---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: N Sekar <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, May 13, 2025, 9:26 PM
Subject: Fwd - We salute these people, our pride
To: Kerala Iyer <[email protected]>, Narayanaswamy Sekar <
[email protected]>, Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>,
Chittanandam V. R. <[email protected]>, Srinivasan Sridharan <
[email protected]>, Mathangi K. Kumar <[email protected]>,
Rama (Iyer 123 Group) <[email protected]>, Suryanarayana Ambadipudi <
[email protected]>, Mani APS <[email protected]>


Know our Foreign Secretary.
India produces such brilliant Indians devoted to serve their country.
Here is about him.
>From Ashes to Authority: #VikramMisri and the Rise of a Silenced People

There are stories that history forgets, not because they lack pain—but
because they are too quiet, too dignified to scream.

The story of the Kashmiri Pandits is one such tale—of a community ripped
from their roots, their temples desecrated, their homes abandoned in the
dead of night, carrying nothing but faith and a fading photograph of what
once was. A community exiled in their own country, silenced by fear, and
forgotten by time.

And yet—they rose.

Not with protests. Not with revenge. But with books, belief, and backbone.
In the face of unimaginable pain, they clung to knowledge. To discipline.
To resilience.

One such story is that of Vikram Misri—a boy born in Srinagar on 7 November
1964, into the serene, intellectual world of Kashmiri Hindus. His early
life echoed with the sounds of temple bells and the scent of chinars. But
that peace was shattered by a storm of militancy that swept through the
valley in the late 1980s and 90s—a storm not born of the people, but of
political poison fed across the border by Pakistan.

Like thousands of others, the Misri family was uprooted—not because they
broke the law, but because they simply existed. Because they prayed
differently. Because they were marked.

But pain did not define Vikram Misri. He did not burn with hatred—he burned
with purpose.

After finishing his schooling in Burn Hall and Scindia, and graduating from
Hindu College and XLRI, he joined the Indian Foreign Service in 1989—the
very year many of his own were forced to flee. While others carried guns,
he picked up treaties. While others chanted slogans, he studied silence.

He went on to serve India in Brussels, Tunis, Spain, Myanmar, and most
importantly—as Ambassador to China during one of India’s most delicate
security crises, the 2020–21 border standoff. Later, he became Deputy
National Security Advisor, and today, he holds the office of India’s
Foreign Secretary—a post of immense strategic importance.

He has advised three Indian Prime Ministers—Gujral, Manmohan Singh, and
Narendra Modi. But even as he sat in the most powerful rooms of the
country, a part of his soul always remained in the narrow lanes of
Srinagar, with the scent of home that was stolen.

Vikram Misri is more than a diplomat—he is a quiet symbol of an entire
people who refused to be erased. His rise is not just personal success; it
is the triumph of memory over forgetting, of dignity over hate, of
perseverance over persecution.

And yet, through it all, he has never used his position for vendetta. His
voice against Pakistan-sponsored terror is not rooted in bitterness, but in
truth. He does not accuse communities—he condemns ideologies of hate, the
policies of states that turned Kashmir from a valley of peace into a
graveyard of harmony.

In Misri, the world sees what the Kashmiri Pandits have always
been—builders, thinkers, survivors.

They may have been scattered, but they are not shattered.

They may have been silenced, but they are not forgotten.

Through every speech he makes, every negotiation he leads, and every stand
he takes for India’s sovereignty, Vikram Misri carries the spirit of his
ancestors—and the pain of a community that once lost everything, except
their will to rise.

Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer
<https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=nativeplacement&c=US_Acquisition_YMktg_315_SearchOrgConquer_EmailSignature&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=US_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100002039&af_sub5=C01_Email_Static_&af_ios_store_cpp=0c38e4b0-a27e-40f9-a211-f4e2de32ab91&af_android_url=https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.yahoo.mobile.client.android.mail&listing=search_organize_conquer>

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