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More Than The Eye Can See tells the story of Gopinath Pillai, a
Singaporean businessman and diplomat who served as Singapore's
Non-Resident Ambassador to Iran (1989-2008) and High Commissioner
to Pakistan (1994-2001). Alongside working with prominent members
of Singapore's pioneering generation to strengthen the country's
manufacturing profile and international trade during the Cold War,
he broke into liberalising India as a trailblazing entrepreneur and
contributed to the nation's public life as the first Chairman of
NTUC Fairprice and Founder Chairman of the Institute of South Asian
Studies.A self-described 'Jack of All Trades', Gopi's memoirs frame
episodes of personal struggle against milestones in the progress of
the nation. Born in Singapore to Malayalee parents in 1937, Gopi
spent his early childhood in India throughout the Japanese
Occupation, where he witnessed the Communist Movement in Kerala
first-hand. When he returned to Singapore in 1946, Gopi grew up in
a multi-racial society taking its fledgling steps as a democracy.
His career took him all over - to Thailand and Malaysia as an
economist and journalist and the Middle East and America as a
manager - reflecting Singapore's early industrialisation and the
pursuit of its values and interests abroad and at home.Co-written
with John Vater, More Than The Eye Can See offers a panorama of a
man and his century.
More Than The Eye Can See tells the story of Gopinath Pillai, a
Singaporean businessman and diplomat who served as Singapore's
Non-Resident Ambassador to Iran (1989-2008) and High Commissioner
to Pakistan (1994-2001). Alongside working with prominent members
of Singapore's pioneering generation to strengthen the country's
manufacturing profile and international trade during the Cold War,
he broke into liberalising India as a trailblazing entrepreneur and
contributed to the nation's public life as the first Chairman of
NTUC Fairprice and Founder Chairman of the Institute of South Asian
Studies.A self-described 'Jack of All Trades', Gopi's memoirs frame
episodes of personal struggle against milestones in the progress of
the nation. Born in Singapore to Malayalee parents in 1937, Gopi
spent his early childhood in India throughout the Japanese
Occupation, where he witnessed the Communist Movement in Kerala
first-hand. When he returned to Singapore in 1946, Gopi grew up in
a multi-racial society taking its fledgling steps as a democracy.
His career took him all over - to Thailand and Malaysia as an
economist and journalist and the Middle East and America as a
manager - reflecting Singapore's early industrialisation and the
pursuit of its values and interests abroad and at home.Co-written
with John Vater, More Than The Eye Can See offers a panorama of a
man and his century.
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