Indian-origin MBA student Anaheez Patel breaks silence after viral clash with billionaire Nikhil Kamath: ‘I grew up in privilege…’

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Indian-origin MBA student Anaheez Patel breaks silence after viral clash with billionaire Nikhil Kamath: 'I grew up in privilege...'

An Indian MBA student who went viral for questioning Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath is now speaking out about how her views on education are shaped by privilege and life experiences.Three days after Anaheez Patel’s exchange with Kamath at an Indian business conference sparked a nationwide debate about the value of a business degree, she addressed the backlash and praise in a detailed LinkedIn post.During the event, Patel directly challenged Kamath’s earlier comments criticizing MBA programs. “A few months ago you said that if you were 25 and got an MBA, you must be an idiot,” she said, questioning whether such remarks at a business school gathering were inconsistent. The moment went viral.Reflecting on this focus, Patel described her own experience growing up in a family that focused on education. Her father is a marine engineer, her mother is a teacher, and her sister is a pediatric surgeon. She said academics were “non-negotiable”, along with a wealth of extra-curricular activities including debating, drama, music and academic competitions.“I grew up with a level of privilege, nothing too much,” she wrote, addressing assumptions about her background. She explains that acquiring knowledge defined her upbringing. “Books are never questioned,” she said, noting that even family vacations often include museums and learning experiences. She describes herself as “very rich, in that sense.”Patel also shared a personal example to explain her beliefs about education. Her family supported domestic help in helping her daughters get an education, one of whom now has an MBA and is living a better life. “So when I talk about education, it’s not abstract. I see it firsthand in action,” she wrote.She defended her decision to question the billionaire. “I have a spine and I believe in using it,” she wrote. She criticizes “intellectual politeness”; Patel believes that avoiding disagreement does nothing to improve ideas.“Respecting (read again, respecting) differing opinions, when grounded in logic, leads to better thinking,” she added, crediting her upbringing with encouraging open dialogue at home.

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