Events & Community Members in news |
IACF Celebrates Unity with Speeches, Awards Fremont, CA (USA) March 27, 2009 |
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![]() California. Hosted by the Indo American Community Federation, the event recognized four San Francisco Bay Area residents and a Seattle-based author for their contributions to the community Shinn-Shyng Chang, Pete McHugh, Pramela Ramachandran, Rashmee Sharma, and Albert Wang.Chang is a gynecologist at Washington Hospital in Fremont, Calif.; McHugh is a former member of the Santa Clara Board of Supervisors and vice-mayor of Milpitas, Calif.; Ramachandran is a pediatrician with Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital in Fremont, Calif.; Sharma is an author and researcher from Seattle; and Wang is a specialist in internal medicine. Papiha Nandy, a media professional, and Deepak Sachdev, a dentist, received honorable mention. The list of honorees, which included persons of Indian, Caucasian and Chinese descent, underscored the spirit of unity in diversity that was close to the heart of community activist and IACF chairman and founder Jeevan Zutshi. “I am so happy to see that an idea that came to me over a decade ago continues to flourish and draw the wonderful, rich and diverse communities of the Bay Area together,” Zutshi told India-West. “I am thrilled to see so many elected representatives support my efforts as well.” Organizers used the event to highlight the needs of children in America, with a keynote address delivered by Deborah Roderick Stark, commissioner of the First Five Alameda County Commission and an expert on children’s issues. Stark, whose husband Pete is a long-time Democratic congressman, did not mince her words. “You know, it’s sad for me that America professes to love its children but its actions too often fail to live beyond rhetoric,” she told the audience. “Every industrialized nation in our world and even some developing nations, too, have a higher regard for the next generation than we do in America.” The statistics she provided were pretty grim. In the U.S., a baby is born without health insurance every 41 seconds, a baby with low birth weight is born every two minutes, and every 18 minutes a child dies before its first birthday. One in six children live in poverty, and among industrialized nations, the U.S. standing is 22nd in low birth weight and 25th in infant mortality. She said she would like “to encourageyou to join us in building support for children’s health . . . (and) comprehensive health care and strong families for every child in America.” IACF was founded in 1994 by Zutshi with a goal of getting Indian Americans more involved in mainstream America by working on issues affecting them in their adopted land. Zutshi said he came up with the idea over a decade ago at a very difficult time for America. By A Swapan |
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