From NASA to the Roadside: 5 Heartbreaking and Heroic Truths About India's Forgotten Math Genius In 1969, a young man at the University of California was completing a doctoral dissertation that promised to reshape the architecture of modern mathematics. By February 1993, that same man was found in a state of absolute destitution, picking through rags outside a roadside dhaba in Doriganj. The trajectory of Vashishtha Narayan Singh is a haunting study in the audacity of genius and the profound fragility of the human mind. While his name languished in relative obscurity for decades, recent tributes—such as the "Matholic" initiative at Mangaldai College—seek to reclaim a narrative that was once defined only by its tragic conclusion. The Student Who Was Literally Too Fast for the System The son of a police constable, Singh’s intellectual ascent began at the prestigious Netarhat School, where he ranked first in the state. Upon entering Patna Science College in 196...
The Forgotten “Mathematics Emperor”: 5 Surprising Lessons from the Man Who Taught a Subcontinent to Count The Ghost in the Textbook For generations of students across the Indian subcontinent, the struggle with mathematics was often personified by a heavy, dog-eared volume that lived at the bottom of a schoolbag. We remember the ink-stained fingers and the late-night oil lamps, but we rarely recall the name on the spine. One such name is Jadav Chandra Chakravarti. Though 2020 marked the centenary of his passing, he remains a "ghost in the textbook"—a figure whose influence is woven into the very fabric of Indian education, yet whose personal narrative has largely faded from public memory. A Bengali mathematician who lived from 1855 to 1920, Chakravarti was an architect of cultural synthesis during the British Raj. He did more than teach numbers; he bridged linguistic and communal divides, creating a shared intellectual language for a diverse nation. In unearthing his story, ...