"Sometimes, you have to leave home and everything you love to build a better future.
That's what Laxdip Pendharkar did four months ago."
That's what the Indian father of a 10-month-old says he told his wife before leaving for Scotland to pursue a master's degree in social innovation and entrepreneurship at the University of Strathclyde, the Guardian reports.
"My daughter understood that I was going away and was so excited to come to me," Pendharkar tells the paper.
"When the train was about to leave, she said bye to me."
Pendharkar, who's studying under the Chevening Scholarship program, says his daughter has started speaking a few words so she can now communicate on video calls.
Pendharkar, who works with rural consumers, tells the Guardian he chose Strathclyde because of its global reach, "the best benefit of studying in the UK is global exposure which gives me an opportunity to build a meaningful global network."
He says the hardest part of the application process was " synchronising the career plan with home country development, UK in India initiatives, and Chevening community engagement."
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