• Friday, April 26, 2024

Business

Women must know they are not second class citizens: Nooyi

Indra Nooyi (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)

By: KeerthiMohan

Women must not see themselves as second class citizens and know that they too have arrived on the scene, Indra Nooyi, who has broken many glass ceilings as a businesswoman, said on Sunday.

“It does not matter, where you’re born and what your heritage was, I think the US gives you a great opportunity to be anybody you want to be as long as you work hard, you contribute positively to whatever you work on and in and you have integrity,” Nooyi told PTI in an interview.

Nooyi, 64, was on Sunday inducted into the prestigious National Portrait Gallery along with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Frances Arnold, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Earth, Wind and Fire.

The induction ceremony was marked with a star-studded gala that included former First Lady Michelle Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, among others.

Nooyi said it sends the message to the people that the US is a great country to make your future in.

“I think going forward, people like us paved the path for women to be viewed as equal, powerful and contributing as anybody else. And, so women should not feel like second class citizens. They should know they too have arrived on the scene. And their contributions will also be noticed irrespective of your background,” she said.

“I think that’s the key thing. To be an Indian American, to be included among business leaders in the portrait gallery basically says, here is a country that only cares about your contribution, not necessarily where you came from and who you are,” she said.

“It is a pretty special day today. Special because I’ve just begun to understand the value of the portrait gallery. I didn’t know a portrait gallery existed because I had never been to one. So, I came to visit this gallery about a year ago when they informed me about this. I was simply blown away by the fact that such a gallery existed, that portraiture is a way to tell the story of the country and all the people who contributed to it,” she said.

The Portrait Gallery, she said, tells a beautiful story.

“It’s not just a picture, it tells a story. If you go downstairs to the portrait gallery, there’s a room that is now showcasing the women’s suffragette movement. It’s a fantastic story of how the whole thing evolved,” she said.

The fact that they are now including businesspeople and they are “beginning to tell the story of how various businesspeople of all kind born here, immigrated here, from whatever country, doesn’t matter, all they say is you contributed to some thought or a change in the country, positive change and we appreciate you for that,” she said.

“The fact that they chose to put me as part of that is a bit emotional for me,” Nooyi said.

Pakistan Weekly

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