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Roshni Nadar Malhotra (born 1982) is an Indian billionaire businesswoman and philanthropist and the chairperson of HCL Technologies. She is the first woman to lead a listed IT company in India. [2] [3] She is the only child of HCL Group founder and billionaire businessman Shiv Nadar. [4]
Nadar was born in Moolaipozhi village, Madras Presidency (present day Thoothukudi district, Tamil Nadu) into a Tamil Hindu family. [9] His parents were Sivasubramaniya Nadar and Vamasundari Devi. His mother, Vamasundari Devi, is the sister of S. P. Adithanar, founder of Dina Thanthi newspaper. Nadar studied at Town Higher Secondary School ...
Unlike secular adoption, the relationship between the child and biological parents is never severed, and adoptive parents therefore cannot entirely replace the role of the biological parent. [4] When a biological parent passes away, the child must fulfil the commandment to honour them by mourning their death, even if they were adopted. [ 13 ]
Kiran Shiv Nadar (born 1951) is an Indian art collector and philanthropist. [1] Kiran is the wife of Shiv Nadar, the founder of HCL Technologies, [2] and is a trustee of the Shiv Nadar Foundation and the founder of the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art. [3] She won a bronze medal representing India in the 2018 Asian Games in the Bridge Mixed team event ...
Judeo-Urdu (Urdu: یہود اردو, romanized: yahūd urdū; Hebrew: אורדו יהודית, romanized: ūrdū yehūdīt) [1] was a dialect of the Urdu language spoken by the Baghdadi Jews in the Indian subcontinent living in the areas of Mumbai and Kolkata towards the end of the 18th century.
Roshni or Roshini is a given name. Notable persons with that name include: Roshini (actress), Indian actress; Roshini (singer), Indian singer; Roshini Kempadoo (born 1959), British photographer, artist, and academic; Roshini Thinakaran, Sri Lankan-American filmmaker; Roshni Chopra (born 1980), Indian actress
The week after Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel, Ilana Pearlman asked her 14-year-old son, Ezra, a ninth-grader at Berkeley High School who is Black and Jewish, if he felt safe.
The Hebrew name is a Jewish practice rooted in the practices of early Jewish communities and Judaism. [4] This Hebrew name is used for religious purposes, such as when the child is called to read the Torah at their b'nei mitzvah.