Suri Sehgal

Suri Sehgal

Sehgal in 2008
Born (1934-05-16) May 16, 1934
Guliana, Punjab, India (now Pakistan)
Residence Captiva, Florida, USA
Citizenship United States
Nationality American
Fields Plant genetics, agricultural science, business, philanthropy
Alma mater Harvard University, USA
Harvard International Senior Management Program, Switzerland
Punjab University, India
Known for Seed industry development, plant breeding, socioeconomic development in rural India, philanthropy
S M Sehgal Foundation, India
Sehgal Foundation, USA
Influences William Lacy Brown
Paul C. Mangelsdorf
Henry A. Wallace
Spouse Edda Gudrun (nee Jeglinsky) Sehgal
Children Kenai K. Sehgal
Bernd U. Sehgal
Oliver S. Sehgal
Vicki D. Sehgal

Surinder Mohan (Suri) Sehgal is an India-born American philanthropist with a long career as a crop scientist, seedsman, entrepreneur, and leading expert in the global hybrid seed industry.[1][2][3][4] His research and professional successes in the areas of plant breeding and genetics, agbiotechnology, intellectual property, business management, and seed industry development were carried out in executive capacities in several companies in the United States, Belgium, and Germany. After the divestment of a group of four seed companies that Sehgal founded and ran with his wife, Edda Sehgal, the couple created two nonprofit organizations to promote rural development in Suri's country of origin: Sehgal (Family) Foundation in 1998 in the USA, and S M Sehgal Foundation in India.[5] The foundations’ work focuses on water security, food security, and social justice with particular emphasis on women’s empowerment.[6] A proponent of corporate social responsibility[7] and environmental sustainability, Sehgal has also provided support individually and through the foundations for projects related to agriculture research,[8][9][10] the preservation of biodiversity[11] and the conservation of natural resources.[12][13][14][15]

Early life and education

Suri Sehgal was born 16 May 1934 in the town of Guliana in the Punjab Province of India. He was the second son, and one of eight children, of a Hindu father, Faqir Chand (Shahji) Sehgal, and a Sikh mother, Shushila Kaur. Shahji Sehgal was an associate of Mahatma Gandhi in the Indian National Congress, and the family home was a center for community organizing for India’s independence from British rule. Suri was thirteen when independence brought about the Partition of India in August 1947. The Sehgal family home, in the region of the Punjab that became part of Pakistan, was along the route of the mass migration of people who were displaced amidst the violence that followed Partition—Hindus and Sikhs to India and Muslims from India to Pakistan. Suri ended up homeless for a time on the streets of Delhi and a witness to horrific violence and bloodshed before being reunited with his family in a refugee camp in Amritsar, India.[2] Suri achieved a bachelor of science with honors and a master of science with honors in botany at Punjab University, where he received silver medal, merit certificates, and scholarships for academic achievement in 1955 and 1957. He came to the United States in 1959 to study plant genetics and work with Paul C. Mangelsdorf at Harvard University. He received the Anna C. Ames Memorial Scholarship in 1961. He attained his PhD in plant genetics from Harvard in 1963. He later (1982) completed the Harvard International Senior Management Program in Mont-Pelerin, Switzerland.

Professional achievements

Suri Sehgal’s professional career began in 1963 at a (then) regional seed company in Des Moines, Iowa, founded by plant breeder and future vice president of the United States, Henry A. Wallace, called Pioneer Hi-Bred Corn Company (named Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc., in 1970, and Dupont Pioneer in 2012). Sehgal’s tenure at Pioneer lasted 24 years. He was mentored and befriended by Pioneer executive Bill Brown (William L. Brown).[16]

Personal life

Suri Sehgal met Edda Gudrun Jeglinsky (born December 25, 1941, in Breslau, Silesia) a few weeks after she first came to the United States from Germany in 1962 to live as an au pair in the home of Henry Kissinger, a professor at Harvard at the time. Suri and Edda shared a refugee past as children. Edda’s family had been forced to flee from their country of origin, German Silesia, near the end of WWII. The Jeglinskys escaped to Bavaria in 1945 and later settled in Göppingen, Germany.[2] When Suri completed his PhD at Harvard, he moved to Des Moines, Iowa, to work with Bill Brown at Pioneer Hi-Bred Corn Company. After the completion of her two-year commitment to the Kissingers, Edda moved to Des Moines, Iowa. Suri and Edda were married in the home of Bill and Alice Brown in 1964. The Sehgals raised four children, helped raise two nephews, and opened their home to other relatives who emigrated from India to the United States.[24] The creation of their foundations and the Sehgals’ ongoing commitment to philanthropy was rooted in the violence and loss they each experienced during their childhoods as fleeing refugees from their countries of origin.[2] Both are proud Americans[3] who want to share their good fortune.

Current work

Suri Sehgal is chairman and trustee of Sehgal Foundation and S M Sehgal Foundation. Edda Sehgal is a trustee. The S M Sehgal Foundation mission is to strengthen community-led development initiatives to achieve positive social, economic, and environmental change across rural India.[25][26] The headquarters building in Gurgaon received platinum-level certification for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) from the US Green Building Council (USGBC).[27]

Sehgal is chairman of two seed companies. Misr Hytech Seed International S.A.E. in Cairo (which he helped establish with other shareholders), is a leading seed company in Egypt, breeding and developing high-yielding corn, sorghum, and squash.[28] The other seed company, Hytech India, which Sehgal founded in 2004, develops high-yielding hybrid seeds in Hyderabad, India.[29][30]

Sehgal is a Trustee Emeritus of the Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis, having helped to establish the William L. Brown Center of Economic Botany at the Missouri Botanical Garden in 2001.[31][31][32][33]

Sehgal has served as a trustee or board member of several other nonprofit organizations including the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE)[34] and the Trust for Advancement of Agricultural Sciences (TAAS).[35]

Honors, awards and international recognition

References

  1. "Indian American Solving Rural India's Challenges Wins Philanthropy Award - The Financial Express".
  2. 1 2 3 4 Bazaar, The American (6 May 2016). "India needs to harvest water to end drought crisis: Indian American philanthropist Suri Sehgal". The American Bazaar.
  3. 1 2 "Get smarter with these new nonfiction offerings".
  4. Maize Genetics and Breeding in the 20th Century, ed. Peter Peterson and Angelo Bianchi, World Scientific Publishing Company, 1999.
  5. 1 2 "'New breed' Indian Diaspora has its heart in the right place".
  6. "Suri Sehgal - IPBO".
  7. "Corporate social responsibility in private sector". 9 December 2011.
  8. "-- ICRISAT --Press Releases 2003". icrisat.org.
  9. "The Hindu Business Line : Icrisat gets another $1 m donation from Sehgal Foundation".
  10. http://pbplanning.gov.in/pdf/tacsa-report.pdf
  11. "Suri Sehgal Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation". 19 March 2014.
  12. http://whc.unesco.org/documents/publi_infokit_en.pdf
  13. https://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~ranganathan/publications/ranganathan%20et%20al.%202010,%20biological%20conservation.pdf
  14. "Biotech Parks of India - BioSpectrumIndia".
  15. http://www.conservation-development.net/Projekte/Nachhaltigkeit/DVD_12_WHS/Material/files/WCMC_Manas.pdf
  16. "William Lacy Brown 1913-1991: Scientist, Executive, & Mentor: He Left a Lasting Legacy To Global Agriculture, by Isabel Shipley Cunningham" (PDF). Diversity.
  17. "Suri Sehgal Ph.D.: Executive Profile & Biography - Businessweek".
  18. "Update: The Life Industry - 1997". 1 December 1997.
  19. "La Biotecnologia". Icaria Editorial via Google Books.
  20. "Siliconeer: September 2003".
  21. "Solid Foundation".
  22. Cornell, Marly. (2014) Seeds for Change: The Lives and Work of Suri and Edda Sehgal, Sehgal Foundation, Des Moines, Iowa. p. 267
  23. "David J. Kinman".
  24. "Sehgals: Planting Seeds for Change - Books Make a Difference". 30 June 2015.
  25. http://www.smsfoundation.org/
  26. Kamlani, Jaya (25 December 2013). "To India, With Tough Love: Time to rise above social injustice and corruption". Jaya Kamlani via Amazon.
  27. "The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - Haryana".
  28. "Misr Hytech Seed Int -".
  29. http://www.aipicrisat.org/wp-content/themes/aip/graduated_clients/g-tech_seed_exports.pdf
  30. "Hytech Seed India Pvt. Ltd. -".
  31. 1 2 "William L. Brown Center".
  32. http://www.mobot.org/reports/AR/MOBOT_AR_2013_Web.pdf
  33. "Board of Trustees and Senior Staff".
  34. "Governing board". 8 October 2014.
  35. http://www.taas.in/board_of_trustees.html
  36. "NRI Institute Celebrates the "Pride of India Gold Awards"" (PDF). NRI Institute.
  37. http://www.nriinstitute.org/award.html
  38. "ICRISAT Happenings".
  39. "$1.8 Million raised towards innovative education initiative, digital equalizer American Indian Foundation: Celebrating a decade of giving - News Portal". 23 June 2011.
  40. "Global Awards for Social Justice & Citizen Action by the people sector".
  41. Cornell, Marly (1 January 2016). "Together We Empower: Rekindling Hope in Rural India". Sehgal Foundation via Amazon.
  42. "Millennium Alliance - Inspiring Innovation. Sharing Solutions.".
  43. "India: S.M. Sehgal Foundation wins '3rd National Ground Water Augmentation Award - 2009' - Humanitarian News".
  44. "Sehgal Foundation wins 9th Global Agriculture Leadership Award 2016".
  45. "The Rockefeller Foundation Centennial".
  46. "Awards for Alfaz-e-Mewat and Waqt Ki Awaaz - UNESCO Chair on Community Media". 23 December 2015.
  47. "Mary Ann Grossmann – Twin Cities". Pioneer Press.
  48. "International Book Awards - Honoring Excellence in Independent & Mainstream Publishing".
  49. "Dr. Suri Sehgal Receives American Bazaar Philanthropy Award". The American Bazaar.
  50. "Indian American Solving Rural India's Challenges Wins Philanthropy Award - The Financial Express.".
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