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Asian Nobel for Indian Educationist

Sandeep Pandey

By Danish A Khan, Special to IslamOnline

NEW DELHI, August 2 (IslamOnline) - Ramon Magsaysay Award, regarded as Asia's Nobel Prize, for the year 2000 has been awarded to Sandeep Pandey, who got the prestigious award in the Emergent Leader category in recognition of his services to education and livelihood projects for poor children and his efforts to defuse tension between India and Pakistan.

Pandey hails from a highly-educated, yet low-profile, family at Lucknow in the north Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. A former professor of Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur, Pandey, after quitting his job formed a voluntary organization called "Asha" (literally, hope), and dedicated himself to better the lot of underprivileged children in the field of education.

The early news that Pandey had been selected for the Magsaysay award was dismissed as a prank, he admitted. "It was on July 16 when I received a mail from the foundation seeking my telephone number. About a week ago, we got a call from the president disclosing the nomination and seeking my acceptance. After six days, another call confirmed the award," informed an ebullient Pandey and his wife, Arundhati Dharu.

Pandey, 37, said that the recognition had come "somewhat early" for him. There were more deserving people involved in selfless work who must be accorded due recognition, he said.

His parents – father US Pandey and mother Uma Pandey, had a keen desire that he become officer of the Indian Administrative Service (IAS). He could not make it to the elite service which forms the backbone of the Indian bureaucracy. "This award would certainly satisfy them," he hoped.

Pandey's father is an officer of the Indian Revenue Service (IRS). His brother, Rahul, is a professor at Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Lucknow. His sister, Priyanka, is a professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania.

Carmencitat Abella, president of the Ramon Magsaysay Foundation in the Philippines, presented the award in recognition of his services which support education and livelihood projects for poor children, particularly Dalits (the so-called "untouchables"). The foundation also acknowledged his efforts to defuse tension between India and Pakistan and appreciated his proposed visit to Pakistan to make efforts to improve relations between the two countries.

Pandey in a classroom

Providing details about the voluntary organization "Asha", Pandey said that it came into being in 1991 at the University of California in Berkley with the assistance and participation of his two other friends VJP Srivatsavoy (died in May 2000) and Deepak Gupta, presently a professor at IIT, Kanpur. Gupta continues to be involved with Asha.

Asha was formed with the purpose of becoming a catalyst in socio-economic change through education of underprivileged children. Its activities include identifying education-related projects in India and supporting them with funds and in other ways.

The organization has 35 chapters in different countries of the world and has more than 300 active volunteers. So far, it has supported more than 100 different projects in several states of the country.

Others who got the Magsaysay awards this week are: chief justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, a Pakistani nun, a doctor from Myanmar, a Nepalese journalist and a South Korean Buddhist monk.

Ramon Magsaysay Award was instituted in the late 1950s to honor individuals and organizations in Asia whose civic contributions and leadership "exemplify the greatness of spirit, integrity, and devotion to freedom of Ramon Magsaysay," former president of the Philippines, who died tragically in an airplane crash.

The awards are presented in five categories: government service, public service, community leadership, international understanding, and journalism, literature, and creative communication arts. Up to five awards of $50,000 each are given annually by the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, which is headquartered at Manila in the Philippines.

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