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Mira Nair, the Oscar-nominated director of acclaimed films like Monsoon Wedding, The Namesake, Mississippi Masala and Salaam Bombay!, was chosen as the India Abroad Person of the Year 2007, on March 28 at a glittering ceremony held at the Gotham Hall in New York City.
The award was presented by Indra Nooyi, Chairperson and CEO, Pepsi, and India Abroad Person of the Year 2006.
"After all, the Indian-American community is my extended family; India Abroad is its mirror and voice -- hence the pride I continue to take in the trophy that occupies a prominent position on my mantel," said Nooyi.
India Abroad Person of the Year 2006 | India Abroad Person of the Year 2005
Of Mira Nair she said: "She has, through her work, provided all of us immense joy. She has, through her excellence, captured the popular imagination, and thus built yet another important bridgehead between the community and the country."
Nair rushed to New York after a week-long trip to Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa and Toronto, Canada [Images], where she will shoot her next film Amelia, starring Hillary Swank, to receive the award. Her husband Mahmud Mamdani, a professor at Columbia University, was present on the occasion while only child Zohran, on whose insistence actor Kal Penn was selected for The Namesake [Images], could not make it.
In an acceptance speech punctuated by both humour and poignance, Nair reflected on her life's journey from Orissa, where she was born, to Hollywood, where she is now a member of the A-List of directors. She paid rich tribute to her mother Praveen and all the other women who had inspired her to achieve heights no other Indian filmmaker has scaled in international cinema.
Also honoured at the event were legendary economists Professor Padma Desai, arguably the most eminent expert on the Russian economy, and her husband Professor Jagdish Bhagwati, a leading advocate for free trade and globalisation.
The couple, distinguished professors at Columbia university, received the India Abroad Lifetime Achievement Award from writer Salman Rushdie, winner of the same award last year.
Hosted by Columbia Professor Sreenath Sreenivasan, the evening began with Ajit Balakrishnan, publisher of India Abroad, the oldest Indian-American weekly, owned by rediff.com, lauding the winners and the Indian-American community's achievements.
"We gather to celebrate a community, increasingly, and justly, famed for its achievements across a vast spectrum of activity, and to honour those Indian Americans who are deemed to be the first among these equals," said Balakrishnan.
The awards ceremony was attended by diplomats, artistes, high ranking professionals, businessmen and stalwarts of the community. It was held at the stately Gotham Hall, formerly the headquarters of Greenwich Savings Bank, which hosted an event honouring soccer legend Pele and tennis great Boris Becker last week.
Dr Renu Khator, President and Chancellor of the University of Houston, was awarded the India Abroad Publisher's Special Award for Excellence. The former provost of the University of South Florida [Images], Dr Khator left India as a young bride 35 years ago, and is among America's premier university administrators.
India Abroad Person of the Year 2004 | India Abroad Person of the Year 2003
The India Abroad Youth Achiever 2007 Award was given to 24-year-old Somdev Dev Burman, the first Indian ever to win the prestigious US collegiate tennis title. A distant relative of musical genius R D Burman and a senior at the University of Virginia, Somdev burst onto the tennis scene by winning one of the world's foremost amateur titles in March 2007.
Somdev's award was accepted by Sunil Gulati, president, US Soccer, as the newest member of India's Davis Cup team was away playing a collegiate tournament.
The awards for service to the community went to Dr Navin Shah and Dr Joy Cherian. Dr Shah, who helped pioneer a revolutionary ambulance service in India, was awarded the India Abroad Community Service Award 2007.
Dr Cherian received the first Lifetime Award for Service to the Community. The first Indian American to be appointed to a US government position, Dr Cherian has been a towering personality within the community.
This is the sixth year of the India Abroad Person of the Year awards. A pioneering effort to recognise Indian-American achievement, the award was instituted in 2002 by India Abroad, the oldest and most widely circulated news weekly for the Indian-American community.
The inaugural India Abroad Person of the Year award was conferred on Iowa legislator Swati Dandekar. In 2003, Sonal Shah, co-founder of NGO Indicorps, which bridges the gap between India-American youth and India through field trips to the country, was chosen as the India Abroad Person of the Year.
In 2004, Olympic gymnast Mohini Bhardwaj, captain of the American team that won a silver medal in Athens, was chosen as the India Abroad Person of the Year, and in 2005, then US Congressman Bobby Jindal, now the governor of Louisiana, received the honour.
Image: Indra Nooyi, Chairperson and CEO, Pepsi, presents the award to Mira Nair in New York on Friday; Photo: Paresh Gandhi.
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