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Kiran Ahuja

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Citizenship
  
United States

Kiran Ahuja Kiran Ahuja Reappropriate

Alma mater
  
University of Georgia School of Law

Occupation
  
Executive Director of The White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Profiles

Kiran ahuja x264


Kiran Ahuja is the Chief of Staff at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management. She assumed that position after serving for six years as the director of the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. An India-born American, she has also been a lawyer with the United States Department of Justice and a founding director of a non-profit, the National Asian Pacific American Women's Forum.

Contents

Kiran ahuja


Biography

Kiran Ahuja Kiran Ahuja Wikipedia

Ahuja was raised in Savannah, Georgia and she and her family were immigrants from India. She started college at Emory University, but quickly transferred to Spelman College and then went on to the University of Georgia School of Law, earning her J.D. degree in 1998.

Kiran Ahuja The Power of Stories Celebrating Immigrant Heritage Month Through a

After school, she went to work for the Department of Justice (DOJ), where she hoped to do civil rights work for the United States. Ahuja recalls that she found the pace of the DOJ to be too slow for her and left to create change through non-profit work.

Kiran Ahuja httpswww2edgovnewsstaffbiosahuja100jpg

Ahuja was the founding executive director of the National Asian Pacific Women's Forum (NAPAWF). She worked there from 2003 to 2008, during which time she turned the NAPAWF from a volunteer organization, to one with paid staff.

Kiran Ahuja Executive Director Kiran Ahuja Welcomes You to the WHIAAPI YouTube

Ahuja was appointed as the executive director of the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (WHIAAPI) on December 14, 2009. In this capacity, she has continued to work towards helping Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI) access services from the United States federal government. Her work has included increasing health care for AAPI and also inter-agency cooperation between WHIAAPI and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to "address exposure to health toxins by nail salon workers," many of who are Asian American. Other initiatives have been public to private, such as translating essential information about the Gulf Oil Spill for AAPI individuals still struggling with understanding English. Ahuja has also shared her own experiences, helping to "destigmatize depression and suicide when she opened up about her brother's suicide." Reappropriate stated that it was an important step towards ending "the stigma against mental illness among Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

She is also a regular contributor to the Huffington Post.

Kiran Ahuja White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders

Kiran Ahuja Kiran Ahuja YouTube

Kiran Ahuja Kiran Ahuja on May 19 National Asian amp Pacific Islander HIVAIDS

Kiran Ahuja No Community Should Be Invisible to its Government Kiran Ahuja

References

Kiran Ahuja Wikipedia