recent years. Yet many of the doctors and medical students would not take membership in AKMG or AAPI, which needs to be changed. He noted that there about 4000 doctors of Kerala heritage, but only a few are associated with AKMG. “I am humbled and honored by the opportunity to serve as your president for its 36th year. As I undertake to represent the AKMG as its President for 2014-2015,” he said. He thanked the convention team with Dr. Joseph Mathew as the Convention Chairman, who had put together the event that included CMEs and a great cultural and entertainment program.

At the event, he handed over the charge to incoming president Dr. Sunil Kumar from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Dr. Kumar announced that the next convention will be held in Miami Beach in July 14-16 in 2016. He said he will work to strengthen the organization and improve relations with other organizations like Fokana and Fomaa and also with organizations of other medical professionals. The attitude of the physicians keeping aloof from other medical professionals has no place in the US

An aggressive move to enroll more members, especially youngsters will be launched soon. To attract youngsters, AKMG members will work as mentors for the medical students and those who wish to study medicine. As always, AKMG will continue the focus on charity activities and helping the medical colleges back in Kerala. He said AKMG will strengthen the relations with AAPI, which can work nationally. Dr Kumar also promised to help Indian American candidates running for elections pointing that they deserve our support as part of our community irrespective of party affiliations.

Dr. Kurian Abraham, patron of the convention noted the reasons for the lack of participation of the young doctors. He said the medical education is very expensive in America and many young doctors are more concerned about repaying the huge student loan they have taken, which has high interest rate too. They are more focused on career and money than social activities, he pointed out.

Dr. Joseph Mathew, convention chair, Dr. Narendra Kumar, former president of AKMG and AAPI, Dr. Aravind Pillai, former president of AKMG and current chair of the AAPI Board of Trustees, addressed the delegates at the convention. The cultural events include Amrutha sandhya, a dance program by New Jersey based Kalashri school led by Bina Menon.  The entertainment for the concluding night on Sept 6th was the Bobby Chemmanur Jayaram show 2015 directed by Nadirshah with star performers Padmasree Jayaram the film actor, Priyamani, the award winning film actress,   Pisharodi & Dharmajan of Badai Bangalaw fame and an ace singer Unnimenon.

The three day convention began with a cruise around Philadelphia. On the second day, Onam was celebrated with traditional festivities including a reception to King Mahabaili with thalapoli and chenda melam followed by an Onam feast. Various seminars, CME classes and campus comedy night which showcased the artistic talents of the doctors were the highlights of the convention. At the literary seminar several doctors read their literary works including poems. Dr. MV Pillai, who moderated the event noted the contributions of doctors like Dr. Siddharth Mukherji and Dr. Abraham Vergese for literature.

NYC Taxi and FHV Drivers Rally at NYS Governor’s Office to Protect Full Time Jobs

Taxi drivers are taking to the streets to demonstrate against “Ubernomics,” a business model predicated on turning full-time driving jobs into part-time gigs, monopolizing service by flooding the streets and overtaking the heavily regulated taxi industry through “disruption,” and ultimately bringing in the driverless car to replace drivers altogether. In cities with legions of Uber cars, drivers report massive loss of income, both for taxi drivers and Uber drivers themselves. Earlier in the summer, Uber Chief Strategist David Plouffe said “the vast majority of Uber drivers have another job and their income from driving Uber is supplemental.” Professional taxi drivers say, what about the full-time jobs that have existed for generations?

“This income is not supposed to be supplemental. It’s the primary income for a quarter-million workers in this country. Uber has set everyone on a vicious race to the bottom where no worker wins,” said Bhairavi Desai, Executive Director of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance.

Uber and other App companies legislate the business model through state-wide laws that allow them to dispatch “on-demand” directly to non-regulated private motorists with personal cars. As a “Transportation Network Company” (TNC), they win special explicit exemptions from all laws governing taxis and for-hire service, including commercial insurance, commercial registration and inspections, vehicle standards, driver security background checks, tax requirements, and compliance with Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA.) There are also no protections against price gouging, or requirements for customer service.

Despite Uber and Lyft’s failed attempts over the past several years to pass TNC legislation in NYS, drivers say they fear the outcome of the Governor’s public pledge to support Uber and bring it across the state. “Since Uber doesn’t believe it needs to follow the same rules as taxis, the only other way it would be in upstate is as a TNC,” said Beresford Simmons. “Drivers in Buffalo are going to be swarmed in traffic during all the busy times, like rush hour and weekend nights. And when the work dries up, all those private cars are naturally going to enter the City where the work is. Whether NYC is in the law or not, we’ll be squeezed. And none of us can afford to lose more.”

With no cap on the number of TNC vehicles, cities like San Francisco have as many as 30,000 private cars competing for fares in a city served by 3,000 regulated taxis. Drivers have reported losing as much as 70% of their income, while the city is now plagued with the second worst traffic congestion in the country.

The laws also explicitly exempt drivers from employee classification, pre-empting state laws that otherwise have classified similarly dispatched black car and car service drivers as employees for decades.  Cities with strong regulated taxi and for-hire service would stand to lose significant revenue from taxes and fees, but city regulators would be precluded from banning such cars as the state would trump their authority.  There are also no limits on the number of vehicles.

Many states have defeated such measures and activated heavy enforcement to stop Uber’s illegal entrants into local markets. Most recently, Philadelphia seized dozens of cars and fined Uber $300,000. Countries across Europe and Asia have banned Uber due to its anti-regulation stance and Uber CEOs in Paris face criminal charges. Taxi and For-Hire-Vehicle Drivers in New York City urge Governor Cuomo to stand up to Uber and say no to TNCs.

Dharma Conference in New Jersey Showcases Hindu Religion, Traditions

The 2nd Global Dharma Conference held from September 11-13, 2015 at the New Jersey Convention and Exposition Center in Edison, N.J. organized by the Hindu Students Council, brought to the limelight the rich traditions and contributions of Hindu religion to the world.

More than 1,000 people attended the event from 13 countries, including some 40 speakers on 14 panels, and numerous performers and artists, Nikunj Trivedi, chairman of the board at HSC and chair of the conference, said. The conference was largely a paean to Hinduism and what most attendees considered its seminal contributions in the history of civilization, and how those teachings were relevant today.

According to Mathematician and Field Medalist Manjul Bhargava of Princeton University, several inaccuracies in the history of science need to be corrected to recognize Hinduism’s contributions to civilization. He was among a multitude of world famous leaders who had addressed the conference. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s personal yoga instructor H.R. Nagendra, was one of the high-profile guests at the conference. Nagendra described yoga as a holistic science and dwelt on the Indian government’s efforts to draw global attention to it. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar of the Art of Living Foundation speaking via video-conference from Bangalore Sept. 12, to a packed audience at Edison, said “dharma” could be used to build a conflict-free world.

A multi-faith panel “Dharma: A Framework for a Pluralistic World Order” included a Rabbi, a Buddhist monk, a Sikh, a Jain, and a Hindu. The Muslim panelist could not make it to the conference, Trivedi said. Panelists agreed there was a need for various faiths to learn to coexist by recognizing and respecting each other’s differences.

Bhargava said there were several misconceptions about the contributions made by Hindus to mathematics and science. In mathematics, for instance Bhargava contended the numbers used today should be called the “Hindu Number System” rather than Arabic Number System and the Fibonacci Sequence (of integers) outlined in the 12th century, should be renamed Hemchandra Numbers after Jain scholar Acharya Hemchandra who developed them 900 years earlier. The Pascal Triangle should be renamed “Pingal’s Meru Prastar” after the 200 B.C. Indian scholar who studied the metrics of verse 1800 years before French mathematician Blaise Pascal, Bhargava said.

Negative numbers and quadratic formula should both be named after 7th century astronomer Brahmagupta who first documented the algebraic properties of negative numbers and wrote the first full quadratic formula, the Princeton professor contended. And the seeds of calculus Bhargava said, were laid by 14th century Kerala-based mathematician Madhava, three centuries before Isaac Newton and Gottfried Leibniz. “So Madhava and the subsequent members of his school should be mentioned in any discussion on the foundations and history of calculus!”

Bhargava said in an email clarification sent to News India Times by organizers. The Princeton professor was on a panel with physicist G.N.R. Tripathi and computer scientist Subhash Kak.

At the opening plenary Sept. 11, keynote speaker Padma Bhushan recipient David Frawley, a Vedic scholar and founder of the American Institute of Vedic Studies said the Hindu heritage of yoga should be recognized and not cut off from the practice.

A Women’s Empowerment panel and a Media & Human Rights panel were well attended. Miss America 2014 Nina Davuluri, a former HSC member, was among the speakers and dwelt on her experience on college campus while growing up as a Hindu; Pratibha “Patti” Tripathi, former CNN anchor and media advisor to the conference, told Desi Talk Davuluri had made it fashionable to say “Hindu-American.”

 

“When I was a CNN anchor, we had to hide our ethnic identity. HSC celebrates their heritage. It’s great to see that sense of pride,” Patti Tripathi said. A panel discussion on India’s political system and how “Dharma” could help reduce poverty, featured University of California, Berkeley economist Atanu Dey, and Rajesh Jain, founder of NitiCentral who is considered the mastermind behind Modi’s “272” campaign strategy, the number of seats needed to win India’s general election.

Entertainers at the conference included flautist Rakesh Chaurasia, mandolin player U. Rajesh, ghatam player Giridhar Udupa, and percussionist Rajeev Mahavir, along with Rachna Sarang Academy of Performing Arts which performed classical Kathak, and a Balinese dance theater group which performed the Ramayana. The HSC honored Prime Minister Modi, Sri Sri Ravishankar and Swami Dayanand Saraswati in absentia with the Light of Yoga award, and bestowed it in person on Nagendra, for their contributions to globalizing the benefits of yoga.

The Conference was packed with panel discussions, yoga/pranayama and meditation workshops/sessions, prayers, demonstrations, classical concert, Bharatnatyam, Garba, Bhangra, Balinese dance, Kathak, etc. Students, young professionals and others from over 20 countries and 50 universities/colleges attended the event.

Topics covered at the Conference included Dharma’s role in Bridging Science and Spirituality, Women’s Empowerment, Showcasing the Arts, Media, Environmental Sustenance, Corporate Social Responsibility, Global Influences and Practices; Guide for the Inner Battlefield, Perceptions of Dharma in Academia, Contributions of Hindus, Youth Perspectives, Reconnecting Yoga to its Roots, Unity of Dharma, Dharma in the 21st Century, Yoga, Sanskrit, etc.

The Executive Committee of this Unique Hindu Unity Conference in US includes: Nikunj Trivedi, Ravindra Jaishankar, Shaivi Sukhadia, Sohini Sircar, Harshit Agarwal, Parth Parihar and Darshna Modi. The key organiser of this event, Hindu Students Council (HSC) is an international forum providing opportunities to learn about Hindu heritage and culture. It is the largest Hindu youth organization in North America, with over 50 chapters across university campuses. Over 130,000 students and youth have participated in HSC activities since its birth in 1990.

Roopal Patel Appointed Director Of Saks Fifth Avenue

Roopal Patel, a fashion consultant specializing in luxury retail, fashion, beauty and lifestyle industries, was appointed Fashion Director of Saks Fifth Avenue, one of the world’s pre-eminent specialty retailers renowned for its superlative American and international designer collections, last week.

Saks Fifth Avenue, which is part of the Hudson’s Bay Company brand portfolio, and operates 38 full-line stores in 22 states, five international licensed stores and saks.com, the company’s online store, announced September 10 that Patel has been appointed Fashion Director of Saks Fifth Avenue, effective immediately. She will report to Tracy Margolies, Chief Merchant of Saks Fifth Avenue.

The company said Patel’s appointment will strengthen the role of the newly shaped fashion office at Saks within the merchant organization, the fashion industry and ultimately consumers.

“Roopal is a respected force in the industry with high energy and a deep understanding of today’s luxury fashion consumer, and we are so pleased to welcome her to Saks,” said Marc Metrick, President of Saks Fifth Avenue. “I am confident that her demonstrated expertise in trend direction combined with Tracy’s leadership in fashion merchandising will be invaluable as we continue to elevate the brand and position Saks as a modern and relevant fashion authority in luxury retailing.”

Patel’s experience and expertise speaks to the multifaceted approach necessary to succeed in today’s global marketplace. She spent many years working in luxury retailing as senior fashion director at Bergdorf Goodman and as senior fashion director for its parent company, Neiman Marcus, where she broadened her expertise, learning how luxury works beyond major cities.

She was previously a market editor at Style.com at its launch and also worked at Ralph Lauren’s Club Monaco. Most recently, Miss Patel served as executive fashion director at e-retailer Moda Operandi.

“I’ve been fortunate to work with some of the best retailers, industry leaders and designers in the fashion industry,” says Patel, according to Roopal Patel Consulting, a creative consultancy she founded in 2012 with a focus on brand development and positioning, merchandising retail strategy, and trend forecasting. “Roopal Patel Consulting allows me the opportunity to use my past experiences to support future initiatives in the fashion industry,” she earlier said.

At Saks Fifth Avenue Patel will play a key role in forecasting the trends that underpin all of Saks’ buying activities, articulating the store’s seasonal fashion message, and scouting fresh designers and collections.

Patel said, “I am truly honored to join Saks Fifth Avenue during this exciting and dynamic time. I have long admired Saks Fifth Avenue’s iconic history and am thrilled to be on the team. I look forward to working with Marc, Tracy, and the entire Saks team to bring an elevated fashion message to the customer and build a strong future for Saks.”

Patel is regularly quoted as a fashion industry insider by such publications as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Women’s Wear Daily, Vogue India and Vogue Japan.

Hudson’s Bay Company, founded in 1670, is North America’s oldest company, one of the world’s pre-eminent luxury specialty retailers, comprises 38 U.S. stores, five international licensed stores and saks.com. The Company also operates Home Outfitters, Canada’s largest kitchen, bed and bath specialty superstore with 67 locations. Hudson’s Bay Company trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Dancing Light: The Spiritual Side of Being Through the Eyes of a Modern Yoga Master

Millions across the globe have been inspired by 97-year-old Tao Porchon-Lynch – World War II French Resistance fighter, model, actress, film producer, wine connoisseur, ballroom dancer, and yoga master. Named “Oldest Yoga Teacher” by Guinness World Records in 2012, Tao exemplifies her mantra: There Is Nothing You Cannot Do.

Dancing Light: The Spiritual Side of Being Through the Eyes of a Modern Yoga Master is an inspirational autobiography that shows us what is possible–that we each can live to our Highest Potential by inhaling life, exhaling strife and dancing to our own rhythm. Through Tao’s reflections, we are given the gift of insights from almost a century of wisdom that can be applied to our modern-day challenges. We learn about her deep connection with nature and “secrets” to vitality while taking a soulful odyssey of love and loss, hope and joy, and ultimately the triumph of resilience.

Tao’s life has been a journey within to answer the age-old questions, “Who am I?,” “Why am I here?,” “What is my Truth?” Born during World War I, she grew up in the disquiet of the world not a cloistered spiritual sanctuary. Called the real “Forrest Gump,” Tao participated in historic events most of us only read about from marching with Mahatma Gandhi in the 1930 Salt March and helping her aunt hide Polish Jews in cement wine vats to performing nightly during the Nazi bombing Blitz when “all of London was on fire.”

She worked with the French Resistance for General Charles de Gaulle during World War II helping Jews hiding in the caves under Paris escape the Germans and cross over to safety. After the war, she modeled for famous couture houses such as Jean Dessès, Coco Chanel, Jeanne Lanvin, Marcel Rochas, Jean Patou and Elsa Schiaparelli. Later, she was under contract with MGM surrounded by the excesses of high society in old-time Hollywood going to parties with the Barrymores. She greatly admired Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and even participated in the March on Washington and later went to Dr. King’s funeral.

Dancing Light The Spiritual Side of Being Through the Eyes of a Modern Yoga MasterTao helped to lay the groundwork for TV in India and was early in international film distribution. She brokered and introduced new wine producers in Napa Valley to the European wine industry elite for quality products and was later a co-founder of the American Wine Society. Tao has personal stories on icons such as Ernest Hemingway, General Charles de Gaulle, Prime Minister Nehru, Marlene Dietrich, Elizabeth Taylor, Michael Wilding, Marilyn Monroe, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Marcel Marceau, Burgess Meredith, Debbie Reynolds, Burt Lancaster, Cesar Romero, Vincent Price, Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner, Joan Crawford, Quentin Reynolds, Sir Noel Peirce Coward, Ezra Stone, Joan Davis, Jim Backus, Lucille Lortel, Errol Flynn, Glenn Miller, Duke Ellington, Katherine Dunham, Ilka Chase, Sol Siegel, Jack Cummings, Robert Mondavi, Dr. Welthy Fisher, Jack LaLanne, and others. Tao still has pay stubs from Coco Chanel, her W2 from the William Morris Agency, residual checks from MGM, pictures with Bob Hope – many of these mementos are featured in the book.

Yet, ALL of this is simply the backdrop for a very human search for the spiritual side of being. As Tao got more into the sex-obsessed material world of modeling and acting, she needed to find balance and come back to her spiritual core. She had to learn to be in the world but not of the world. She witnessed the hate of pre-civil rights era and the prosecution of Cold War Communist fever in America. She saw that the Jewish people had to seek refuge by creating their own clubs in Hollywood and there were even disagreements amongst the Christian denominations. She was saddened by the crackdown in Tibet and on the practice of Buddhism. She wondered how she could go beyond all of this exclusion and discord and get to the Truth.

In Dancing Light, we gain wisdom from Tao’s many teachers – from her uncle Vital Porchon to the teachings of revered spiritual figures Sri Aurobindo and Swami Vivekananda who is credited with bringing yoga to the West. We are privy to Tao’s personal experiences with legendary leader Mahatma Gandhi and the iconic Transcendental Meditation founder The Maharishi who taught meditation to The Beatles and spurred a worldwide movement. We learn from Swami Prabhavananda of the Vedanta Society, Mataji Indra Devi, metaphysics teacher Dr. Roman Ostoja, and two of the most acclaimed yoga masters, B.K.S. Iyengar and K. Pattabhi Jois. We see how Tao assimilates all of these layers of study and influence to form her own philosophy of Oneness. Tao has since trained and certified over 1,600 yoga teachers and has shared her light at various forums from the Newark Peace Education Summit with His Holiness The 14th Dalai Lama to teaching yoga at the Pentagon and doing a TEDx talk at Columbia University.

At the age of 87, Tao became a ballroom dancer and has since won over 700 First Place Awards with dance partners that are thirty years her junior. Tao believes that life is a dance of Eternal Energy. Sometimes we weave in and out of consciousness. That’s the dance – back and forth, up and down, sometimes spinning around, always looking to come back to center. That’s our journey–the search for how to be present with the wonders of life and maintain harmony of mind, body and spirit. In many ways, Dancing Light is a modern Autobiography of a Yogi–a manifesto for a new generation of light seekers taking us on a search for peace, the Oneness behind everything and your exceptional profound Self.

Sikh Coalition Wants Justice For Inderjit Singh Mukker, Brutally Attacked in Hate Crime

September 10, 2015 (New York, NY): “On the eve of the 9/11 anniversary, the violent attack on Mr. Mukker is another painful reminder for all Americans that hate remains alive and well in the United States,” said the Sikh Coalition’s Legal Director, Harsimran Kaur. “While we relentlessly work to protect Mr. Mukker’s rights and work hard to ensure that hate crime charges are pursued in this case, we urge all Americans to reach out to their neighbors to build bridges of understanding. It is through recognizing our collective humanity that we can work together to end hate.”

Inderjit Singh Mukker, a Sikh American resident in the Darien suburb of Chicago, Illinois was viciously attacked after an assailant pulled up to his car yelling racial slurs, including, “Terrorist, go back to your country, Bin Laden!” on September 8, 2015.

Mukker, a father of two, was on his way to the grocery store when the verbal taunting was initiated. Mukker turned onto another street, but was repeatedly cut off by the driver. Mr. Mukker pulled over to the side of the road to let him pass, but the driver instead pulled in front of his car and aggressively approached Mukker’s vehicle. The assailant then reached into the car and repeatedly punched Mukker in the face, causing him to lose consciousness, bleed profusely and suffer a fractured cheekbone and a laceration to his cheek. He was rushed to the hospital, where he received six stitches, treatment for lacerations, bruising and swelling.

The suspect is in custody and the Darien Police Department has notified the Sikh Coalition that they are investigating this matter as a hate crime. As Mr. Mukker recovers, the Sikh Coalition invites supporters around the world to express solidarity by clicking here to send a message. Alternatively, you can mail a card to the Sikh Coalition’s office at Inderjit Singh Mukker c/o The Sikh Coaltion, 50 Broad Street, Suite 1537, New York, NY 10004.

Sikh Coalition also urged people to contact local Congressional Representatives. “Send an email to your congressional representative to request that they co-sponsor H-Res. 413, a resolution honoring the victims of post-9/11 hate crimes, including Sikh Americans. This is a critical time for everyone (Sikhs and non-Sikhs) to raise awareness and appreciation about the Sikh American community. Host and/or conduct a Sikh awareness presentation in your school, place of employment, library, police station, town hall, etc. For community and Sikh awareness resources, please click here. Click here to read our FAQs on Hate Crimes and Hate Speech. Please contact the Sikh Coalition at legal@sikhcoalition.org if you would like more information on how to raise awareness on hate crimes and hate crimes law with your sangat. As always, the Sikh Coalition urges Sikhs everywhere to practice their faith fearlessly.”

Harendra Singh of Long Island Indicted For Alleged $20 Million Bribery And Fraud

Harendra Singh, an Indian-American businessman in Long Island, N.Y, has been indicted on charges of bribery, fraud and obstruction of justice on September 9th, 2015. Several charges were unsealed against Harendra Singh, 56, of Syosset, N.Y. in federal court in Central Islip for allegedly paying bribes and kickbacks to an employee of the Town of Oyster Bay in connection with the town’s guarantees of $20 million in loans to Singh.

According to reports, the 13-count indictment accuses Singh of five counts of honest services wire fraud, one count of honest services wire fraud conspiracy, one count of federal program bribery, one count of disaster relief fraud, two counts of conspiring to defraud the United States, one count of impeding the Internal Revenue Service, one count of tampering with evidence, and one count of obstruction of justice. Singh was arraigned before U.S. Magistrate Judge A. Kathleen Tomlinson, at the United States Courthouse in Central Islip.

If convicted, Singh faces terms up to 20 years in prison for each honest services wire fraud charge and up to 10 years for the federal program bribery charge, both in connection with the Town loan scheme. If convicted of any of those charges, the government will seek to forfeit Singh’s properties which benefited from the alleged fraud.

He also faces terms of imprisonment of up to 30 years for the disaster relief fraud charge and up to five years for conspiring to defraud the United States in connection with his submitted claims for disaster relief; up to 20 years for each of the obstruction charges; up to five years for the charge of conspiring to defraud the United States in connection with his scheme to under-report gross receipts and payroll taxes; and up to three years for the charge of obstructing and impeding the due administration of the Internal Revenue Laws.

According to a press release from the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, Singh owned and operated restaurants and food concessions located mainly in Nassau County, and was awarded agreements with the Town of Oyster Bay, including concession agreements to operate various food concessions within the Town.

The indictment alleges that Singh paid bribes and kickbacks to a Town employee not identified by name in the release, who in exchange helped the businessman get the Town’s guarantee of two loans totaling approximately $20 million that two of Singh’s businesses received from a private corporate financing company. As a result, if Singh’s businesses defaulted on the loans, the Town would be held liable to pay back the hefty loan.

Singh is alleged to have given the co-conspirator numerous $5,000 checks in exchange for each tranche of loan that was cleared. In addition, Singh paid one of the co-conspirator and a relative to travel to Asia a few weeks after the second loan closed, including all transportation and hotel expenses.

In addition, the indictment alleges that Singh under-reported to the IRS the true amount of money some of his businesses earned and the wages he paid his workers, to significantly reduce the amount owned in taxes.

The indictment also alleges that between October 2012 and January 2015, Singh managed to procure federal disaster relief funds by preparing and filing false documents and invoices with the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency, on grounds that his restaurant, The Water’s Edge, suffered losses from Hurricane Sandy. For that he received approximately $950,000 in disaster relief funds from FEMA, the indictment alleges.

Singh is charged with evidence tampering and obstruction of justice FBI Special Agents came with search warrants for his premises on August 5, 2014.

Family of Medical Student Sues Concert Hall for Wrongful Death

The family of a first-year Indian American medical resident who died in a fall last year at the Tralf Music Hall in Buffalo, N.Y., has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the company, according to a report in The Buffalo News. After attending a concert at the hall, Rajan Verma, 28, decided to climb the second-floor bannister and slide down June 2, 2014. He completed the first leg of the bannister with another concertgoer but lost his balance on the second leg and fell to the ground. Verma succumbed to his injuries the next day.

The family of the deceased Verma subsequently has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the music hall, looking for at least $2.5 million, said the report. In the filing, the family alleges the club attached a sticky substance to the bannister to deter visitors from sliding down it. That sticky substance caused Verma to lose his balance, according to the family.

The lawsuit added that the music hall should anticipate concertgoers attempting to ride the bannister and should have safeguarded the staircase. A native of New Jersey, Verma was a graduate of St. John’s University, where he received a degree in biology, and later the American University of Antigua Medical School. He was in his first year of the University at Buffalo.

Obama, Modi Likely to Meet in New York on September 28th

President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Narendra Modi are expected to meet in New York later this month. Both are coming to the United Nations to address the General Assembly. Obama along with Vice President Joe Biden and several of his cabinet ministers, is set for a high-level engagement with the Indian leadership in a series of meetings later this month. This would be the highest level of engagement between the two countries since Obama’s trip to New Delhi in January to attend the Republic Day parade as the chief guest of Prime Minister  Modi.

Officials had a hard time setting up the meeting on one of the busiest days for the American president, given his address to the U.N. General Assembly earlier that day. Modi, on the other hand, would be flying in from Silicon Valley on Sept. 27 after addressing Indian Americans at the SAP Center in San Jose.

While no official announcement has been made yet, the proposed meeting is a reflection of the seriousness and commitment of the two leaders to this bilateral relationship. Notably, in the January joint statement, the two leaders committed themselves for more regular meetings. The Modi-Obama meeting in New York would cap more than a week of high-level India-U.S. engagement, most of it in Washington.

It is believed that Biden is keen to be part of this engagement. It was Biden who, during a visit to India a few years ago, who set the ambitious goal of increasing bilateral trade from the current $100 billion to $500 billion per annum.

Therefore, it might not be surprising to learn that Biden is taking the lead once again when it comes to economic ties. Several cabinet-ranking officials, along with corporate leaders from both countries, are expected to be present at the 40th anniversary Leadership Summit of the US-India Business Council on Sept. 21.

Energy Minister Piyush Goyal and Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, and U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzeker are among those confirmed to attend the event. The next day TERI North America is to host the 6th India-U.S. Energy Partnership Summit. However, the first ever India-US Strategic and Economic Dialogue, to be hosted by Secretary of State John Kerry at Foggy Bottom, is likely to be the center of attraction. While the dates of this dialogue have not been announced, it is expected to be held on September 22.

The decision to expand the India-U.S. Strategic Dialogue to a commercial one was taken during Obama’s January visit to India. Kerry, along with Pritzeker, would lead the U.S. delegation, while the Indian delegation would be led by Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj and Sitharaman.

Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar will be part of the Indian delegation. Indian Ambassador Arun K. Singh and his American counterpart Richard Verma are expected to be present.

Sania Mirza ends U.S. Open with doubles title

Top seeds Martina Hingis and Sania Mirza beat Casey Dellacqua and Yaroslava Shvedova to win the U.S. Open doubles title on Sunday, September 13, 2015 and cap off a perfect visit to Flushing Meadows, New York.

At 34 years old and already a member of the International Tennis Hall of Fame, Hingis paired with  Sania Mirza of India to beat Casey Dellacqua of Australia and Yaroslava Shvedova of Kazakhstan 6-3, 6-3 in the final.

Hingis, the Swiss former-world number one and her Indian partner Mirza, tore through the doubles tournament without dropping a set to claim back-to-back grand slams after their victory at Wimbledon.

It has been a productive and busy visit to New York for Hingis who also captured the U.S. Open mixed doubles title with India’s Leander Paes.

Having only joined forces in March, Mirza and Hingis have enjoyed a successful partnership reaching six finals in 12 events and winning two majors.

After easily taking the first set Hingis and Mirza broke to open the second and apart from a late wobble were never really threatened by the Australian Dellacqua and Kazakhstan’s Shvedova.

For Hingis it was her second U.S. Open doubles title coming 17-years after she won her first in 1998 with Jana Novotna.

“With all the pressure on us, all the time, we’re really happy to come through,” Mirza said. Mirza thinks her victory will be a big deal back home in India. “It has been a great year for us,” Mirza said.

“To win Wimbledon was a great year. Then to come back and back it up to win the US Open, we feel like we’re a really solid team. And we came through again today. Grand Slams mean a lot, but obviously being a woman and being the first one to be able to achieve everything that I’m achieving is amazing for, not just India, for Indian women, but for Indian sports, for women to pick up sports in the country and that side of the world,” she said. “So I hope they’re proud.”

On His North American Tour, Arijit Singh Rocks Trenton

Bollywood singer Arijit Singh made a stopover in Trenton, New Jersey, earlier this month as part of his North American musical tour. Singh, who would be holding concerts in Illinois, Texas and California, among other states, performed at Sun National Bank Center, Trenton Sept. 12. About 5,000 people, including music aficionados, turned up for the concert, according to organizers. Singh belted out some of his hit numbers like ‘Mein Tenu Samjhawaan ki,’ ‘Kabira,’ and ‘Hamari Adhuri Kahani,’ among others.

First Woman of Indian Descent Made Postmaster in California

An Indian American woman has become the first female to be appointed as the postmaster in Sacramento city in California in last 166 years, a media report said. Jagdeep Grewal will oversee 1,004 employees who process and deliver mail on 537 city routes and 94 rural routes – and fill nearly 20,000 post office boxes, American Bazaar news portal reported on Wednesday.

According to reports, Grewal who earned her bachelor’s and master’s degree from Punjab University, started her career in postal services in 1988 as a window clerk. She was promoted to the post of manager after five years of service.

Referring to the steep decline in the usage of postal services due to internet and courier services, Grewal said that she looked forward to working with Sacramento’s Postal Service employees during a challenging time.

“It is only through joint effort and collaboration that we can truly meet our mission of providing extraordinary service while keeping costs down,” Grewal was quoted as saying.

She has also worked as a postmaster in Pacifica-Daly City, California. The US Postal Service is facing cash crunch and recently reported a net loss of $586 million earlier this year.

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