Abraham George

Dr. Abraham M. George
Born Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, IND
Occupation Founder, The George Foundation
Website
tgfworld.org

Dr. Abraham M. George is a Indian-American businessman, academic, and philanthropist. He is the founder of The George Foundation (TGF), a non-profit organization based in Bangalore, India dedicated to the welfare and empowerment of economically and socially disadvantaged populations in India. His foundation has initiated numerous projects in poverty alleviation, education, health, women's empowerment, and press freedom.

Notable projects he has spearheaded include the creation of Shanti Bhavan, a free K-12 boarding school of international standards for children from disadvantaged backgrounds, and the creation of the now prestigious Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media, a graduate school of journalism in Bangalore where he currently serves as the dean. He also pioneered the successful effort to remove lead content from gasoline throughout India in April 2000 and was instrumental in the creation of the National Referral Centre for Lead Poisoning in India.

In addition to his philanthropic efforts, George is currently Chairman of eMedexOnline LLC, a medical diagnostic software company in New Jersey, and an Adjunct Professor at Stern School of Business, New York University.

He has also been recognized as one of the world's leading social entrepreneurs.[1]

Contents

Early years

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 prestigious National Defence Academy in Khadakwasla. 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 Northeast Frontier that borders China, following the Chinese invasion of 1962.

The assignment 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.".[2] "George has spoken of his time in the army as formative experience: "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."[2]

In the third year of George's service, he suffered a hearing disability that would plague 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; where he could have his surgery and start a new life.

Education and Professional Life

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".[2]

Soon after arriving in America, George attended New York University's Stern School of Business as a graduate student. While there he became an American citizen.[3] He specialized in developmental economics and 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. .[2]

George had worked for Chemical Bank for 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. MCM formed a joint venture with Credit Suisse First Boston where George served as the Chief Consultant and Managing Director of its new operations. George sold MCM to SunGard Data Systems 1998.[2]

The George Foundation

Main article The George Foundation

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.

A good friend of George's, Angeline Nair, organized a meeting with several prominent individuals of Bangalore society. 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.[2]

George's impact through The George Foundation has attracted acclaim from prominent people. Pulitzer Prize winner Thomas Friedman of the New York Times said in his book, The World is Flat, "We must have more Abraham Georges — everywhere — by the thousands."

Writing

George was a pioneer in the international finance arena, authoring several books on the topic:

Since becoming a full-time philanthropist, George has written several articles and has published two books:

George has also published over three dozen articles in international finance and on issues of global poverty.

Awards

References and footnotes

  1. ^ Friedman, Thomas (2006). The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0374292795. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f George, Abraham (2005). India Untouched: The Forgotten Face of Rural Poverty. Writers' Collective. ISBN 1594111227. 
  3. ^ Gross, Daniel (Fall/Winter 2006). "Return of the Native Son". STERNbusiness. http://w4.stern.nyu.edu/sternbusiness/fall_2006/nativeSon.html. Retrieved 2007-04-13. 

External links