Dnyaneshwar Mulay

Dnyaneshwar Manohar Mulay
Consul General of India, New York
In office
April 2013  January 2016
High Commissioner of India, Male, Maldives
In office
April 2009  March 2013
Foreign Service Advisor, Cabinet Secretariat, Government of India, New Delhi
In office
May 2006  March 2009
Minister (Economic and Political), Embassy of India, Damascus, Syria
In office
August 2003  May 2006
Deputy High Commissioner, High Commission of India, Mauritius
In office
July 2002  July 2003
Director, Ministry of Finance (Department of Economic Affairs), New Delhi
In office
September 1998  June 2002
First Secretary/Counselor, Economic/Commercial, Embassy of India Tokyo
In office
August 1995  September 1998
First Secretary Economic/Commercial, Embassy of India, Moscow
In office
June 1992  August 1995
Under Secretary, Ministry of Commerce, New Delhi
In office
January 1989  May 1992
Third/Second Secretary, Embassy of India, Tokyo, Japan
In office
September 1984  December 1988
Personal details
Born (1958-11-05) 5 November 1958
India
Spouse(s) Sadhna Shanker
Children A daughter and 2 sons
Alma mater University of Mumbai
Shivaji University
Vidya Niketan School
Occupation Diplomat, Author, Columnist

Dnyaneshwar Mulay – ज्ञानेश्वर मुळे (Jñānēśvar Muḷē), Consul General of India, New York, USA (former High commissioner of India in Maldives), the son of soil of Kolhapur and career diplomat of the Indian Foreign Service (IFS) since 1983. He has been recognised both nationally and internationally as a prominent thought leader, diplomat, and author.

He is a well-known writer having written over 15 books that have been translated in Arabic, Dhivehi, Urdu, Kannada and Hindi. His original writings in Marathi have large following especially among youth who find it highly inspiring. He has won many awards including the Maharashtra State and Hindi Sahitya Akademy of Delhi. His book 'Mātī Pankh Āṇi Ākāsh – माती पंख आणि आकाश' has become a bible for the young generation of Maharashtra.[1] This book was recently included in the curriculum for B.A. students by the North Maharashtra University, Jalgaon(Maharashtra). Rashiyā – Navyā Dishānchē Āmantraṇ – रशिया – नव्या दिशांचे आमंत्रण, his book on Russia has become a must read for anybody studying the transformation of USSR to Russia.[2] He was felicitated as Kolhapur Bhushan by the Kolhapur Municipal Corporation.

He is also inspiration behind many socio educational projects including Balodyan,[3] an orphanage in his native village and Dnyaneshwar Mulay Education Society[4] in Pune which has embarked in the field of education with innovative concepts of global education.

Early life, education and struggles

From his simple beginning in the village Lat, in Kolhapur District, he has risen to the high position of High Commissioner of India, Male, Maldives and then Consul General of India,[5] New York, USA. This journey has seen a number of milestones.[1]

His father Manohar Krishna Mulay was a farmer and tailor, mother Akkatai Mulay has been a homemaker. His struggles began early in life, after his primary education in village Lat, at the age of 10, he left his village to join Rajarshi Shahu Chatrapati Vidyaniketan, Kolhapur, a school that was founded by Zilla Parishad, to nurture talent from rural areas. He became the first student from rural area, to win the Jagannath Shankarsheth Award, by securing highest marks in Sanskrit at SSC exam in 1975.

He completed graduation at the Shahaji Chattrapati College Kolhapur and topped the Shivaji University in BA with English Literature, and won the prestigious Dhananjay Keer Award. Always proud of Shivaji University, Dnyaneshwar Mulay established an annual excellence award at this university in 2006, for the girl student securing highest marks in social studies.

During this phase too he had faced many difficulties to find resources, study material and guidance for the higher civil services which he aspired to join. Lack of intellectual infrastructure was a major hurdle. Overcoming linguistic difficulties was another challenge as his medium of instruction was vernacular Marathi while the Civil Services required certain proficiency in English. Through relentless efforts and timely help from teachers he crossed these hurdles . Later he shifted to Mumbai to access better expertise. The State Institute for Administrative Career provided him the basic facilities for study especially for the main examinations.

Meanwhile, as a topper of Mumbai University in post graduation in Personnel Management he won Peter Alvarez Medal.

After scoring first rank in the [Maharashtra Public Service Commission] (MPSC) examination in the year 1982, he also succeeded in [Union Public Service Commission] (UPSC) examination before he was selected in much coveted Indian foreign service.

Career in Indian foreign service

He joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1983.Prior to that he was deputy collector in Pune. This was the beginning of his long and distinguished career in the civil services. He started his Indian Foreign Service in Japan and since then has served with distinction in Russia, Mauritius, then in Syria as the minister in the Indian embassy.

He was high commissioner of India to Male (Maldives) from April 2009 to March 2013.[6][7][8] He is credited with taking the Indo-Maldivian relations to a new level and steering it successfully through the difficult transfer of power, in February 2012.[9][10][11][12]

He was also instrumental in strengthening India- Maldives military relations including the India -Maldives- Sri Lanka cooperation in the maritime arena.He also handled the difficult situation during the two-week-long refuge of President Mohamed Nasheed in the Indian High Commission in Male').The Indian Cultural Centre in Maldives was also established with his initiative

During his diplomatic assignments he accomplished several things.In his first posting in Japan he managed the ambitious Cultural extravaganza, Festival of India, which was organised in over 20 cities of Japan over a period of one year in 1988.In Moscow he handled the business relations between India and Russia particularly the transition from state controlled (rupee ruble) trade to direct trade.He founded the Indian Business Association and was its Founder president for two years.In his second stint in Japan he looked after economic relations and paved the way for many Japanese investments in India including from Toyota Motors, NTT-Itochu, Honda Motors and YKK. In Syria he facilitated Sahitya Akademy's first M.O.U. outside India with the Arab Writers Association.In Mauritius he streamlined and expedited the Cyber Tower project and Rajiv Gandhi Science Centre,with Indian assistance.

Currently, he is the Consul General of India Consul General of India, New York, USA, from 23 April 2013. After joining the Consulate in New York he has started many initiatives of outreach to the Indian diaspora as well as the mainstream American society. The monthly lecture series Media India 2014 is popular and is helping creating new conversations on India. Similarly the events focused on Indian states called titled 'India-State by State' is also received very well. A film and Literature Club has also been established to introduce Films and Literature with Indian collection. His appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart centered on Indian general elections was widely seen.[13]

In response to Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, announced by Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi, Mulay initiated a Swachh Consulate campaign at New York. This holistic cleansing campaign has set a model of Swachh Consulate campaign for other Indian missions abroad. Mr. Mulay has also launched Consulate At Your Doorstep,[14] an outreach program,[15] one of the many initiatives after he took charge as Consul General of India in New York.

Academic, media and literary work

Contribution in Marathi literature

Contribution in Hindi literature

Contribution in English literature

Criticism

In Nov 2012, at rally in Maldives to protest against leasing of Ibrahim Nasir International Airport to Indian infrastructure major GMR Group, Mr.Riza, a political appointee called Mr. Mulay a traitor and enemy of Maldives and Maldivian people. He also added that a diplomat's job is to work for his country and people and not to protect the interests of one private company. Later Mr.Riza denied that he made any such comments. President Mr.Waheed said that remarks made by Riza and some other government officials, did not reflect the views of the government.[45] Later, Mr. Riza resigned from his political party (JP-Jamhoori Party) since the party had distanced formally from his utterances.[46] Major political parties, both from ruling coalition (PPM,DRP and JP) and opposition (MDP) have either condemned the remarks or disowned them in respective press statements.[47]

Personal life

He was married to Nalini Patel (later Indrayani Mulay) of Pune. After their divorce, he married to Sadhna Shanker, an Indian revenue service officer. He has three children Utsav, Agney and Pujya.

See also

References

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  2. 1 2 "Russia Navya Dishanche Amantran". Maharashtra Times. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
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  14. "Amb. Mulay launches new outreach program: 'Consulate At Your Doorstep'". http://www.thesouthasiantimes.info/. http://www.thesouthasiantimes.info/. Retrieved 24 July 2015. External link in |publisher= (help)
  15. "Public diplomacy through flawless service: Ambassador Mulay's success story". http://www.dlatimes.com/. dlatimes. Retrieved 24 July 2015. External link in |publisher= (help)
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