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{{Short description|Indian-American businessman and philanthropist}} |
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{{Infobox Celebrity |
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{{distinguish|Abraham George (politician)}} |
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| name = Dr. Abraham M. George |
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{{Multiple issues| |
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| image = ABRAHAM_GEORGE.jpg |
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{{BLP sources|date=June 2020}} |
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| caption = Dr. George at Shanti Bhavan grounds, [[Bangalore]], [[India]] |
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{{Peacock|date=June 2020}} |
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| birth_date = {{February 1946}} |
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{{COI|date=June 2020}} |
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| birth_place = {{flagicon|IND}}[[Thiruvananthapuram]], [[Kerala]], [[India|IND]] |
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}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2018}} |
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{{Use Indian English|date=October 2018}} |
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{{Infobox person |
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| name = Abraham M. George |
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| image =Dr. Abraham George.jpg |
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| caption = |
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| birth_place = [[Thiruvananthapuram]], [[Kerala]], [[India]] |
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| death_date = |
| death_date = |
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| death_place = |
| death_place = |
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| occupation = |
| occupation = Founder, The George Foundation |
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| spouse = Mariam George |
| spouse = Mariam George |
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| website = |
| website =[http://www.shantibhavanchildren.org shantibhavanchildren.org] |
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[http://www.indiauntouched.com indiauntouched.com] |
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| footnotes = |
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| children = 2 |
| children = 2 |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Abraham M. George''' is an Indian-American businessman, academic, and [[Philanthropy|philanthropist]]. He began his career in the Indian army as an artillery officer at the S[[sela pass|ela pass]] in the [[North-East Frontier Agency]] (NEFA) on the China-India border. Following brief military service, he moved to the United States. George pursued an entrepreneurial career before returning to India in 1995 to address discrimination and economic oppression faced by the country's social underclass. |
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Among the initiatives he embarked on in India are the [[Shanti Bhavan|Shanti Bhavan Residential school]] to provide education to children from socially and economically disadvantaged backgrounds, and the Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media, a post-graduate institution aimed at fostering a free and independent press in India. Further, he set up Baldev Medical & Community Center to serve the healthcare needs of 15 villages across [[Tamil Nadu]] and Karnataka states. His work in environmental health was pivotal in the removal of lead from gasoline across India in April 2000. |
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George is the author of three books on international corporate finance and two on his social work in India. He has served on the [[Human Rights Watch]] and the [[International Center for Journalists]] boards. He has been honored with the Hind Rattan. |
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'''Dr. Abraham M. George''' is the founder of [[The George Foundation (TGF)]], a non-profit organization based in [[Bangalore]], [[India]], that is dedicated to the welfare of economically and socially disadvantaged people. His foundation has initiated several projects in poverty alleviation, education, health, empowerment of women, press freedom, and other major endeavors. Part of the mission goal of TGF is the promotion of democratic institutions and values; this has lead to the creation of the [[Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media]], Bangalore, where he serves as the [[dean]]. His work in the field of environmental health was instrumental for the removal of [[lead]] from [[gasoline]] throughout India in April 2000 and the creation of the [[National Referral Centre for Lead Poisoning in India]]. He has also been recognized as one of the leading [[social entrepreneur]]s.{{fact}} |
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== Childhood in India == |
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George was born and brought up in the seaside town of [[Trivandrum]] in the coastal state of [[Kerala]], at the southwestern tip of [[India]]. He is the second son of Mathew and Aleyamma George, one of four children. As a young boy George was outgoing, and excelled in sports and other extracurricular activities. Perhaps not the model student, he learned his most vital lessons from the everyday experiences of life. |
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As a young man, George was attracted by the discipline and glamour of the military. At fourteen he was admitted to the highly selective and prestigious [[National Defence Academy]] in [[Kharakvasala]]. He subsequently went on to graduate as a Second-Lieutenant in a medium artillery regiment of the [[Indian Army]]. George's first posting in 1966 was to the North-East Frontier that borders [[China]], following the [[Chinese invasion of 1962]]. He was the first military officer to take medium artillery guns to an altitude of over 14,000 ft. above sea level at the [[Sela pass]] on the north-east frontier of India with China. It was a key point, a position India needed to defend if it was going to successfully ward off any [[future]] aggressions by China into its territory. |
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The assignment at Sela ended abruptly after only ten months, when George was injured in a [[dynamite]] explosion. Upon his return from convalescence, he was assigned to the [[Indo-Pak border]] where he served for nearly two more years and rose to the rank of Captain. He found both field assignments rewarding experiences that taught him lifelong lessons. Through his years in the army, he learned much about loyalty, leadership, teamwork and discipline. It taught him about his responsibility to others and about the needs of soldiers under his command. "There is, I suppose, some stage in each one’s life that has a greater impact on his future than all others. For me, it was these army experiences that helped shape much of my outlook on life."<ref name="India Untouched">{{cite book| |
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title =India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty| |
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id =ISBN 1594111227| |
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year =2005| |
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publisher =Writers' Collective| |
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last=George| |
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first=Abraham |
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coauthors=}}</ref> |
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During this time, George also realized that while he admired the dedication and values with which the military functioned, it was not a lifetime career he wished to pursue. He felt there were other opportunities, possibilities for a future where he could apply what he had learned from the army. |
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In the third year of George's service, he suffered a hearing disability that would plaque him for the rest of his life. At the time, doctors in India were not trained to tackle his medical condition; it required specialized [[surgery]]. By this point, his mother was already in the [[United States]], teaching physics and working for [[NASA]] as a research scientist. His mother's position afforded him the opportunity to come to [[America]]; he could have his surgery done there and start a new life. After considerable effort, he managed to persuade the Indian Army command to give him a medical discharge, and left for the [[US]]. |
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== A New Life in America == |
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The transition from India to America was a startling, nearly overwhelming for George. He joined his mother in [[Alabama]], during the heyday of the [[segregationist]] governor, [[George Wallace]]. "I felt I had gone to another world, not simply another country". |
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Soon after arriving in America, George began to attend [[New York University]]'s [[Stern School of Business]] as a graduate student. He specialized in developmental economics and finance with the hope that one day he would be able to make a contribution to India or one of the impoverished [[African]] nations. "I was working part-time for the [[Singer Company]] to meet the expenses toward my studies, and as a young man too idealistic about what I should be doing with my life, I asked the management of the company to remove my name from its records after I had left so that I would never be identified with a profit-making institution". He attempted to join the [[World Bank]] but was not offered a position. Soon after completing his doctoral work he decided to enter the teaching profession. But teaching was not sufficiently gratifying, and he wanted to go out and do for himself what he was preaching to his students. That was when [[Chemical Bank]], now part of [[JP Morgan Chase]] Bank, offered him a job as an officer in the bank. He felt it was time for him to put aside his idealism and work for a prestigious bank, and hopefully save enough money over the years to do something for humanitarian causes. |
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George had worked for Chemical Bank for only two years when he decided to start his own company, [[Multinational Computer Models]], Inc (MCM), which would offer computerized systems to large multinational corporations to enable them to deal with their international financial risks. In the mid-1970s, software solutions for management decisions, especially if they involved gathering and processing information across many international subsidiaries, were something new, and somewhat expensive. [[Personal computers]] had not yet been invented, and companies had to rely on expensive mainframe computers and terminals that were connected through international [[telephone]] lines in a time-sharing environment. It was several years before his business became somewhat profitable, but when personal computers came along, they migrated their software to this new environment with great success. During this period, MCM formed a joint venture with Credit Suisse First Boston where he served as the Chief Consultant and Managing Director of its new operations. As his fortunes began to turn rosy, he thought of the day when he would make enough money to pursue work for the poor. |
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By 1995, after 25 years in America, George felt he had accomplished what he had set out to do in his professional business career. He had not lost my youthful idealism; it had been buried, perhaps for awhile, but he felt there were more important things to accomplish than success in business. Over the years, he had built a company from the ground up, and would soon sell it to a large multinational firm, SunGard Data Systems, thereby concluding another chapter of his life. It was time for him to pursue what he had originally set out to do, to work full-time in the non-profit sector. He had read about the hardships faced by the poor in India and elsewhere, and their problems had emotionally affected him. He always knew that after accomplishing his professional goals, he would turn towards non-profit work in developing nations. While he was most interested in India, it mattered less to him which country he worked in as long as his efforts would make a difference, and help alleviate the poverty and suffering that had spread worldwide. |
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== Pursuing a Dream == |
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It was during this time that George's good friend Angeline Nair decided to return to India and settle down in Bangalore after spending nearly 20 years in America. Both of them shared similar interests in social service and had worked together in America to offer a better education to Afro-American inner city children who came from underprivileged and broken households. They both spent a great deal of time discussing the ills that the poor of India faced, and the sheer lack of hope to change their fates. The more they talked, the more they realized they had a duty and an opportunity to do something about it. She promised to help him start a foundation in India that eventually became The George Foundation; it was a promise that would take him on to the next chapter of his life. |
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It was in January 1995 that George went back to India for the first time after a long absence. He returned with the goal of making his contribution to reducing the injustices and inequalities he had observed and learned about from the media and many published works. He had a renewed sense of purpose and a lifetime of experience to undertake what he thought was a social obligation. Money, he had decided, was not an end, but a means to an end. He had been professionally and financially successful because of the opportunities that he had seized in his lifetime. He believed that it was only the luck of his birth that allowed him to have these opportunities. He felt it was not fair for him to selfishly enjoy the fruits of his success when many others had never had a chance. It was his duty to do something about this inequity. |
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Angeline had organized a meeting with several prominent individuals of the Bangalore society; like-minded individuals who believed in the need for social service. George found an extraordinarily talented young man, Jude Devdas, who would soon head all of The George Foundation’s activities in India. "Over these years, he has proved himself to be one of the most determined and hardworking individuals I have ever met". Devdas oversees and coordinates every project TGF runs, and closely works with George to manage the finances of the foundation. |
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This meeting was the birth of The George Foundation, a non-profit charitable trust that would work towards the goals of addressing some of the most persistent problems in Indian society, especially with regard to the poor. It was the turning point in his life and in his professional interests. The sale of his company in America soon followed; he was now committed totally to humanitarian work. |
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== The George Foundation == |
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''Main article'' [[The George Foundation]] |
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The George Foundation (TGF) is a [[non-governmental organization]] ([[NGO]]) established in 1995 with head office in Bangalore, India. After a decade of operations, the foundation George started has laid the groundwork for several projects that are presently addressing rural poverty. |
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The principal geographic area covered is rural [[Tamil Nadu]] (mainly in [[Krishnagiri]] district) and [[Karnataka]] states, serving over 16,000 people in 17 villages. The communities are some of the poorest in the nation: over 70 percent of the population has daily income of less than one dollar per person; illiteracy and malnutrition are both over 60 percent; female infanticide and bonded labor are prevalent. |
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TGF’s mission is to alleviate [[poverty]], promote health and a [[clean environment]], and strengthen [[democratic]] institutions and values in India. |
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[[Image:Amgwithkids.jpg|right|frame|Dr. Abraham M. George with the children of Shanti Bhavan]] |
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TGF pursues integrated holistic approaches to solving human problems. Accordingly, their projects create economic opportunity for the poor through business activities, and facilitate planned development through [[education]], [[health care]], [[empowerment of women]], [[social justice]], and [[good governance]]. Consistent with this mission, the Foundation initially embarked on two major projects: |
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* ''Project Shanti Bhavan'': Facility to house and educate at a time 336 children of deprived backgrounds from pre-school to grade 12. It is a world-class institution committed to excellence and globally shared values. |
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* ''Project Lead-Free'': Infrastructure to test for blood lead levels in urban population throughout India. In 1998-99, the project conducted 25,000 blood tests of children, pregnant women, and emergency referrals, and this study led to a world conference in Bangalore in 1999 that resulted in the initiation of prevention measures, including unleaded gasoline, by the Government of India and several other [[developing countries]]. |
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Subsequently, the Foundation initiated several new projects: |
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* ''Healthcare Projects'': A medical diagnostic and management system (EDPS 2000) was developed and implemented in 1998 to improve the delivery of rural healthcare. Subsequently, the Baldev Medical & Community Centre was opened in December 2000 to provide primary health care and health education for the rural communities around Shanti Bhavan. Presently (2006) it servers 16,000 people in seventeen villages. |
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* ''Women's Empowerment'': Several initiatives are currently under way to empower women through education, cooperative farming (BALDEV FARMS), vocational training, savings plan, and business development. Today (2006) Baldev Farms is the second largest banana grower in South India with 250 acres under cultivation. Profits from the farm are used for improving the economic status of the workers and for running the other charitable activities of the foundation. |
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[[Image:Tillany.jpg|thumb|Tillany Fine Arts Museum and Gallery at night |300px|left]] |
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George has been recognized<ref name="Stern">{{Cite news | last = Gross | first = Daniel | title = Return of the Native Son | newspaper = STERNbusiness | date = Fall–Winter 2006| url =http://w4.stern.nyu.edu/sternbusiness/fall_2006/nativeSon.html | access-date=2007-04-13}}</ref><ref name="Indialife">{{Cite news |title = In search of the poor, with his own money | newspaper = Indialife | date = Fall–Winter 2018| url =https://www.indialife.us/article.php?id=108528 | access-date=2018-12-06}}</ref> as one of the world's leading [[social entrepreneurs]].<ref name="The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century">{{cite book| |
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title =The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century|isbn =0-374-29279-5| |
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year =2006| pages = 630-634| |
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publisher =Farrar, Straus and Giroux| |
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last=Friedman|first=Thomas}}</ref><ref name="Indialife"</> |
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==Early years== |
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* ''Community Development'': Various projects to foster community involvement and welfare have been successfully initiated by BALDEV community centre. It includes periodic village clean-up, sanitation, housing and water management. |
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George was born and brought up in the seaside city of [[Trivandrum]], [[Kerala]], at the southwestern tip of [[India]]. He is the second son of Mathew and Aleyamma George; one of four children. |
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* ''Tillany Fine Arts Museum and Gallery'': This project is designed to assist talented and upcoming artists and artisans who have not been able to promote their work. These artists and artisans from poor backgrounds do not have the means to create art consistent with their talents, and display their work in the right environment. |
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[[File:The George Foundation - Abraham George Army1.jpg|thumb|George during the army days|275px|left]] |
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* ''Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media (IIJNM)'': This institution is a joint venture of The George Foundation with Adi Chunchanagiri Foundation, under the banner of BS&G Foundation. The institute has developed the curriculum in association with [[Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism]], [[New York]], offering students a diploma program at the Master's level, to promote quality journalism through a free, fair and independent press. |
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At fourteen, George was admitted to the [[National Defence Academy (India)|National Defence Academy]] in [[Khadakwasla]]. He subsequently went on to graduate as a second lieutenant in 34th medium artillery regiment of the [[Indian Army]]. George's first posting in 1966 was to the [[North-East Frontier Agency]] (NEFA) that borders [[China]], following the [[Sino-Indian War]]. |
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* ''Centres for Studies in Emerging Critical Issues'': Dr.George has spearheaded several studies to debate and present viable solutions to economic, environmental, human rights and other major issues facing both developing and advanced countries. |
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The assignment in [[Sela pass]] in the NEFA ended abruptly after ten months when George was injured in a [[dynamite]] explosion. Upon his return from convalescence, he was assigned to the Indo-Pakistan border, where he served for nearly two more years and rose to the rank of captain.<ref name="Stern"/><ref name="Indialife"/> |
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== Writing == |
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==Education and career== |
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George joined his mother in [[Alabama]] during the heyday of the [[segregationist]] governor, [[George Wallace]]. He found the transition to be overwhelming, later writing of it: "I felt I had gone to another world, not simply another country".<ref name="India Untouched">{{cite book|title =India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty|isbn =1-59411-122-7|year =2005|publisher =Writers' Collective|last=George|first=Abraham|location=Cranston, RI}}</ref> |
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Soon after arriving in America, George attended [[New York University]]'s [[Stern School of Business]] as a graduate student. During that time, he [[naturalization|became an American citizen]].<ref name="Stern"/> He specialized in developmental economics and international finance, and soon after completing his [[doctoral]] work he decided to enter the [[teaching]] profession. Later, [[Chemical Bank]], now part of [[JP Morgan Chase]] Bank, offered George a job as an officer in the bank which he accepted.<ref name="Stern"/><ref name="India Untouched"/> |
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George was a pioneer in the international finance arena, authoring several books on topic: |
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George had worked for Chemical Bank for two years when he decided in 1976 to start his own company, Multinational Computer Models Inc. (MCM),<ref name="Stern"/> which offered computerized systems to multinational corporations. MCM subsequently formed a joint venture with the global investment bank [[Credit Suisse First Boston]] where George served as the Chief Consultant and [[Managing Director]] of its new operations. In 1998, George sold MCM to [[SunGard Data Systems]], a [[Fortune 500|''Fortune'' 500]] company, where he served as a Vice-Chairman for two years.<ref name="Indialife"/><ref name="India Untouched"/> |
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*International Finance Handbook (2 volumes), John Wiley & Sons |
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*Foreign exchange Management and the Multinational Corporation, Holt, Reinhart and Winston |
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*Protecting Shareholder Value: International Financial Risk Management, Prentice Hall |
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George returned to India in January 1995. His intent was to reduce the injustices and inequalities of which he had become aware and to this end he established The George Foundation, a non-profit charitable trust.<ref name="India Untouched"/> One of The George Foundation's first projects was to formally study the issue of leaded gasoline in India and its long-term effects on children. The study showed that 51% of children in urban areas suffered from high lead levels. This ultimately led to India's government banning leaded gasoline.<ref name="Stern"/> |
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The [[Shanti Bhavan]] story is told by the life-journey of five of its girls in a four-part [[Netflix]] documentary, ''[[Daughters of Destiny (TV series)|Daughters of Destiny]]''.<ref name="nytimes">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/28/arts/television/daughters-of-destiny-netflix-tv-review.html |title=Review: 'Daughters of Destiny' on Netflix Explores Caste Struggles in India |work=The New York Times |date=28 July 2017 | accessdate=April 24, 2022|last1=Hale |first1=Mike }}</ref> |
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==Publications== |
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Since becoming a full-time philanthropist, George has written several articles and has published a book: |
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* ''International Finance Handbook'' (2 volumes), John Wiley & Sons ({{ISBN|0-471-09861-2}}) |
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*India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty, Writer's Collective |
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* ''Foreign exchange Management and the Multinational Corporation'', Holt, Rinehart and Winston ({{ISBN|0-03-046641-5}}) |
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* |
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* ''Protecting Shareholder Value: International Financial Risk Management'', Prentice Hall ({{ISBN|0-7863-0439-1}}) |
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* ''India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty'', Writer's Collective ({{ISBN|81-88661-18-X}}) - A description of Dr. George's initial 10 years of social work in rural India. |
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* ''Lead Poisoning Prevention and Treatment: Implementing a National Program in Developing Countries''—distributed by World Bank to governments of developing countries in 2001 for policy implementation.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}} |
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==Awards== |
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George has published over three dozen articles in international finance and on issues of global poverty. Some of his work on poverty are available in the Critical Issues section under Projects on the foundation's web site www.tgfworld.org. |
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* [[New York University Stern School of Business|NYU Stern School of Business]]' Stewart Satter Social Entrepreneurship Award, US<ref name="Stern ISSUU">{{Cite news|title =The Alumini magazine of NYU Stern|date = Fall–Winter 2007| url=https://issuu.com/nyustern/docs/sternbzfall07web/5| access-date=2010-04-21}}</ref> |
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*Lifetime Achievers Award for Philanthropy - Year 2000, Indian American Kerala Cultural & Civic Center (The Kerala Center)<ref name="Kerala Center">{{Cite news|title =Awards & Achievements|date = 2000| url=https://keralacenterny.com/awards-and-achievements/}}</ref> |
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*GOPIO 2017 Community Service Award by the [[Global Organization for People of Indian Origin]] (GOPIO)<ref name="GOPIO">{{Cite news|title =GOPIO News Special Bulletin|date = Jan 2017| url=https://www.gopio.net/news_010317.htm| access-date=2017-01-03}}</ref><ref name="IE">{{Cite news|title =GOPIO 2017–Community Service Awards|date = Jan 2017| url=https://www.indiaempire.com/article/1243/gopio_2017community_service_awards}}</ref> |
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== |
==References== |
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{{reflist}} |
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* Spirit of India Award, America India Foundation, USA |
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* Hind Ratna Award, Non-Resident Indian Association, [[Delhi]] |
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* Millennium Awards, Indian American Kerala Cultural and Civic Center, USA |
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==External links== |
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* [http://www.tgfworld.org The George Foundation] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:George, Abraham}} |
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== External Links == |
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[[Category:Businesspeople from Thiruvananthapuram]] |
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*[http://www.tgfworld.org The George Foundation] |
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[[Category:Indian philanthropists]] |
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*[http://www.indiauntouched.com India Untouched] |
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[[Category:Indian emigrants to the United States]] |
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*[http://www.www.leadpoison.net leadpoison.net - National Referral Centre for Lead Poisoning in India] |
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[[Category:Rural community development]] |
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*[http://www.iijnm.org Indian Institute of Journalism New Media] |
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[[Category:Agrarian politics]] |
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[[Category:New York University Stern School of Business alumni]] |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:1946 births]] |
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[[Category:Indian activists]] |
Latest revision as of 08:20, 11 December 2024
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|
Abraham M. George | |
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Born | |
Occupation(s) | Founder, The George Foundation |
Spouse | Mariam George |
Children | 2 |
Website | shantibhavanchildren.org |
Abraham M. George is an Indian-American businessman, academic, and philanthropist. He began his career in the Indian army as an artillery officer at the Sela pass in the North-East Frontier Agency (NEFA) on the China-India border. Following brief military service, he moved to the United States. George pursued an entrepreneurial career before returning to India in 1995 to address discrimination and economic oppression faced by the country's social underclass.
Among the initiatives he embarked on in India are the Shanti Bhavan Residential school to provide education to children from socially and economically disadvantaged backgrounds, and the Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media, a post-graduate institution aimed at fostering a free and independent press in India. Further, he set up Baldev Medical & Community Center to serve the healthcare needs of 15 villages across Tamil Nadu and Karnataka states. His work in environmental health was pivotal in the removal of lead from gasoline across India in April 2000.
George is the author of three books on international corporate finance and two on his social work in India. He has served on the Human Rights Watch and the International Center for Journalists boards. He has been honored with the Hind Rattan.
George has been recognized[1][2] as one of the world's leading social entrepreneurs.[3][2]
Early years
[edit]George was born and brought up in the seaside city of Trivandrum, Kerala, at the southwestern tip of India. He is the second son of Mathew and Aleyamma George; one of four children.
At fourteen, George was admitted to the National Defence Academy in Khadakwasla. He subsequently went on to graduate as a second lieutenant in 34th medium artillery regiment of the Indian Army. George's first posting in 1966 was to the North-East Frontier Agency (NEFA) that borders China, following the Sino-Indian War.
The assignment in Sela pass in the NEFA ended abruptly after ten months when George was injured in a dynamite explosion. Upon his return from convalescence, he was assigned to the Indo-Pakistan border, where he served for nearly two more years and rose to the rank of captain.[1][2]
Education and career
[edit]George joined his mother in Alabama during the heyday of the segregationist governor, George Wallace. He found the transition to be overwhelming, later writing of it: "I felt I had gone to another world, not simply another country".[4]
Soon after arriving in America, George attended New York University's Stern School of Business as a graduate student. During that time, he became an American citizen.[1] He specialized in developmental economics and international finance, and soon after completing his doctoral work he decided to enter the teaching profession. Later, Chemical Bank, now part of JP Morgan Chase Bank, offered George a job as an officer in the bank which he accepted.[1][4]
George had worked for Chemical Bank for two years when he decided in 1976 to start his own company, Multinational Computer Models Inc. (MCM),[1] which offered computerized systems to multinational corporations. MCM subsequently formed a joint venture with the global investment bank Credit Suisse First Boston where George served as the Chief Consultant and Managing Director of its new operations. In 1998, George sold MCM to SunGard Data Systems, a Fortune 500 company, where he served as a Vice-Chairman for two years.[2][4]
George returned to India in January 1995. His intent was to reduce the injustices and inequalities of which he had become aware and to this end he established The George Foundation, a non-profit charitable trust.[4] One of The George Foundation's first projects was to formally study the issue of leaded gasoline in India and its long-term effects on children. The study showed that 51% of children in urban areas suffered from high lead levels. This ultimately led to India's government banning leaded gasoline.[1]
The Shanti Bhavan story is told by the life-journey of five of its girls in a four-part Netflix documentary, Daughters of Destiny.[5]
Publications
[edit]- International Finance Handbook (2 volumes), John Wiley & Sons (ISBN 0-471-09861-2)
- Foreign exchange Management and the Multinational Corporation, Holt, Rinehart and Winston (ISBN 0-03-046641-5)
- Protecting Shareholder Value: International Financial Risk Management, Prentice Hall (ISBN 0-7863-0439-1)
- India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty, Writer's Collective (ISBN 81-88661-18-X) - A description of Dr. George's initial 10 years of social work in rural India.
- Lead Poisoning Prevention and Treatment: Implementing a National Program in Developing Countries—distributed by World Bank to governments of developing countries in 2001 for policy implementation.[citation needed]
Awards
[edit]- NYU Stern School of Business' Stewart Satter Social Entrepreneurship Award, US[6]
- Lifetime Achievers Award for Philanthropy - Year 2000, Indian American Kerala Cultural & Civic Center (The Kerala Center)[7]
- GOPIO 2017 Community Service Award by the Global Organization for People of Indian Origin (GOPIO)[8][9]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f Gross, Daniel (Fall–Winter 2006). "Return of the Native Son". STERNbusiness. Retrieved 13 April 2007.
- ^ a b c d "In search of the poor, with his own money". Indialife. Fall–Winter 2018. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ^ Friedman, Thomas (2006). The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 630–634. ISBN 0-374-29279-5.
- ^ a b c d George, Abraham (2005). India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty. Cranston, RI: Writers' Collective. ISBN 1-59411-122-7.
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