Hello 6E-Feb'26

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163rd Issue, Feb 2026

Shanghai Shanghai

Next stopLondon Heathrow

"TO TRAVEL IS TO LIVE."

On a flight, soaring amidst the clouds, a fascinating world of stories opens up, layer by layer, page by page. The February edition of Hello 6E is an invitation to explore a few of these stories from places that feel less like destinations and more like a living theatre.

We begin with Shanghai, China's vibrant city, which in spring, transforms from a cosmopolitan business hub to a floral paradise celebrating the Lunar New Year. Here, history and tradition come together in an exuberant display of experiences as festivities spill onto the streets, food becomes a ritual and music hums through every corner

February carries us deeper into celebrations as the Year of the Horse gallops in with colours and promises, from the festive streets of Guangzhou to the quieter cultural rhythms of Foshan.

Closer to home, we take the road down the pages of history

to revisit the Silk Route that still carries its footprints in Kargil. Often overlooked on the way to more popular tourist destinations, this quaint town has a cherished history as a strategic pit stop on the ancient trade route. A museum here preserves the memory of a Silk Route trader, reminding us that exchange once meant patience, trust and human connection.

Music and movement thread through the pages, from global icon DJ Diplo’s deeply personal bond with India to champion golfer Shiv Kapur’s insider tour of the Middle East’s most exquisite greens.

We round up with celebrity interior designer and film producer Gauri Khan, who reflects on the inspirations behind her new luxury ventures in Mumbai.

Wherever you’re headed next, let the journey begin right here, at cruising altitude.

#IndiabyIndiGo

Red lanterns glow beneath carved temple roofs, popping against a soft pink sky. It’s a classic Shanghai moment, where traditional architecture, street life and quiet bursts of colour blend easily into the bustling city’s everyday rhythm.

- Hans Christian Andersen
Cover

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Journey to a unique side of Kargil, where a trader of the Silk Route left a hidden legacy.

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DoubleTake

Dive into the festive rhythm of Guangzhou and Foshan as China celebrates the Year of the Horse.

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OutBound

Travel to Kenya’s coast where community efforts have revived an ocean once stripped of life.

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Discover luxury golf courses in the Middle East through the lens of a professional golfer. Game On

According to a new directive issued by DGCA, carrying any satellite phone from abroad into India is strictly prohibited. The possession of any such radio equipment without authorisation is a punishable offence.

The Ministry of Civil Aviation has upgraded the AirSewa portal, which is accessible through an interactive web portal and a mobile app. The new version includes the following features: 6E

Secure sign-up and log-in with social media A chatbot for traveller support Improved grievance management, including on social media Real-time flight status and detailed flight schedules For any other Information regarding this service, please visit www.alrsewa.gov.fn

Image: shutterstock
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GlobalViewpoint

Discover how researchers are devising ways to slow down the natural ageing process.

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Touch&Go

Gauri Khan reveals what fuels her creativity in the field of design entrepreneurship.

IndiGo

Brand & Content Rashmi Soni

Business Development Shuchi Bhatia

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With the Indian Government's Fast Track Immigration – Trusted Traveller Programme (FTI-TTP), the immigration process has become seamless for eligible NRIs and Foreign Nationals holding OCI cards. Instead of waiting in long queues, the initiative uses biometrics, allowing eligible persons to access self-service e-gates. The programme is currently operational at 13 airports across India including Lucknow, Thiruvananthapuram, Trichy, Kozhikode, Amritsar, Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Cochin and Kolkata.

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SHANGHAI with Cathy Adams

Adams is the travel news features editor of The Times and Sunday Times in London, covering the world's best destinations, aviation news and great hotels. She has been a resident of Hong Kong as well and has extensively travelled around Southeast Asia, and writes about her experience of the region.

KURUWITU with Shivya Nath

ONBOARD

GUANGZHOU & FOSHAN with Tom O'Malley

O'Malley is a travel writer specialising in China, where he lived for 12 years. He also covers Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Mongolia, as well as Denmark and Scotland. He is a regular guidebook author for Lonely Planet, DK and others, and writes reports on travel for The Telegraph

Nath is an award-winning travel writer and author who writes at the intersection of sustainable travel, social impact and climate action. She is the founder of Climate Conscious Travel, where she works with destinations and businesses to integrate community-centric climate action in tourism offerings.

KHAJURAHO with Aditi Mangaldas

KENYA with Lyndsey McIntyre

A resident of Nairobi, Kenya, McIntyre's inclination towards travel started young. She works as a casting agent, photographer, events organiser and interior designer as well as manages her holiday home, Neem Tree on the Kuruwitu Marine Conservancy, Vipingo.

Mangaldas is a leading dancer and choreographer in the classical Indian dance form of Kathak. She has won critical acclaim across the world and has been the recipient of numerous national and international awards.

Quest-page 58

KARGIL with Muzammil

Hussain Munshi

Hussain heads outreach at the Munshi Aziz Bhat Museum. Other than spreading the word about the Museum, Hussain is a climber, trekker, wildlife enthusiast and co-founder of Roots Ladakh, a travel company focussed on responsible tourism.

GameOn-page 78

MIDDLE EAST with Rohit Bhardwaj

In his more than two-decade-long journalistic career, Bhardwaj has been the managing editor of popular sports magazines and has travelled the world to cover premier tournaments in golf, MMA and motorsports, apart from multi-discipline sports events like the Asian Games.

Reasons Why 6

I ndiGo to KHAJURAHO www.goIndiGo.in

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I n Khajuraho, stone breathes poetry, Chandela temples glow and an annual dance festival brings classical rhythms alive. Renowned Kathak dancer Adi ti Mangaldas offers a tour of this ethereal town in Madhya Pradesh.

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Breathtaking History

A UNESCO World Heritage Site, Khajuraho is renowned for its 10th to 11th-century temples, exquisitely carved with sculptures of Hindu deities and mythological narratives. I would recommend everyone interested in the rich cultural heritage of India to visit this quaint town.

Artistic Significance

Built by rulers of the Chandela dynasty, these temples are adorned with sculptures of deities, celestial beings, processions and dancers. The figures of dancers, captured in fluid movement, with emotions frozen in sandstone, evoke rasa or emotional response, offering rich insights into ancient dance traditions, costumes and jewellery.

Celebrating Dance

Every year, the town hosts the Khajuraho Dance Festival, India’s renowned classical dance event, which is taking place on February 20-26, this year. Performing there is an honour. I recall dancing with the temples in the background and under a radiant full moon. It was magical.

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Light & Sound Show

After sundown (timings are seasonal), the temple grounds of Khajuraho turn into a spectacle with the Light & Sound show. The show reveals the history and inspiration behind the Khajuraho temples.

Easy Access

Khajuraho was once difficult to reach, but now with direct flights, it is a dream destination. Within 100 km is the lush Panna National Park and the stunning Raneh Falls, and about 150 km away is the historical site of Orchha.

When Time is Suspended

Time seems to stand still in Khajuraho, where architecture, sculpture and dance unite. As temples rise, touching the sky, celestial light glows and performance celebrates a city where past and present coexist.

around the world

Discover the latest in travel, lifestyle, festivals, and tech!

aglobal showcase of style and innovation, the 2026 edition of London Fashion Week unfolds from February 19 to 23 across multiple venues in London. See the latest styles on the runway, discover new collections by British and international designers, and hear insights on emerging trends from fashion experts in the UK capital.

blending food and history, Suma, an Indian-Arabic restaurant in Mumbai, offers an immersive culinary journey inspired by the Grand Trunk Road and the tastes of Arabia. From palak patta chaat to raat ki beli kebab, its menu draws from North Indian and Arabic traditions, reflecting tastes linked to the historic route stretching from Kolkata to Amritsar and leading towards Afghanistan.

celebrating the living heritage and spirit of India’s capital, ‘Kahaani: Dilli Ki’, a 2-day cultural event unfolds at Travancore Palace, New Delhi on February 14 and 15. The event features classical dance performances, street theatre, culinary showcase, and vibrant craft bazaars featuring artisans from Old Delhi and beyond.

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discover a harmony of art and legacy being celebrated this month at The National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi with the centenary exhibition 'Satish Gujral 100'. The show running until March 30 features paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, interwoven with personal archives of the late artist to form a reflective narrative of his life and times.

experience modern comfort fused with iconic style in the new MINI Cooper Convertible. With a striking stance and sleek sculptured body, it delivers a thrilling go-kart feeling. Powered by a 204 PS TwinPower Turbo engine, it accelerates from 0–100 km/h in 6.9 s with a top speed of 237 km/h, offering a palpable, exhilarating drive.

grounded in metaphor and rhythm, Urdu poetry gives voice to memories and emotions that often remain unspoken and quietly shape us over time. Across books and voices, and in cultural gatherings such as Jashn-e-Rekhta, a three-day festival celebrating Urdu poetry, literature and music, it moves from the page into shared experience.

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in a shared love for words and dialogues, literature enthusiasts unite at the third edition of the Dibrugarh University International Literature Festival, being held at the university in Assam from February 18 to 21. The festival provides a platform for like-minded

holiday by the serene Morjim backwaters at Goa’s newest luxury resort. Bastian Riviera by Shilpa Shetty’s Bastian Hospitality Group combines water-led architecture with seafood-forward indulgence, offering travellers design-focussed luxury and unforgettable coastal escapes.

journey to Bengaluru to catch an art exhibition where cats take the centre stage. The Museum of Art & Photography (MAP) presents 'The Many Lives of the Cat', an exhibition that explores how the feline has been depicted with varied meanings across Indian art. It is on view until March 29.

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THE QUIET MEASURE OF TRUE WEALTH

This interview invites every reader, young or old, to rethink success, rediscover purpose, and redefine wealth. In this conversation, Dr. Manimekalai Mohan, Founder of SSVM Group of Institutions, talks about how true wealth is measured by the good one does in this world.

When you speak of “true wealth,” how can this idea resonate with a child, a working professional, and a senior citizen alike?

True wealth is universal — it transcends age and stage. For a child, it begins with kindness and honesty. For a professional, it reflects in ethical choices and responsibility. For seniors, it lies in wisdom shared and lives touched. Wealth is not what we accumulate, but what we contribute.

In a world obsessed with speed and success, how can education slow us down in meaningful ways?

Education must create pauses for reflection, not just push performance. True learning encourages questioning, empathy, and awareness. When students learn why they act, not just how to achieve, they grow grounded. Slowing down helps learners understand consequences, respect diverse perspectives, and act thoughtfully.

How can parents balance ambition for their children with values that truly matter?

Ambition must be anchored in purpose. Parents can encourage dreams while modelling humility, kindness, and resilience. Children learn more from observation than from instruction. When they see parents treat others with respect and face challenges ethically, values become lived lessons.

If every reader carried one thought off this flight, what should it be?

Ask yourself daily, “How did I add value today?” Life is not about titles or possessions, but impact. When goodness becomes intentional — through small acts, mindful decisions, and service — life gains depth and meaning. True wealth grows quietly, within and around us. Wherever you land next, let your presence leave the world a little better than you found it.

Founder, SSVM Group of Institutions, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

looking back at a Gothic classic, director Emerald Fennell adapts Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights for the screen. Starring Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff and Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw, the movie follows a passionate, tumultuous love set against the backdrop of the Yorkshire moors and releases in theatres on February 13.

known for its tranquil setting, Sunder Nursery in New Delhi hosts the second edition of the Sufi Heritage Festival, a two-day celebration of Sufism featuring soul-stirring performances, captivating stories, and immersive experiences, taking place from February 28 to March 1.

mountains form a dramatic backdrop as runners gather at Pangong Tso Lake for the Guinness World Record-recognised Pangong Frozen Lake Marathon. Taking place on February 24 and 25, the race on the frozen lake is being called the ‘last run', highlighting climate change as glaciers rapidly melt in Ladakh.

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step into Mumbai’s Bandra, known for its lively nightlife and numerous gastro-pubs and bars. Among them, Monkey Bar offers a mix of fresh flavours, cocktails and a new weekday lunch service, providing visitors with a relaxed space to enjoy food and drinks while soaking in the area’s energetic atmosphere.

taste often carries the memory of a place, and Tangra, Tales of Chinatown perfectly captures this idea. Inspired by Kolkata’s Chinatown area, where the neighbourhood of Tangra is, the restaurant at the Westin Sohna Resort & Spa near Gurgaon serves popular Hakka-style Chinese cuisine, reflecting the traditions and flavours of Tangra’s streets and kitchens.

Images

usher in spring fashion with refreshing colours and statement-making accessories, from a tiered dress to a quirky print handbag.

1. With minis in soft prints emerging as a major spring trend, wrap yourself in this embroidered tiered dress by Abirr & Nanki.

2. Adorn your fingers with twinkling stars in this gold ring by STAC featuring diamond-studded stars, creating a striking visual appeal.

3. Give your overall look an artistic touch with the Chopard L.U.C XP Sakura by Night, evoking the ephemeral beauty of nocturnal sakura (cherry blossom) viewing.

4. Playful horses come to life with Michael Kors’ new ‘Year of the Horse’ gold-tone handbag. Images are for

I n spring, travel to China’s most cosmopolitan city, where history, modernity, festivals, food and music converge, transforming it i nto pure theatre.

Image: shutterstock
Words Cathy Adams

Shanghai makes grand gestures feel effortless. In this bustling metropolis, the past and future collide with exhilarating ease, as Art Deco façades stand next to ancient temples, shíkùmén stone houses nestle beside neck-craning skyscrapers, and jazz bars echo the 1930s just a few streets from cutting-edge galleries. China’s largest and most cosmopolitan city is impossible to pigeonhole.

And then comes spring. Winter loosens its grip, cherry blossoms scatter across parks and gardens, and the former French Concession, with its charming historic lanes, turns gloriously languid, perfect for slow cycling beneath leafy canopies. In the evening, lanterns glow, art spills onto the streets, and music drifts through unexpected corners. Across the Huangpu River, Pudong’s modern glass office towers shimmer with festive installations. As the Year of the Horse arrives and Chinese New Year festivities begin (this year on February 17), Shanghai, China’s most dazzling city on the east coast, bursts into life.

I’ve been coming to Shanghai for years, in different seasons and moods, but the season of spring always stands apart!

Festivities Galore

As the New Year unfolds, Shanghai comes alive with dazzling light projections, lantern-lined streets along iconic arteries like the Bund and Nanjing Road, and a rich tapestry of cultural performances. Yet, above all, it is the Lantern Festival that truly captivates, with its enchanting rituals that bathe the city in glow and symbolism, carrying its magic all the way through to the beginning of March.

Centred in the city’s historic Huangpu neighbourhood, the festival transforms the streets into a dreamscape of light, with dazzling lantern installations depicting horses and other mythical creatures strung across the streets, making for a stunning spectacle. A stroll through the beautifully lit-up Yuyuan Garden, a classical Chinese garden dating back to the Ming dynasty, is a must.

Images: shutterstock

Art for All

This is also the season when the metropolis’ leading art galleries unveil their most cutting-edge exhibitions. At the Shanghai Museum, overlooking the expansive People’s Square, a show dedicated to the qipao, the traditional Chinese silk dress, will capture the timeless glamour of old Shanghai.

The glass-draped Museum of Art Pudong (MAP), which sits beneath the soaring Oriental Pearl Tower, hosts the first international display of a groundbreaking 'Picasso Through the Eyes of Paul Smith' exhibition, with works borrowed from the Picasso Museum in Paris. Whereas the gargantuan Modern Art Museum Shanghai, on the Huangpu River banks, is worth a visit for its jaw-dropping architecture alone.

Eat & shop

You’ll never go hungry in Shanghai, a city shaped by its port heritage and celebrated for a distinctive cuisine that reflects its long history of trade and exchange. This city is the home of the Shengjianbao, also known as pan-fried pork buns, shui jian bao, the slurp-worthy xiao long bao soup dumplings and terrific boat-fresh seafood. Breakfast is taken seriously, with staples like cong you bing, a type of spring onion pancake, and youtiao, fried dough sticks, which

Best time to visit

The ideal time to explore Shanghai is in spring (March to May) and autumn (September to November).

Image: mamsh.com
Image: shutterstock

UNMISSABLE MUSIC

OneRepublic

From Asia, With Love Tour Apr 25- International poprock favourites bring their global hits to Hongkou Football Stadium.

Jessie J No Secrets Tour

Mar 22- The British pop powerhouse performs live at Oriental Sports Center.

Daniel Lopatin

Tranquilizer Tour

March 28- American music producer and composer brings an electrifying performance to Bandai Namco Dream Hall.

jazz.org

can be relished for a few yuan from any street-side stall. Don’t miss a wander down Huanghe Road, known as Shanghai’s food street, to pick up quick bites. For something more refined, step into any branch of the ubiquitous Din Tai Fung, a Michelin-starred restaurant, which is surprisingly affordable! Its xiao long bao is legendary and you can watch the chefs make them fresh in the kitchen.

Rhythm Divine

Shanghai boasts an impressive array of world-class theatres and concert halls, with a calendar packed with special performances unfolding over the coming months. For classical music lovers, there is a Spring Festival concert (February 21) at Theatre YOUNG. But Shanghai is a city of jazz, enjoyed either in the lobby of the Fairmont Peace Hotel just off the Bund, or at Jazz at Lincoln Center, both of which attract a well-heeled international audience. But the hot ticket is the Shanghai International Musical Festival, from March to May, which attracts talent from around the world.

Image: Shanghai Culture Square

BEYOND BATTLE

The word samurai often conjures images of armour-clad warriors and epic duels, popularised by films and video games. But the British Museum, London, challenges this familiar image of Japan’s warrior elite. From February 3 to May 4, the exhibition 'Samurai' traces the warrior class’ real lives and enduring influence across popular culture, from Japanese armour-inspired Louis Vuitton designs to the video game Assassin’s Creed: Shadows.

MIND

PAGE TURNER

THE GREAT RESET

This futuristic read by H.E. March explores societal transformation through technology. Following the journey of an AI expert, Nour, the book invites readers to gain profound insights into global challenges, questioning whether humanity will progress through transformation or face global collapse as outdated political systems struggle to contain a world reshaped by AI. A must-read to understand the deep changes underway.

REDLINES REDRAWN

by Maj. Gen. Bipin Bakshi, Air Marshal Rajesh Kumar, Ambassador Anil Trigunayat & Brig. Akhelesh Bhargava

This book provides deep insights into the military and diplomatic dimensions of India’s decisive 88-hour conflict in May 2025, “Operation Sindoor”. Authored by senior military and diplomatic leaders, it explains planning and strategy, highlighting how the campaign reshaped India’s response.

FOR THE LOVE OF ART

The book is a powerful account of how theatres in Kerala were dominated by men for centuries, until women stepped onto the stage and changed the narrative. It spotlights women actors, writers and theatre workers who transformed Kerala’s theatre, earning nationwide recognition.

THE LOOK

Illustrated with over 200 photographs, including never-seen-before images, the memoir by the former First Lady of the United States captures her style evolution over the years. It shares candid stories that explore the joy and purpose of fashion, and how it can help you feel like the best version of yourself.

MEANDER

HIDDEN IN CHHATTISGARH

Nestled in Chhattisgarh’s Kanger Valley National Park, Dhudmaras, a UNWTO-recognised eco-village, becomes an ideal destination in February, with a cool weather inviting travellers to enjoy bamboo rafting and kayaking along the Kanger River, and treks through picturesque, lush green forests. Explore the rituals and traditions of the Dhurwa tribe and the enchanting Kotumsar Cave, a limestone wonder, with Chhattisgarh Tourism.

MASKED SPECTACLE

Monks, donning vibrant costumes and elaborate masks crafted from paper and clay, perform the Cham dance, a sacred ritual in Tibetan Buddhism. This powerful dance represents a dramatic enactment of the victory of good over evil and is often performed during the Losar Festival, the Tibetan New Year celebrated by Tibetan Buddhist communities primarily in Ladakh, Tibet, Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh. This year, Losar is being celebrated on February 18.

INDIA–GERMANY PARTNERS IN PROGRESS

India and Germany reaffirmed a future-focussed partnership, propelled by high-level diplomacy, shared values and agreements spanning technology, trade and security.

India and Germany marked 25 years of their robust partnership last year, an association built on democratic values, mutual respect and a shared commitment to innovation. This momentum was reinforced by the visit of the Federal Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany, H.E. Mr. Friedrich Merz, to India on January 12 and 13, 2026, and commemoration of 75 years of diplomatic relations. His interactions with Indian leaders underscored a strong political will to deepen collaboration, as articulated in Germany’s ‘Focus on India’ strategy and the German Coalition Treaty. During the visit, both sides signed multiple agreements to strengthen cooperation in key areas such as defence, trade, digital technologies, semiconductors, and critical minerals, while reaffirming support for a future EU–India Free Trade Pact.

The Indo-German partnership is strengthened by Germany’s strong cultural presence, led by the Goethe-Institut, the Federal Republic of Germany’s globally active cultural institute. With 154 institutes in 100 countries, the Goethe-Institut promotes access to the German language, fosters international cultural exchange and conveys a contemporary image of

Germany. In India, the Goethe-Institut, also known as Max Mueller Bhavan, has presence in Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata, Mumbai, Pune and New Delhi, playing an important role in nurturing intellectual exchange and creative dialogue.

Building on the recent visit, both nations seek to further strengthen cooperation in trade and investment, technology, education, skilling and mobility, and people-to-people ties. The India-Germany partnership continues to evolve as a model of global cooperation with enduring relevance.

The Indo-German scientific partnership dates back to 1974, with the signing of the InterGovernmental Agreement on Scientific Research and Technological Development. Since then, Germany has emerged as one of India’s prime technology partners, supported by strong institutional links across academia, research and industry.

LET THE RIVER DECIDE

F rom riding a battered motorcycle across the country to a DJ console by the Ganga, American musician Diplo’s relationship with India is less about destinations and more about surrender.

Long before global chart-topping songs, Grammy wins and festival headlining slots, Thomas Wesley Pentz from Tupelo, Mississippi, USA, had travelled to India at the age of 20 with little money, no plan and a restless hunger for sound. He bought a second-hand Royal Enfield motorcycle in Delhi, learnt to ride it, and pointed himself towards the unknown. “I didn’t know where I was going,” he recalls. “I just knew I had to keep moving.” Decades later, now known as world-famous DJ Diplo, he has returned to India and says, “for me, India was never a stopover. It was the beginning!” Adding, “but every time I come back, I feel the same truth that growth happens when you surrender to the unknown, when the road teaches you more than any classroom could.”

The Road as a Teacher

Diplo’s first journey across India unfolded on two wheels from Kolkata to Delhi, onward to Rishikesh, Gujarat, the Himalayan foothills, and farther still. Some nights, he slept on the bike itself. Other days, he hopped onto trains when fuel wasn’t an option. Chai stalls became lifelines and strangers became guides. In Gujarat, he paused long enough to volunteer during earthquake relief efforts. “India didn’t just

teach me independence,” he says. “It cracked me open creatively.”

He carried back records, rare Indian disco, experimental ragas, forgotten soundtracks and shaped the global bass sound he would later become known for.

River

Tales

If one city shaped Diplo’s inner geography, it was Rishikesh. By the time he arrived in the temple town of Uttarakhand, he was broke and exhausted. He slept on the floor of a yoga studio and wandered through record shops and along the riverbank. A spontaneous decision to dive into the river Ganga nearly turned fatal. “The river takes you wherever it wants,” he says simply. “People come to the Ganges to die, to be burnt and returned to it,” he reflects. “I went there to be reborn.”

Years later, when Diplo returned to Rishikesh to perform a quiet, one-hour DJ set by the riverbank, the moment felt less like a show and more like a homecoming. “It was a full-circle moment,” he says. “Not about the crowd, but about the memory.” I ndiGo to DEHRADUN www.goIndiGo.in

Discovering Rishikesh

Of course, there is the Beatles Ashram. But there’s more to Rishikesh. In fact, it’s a place where ditching the map is a better way to discover the destination,” he says.

Road Trip

In recent years, he’s often returned, headlining the Royal Enfield Motoverse festival in Goa and riding through Meghalaya and Assam's Kaziranga. “I actually bought another Enfield to take back to Los Angeles! I just did not want to leave the road behind entirely,” he laughs.

Tapovan in Rishikesh is one of his favourite areas, but while recollecting memories, he mentions having the most delicious chai-pakora at a roadside shanty just half a kilometre before Lakshman Jhula

"Thalis, chai, whatever finds you. You make the best friendships at local roadside eateries," iplo.

Listen More

Diplo adds how Rishikesh became his muse, "In this temple town, the sound of bhajans and chants has given me ideas for dozens of samples and snares."

Musician
Images: shutterstock
Don’t Rush
A bird’s-eye view of Holiyal village in Mushkoh Valley near Kargil.
Image: Matt Stirn

EkE xplore Kargil and the secrets that lie beyond it through a museum that carries forward the legacy of the last known trader of the Silk Route.

Words Muzammil Hussain Munshi
Tajir

Quest

Ladakhi bow and arrow, locally known as da and ju, rest beside British-made double-barrel guns. A Mongol wooden saddle stands near wool and silk carpets from Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kashgar and Yarkand regions. At first glance, they appear as neatly labelled objects. Look closer, and they become voices that echo stories from a world that once moved on hooves, feet and wind, carrying ideas, faiths and fortunes across continents. They are living memories of the historic Silk Route, preserved in the Munshi Aziz Bhat museum in Kargil, Ladakh. These items of yore were excavated from a shop-cum-sarai (inn) that served as a resting place for traders (tajir) in the high mountain town.

The Route

The Silk Route, named for the trading of Chinese silk but sustained by a large variety of essential goods, was never a single road. It was a living network of land and sea routes linking Asia with Africa and Europe. And Kargil was one of its most strategic pit stops. Set along the Suru River, a tributary of the Indus, the town thrived as a caravan halt. In 1920, my great-grandfather, Munshi Aziz Bhat, founded the shop-cum-sarai in Kargil that stocked everything from European soap and stationery to Central Asian carpets and ornate horse and camel accessories.

When borders were drawn in 1947, the trade routes collapsed overnight. The sarai fell silent, its goods locked away and forgotten for more than five decades. Then, in the early 2000s, a chance encounter of our family with an American Silk Route researcher, Dr. Jacqueline H. Fewkes, led to the rediscovery of thousands of traded objects hidden in the abandoned building.

The Legacy

Stepping inside the museum, housed in my home's attic, feels like entering a private archive of a global past. Hand-knotted carpets, copper cauldrons, silk and muslin, jewellery and camel and horse gear fill the space.

Among the collection’s highlights is a 1822 Namdah rug from Bokhara (Bukhara) in Uzbekistan, featuring tigers and bearing the name of an Indian aide to a senior British

Map is for representational purposes only.
Road from Leh to Kargil Image: Matt Stirn
Kargil
Srinagar
Kaksar

Leh to Kargil

Distance: Around 200 km

Travel Time: Around 5 hours

Best Season: April to September

The journey from Leh to Kargil is an adventure unto itself, traversing some of the most spectacular highaltitude landscapes in the world. The well-maintained highway winds through dramatic terrain that transforms with every passing mile.

Route Highlights

Magnetic Hill (approx 30 km from Leh)

Experience the famous point on the road, where vehicles appear to roll uphill.

Lamayuru Monastery (approx 127 km from Leh)

One of the oldest monasteries in Ladakh, set amid a “moonscape” of eroded hills.

Fotu La Pass (13,478 ft)

The highest point on the Leh-Srinagar Highway, offering panoramic views.

Mulbekh

Home to a 9-m-tall Maitreya Buddha rock carving dating back to around the 8th century.

Kargil Attractions

Suru Valley (around 100 km) for offbeat hikes to see the Nun Kun peak.

Hunderman Heritage Village (about 14 km) that houses Unlock HundermanMuseum of Memories.

Mushkoh Valley (around 70 km away) for dramatic views and, if lucky, a glimpse of the rare Himalayan brown bear.

Images: shutterstock

officer. There are also animal-motif spoons set with semi-precious stones and several bahi khata pieces, the rough-edged ledgers once used by Silk Route traders to record transactions. As a child, I would often scribble on them, unaware of their historic value as a tool of global commerce! Everyday relics include soaps and razors from London, buttons from Japan, glassware from erstwhile Czechoslovakia, dyes from Germany and handwritten Qurans and Bibles in the local Purigi language of Ladakh.

The Region

Kargil is often seen as a stop between Srinagar and Leh, mostly drawing travellers to the war memorial in Dras (Drass), around 60 km away. But not many are aware that this dramatic landscape was among the first inhabited areas of this high Himalayan region, shaped by the movement of traders, migrants from the Indus and Gilgit valleys and nomads from the Tibetan highlands. Their influence still lives on in local farming practices, beliefs and everyday rhythms.

Some exhibits from the museum

2

CITIES IN FESTIVE LIGHT

F ebruary brings festivities and fresh beginnings as China ushers in the Year of the Horse. Dive into the country’s festive mood with a trip to Guangzhou a nd Fos han.

No matter where you are in China, the Lunar New Year is a time for feasting and family reunions. Red is the colour of the season that is pasted as poetic couplets on doorways, in bright new clothes, in the paper confetti of firecrackers and the red envelopes of money given to younger relatives. Homes are cleaned, bad luck swept away and neighbours greeted with wishes for wealth and prosperity. But each region has its own unique customs and traditions, many going back centuries, while others are much newer. Experience them with a trip to southern China.

GUANGZHOU in bloom

In the southern city of Guangzhou, with its mild winters, holiday crowds buzz like bees at flower markets which spring up as the New Year approaches. Whole streets are commandeered by fragrant stalls selling orchids, narcissus and delicate pink peach blossoms, while miniature kumquat trees, heavy with golden-orange fruit symbolising wealth, are a fixture in the entranceways of homes and shops throughout the region.

In one of Guangzhou’s most historic districts, the Liwan Spring Festival Flower Market runs for three days in the lead-up to the Lunar New Year, inviting locals to feast on seasonal snacks and shop for auspicious blooms late into the night. Filling your home with flowers is a way to welcome the changing of the seasons and invite good luck for the year ahead. Interestingly, the Lunar New Year is also known as Spring Festival in China.

Images: shutterstock

FOSHAN festive beats

Just a short hop west from Guangzhou, Foshan is a city where tradition beats as strongly as the drums and gongs of its famous lion dances. A Lunar New Year spectacle going back to the Tang dynasty (618-907 CE), two performers, one at the head, the other at the tail, leap and twist in time to music, bringing to life their elaborate lion costume crafted from bamboo, silk and paper. Requiring great strength and acrobatic agility, the art form has links to Foshan’s centuries-old martial arts heritage. China’s best performers showcase their lion dance skills year-round at the Foshan Ancestral Temple, with extra shows put on at the Lunar New Year.

The temple’s historic Wanfu Stage is also the ideal venue to enjoy Cantonese Opera, a UNESCO-listed art form especially popular at the New Year. Performers with brightly painted faces use symbolic gestures to bring old legends and stories to life, filling the temple courtyard with music, colour and festive vibes.

When the big day finally arrives, and the fireworks subside, the streets fall quiet, and businesses close as families gather indoors to feast, rest and reconnect. From then on, February is above all a time for family and it won’t be until the end of the month that life across the country returns to its usual rhythm.

Image: shutterstock

SHENZHEN lunar spectacle

Markets Lights & Celebrations

Less bound to tradition than its Guangdong neighbours, the megacity of Shenzhen offers a more modern take on Lunar New Year in southern China. Throughout the city, urban plazas and theme parks come alive with colourful, hi-tech events, from illuminated lantern installations to large-scale light shows featuring LED projections and synchronised drones. Districts like Nanshan, Futian and OCT Harbour are where most of the action takes place.

Lunar New Year markets pop up in malls and shopping centres, selling decorations like red lanterns, gifts of nuts and fruits and a sea of seasonal snacks, from candied kumquats and melon seeds to sweet glutinous rice balls called tangyuan

Images: shutterstock

HOME ON WEEKENDS LEADERS ON WEEKDAYS

Weekday Boarding - The Modern Balance

For 16-year-old Ishaan, Monday mornings don’t begin with traffic jams or rushed school buses. They begin with a calm walk across a sunlit campus in the Aravali Hills, followed by an hour of self-learning before classes start.

Ishaan studies at Pathways World School, North India’s first IB continuum school, where a global ethos is lived every day. With students from over 18 nationalities and 2,200+ alumni worldwide, Pathways has quietly set the benchmark for international education in India.

He is part of a growing group of students choosing weekday boarding — a hybrid model offering global education standards without the rigid commitment of traditional boarding.

“In a day school, your time is controlled by commute and schedules”, Ishaan says, “Here, by Tuesday night, my Physics lab is done and I’ve had two hours on the football field. Living where I learn gives me back nearly 10 hours a week — for my interests or just thinking”.

That time matters in the IB Diploma Programme, which prioritises independent inquiry over rote learning. Students complete a 4,000-word Extended Essay and manage sustained academic workloads.

“Having structured self-study, regulated screen time, and access to mentors till 7:00 p.m makes a huge difference”, Ishaan explains. “I’m not just studying — I’m researching”.

This rigour has consistently placed Pathways World School among the top-ranked international schools in India, with results consistently above world averages. Weekday boarding strengthens this advantage by embedding structure, mentorship, and discipline into daily life.

“Since joining the weekday boarding programme, we’ve seen our child become more organized, confident, and independent - yet still deeply connected to home. That balance is priceless”

- Mrs. Madhavan, Pathways World School Parent

For Ishaan’s mother, Sunita, a senior corporate professional, the decision was also about preserving family relationships. “Evenings used to be battles over homework and screens”, she shares. “Now that structure is handled by trained residence parents, consistent routines, and thoughtful care. When Ishaan comes home on Fridays, our conversations are about life — not assignments. Our weekends are truly ours”.

Beyond experience, the academic outcomes are compelling. Studies show IB students demonstrate stronger critical thinking, higher persistence at top universities, and greater global readiness — skills further sharpened in residential learning environments.

At Pathways World School, this is supported by robust pastoral care, including resident medical staff, counsellors, wellbeing experts, and nutrition specialists — creating a carefully designed campus ecosystem.

As Indian education evolves, weekday boarding is emerging as a powerful middle path: the independence and rigour of a global education during the week, and the comfort of home on weekends. For families like Ishaan’s, it’s not a compromise — it’s an advantage.

Aravali Retreat, Off Gurgaon-Sohna Road, Gurugram, Haryana 122102 www.pws.edu.in

When the Sea Healed Itself

A long Kenya’s tranquil coastline, an ocean once stripped bare now pulses with life, revived by a community’s s teadfast act of protection.

Shivya Nath

Photography Contribution by Lyndsey McIntyre

Have you ever seen an octopus camouflage itself to look like a coral? Or a porcupine fish puff up to almost four times its original size to scare predators? These are not scenes from a documentary reel or aquarium illusions. These are real, pulsing nature's marvels, unfolding just beneath the surface of the Indian Ocean, at a quiet stretch off the coast of Kenya.

Kenya has several spectacular beaches, including Diani.
Image: shutterstock

The Journey

On a bright winter morning, we rattle away along a quiet coastal road in a tuk-tuk, past sleepy villages dotted with ancient baobab trees, over a bone-shaking dirt track that feels like a test of faith. When we finally stop, the sea greets us in impossible shades of blue. We have arrived at Kuruwitu, one of Kenya’s most beautiful snorkelling spots and, as I am about to learn, something far rarer. It's Kenya’s first community-owned and managed marine park.

Our host, Jon, welcomes us like family, hands us snorkel masks and water shoes, and gestures toward the water. “Follow me,” he says. What lies ahead is not just a swim but a revelation in how a community can protect, revive and fiercely love its ocean.

We walk for several minutes on the soft white sand, then wade into the low tide, carefully following Jon’s footsteps to avoid slipping on the rocks or stepping on spiky black sea urchins hiding away in shallow rock pools. En route, Jon grabs a sponge

What to try

Deep sea tours, dhow rides, snorkelling and dolphin or whale watching tours. Dolphin tours are best done between December and February. Also try bush excursions and village tours.

(Porifera) from the seabed to scrub our snorkel glasses clean, more effective than any artificial cleaner. Unlike the familiar seascape of coastal Kenya, there are no fishing boats here, no nets skimming the horizon. Instead, the water lies undisturbed. In 2005, the local community of Kuruwitu took a radical step, declaring the 30-hectare-expanse of ocean here a Marine Protected Area (MPA).

The Conservation

In the late '90s-early 2000s, this area was nearly devoid of fish. Overfishing had dangerously depleted the fish and coral stock. As the ocean warmed due to climate change, coral bleaching was an immediate threat too. Elders in the village realised the dangers and laid the foundation for Kenya’s first coral-based community-managed MPA. No fishing was allowed in the MPA, enabling an increase in the fish diversity and volume, while also creating a breeding ground for fish in the rest of the ocean. Alternate income sources, including tourism and conservation grants, enabled the

Image: shutterstock

Images: kuruwitukenya.org

I ndiGo to NAIROBI www.goIndiGo.in

community to offset the loss of their fishing income. It was a win for the marine life, the community and conscious travellers.

The

Adventure

As a result, the ocean here has been reborn, its underwater world unveiling a kind of magic that feels more cinematic than real. So when, after nearly half an hour of wading through the shallows, Jon finally asks us to put on our snorkel gear, it feels like the curtain is about to rise on the main act.

“Don’t touch the coral”, he warns sternly, as we follow his lead and plunge ourselves into the ocean. My eyes take a moment to adjust from the blinding glare of the sun above to the colourful blue water below. I take a deep breath through my snorkel tube as schools of tiny orange fish swim past me, and marvel at the magnificent corals surrounding me.

As I swim along, fish of every colour and size drift into view - yellow butterflyfish, spotted porcupine fish, crimson featherstars, striped Indo pacific damsel and thorny starfisheach one a brushstroke in a living seascape. Further on, metal frames rise gently from the seabed, now softened by young coral and surrounded by curious fish, quiet markers of the patient work underway to heal this protected reef.

Time loosens its grip in this wild, breathing world below. When I finally surface, salt-skinned and exhilarated, Jon explains how these waters were once depleted and how collective care brought them back to life. I realise that Kuruwitu is not just a place you snorkel through, but a reminder that when a community chooses to protect the sea, the ocean remembers and gives back in colour, abundance and grace.

Image
Lyndsey McIntyre

WINGS OF GROWTH: KP GROUP EXPANDS ACROSS INDIA AND BEYOND

F"By integrating renewable energy and advanced manufacturing, we are creating a platform for long-term growth while contributing meaningfully to India’s and the world’s green energy transition."

of KP Group.

rom the air, India’s landscape tells a story of movement and ambition. On the ground, KP Group is quietly shaping that narrative through clean energy and advanced manufacturing. With three listed companies, KPI Green Energy, KP Energy and KP Green Engineering, the Group’s growing footprint now spans multiple states and countries.

Installation of 1st Green Hydrogen Plant and Asia’s Largest Galvanising Kettle

Among KP Group’s recent milestones is the installation of its first green hydrogen plant at Bharuch, Gujarat. What makes this milestone particularly significant is green hydrogen integration with Asia’s largest galvanising kettle, which was recently installed at the Group’s Matar facility in Bharuch.

KP

Group:

Growing Across India and Beyond

While Gujarat remains its strong base, KP Group’s growth story today streches far beyond. KP Group has in progress and upcoming renewable projects in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka and Odisha — showcasing the Group’s ability to deliver at scale, across terrains and sectors.

Internationally, KP Group is advancing renewable energy initiatives in Botswana, including proposals for up to 5 GW of projects, while building partnerships across the UAE and South Korea in areas such as green hydrogen, energy storage and advanced power electronics.

As KP Group expands across India and overseas, sustainability remains at the core — powering growth today while shaping a cleaner tomorrow.

In recently announced 3Q results, KPI Green Energy and KP Energy reported 9 months consolidated revenue of ₹28,029 million, reflecting YOY growth of 62%, along with cash profit of ₹6,522 million, up 82%, and PAT of ₹4,565 million, registering a growth of 57%.

FIVE GREENS OF RARE LUXURY

A rjuna Award winning golfer Shiv Kapur takes you on a personal tour of the Middle East’s most unforgettable, luxurious, and world-class golf courses.

Bharat Express delivers responsible Hindi journalism—shaping national discourse, pursuing facts with integrity, and serving the public interest with truth, courage, and consistency.

Game On

Travel is the only thing you buy that makes you richer, I realised this even before I turned professional back in 2004. I had already represented India in the Eisenhower Trophy for consecutive editions in 2000 and 2002 and secured the individual gold medal for the nation at the Asian Games in Busan, South Korea, in 2002. Golf took me to various nooks and corners of the planet and, over the years, enriched me with experiences, cultures, and memories, making it a valued investment in itself.

If there’s one region that continues to attract me, it’s the Middle East. Beyond famous skylines, luxury golf unfolds across Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Oman, desert-carved fairways, oceanfront greens and secluded royal retreats where silence, sun and sport meet. What was once viewed simply as a convenient winter stop on the professional calendar has evolved into one of the most luxurious golf destinations anywhere in the world. If I were to rank the courses that stay with me the most, this would be my personal selection:

Yas Links, Abu Dhabi

It’s rare to find genuine links-style golf in this part of the world, and Yas Links pulls it off beautifully. Opened in 2010 and developed by renowned designer Kyle Phillips, the 18-hole championship course is the new home of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship on the DP World Tour. Set on the water’s edge with dramatic views of the Arabian Gulf, it not only attracts experienced international golfers but has a 9-hole par three course and practice facilities for families to try their hands at.

Royal Greens Golf, Saudi Arabia

Nestled in the Al Murooj district of King Abdullah Economic City, the first dedicated golf community on the western coast of Saudi Arabia, the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club presents panoramic views of the Red Sea beaches. Opened to the public in 2018, the around 7,000-yard desert-lined layout designed by Dave Sampson has hosted the $5 million PIF Saudi International from 2019 to 2023 and LIV Golf’s Jeddah events from

"GOLF TOOK ME TO VARIOUS CORNERS OF THIS PLANET AND ENRICHED ME WITH EXPERIENCES, CULTURES, AND MEMORIES."

2022 to 2024, solidifying its reputation as a stand-out venue for international golf events. Stacked with a luxurious clubhouse offering the world’s best spa, health club and fine dining experience, among others, Royal Greens reflects Saudi Arabia’s growing presence in global golf.

Majlis Course, Dubai

Dubai has been home to my family and me for almost 20 years. So, receiving the Dubai Golden Visa in 2021 was the cherry on my cake. I strongly feel the Majlis Course is where Middle Eastern golf truly announced itself to the world. Established in 1988, the Majlis has aged gracefully, retaining its relevance while embracing the modern Dubai around it. If you find time while in Dubai, no trip is complete without a visit to the Iconic Dubai Creek, with probably the most striking clubhouse and views of Dubai.

Al Mouj Golf Club, Muscat

Few courses in the region can match its natural setting. With the ocean on one side and mountains on the other, Al Mouj feels refreshingly open and unforced. Established in 2012 and designed by Greg Norman, Al Mouj is an ecological wonder that almost feels like a wildlife park. The natural lakes and plethora of flora and fauna, including 173 bird species, add to the unforgettable experience. Al Mouj is soon to open doors to a fully modern clubhouse equipped with multiple indoor padel courts, a fully-equipped gym, a unique TopTracer driving range technology, luxury retail outlets and inviting restaurants, making it one of the most attractive golf escapes.

Doha Golf Club, Qatar

Holding the distinction of being one of the first grass golf courses in the Middle East, Doha Golf Club, which was established in 1998, is a 7,374-yard monster designed by Peter Harradine that is strong off the tee, bold in its green complexes, and capable of producing real drama when the wind picks up. The course features eight strategically positioned lakes, 65 giant cacti imported from Arizona, and numerous limestone formations, offering a visually stunning and challenging experience for golfers of all levels.

Career Highlights

Two-time European Challenge Tour winner, including victories at the 2013 Gujarat Kensville Challenge and 2013 Dubai Festival City Challenge Grand Final.

Winner of two PGTI-sanctioned events: The 2012 Shubhkamna Champions and 2021 Jeev Milkha Singh Invitational presented by TAKE.

Winner of four titles on the Asian Tour, 2005 Volvo Masters of Asia, 2017 Yeangder Heritage, 2017 Panasonic Open India and 2017 Royal Cup.

Recipient of India's prestigious Arjuna Award in 2002.

MAJOR GOLFING EVENTS TO TRAVEL FOR IN 2026

March 10-15

THE PLAYERS Championship at TPC Sawgrass, Florida, USA

March 26-29

Hero Indian Open at DLF Golf & Country Club, Gurgaon

*April 9-12

Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club, Georgia, USA

*May 11 -17

PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club, Newton Square, USA

*June 18-21

U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club, New York, USA

*July 1 2-19

The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale Golf Club, Southport, England

September 2 2-27

Presidents Cup at Medinah Country Club, Chicago, USA

October 15-18

DP World India Championship at Delhi Golf Club, New Delhi

October 22-25

Hero Women’s Indian Open at DLF Golf & Country Club, Gurgaon As told to Rohit Bhardwaj

*Major championships

Image: Asian Tour
Image: shutterstock

CREATING A BRIGHTER FUTURE TOGETHER, ONE SMILE AT A TIME

By partnering with the world’s leading cleft-focused organisation, corporations are creating meaningful CSR initiatives that inspire audiences and showcase their brand as a force for good.

Smile Train believes that every child with a cleft deserves the opportunity to live a full, healthy life. To achieve this, the organisation has built a global movement that empowers local doctors through training, funding, and resources to provide 100% free cleft surgeries and comprehensive care within their own communities. Since 1999, this model has transformed more than 2 million lives worldwide, giving children not only the ability to eat and speak but also the confidence to smile and dream again. “Smile Train represents a new standard of compassionate care which ensures that every child receives not just free surgery, but holistic treatment,” says Mamta Carroll, Sr. Vice President and Regional Director - Asia, Smile Train.

IMPACT IN INDIA

ON TRUST AND TRANSPARENCY

• Not-for-profit registered under Section 8 of the Companies Act.

• CSR1 registered with Ministry of Corporate Affairs.

• FCRA-registered NGO.

• Registered with NITI Aayog.

• Doing Good For Bharat 2025 – Winner Healthcare.

THE BUSINESS OF LIVING LONGER

T he business of longevity is a booming one, and there are many treatments that may hold real hope, say Trisha Thadani from , w i th contributions from Daniel Gilbert and Lauren Weber.

Just beyond the flashing slot machines and cigarette-saturated casino air, thousands of the health-obsessed gathered in a convention hall in Las Vegas, USA, to demonstrate their hacks for living longer. They infused ozone into their bloodstreams, stood on vibrating mats, swallowed samples of supplements and took scans of their livers. The recent gathering of wellness clinic operators, doctors and anti-ageing enthusiasts offered a vivid snapshot of a booming industry built upon the promise of longer, healthier and more vibrant lives. At the centre are customers willing to take risks with unproven treatments and spend extraordinary

Images are for visual representation only

Image: shutterstock

sums of money to extend their lives. “There’s always something new in the longevity business,” Veronica Zarco, a partner at a clinic in Miami Beach, USA, said after testing out a $60,000 light bed. “So we want to be on top of our game.”

The Longevity Race

At its core, anti-ageing medicine revolves around the reality that the older we are, the weaker our hearts, the more brittle our bones and the more susceptible we become to afflictions like cancer, heart disease and dementia. Longevity experts theorise that if humans can slow the natural ageing process, then we can avoid debilitating ailments and live longer and healthier.

Human ageing is increasingly recognised as a key area of research, with major institutions such as Brown and Harvard universities studying ways to slow or reverse natural declines. Numerous clinical studies are also exploring strategies to extend overall health. At the same time, critics warn that longevity medicine exists in a regulatory grey area where influencers can promote unsafe protocols and clinics exaggerate the benefits of their treatments. “A lot of this space is dominated by

medical influencers, and not scientists,” said Douglas Vaughan, director of the Potocsnak Longevity Institute at Northwestern Medicine. “We’re still in the discovery mode, and we are trying to find the truth and interventions that are scalable, affordable and effective up to 99 per cent.”

Across the world, there are hardly any regulatory pathways to approve medications specifically targeted to ageing. Meanwhile, the big money keeps flowing in.

Investment Flows

LONGEVITY EXPERTS THEORISE THAT IF HUMANS CAN SLOW THE NATURAL AGEING PROCESS, THEN WE CAN AVOID DEBILITATING AILMENTS AND LIVE LONGER.

Global investment in longevity companies surged to $8.49 billion in 2024, a 220 per cent increase from the previous year, according to industry analysts. Much of that investment was centred in the United States, they say. The longevity and preventive wellness marketdefined as the money customers spend on products, services and technologies aimed at extending their lives and enhancing their health - is expected to explode globally from $784.9 billion in 2024 to $1.9 trillion by 2034, according to MarketResearch.com. Silicon Valley figures have been behind some major investments in recent years. In 2021, Altos Labs, a biotech start-up focussed on anti-

Cashing In

The boom in consumer demand has inspired as many as 800 longevity clinics to spring up around the US, according to some estimates. These clinics often charge as much as tens of thousands of dollars for a single visit. Common offerings include infusions of NAD+, a molecule found in all cells that clinics often claim can help with energy, brain function, anti-ageing, or recovery; hyperbaric oxygen chambers, a pressurised chamber where customers breathe pure oxygen; and chelation therapy, a treatment that removes heavy metals from the body. None of those treatments has been proven in large-scale human trials to slow ageing.

E

ageing, launched with $3 billion in funding from wealthy investors that reportedly included Jeff Bezos. The company says its aim is to rejuvenate cells to a more youthful state in a way that would prolong a healthier life. Also in 2021, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman invested $180 million into Retro Biosciences, a start-up that says it is developing therapies to add “10 years to healthy human lifespan.” The company is currently “fundraising for the next stage of expansion,” said Joe Betts-LaCroix, CEO of Retro Biosciences.

XPERTS SAY INVESTORS WILL CONTINUE FLOCKING

TO THE SECTOR AS THE POPULATION AGES. AND 60 WILL BE THE NEW 40.

Erskine Thompson, 60, is unbothered by treatment costs or criticism. Toward the back of the exhibition hall in Las Vegas, Thompson was among a steady stream of attendees who sat down on black plastic chairs while a nurse poked an IV into their arms. After their blood snaked its way through the tubes, the nurse took a syringe of ozone gas and pumped it into the IV bags, turning their blood from a deep, rich colour into a bright, frothy, bubbly red before funnelling it back into their bodies. This ozone therapy treatment, offered at the conference by a Michigan-based company, Simply O3, is an increasingly popular one among providers who claim the treatment helps boost immunity and reduce inflammation. It’s also lucrative. The average clinic generates an additional $60,000 per year by adding IV ozone therapy, according to a company brochure. SimplyO3 did not respond to a request for comment.

Robert Goldman, who co-founded the group that started LongevityFest, the American Academy of Anti-Ageing Medicine (A4M), said companies and investors will continue flocking to the sector as the population ages. In the past few years, he said, the industry has experienced an “explosion we’ve never seen,” and he predicted it will continue to grow “at a rate that will boggle your imagination.” “Sixty will be the new 40, and 90 will be the new 60,” Goldman said.

Thompson said he has seen the impact with his own eyes. He first came across ozone therapy in Mexico, when his mother-in-law was being treated for Stage 4 cancer. He said the treatment helped her walk and talk in her final months of life. When he and his wife saw the therapy in the exhibition hall for $100, a special conference price, they immediately jumped at it, thinking they could use an energy boost during the long weekend in Vegas. “If a lot of people say it makes them feel better,” he said, “then why not try it?”

(In this article, $ refers to the US dollar.)

Image:
The Washington Post

TRUST AND TRANSPARENCY THE FOUNDATION OF MODERN HEALTHCARE

In

healthcare, trust is earned through transparency and consistency, and Davaindia exemplifies this commitment daily, nationwide.

As patients become more informed and discerning, they seek clarity in what they consume, how much they pay, and why certain choices are recommended. Transparency, today, is no longer optional; it is fundamental to credible healthcare delivery.

Pharmacy retail plays a critical role in this trust ecosystem. It is often the most frequent and personal point of contact between healthcare systems and individuals. Clear communication around medicines, pricing, alternatives, and usage empowers people to make informed decisions and fosters long-term confidence.

This philosophy is increasingly shaping the way organisations like Davaindia operate. By focussing on transparency in pricing and product information, Davaindia encourages informed choices rather than passive consumption. The availability of branded generic medicines, coupled with clear guidance, allows customers to understand that quality and affordability can coexist — without ambiguity or compromise.

Trust also extends beyond products to processes. From sourcing and quality assurance to staff training and customer interaction, consistency across touchpoints reinforces reliability. When systems are designed to prioritise clarity and accountability, trust becomes embedded rather than advertised.

In a country as diverse as India, transparency also has a broader impact. It bridges information gaps, reduces uncertainty, and helps healthcare reach more people in a meaningful way. When individuals feel confident about what they are consuming and why, healthcare becomes participative rather than intimidating.

As the healthcare landscape evolves, the organisations that will stand apart are those that treat trust as a responsibility, not a marketing tool. By embedding transparency into everyday operations and customer engagement, Davaindia reflects a growing shift towards healthcare that is open, informed, and respectful of the people it serves.

"Davaindia

is a pioneering force in the healthcare industry, reshaping the landscape by making high-quality generic medicines affordable and accessible to all. Our vision is to create a healthier and more equitable future for everyone we serve."

DRIVING GLOBAL CHANGE, MAHE’S COMMITMENT TO THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

L“Education is the most powerful tool to fight illiteracy, ill health and poverty.”
Dr. T. M. A. Pai (Tonse Madhava Ananth Pai), Founder, MAHE

ong before Manipal became a global education destination, the land it occupies told a very different story. Mannu Palla, a barren hillock overlooking the town, was rocky, unsuitable for agriculture and untouched by forest cover. The name Manipal itself reflects this landscape, “mannu” meaning mud and “palla” meaning pond. It was here that Dr. T. M. A. Pai envisioned an institution that would transform lives while remaining deeply respectful of its environment. True to this conviction, no agricultural or forest land was disturbed in building Manipal, a conscious decision that quietly laid the foundation for a philosophy of sustainability long before the term gained global prominence.

From this hillock emerged the Manipal Academy of Higher Education (MAHE), an institution that has shaped generations of learners and built globally respected centres of education and research. While MAHE is widely known for its academic excellence, a quieter story has unfolded over decades, one rooted in responsibility, balance and long-term thinking.

Guided by Dr. Pai’s belief that education must serve society, sustainability at MAHE became a way of life. Long before global discourse, its principles shaped teaching, infrastructure and community engagement, now aligning seamlessly with the UN Sustainable Development Goals worldwide.

That quiet commitment is now gaining wider recognition. MAHE has received several sustainability accolades, including being ranked No. 1 in India for environmental friendliness in the UI GreenMetric World University Rankings 2025, along with strong global positions in the QS Sustainability Rankings 2025 and the THE Impact Rankings 2025.

Sustainability at MAHE is lived every day, within classrooms and beyond. This commitment extends into the community through outreach programmes that promote sustainability literacy, engaging over 10,000 people annually.

Academic excellence and social responsibility advance together at MAHE. Recently reaccredited with a NAAC A++ grade and a CGPA of 3.65, and supported by internationally recognised ISO 9001, ISO 14001 and ISO 50001 certifications, the university upholds high standards in quality assurance, environmental stewardship and energy management.

As MAHE advances toward its 2030 SDG commitments and 2040 Net Zero goal, sustainability remains intrinsic to its purpose. Inspired by Life, MAHE unites academic excellence, responsibility and long-term thinking to create impact that endures, within the university and far beyond it.

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Shades on or off?

Believe it or not, your window shades play an important role in ensuring your safety. Here's how:

1. Keeping your window shades up during takeoff/ landing helps the cabin crew quickly assess the situation outside and form an exit plan in case of an unforeseen circumstance.

2. Once the doors are opened upon arrival, the cabin crew may ask you to close the window shades to maintain the cabin temperature and ensure your comfort and safety.

Please follow your cabin crew’s instructions for a safe flight.

WINGS MEETwheels

Born in Darjeeling, Manisha’s dream took flight watching her cousin don an airline uniform. From hospitality to the skies, her path was paved with curiosity. In 2018, she stepped into an IndiGo uniform and soared ever since. “Flying changed me,” she says.

Off the crew hat and wings, Manisha shifts gears to fuel her passion for travel. A chance Hyderabad encounter sparked her biking passion. Inspired by women riders, she bought her own machine, allowing her to feel the wind in her hair.

A dream destination, Manisha reminisces about her solo trip to Ladakh, crossing over Khardung La, one of the world’s highest motorable passes. “It’s every rider’s dream, and I am so proud to have fulfilled it for myself,” she mentions with a smile.

At IndiGo, her dual passions earned her the badge “Biker Manisha”. “I fly in heels and ride on wheels,” her words capture the spark. Today, Manisha embodies the joy of chasing skies and highways, unbound.

Should you spot her winging your flight, you may hear revving stories.

My tips: Explore Magnetic Hill, taste tingmo from street vendors, sip butter tea, and go to The Terrace for a wine and dine evening.

An IndiGo cabin attendant by profession and a biker by passion, Manisha lives her dreams across skies and highways. Manisha Sundas
Senior Cabin Attendant, IndiGo

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IndiGoReach is committed to creating impact through flagship initiatives in Heritage Conservation, Skill Development in Travel, Transportation, Logistics, and Hospitality (TTLH), and Environment Conservation. Additionally, we continue to enhance livelihood of women by supporting agriculture and allied activities.

ur partners - PRADAN, AFARM, and Grameen Sahara are leading efforts to gain access to essential agricultural inputs, credit facilities, market linkages, and robust support systems built around community institutions.

In FY 2025–26, IndiGoReach reached out to over 1 lakh women in more than 800 villages, across the country, enabling them to build sustainable livelihoods and strengthen economic resilience.

Together, these women are creating ripples of positive change, reshaping narratives and inspiring others.

he program has empowered identified women to become decision-makers and recognised experts in finance and agriculture within their communities. Some have even joined the boards of their Farmer Producer

Connecting the world one dot at a time

USA

USA

San Francisco Washington, D.C.

Miami New York San Francisco Washington, D.C.

2200+ f light s daily, across 130+ domestic and international destinations.

2200+ f light s daily, across 140+ domestic and international destinations.

The map above is for illustrative purposes and is not drawn to scale. All IndiGo direct destinations in pink. All codeshare destinations in green. Chengdu, Guangzhou, Yangon are cur rently non-operational

The map above is for illustrative purposes and is not drawn to scale All IndiGo direct destinations in pink. All codeshare destinations in green.

AFRICA

AFRICA

Mauritius

Mauritius

Nairobi

Nairobi

Seychelles

Seychelles

Cape Town

Casablanca

Cape Town Casablanca

Dar-es-Salaam

Dar-es-Salaam

Johannesburg

Johannesburg

Kilimanjaro

Kilimanjaro

EUROPE

EUROPE

Amsterdam

Amsterdam Athens

Manchester

Athens

Copenhagen

Basel

Belgrade

London (Heathrow)

Birmingham Brussels

A F R I C A

ASIA

Abu Dhabi

Almaty

Bahrain

Baku

Bali

Bangkok

Chengdu

Colombo

ASIA

Abu Dhabi

Almaty

Bahrain

Baku

Bali

Bangkok

Colombo

Dammam

Dammam

Dhaka

Dhaka

Doha

Dubai

Fujairah

Doha

Dubai

Fujairah

Guangzhou

Hanoi

Guangzhou

Hanoi

Ho Chi Minh City

Jaffna

Jakarta

Jeddah

Jakarta

Jeddah

Kathmandu

Kathmandu

Krabi

Krabi

Kuala Lumpur

Ho Chi Minh City

Hong Kong

Istanbul

Hong Kong

Istanbul

Jaffna

Kuwait

Langkawi

Kuala Lumpur

Kuwait

Langkawi

Madinah Male

Madinah

Male

Muscat

Penang

Phuket

Muscat

Penang

Phuket

Ras Al-Khaimah

Riyadh

Sharjah

Singapore

Tashkent

Johor Bahru

T bilisi

Johor Bahru

Kota Kinabalu

Ras Al-Khaimah

Riyadh

Siem Reap

Sharjah

Singapore

Tashkent

Kuc hing

Kuc hing

AUSTRALIA

Adelaide

AUSTRALIA Adelaide

Kota Kinabalu

T bilisi Yangon

India by IndiGo

Connecting you to ever y corner of the countr y.

Agartala

Agatti

Agra

Ahmedabad

Aizawl

Amritsar

Ayodhya

Bagdogra

Bareilly

Belagavi

Bengaluru

Bhopal

Bhubaneswar

Bikaner

Chandigarh

Chennai

Chhatrapati Sambhaji Nagar Coimbatore

Darbhanga

Dehradun

Delhi

Deoghar

Dharamshala

Dibrugarh

Dimapur

Diu

Durgapur

Gaya

Ghaziabad (Hindon)

Goa

Gondia Gorakhpur Guwahati

Gwalior

Hubballi

Hyderabad

Imphal

Indore

Itanagar

Jabalpur

Jagdalpur

Jaipur

Jaisalmer

Jalandhar (Adampur)

Jammu

Jharsuguda

Jodhpur

Jorhat

Kadapa

Kanpur

Kannur

Khajuraho

Kishangarh

Kochi

Kolhapur

Kolkata

Kozhikode

Kurnool

Leh Lucknow

2200+ flight s daily, across 140+ domestic and international destinations

Madurai

Mangaluru

Mumbai

Mysuru

Nagpur

Nashik

Navi Mumbai

North Goa

Pantnagar

Patna

Prayagraj

Puducherry

Pune

Purnea

Raipur

Rajamahendravaram

Rajkot

Ranchi

Rewa

Salem

Shillong

Shirdi

Shivamogga

Silchar

Srinagar

Sri Vijaya Puram

Surat

Thiruvananthapuram

Thoothukudi

Tiruchirappalli

Tirupati

Udaipur

Vadodara

Varanasi

Vijayawada

Visakhapatnam

THE LANGUAGE OF SPACE WITH

Gauri Khan

Design entrepreneur and film producer Gauri Khan discusses her new luxury ventures in Mumbai and her inspirations.

“Where Soraia is daylight and softness, Fielia is twilight and velvet.”

What inspires you as a design entrepreneur?

I’m inspired by the fact that no two spaces ask for the same approach. Restaurants are experiential by nature and therefore, very unique. It’s all about creating an experience that extends to how it feels, smells and what it sounds like. The constant shift between emotion, experience and function is what keeps me creatively driven.

How does the design approach differ between residential and commercial spaces?

Homes are deeply personal and layered with emotion, while commercial projects are more about brand identity and the functionality of the space.

What was your inspiration for Fielia and Soraia, the two new ultra-luxury hospitality venues you have designed recently?

The intent was to create a destination that goes beyond food and drink, one that sits at the intersection of culture, community and craft. Fielia is Mumbai’s first invite-only aperitivo cocktail cinema bar, while Soraia is a glasshouse dining space. For both, I wanted to bring in elements of timeless luxury, quiet elegance and slow indulgence. Fielia and Soraia (owned by Amit and Afsana Verma and Dhaval Udeshi) are set within the lush greens of the Mahalakshmi Racecourse, making nature central to their ambience. Abundant greenery frames the spaces, complemented by natural materials, subtle textures and soft, diffused lighting. The design brings these elements together to create an atmosphere that feels warm, calm and genuinely welcoming.

"I particularly enjoy the Shiso Leaf Chaat, with shiso leaves, pomegranate, a tangy chutney, sev, and the Honey Nut Brie, as well as the Forest Mushroom Risotto."

While the two spaces are interconnected, what distinguishes them from a brand standpoint?

Fielia is my interpretation of nocturnal luxury. It is a space designed for those who appreciate depth, mystery and a certain slowness after sundown. Where Soraia is daylight and softness, Fielia is twilight and velvet. It’s a place that invites you to lean in, listen closer and stay longer. My expression for Fielia was to create a world that feels intimate yet grand, familiar yet impossibly indulgent.

I loved having the opportunity to design both spaces in a way where we didn't have to compromise. Each space is unique, warm and inviting.

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