The US judge who once made cigarettes in India
Last week, when Indian-origin lawyer Surendran K Pattel took the oath as a district judge in a US court, he made headlines back home because of his inspiring journey. BBC Hindi's Imran Qureshi tells the story of a man who went from making hand-rolled cigarettes in India to becoming an arbiter of justice.
Mr Pattel, 51, who is from the southern Indian state of Kerala, has been appointed a judge in the 240th Judicial District Court in Fort Bend County in Texas state.
He was sworn in on 1 January, five years after he became a US citizen - his journey, Mr Pattel says, was all about "hard work, determination and a lot of struggle".
"But there were also a lot of people who supported and helped me at every stage of my life," he says, saying that the list is topped by his mother, whom he calls "a symbol of sacrifice".
Mr Pattel spent his childhood in grinding poverty. His parents were labourers who depended on meagre daily wages to feed their six children.
As a child, Mr Pattel would roll beedis - traditional cigarettes made by wrapping raw tobacco in leaves - "so that we could have three meals a day".
"My elder sister and I used to sit late into the night doing this," he says.
As a teenager, he dropped out of school after not scoring well in his exams. He had almost accepted his lot in life when his eldest sister died, leaving behind a 15 month-old daughter.
"The case was determined to be a suicide but I felt that justice had not been done in the matter. It still haunts me," he told the BBC without giving more details about the incident.
The tragedy spurred him to redefine his future and he rejoined school and studied hard. When he was in a two-year, pre-degree course before going to college, Mr Pattel often had to skip classes because he had to work too.
In his first year, he had to plead with his teachers after they asked him not to take the final exams due to low attendance.
"I didn't want to tell them that I wasn't going to class because of my financial situation because I didn't want sympathy," he says.
His teachers gave him another chance - they only learnt later from his friends that he had no choice but to work.
When the results came out, Mr Pattel surprised everyone by ranking second in his class.
He also decided that his future lay in law. "I never wanted to do anything else. I am so passionate about it," he says.
Mr Pattel's financial situation continued to pose challenges but he was helped by the generosity of people he met along the way.
One of them was a Mr Uttupp, who ran a hotel in Kerala.
"I told him if he did not give me a job, I would have to discontinue my education. He hired me as part of the housekeeping staff in the hotel," Mr Pattel says.
The relationship continued until Mr Uttupp's death.
"His brother Manuel even called me after the news broke that I had become a judge," Mr Pattel says.
Mr Pattel got a degree in political science in 1992 before studying law.
Four years later, he got a job with lawyer P Appukuttan and began working in the town of Hosdurg in Kerala's Kasaragod district.
"He was so enthusiastic that I trusted him. I entrusted all kinds of civil matters to him because he was capable of doing it," Mr Appukuttan told the BBC.
Mr Pattel worked there for a decade until his wife, Subha, got a job at a hospital in India's capital Delhi.
He decided to follow her because he "never wanted to come in the way of her career".
In Delhi, he worked with a Supreme Court lawyer for a few months before his wife had to move again - this time to the US.
"Even though I wasn't happy about leaving my profession behind, I followed her. Without her, I would not have been where I am today,'' Mr Pattel says.
The couple moved to Texas in 2007, where Mr Pattel worked in a grocery store for some time before realising that he could take the Bar exam in Texas. He then went on to get a degree in international law.
When Mr Pattel decided to run for the post of the judge with the Democratic Party, he had some unpleasant experiences - for instance, he was mocked for his Indian accent while campaigning, he says.
"But I was not hurt by it. Campaigns can be nasty sometimes. I think it doesn't matter how long you live here - what matters is how long you have served the community," he adds.
The American journey, he says, has been a rewarding one: "I became a citizen only in 2017 and now in 2022, I have won an election. I don't think this can happen in any other country."
His victory is also special for a personal reason.
While practising in Texas, Mr Pattel became very close to a senior lawyer, Glenden B Adams.
When Mr Adams died, his wife Rosalie Adams asked Mr Pattel to be a pallbearer.
On Wednesday, when he began his new role, "it was Rosalie Adams who put the robes on me at my private investiture in my courtroom".
-
Aston Villa announce Unai Emery as their new manager just FOUR DAYS after sacking Steven Gerrard... but caretaker Aaron Danks will remain in charge until November 1 while the Spaniard awaits his work permitHorslips guitarist Johnny Fean dies aged 71Gunman kills five, including child, at Texas homeSomaliland profileEd Sheeran, Adele, and Harry Styles among affluentest Britons under 35Top Zimbabwe author has conviction overturnedFrench trippers can enter Jersey without passportsBlinding flash over Kyiv was probably meteorSan Francisco 49ers acquire running back Christian McCaffrey from Panthers 'in exconvert for picks' in surprise blockbuster move for former eighth overall pickBusinesses 'need more detail on Windsor Framework'
Next article:Just Speak Oil activists assault 'Girl with a Pearl earring' painting at Dutch m utilizeum... as groaning visitors tell the 'stupid' protesters to 'shut up' when they begin preaching about the environment
- ·America moves a step closer to securing its first F1 driver in EIGHT years as Logan Sargeant is given Williams seat for 2023 - if he secures the required Super License points in F2 seaconsequentlyn finale
- ·'I'm very glad to be with my family'
- ·UK urges extension to Sudan ceasefire as deadline nears
- ·Four people wanted in Albania arrested in England
- ·Marcelo Bielsa tells Everton he DOESN'T WANT the job as manager - notwithstanding positive talks after flying in from Brazil - with Sean Dyche now in pole position
- ·Retired American doctor dies during Everest climb
- ·House arrest for man who threw gravel at Trudeau
- ·Organ-trafficking plot politician and wife jailed
- ·Amazon staff protest climate record and office return
- ·Qantas appoints new CEO to replace Alan Joyce
- ·Survivor of doomed Pearl Harbor warship dies at 102
- ·Sudan evacuees from around the world arrive home
- ·Top economist calls for 'lenient' migration rules
- ·Flambé fire kills two in Madrid restaurant
- ·Wheelchair user left to crawl off plane
- ·House arrest for man who threw gravel at Trudeau
- ·Yeezy come, Yeezy go! GAP rips Kanye West merchandise from their stores and removes collab website and Universal drops him - hours after Adidas terminated its componentnership with the rapper over his anti-Semitic outbursts
- ·Basketball shooting suspect surrenders in Florida
- ·Liberia country profile
- ·Explosions kill 17 in Pakistan counter-terror office
- ·Jeremy Renner shares photo of physical therapy session and reveals he's suffered more than 30 broken bones after star was almost crushed to death by 14,000-pound snowplow
- ·Protesting India wrestlers say police assaulted them
- ·Most populous nation: Should India rejoice or panic?
- ·Rwanda country profile
- ·BREAKING NEWS: Newcastle agree to sign Anthony Gordon for £40m - plus £5m in add-ons - with a medical set for tomorrow after the Everton youth product missed days of training to compel it through
- ·Four people wanted in Albania arrested in England
- ·Foxconn: iPhone maker hikes pay ahead of fresh model launch
- ·Stranded in Sudan with passports locked in Western embassies
- ·Sheriff explains where gunman was hiding
- ·US principal visits David sculpture after nudity row
- ·Kanye wanted to call his 2018 hit album Ye - HITLER - as anti-Semite rapper's disturbing history of praising Nazi leader is revealed
- ·Fleeing Sudan: First Britons to leave Cyprus for UK
- ·Vietnam objects to Australian coin with war-era flag
- ·Mass graves of starvation cult exposed in Kenya
- ·San Francisco 49ers acquire running back Christian McCaffrey from Panthers 'in exconvert for picks' in surprise blockbuster move for former eighth overall pick
- ·Mixed reviews for Biden's candidacy announcement