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Ramananda Prasad

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Nationality
  
Indian

Occupation
  
Engineer

Name
  
Ramananda Prasad

Spouse
  
Sadhana Prasad

Alma mater
  
University of Illinois

Religion
  
Hindu

Role
  
Engineer

Born
  
1938
Hargawan, Patna, British India (Now in Nalanda, India)

Employer
  
U. S. Navy Corps of Engineers (ret.)

Children
  
Sanjay Prasad, Reeta Raina

Education
  
Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur

Ramananda Prasad (born 1938) is the founder of the International Gita Society. He has translated the Bhagavad Gita into English in 1988 from the original Sanskrit texts. The book is in its fourth edition.

Prasad was born in a small hamlet, Hargawan, near Bodh Gaya in Biharsharif District of the Indian state of Bihar to a farmer who had 3 acres (12,000 m2) of land and six children to support. Ramanand had his pre-school education in the village from the late Mazahirul Haque, a Muslim headmaster who taught him English and Mathematics. After finishing his high school education at Mahadeva High School, Khusrupur, he passed his high school from Patna College in 1953. He attended Patna Science College from 1953 to 1955 and is a 1959 graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur, India, obtained his Master's Degree from the University of Toronto and earned his doctorate in Civil Engineering from the University of Illinois. Since then, he has been involved in research, teaching, engineering and consulting and worked for the U. S. Navy Corps of Engineers before retiring in 2000. He is a professor of Civil Engineering at San Jose State University and an adjunct professor of religion and psychology at the Union Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio.

References

Ramananda Prasad Wikipedia