Michigan India Community Blog

A Community Resource for Indians in Michigan

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Michigan Indian - Richa Gangopadhyay

Meet Richa Gangopadhyay (Beauty + Brains) from Okemos, Michigan, a very talented Michigan Indian. Richa was Miss India Michigan in 2007 and then went on to become Miss India USA.

Richa was pursuing her degree in nutrition at Michigan State University. However she decided to take a break after her bollywood calling, and her Miss India USA win.

Richa recently finished a 3 month rigorous course at Anupam Kher's Actor Prepares Institute in Mumbai. Very soon you might see Richa in a Bollywood movie at a theater near you.

Richa has also devoted a considerable amount of time into volunteering. Richa has been volunteering since a young age and got nominated for the governor's service award for outstanding volunteering. Richa started her own youth tutoring group when she was 15 with her mom, and she recruited more than 20 of her friends to tutor at-risk students in the urban school districts every Saturday for 4 consecutive years, until she graduated from high school.

Best Wishes to Richa!!

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Anuja Rajendra of BollyFit featured in Detroit Free Press

In a article titled "Inventive routines make the right workout for hard times" in yesterday's Detroit Free Press, Erin Chan writes about a talented Michigan Indian - Anuja Rajendra of Bollyfit.
A class called "Bollyfit" in Ann Arbor merges culture and fitness by incorporating Bollywood dance into workouts. Designed by Ann Arbor resident Anuja Rajendra, the class puts a fitness emphasis on the choreography and upbeat movements of the dances Bollywood movies made famous.

The dancers learn some steps each week, and by the end of an eight-week session, they will have pieced together a complete dance.

At the front of the room, Rajendra, a lithe mother of two, leads the women in a series of sweat-inducing hand gestures (mudras), half-sits (araimandis) and other moves that, once put together, form a routine during the 6-minute song.

"One of the hardest things I do," she says, "is achieving the right balance of dance, fitness and accessibility."

Raised in Okemos, Rajendra, 36, began her training in classical Indian dance 30 years ago. For years, she performed with her two older siblings as the Rajendra Sisters Dance Troupe.

The dancing stopped when one sister, Rachana Rajendra, was killed in a car accident at the age of 27. For the next decade, Rajendra shoved dance aside.

"Just the idea of dancing," she says. "There wasn't joy in it."

That changed a couple of years ago, after the birth of her second son. She had gained 60 pounds with her first pregnancy and 45 pounds with her second, and "I was literally waddling around and looking for a way to get healthy again," she says.

"I started dancing, and not only was the weight coming off, but the joy was coming back. A spark that had been gone started re-emerging."

When friends wanted to learn, that prompted Rajendra to begin teaching a class at the YMCA two years ago. It became so popular that she parlayed the concept into Bollyfit and teaches twice a week in Ann Arbor and once a week in Plymouth.

The classes possess a peaceful, free-flowing feel. The routine's moves are not fixed and the people who attend often vote on them.

The classes have a sisterly quality -- Rajendra describes a move by shouting, "The legs move, but the hips get the credit!" -- and have drawn mostly women. Rajendra says men are welcome and could get their own class, like the one she will offer for toddlers within the coming months.

The women in the class say the social appeal mixed with the unorthodox workout keeps them interested.

"You feel like you're with a group of friends," says Deasha Perry, 22, of Ypsilanti. "I don't even think about it being exercise until the end, when I'm all wet and my muscles ache."

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Saturday, February 14, 2009

Harish Rawal - Jackson Citizen Patriot's 2009 Citizen of the Year

Harish Rawal, 60, who is a Jackson, MI neurosurgeon and founder of the Great Lakes Brain and Spine Institute has been named Jackson Citizen Patriot's 2009 Citizen of the Year. Last year, the newspaper named him a Distinguished Citizen.
Harish Rawal and his wife, Sudha, donated $1 million in 2007 to Jackson Community College to help pay for its newly renovated allied health and nursing classrooms, now called the Rawal Center for Health Professions.

This year, he gave $25,000 to erect a bronze statue of a Viking at Jackson High School. He and his wife previously gave $50,000 to set up a high school scholarship fund in memory of his mother.

Also in remembrance of his mother, Vasantiben, he recently donated $150,000 to Allegiance Health for its Hospice Home, 2150 Kingsbrook Drive, which provides end-of-life care.

"If I have a message to society, I want youngsters to get inspiration from our lives, from our ascent. And to those who have, we want them to have inspiration to give." Rawal said.
(via MLIVE)

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Monday, February 09, 2009

Michigan Asian Indian Family Services offers Free Resume Workshop

MAIFS (Michigan Asian Indian Family Services) offers a free Resume Workshop on February 15th, 2009 at the Northville Public Library, 212 W. Cady Street, Northville, MI 48167. The event will be held from 2pm - 5pm. Visit MAIFS website for more details.

In this free Resume Workshop you will learn strategies to succeed in high unemployment market:
  • Are you greater than your resume? If yes, so what? If no, now what?
  • Your resume says you are applying for a different job. Oops!
  • Form and substance - the medium is sometimes the message.

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Sunday, February 01, 2009

Seminar for Young Married Couples in Ann Arbor, MI

I first heard of this event on Narendra Sheth's radio program. It is a 2 day seminar hosted by Chinmaya Mission, Ann Arbor on July 25-26, 2009. This is seminar exclusively for young married couples between the ages of 25-38 (either spouse). The seminar adresses the following topics:
  • Vision of Life for Married Householders
  • Joys and Challenges of Married Life
  • Parenting
  • Dealing with Emotions and Relations
The thing though is that this seminar is not free. It will cost you $200 and if you are not from the area then you will have to arrange for your own hotel accomodations. Check out Chinmaya Mission, Ann Arbor website for more details.

So my question is what about those couples who are struggling hard in this economy and might not be able to afford $200. So where do these couples go for help? Are there any local Indian Community organizations which offer similar services at no cost?

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