Early
life and nature of childhood:
My childhood roots from Champaran, Bihar, although I grew up in
Ranchi. My father, a disciplinarian and an educationist, established a school
for the minorities of the backward community and stood by its values. He made
sure we attend his school and not a convent or high-end institution. On
the other hand, most of my vacations were spent back in the village which
seemed like a completely different life. I used to be very playful and
was one with nature during my holidays. This liberty to be on your own was in itself a different
experience for me. I recollect growing up with great sensitivity towards
village seniors, the magnanimity of the country, issues of poverty, agriculture
and minority communities. I had never resonated with the structured education
patterns and the conventional “A grade” ambitions. I spent most of my college
days doing photography, painting, being a part of election campaigns and
everything that caught my eye and added to my growth. Later, I got enrolled
into journalism and started enjoying the process, making great friends who were
terrific intellects. My curiosity has always driven me forth in life. With
my father’s determination towards social causes, I always wanted to work for
social welfare. Later in life as my hunger for technological learning grew, I
somehow discovered the magnanimous issue of information poverty in the country.
Vision behind Digital
Empowerment Foundation:
I have travelled throughout
because of my resolution to establish internet infrastructure and connectivity for
the people and have been blessed with opportunities to work around the world as
people invite me to share my experiences on how one can step-up on the digital
infrastructure for their countries and render its access to the deprived ones.
In broader light, when you are doing strong work with passion and compassion to
empower the community, it becomes relevant around the world. About my
motive in empowering the people- We live in a developing country yet struggling
with basic amenities like food, water and shelter. I believe that information
poverty is a big burning issue for us because anything we start to do or change
begins with knowing about it. A poor man in India has the right to access
rationalized food rates but in practise, he would need to document his identity,
sign papers, know about the schemes or find the location of his nearest shop.
Access to information is indeed a privilege; and the less privileged ones
always have to be dependent on middle-men which leads to their perennial cycle
of poverty and exploitation which can only be broken by the power of
digitalisation. Our value and genesis is to digitalise the means, and extend
this access to each and every poor person in this country.
Hurdles
and challenges in life:
The initial days of my career journey and the job hunt race have
been a big lesson that life has rendered to me, quite young! With dreams in my
eyes, I moved to New Delhi to kick start my career but had to struggle for four
years without a job, at the cost of pain and financial crisis. When I got my
first job after the long haul, I was kicked out after 2 months! Around 1994, I
started working for a computer functionalities magazine having very little
knowledge of the computing world. Years later, when we got abundant access to computers
and the internet, I started surfing obsessively and religiously that somehow landed
me a job as the Head of Internet in The Hindustan Times. I then founded a
start-up in partnership with my friend, making websites for many popular
newspapers of India. I realised how the world was moving towards the era of
digitalisation and how the under privileged class was going to suffer due to
the lack of digital skills and awareness. That’s when I truly landed to the
niche I am in today. It’s been quite a journey, but I never lose hope- my innate
curiosity still drives me towards the best, just like those initial days of my
career.
Lessons
in life and key message of ‘The New Normal- How to Survive the New World Order’:
The book is aimed to carry forward the voices of
many people who have shared their wisdom for the community, which I have jointly
edited with my friend Dushyant. We want to carry forth the message that the new
world order is heavily dependent on information and technology and how it is
going to transform lives. Covid19 has been the biggest example that changed the
perspective towards digitalisation from being an alternative or a luxury to the
primary tool that is keeping the world order in place. We were rendered to be
over-consumers of resources in pre-covid times; these new times have taught us
the importance and value of localization over globalization. In this new world
order, globalisation is becoming localisation while globalisation is becoming
more wisdom oriented and local-contractual oriented. This is teaching us how to
live without a big congregation. This book celebrates the knowledge that we
have acquired over a long time and how we apply this in the present
circumstances of the pandemic. We vouch to localise the digital infrastructure
and at the same time also extend an individual ecosystem of localised digital
infrastructure to every pocket, every village and every community. The words of
wisdom that resonate the most with my life is that we ought to create a world
that is not patriarchal, not feudal and at the same time is heavily
participatory and dependent on the wisdom of women and the children and not
only of men and the old people. A base of digital infrastructure could create a
more independent functional and aware society that is away from the roots of patriarchy.
Role
of Mentors in life:
The role
of my father as a disciplinarian and my upbringing are permanently printed in
my memory. I got to study five different Indian languages and explored two very
different lives of Champaran and Ranchi which added to my personal growth and
self development. My wife's role in my life has been tremendous- of a partner,
confidant and my support system. The biggest mentorship guidance for my life
comes from my thought processes, the mere guides of common sense, scientific
temper and a self-critical viewpoint. We all ought to be guided by such
virtues. I wish to see equality in best practise in order to holistically
educate the new generation and change the world for good. We should not be
constricted by rules but make due efforts to mould them for the better. The
future is of the ones that dare to think beyond.