This story is from May 23, 2017

Allies in war on malnutrition

She is truly a Global Gujarati: her father was born in Kenya, mother in India, her husband is from Germany, and she lives in the US! Rajul Pandya-Lorch, the chief of staff at the DG office of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), was the moderator at the African Development Bank (AfDB) Annual Meetings’ session titled ‘Developing Africa’s Grey Matter Infrastructure: Addressing Africa’s Nutrition Challenges’, at the Mahatma Mandir on Monday.
Allies in war on malnutrition
Rajul Pandya-Lorch heads the food and agriculture mission
AHMEDABAD: She is truly a Global Gujarati: her father was born in Kenya, mother in India, her husband is from Germany, and she lives in the US! Rajul Pandya-Lorch, the chief of staff at the DG office of the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), was the moderator at the African Development Bank (AfDB) Annual Meetings’ session titled ‘Developing Africa’s Grey Matter Infrastructure: Addressing Africa’s Nutrition Challenges’, at the Mahatma Mandir on Monday.
1x1 polls
She also heads IFPRI’s 2020 Vision for Food, Agriculture and the Environment Initiative, seeking solutions for meeting world food needs while reducing poverty and protecting the environment.
“My family has been living on the east coast of Africa for over a century. We were brought up in the true Gujarati style,” she said. “But there is Africa in me. My Gujarati has a good chunk of Swahili and thus I have some difficulty in understanding the local language. But I am going to enjoy the Gujarati platter!”
Pandya-Lorch has won numerous awards for her work in the field of food security and nutrition. Comparing India with African nations, Pandya said that Africa can learn from Indian entrepreneurs. “Indians opened the countryside with their small shops and made a name for themselves,” she said. “Africa has a similar sense of family and community. Kenya values education. For a long time, if a community built school infrastructure, the government used to pay for teachers. Africa is also making rapid strides in countering problems such as malnutrition.”
author
About the Author
Parth Shastri

Parth Shastri is senior correspondent at The Times of India, Ahmedabad. He reports on crime as well as issues related to traffic in the city, forensic investigation, archaeology and emergency medical services.

End of Article
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA