About

Infinity Foundation is a non-profit organization based in Princeton (USA), focused on research and education. It specializes in the field of civilization studies applying the Dharma lens to examine a broad range of topics. It disseminates its unique research findings through books, videos and public events.

The foundation seeks to create dialogue that breaks out of the dualities of anti- and pro- globalization forces, of the right vs. the left, of secularism vs. religion, of science vs. spirituality, of economic growth vs. ecological preservation. Globalization can be a positive force but it cannot simply be translated to Westernization of the planet – in cultural norms, in academic frameworks, in knowledge systems and in definitions of progress and patterns of development. To do so has enormous ecological implications in both biological and cultural terms. To create a global family, a “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam”, requires that indigenous non-Western civilizations get a seat on the table as equals in crafting the frameworks of discourse, rather than simply being used as exotic artifacts to be plugged into an overall Euro-Centric framework. Revitalizing the Indic discourse and helping India find its own voice in this dialogue is a key part of the mission.

The foundation has given over 400 grants for research, education and philanthropy, including grants to leading institutions of higher education, specialized research centers, as well as grants to many individual scholars. It has also organized several conferences and scholarly events in USA and India to bring out a balanced view of the many positive contributions from the Indian civilization.

The foundation has published game-changing original research that is widely disseminated through books, blogs and social media. It has a defined set of themes and goals in which it strives to be the leading think tank.

Team

Our Mentor and Guide

Rajiv Malhotra

Rajiv Malhotra was trained initially as a Physicist, and then as a Computer Scientist specializing in AI in the 1970s. After a successful corporate career in the US, he became an entrepreneur and founded and ran several IT companies in 20 countries. Since the early 1990s he has been researching civilizations and their engagement with technology from a historical, social sciences and mind sciences perspective. He has authored several best-selling books. His latest book on AI is titled, ‘Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Power: 5 Battlegrounds’, in which India is the case study to analyze the impact of AI in a variety of domains.

Our People

Manogna Sastry

Manogna Sastry is a Master of Science from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, with a strong background in theoretical physics and mathematics including General Relativity, Inflationary Theory, Quantum Field Theory and Astrophysics. Her research interests encompass the study of ancient India as well as seeking to understand the manifestation of the old spirit of the land through contemporary forms of philosophy, science and literature.

Divya Nagaraj

Divya Nagaraj is a Computer Engineer and a post-graduate in Management who joined Infinity Foundation as a Researcher and the host of ‘The Youth Asks’ series featured on the Rajiv Malhotra YouTube Channel. At Infinity Foundation, she oversees social media activities, manages a team of 20+ youth volunteers, develops educational material & other projects of IF that include the dissemination of the foundation’s original research activities. She also contributes articles to the Intellectual Kshatriya portal & other research projects.

Biswajit Malakar

Biswajit Malakar is a photographer/graphics designer and a film-maker by profession from the small town of Shillong, Meghalaya, India. With over 3 years of professional experience he is currently working as fulltime cinematographer & motion graphics animator with Infinity Foundation India. Other than his work he takes great interest anthropology and music.

Vandana Mishra

Vandana V Mishra has a Masters degree in Statistics from Mumbai University and Post graduate Diploma degree in Computer Science. She worked as a Research Associate in the department of Electrical Engineering Dept at IIT Kanpur. At Infinity Foundation India she is involved in various academic and promotional activities.

T. N. Sudarshan

T. N. (Therani Nadathur) Sudarshan is a Computer Scientist by profession, engaging primarily in the fields of Artificial Intelligence and related technologies. His research and practical interests in the extant civilizational encounter have been to formalise and enable the reification of the dharmic dialectic and its related semantics (both epistemologically and ontologically) not only in the socio-cultural space but also in pedagogy, both in the Sciences and Social Sciences.

R Buvaneswari

R Buvaneswari is a B.Com graduate from Bharathidasan University, currently employed as Admin Executive in Infinity Foundation India, Chennai. She has worked earlier with Unicef and FAO, Organizations of the United Nations and has more than 20 years of experience in various fields viz., Adminstration, Operations and Finance & Budgeting.

T. N. Sudarshan

Divya Sharma is a graphic designer from Delhi, India. She has a degree in Multimedia from Picasso Animation College, Delhi. Her aim is to always create compelling and effective designs, thumbnails, flyers, infographics & banners.

Our Trustees

Shalini P V

Shalini is a Managing Trustee at Infinity Foundation India. She is proficient in 7 languages. She has worked for about two decades in various roles as an engineer, teacher, student of language, translator, relationship manager and project manager for various projects in diverse domains.

Subhodeep Mukhopadhyay

Subhodeep Mukhopadhyay is a computer engineer and MBA (Finance) with a corporate background in data science and management reporting. At Infinity Foundation India, he oversees various research initiatives and academic projects in the areas of civilization studies and closely aligned with the organization’s goal of producing better understanding among different cultures. His current areas of research include dharma and business, social impact of technology and cross-cultural encounters.

Our Scholars

K S Kannan

Dr. K.S. Kannan is the Academic Director of Swadeshi Indology Conference Series organized by Infinity Foundation India. A renowned scholar of Sanskrit, he was formerly the Director at Karnataka Samskrit University, Bangalore, and has a rich teaching experience of over 35 years in the National College, Bangalore. He is a Nominated Member of the Indian Institute of Advanced Studies, Shimla.

Sharda Narayanan

Dr. Sharda Narayanan received Ph.D in Sanskrit from JNU, New Delhi. She has assisted in editing two volumes of papers presented at SI-3 Conference in Chennai where she currently teaches Indian Philosophy and Aesthetics.

Meera H R

Meera H R is a Senior Editor in charge of Swadeshi Indology journals. She has co-authored Vibhinnate, the Kannada translation of Being Different of Sri Rajiv Malhotra and Śrī Rāma Saṅkīrtanam, with Dr. K.S.Kannan.

Scholars who have contributed to Swadeshi Indology journals

Western Indology on Rasa: A Pūrvapakṣa
  • Naresh P. Cuntoor
  • Ashay Naik
  • K. Gopinath
  • Charu Uppal
  • Sreejit Datta
  • Shankar Rajaraman
  • R. Ganesh
Swadeshi Critique Of Videshi Mīmāṁsā
  • T. N. Sudarshan
  • Manogna Sastry
  • Shrinivas Tilak
  • Charu Uppal
  • Megh Kalyanasundaram
  • Alok Mishra
  • T. N. Madhusudan
The Land Of Dharma
  • Ravi Joshi
  • Yamuna Harshavardhana
  • Manogna Sastry
  • Megh Kalyanasundaram
  • Jayaraman Mahadevan
  • Akshay S. P.
  • Bimal Trivedi
  • K. Vidyuta
  • K. Vrinda Acharya
  • Shanthi Narayanan
  • Sundari Siddhartha
  • Shrinivas Tilak
Fount of Culture
  • Chitra Rao
  • Saraswati Sainath
  • A.V. Gopalakrishnan
  • V. Yamuna Devi
  • T.N. Sudarshan
  • Nilesh Oak
  • T.N. Madhusudan
  • Shivshankar Sastry
  • Subhodeep Mukhopadhyay
  • Parthasarathy Desikan
  • Padmaja Venkatesh
  • Prakruti Prativadi
Karnāṭaka Śāstrīya Saṅgīta: Its Past,
Present and Future
  • Gayathri Girish
  • Korada Subrahmanyam
  • Radha Bhaskar
  • V. Ramanathan
  • V. B. Arathi
  • Arvind Brahmakal
Chronology and Causation:
Negating Neo-Orientalism
  • Manogna Sastry
  • Megh Kalyanasundaram
  • Nilesh Oak
  • Ravi Joshi
  • M. V. Sunil
  • Rajath Vasudevamurthy
  • Sharda Narayanan
  • Arvind Prasad
  • Vishal Agarwal
  • Murali K. Vadivelu

History

Infinity Foundation specializes in the field of civilization studies applying the Dharma lens to examine a broad range of topics. We disseminate our unique research findings through books, videos and public events.

Wisdom and Compassion

The Foundation is a registered 501©3 Nonprofit organization that is classified as a private foundation by the Internal Revenue Service. The Foundation is also a registered Non-profit charitable organization in the State of New Jersey.

The Foundation provides two types of grants. One type is to nonprofit organizations in the following broad program areas: Charitable, Holistic Healing, Scientific, Religious, or Educational. The Foundation assists nonprofit organizations and public agencies committed to practices and policies that better the lives of all people. Under This type of grant, all work is done by the recipient and not by Infinity itself. this is because Infinity is a non-operating foundation.

In July of 1997, The Foundation submitted an additional request to the Internal Revenue Service to expand it purposes and mission to include creating, disseminating, and expanding a body of knowledge which clarifies or integrates philosophy, religion, science, psychology and non-traditional mystical disciplines; and bridging Eastern philosophies with Western thought. The Foundation received IRS approval for its expanded mission in December,1997. This ruling allows it to award grants to individuals for travel, study, fellowships or scholarships or for the production of a product which supports the expanded mission.

The Foundation provides national and international grants. All proposals are reviewed and approved by the Board Members of the Foundation. Applicable rules and regulations are followed with respect to the grants to foreign charities.

Press Kit

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Grants

Tax Status

The Foundation is a registered 501(C)3 Nonprofit organization that is classified as a private foundation by the Internal Revenue Service. The Foundation is also a registered Non-profit charitable organization in the State of New Jersey. Infinity Foundation is a non-profit organization based in Princeton (USA), focused on research and education. It specializes in the field of civilization studies applying the Dharma lens to examine a broad range of topics. It disseminates its unique research findings through books, videos and public events.

Charitable Tax-Exempt Status

INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY DISTRICT DIRECTOR 51 HOPKINS PLAZA BALTIMORE, ND 21201

THE INFINITY FOUNDATION A NEW JERSEY NON-PROFIT CORPORATION

Accounting Period Ending: June 30

Addendum Applies: Yes

Dear Applicant:
Based on information supplied, and assuming your operations will be as stated in your application for recognition of exemption, we have determined you are exempt from Federal income tax under section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code as an organization described in section 501(c)(3).

We have further determined that, as indicated in your application, you are a private foundation within the meaning of section 509(a) of the Code. In this letter we are not determining whether you are an operating foundation as defined in section 4942(j)(3).

If your sources of support, or your purposes, character, or method of operation change, please let us know so we can consider the effect of the change on your exempt status and foundation status. In the case of an amendment to your organizational document or bylaws, please send us a copy of the amended document or bylaws. Also, you should inform us of all changes in your name or address.

As of January 1, 1984, you are liable for taxes under the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (social security taxes) on remuneration of $100 or more you pay to each of your employees during a calendar year. You are not liable for the tax imposed under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA). However, since you are a private foundation, you are subject to excise taxes under Chapter 42 of the Code. You also may be subject to other Federal excise taxes. If you have any questions about excise, employment, or other Federal taxes, please let us know.

Donors may deduct contributions to you as provided in section 170 of the Code. Bequests, legacies, devises, transfers, or gifts to you or for your use are deductible for Federal estate and gift tax purposes if they meet the applicable provisions of sections 2055, 2106, and 2522 of the Code.

Contribution deductions are allowable to donors only to the extent that their contributions are gifts, with no consideration received. Ticket purchases and similar payments in conjunction with fundraising events may not necessarily qualify as deductible contributions, depending on the circumstances. See Revenue Ruling 67-246, published in Cumulative Bulletin 1967-2, on page 104, which sets forth guidelines regarding the deductibility, as charitable contributions, of payments made by taxpayers for admission to or other participation in fundraising activities for charity.

You are required to file Fora 990-PF, Return of Private Foundation or Section 4947(a)(1) Trust Treated as a Private Foundation. Form 990-PF must be filed by the 15th day of the fifth month after the end of your annual accounting period. A penalty of $10 a day is charged when a return is filed late, unless there is reasonable cause for the delay. However, the maximum penalty charged cannot exceed $5,000 or 5 percent of your gross receipts for the year, whichever is less. This penalty may also be charged if a return is not complete, so please be sure your return is complete before you file it.

You are not required to file Federal income tax returns unless you are subject to the tax on unrelated business income under section 511 of the Code. If you are subject to this tax, you must file an income tax return on Form 990-T, Exempt Organization Business Income Tax Return. In this letter we are not determining whether any of your present or proposed activities are unrelated trade or business as defined in section 513 of the Code.

You need an employer identification number even if you have no employees. If an employer identification number was not entered on your application, a number will be assigned to you and you will be advised of it. Please use that number on all returns you file and in all correspondence with the Internal Revenue Service.

This determination is based on evidence that your funds are dedicated to the purposes listed in section 501(c)(3) of the Code. To assure your continued exemption, you should maintain records to show that funds are expended only for those purposes. If you distribute funds to other organizations, your records should show whether they are exempt under section 501(c)(3). In cases where the recipient organization is not exempt under section 501(c)(3), there should be evidence that the funds will remain dedicated to the required purposes and that they will be used for those purposes by the recipient.

If distributions are made to individuals, case histories regarding the recipients should be kept showing names, addresses, purposes of awards, manner of selection, relationship (if any) to members, officers, trustees or donors of funds to you, so that any and all distributions made to individuals can be substantiated upon request by the Internal Revenue Service. (Revenue Ruling 56-304, C.B. 1956-2, page 306.)

If we have indicated in the heading of this letter that an addendum applies, the addendum enclosed is an integral part of this letter.

Because this letter could help resolve any questions about your exempt status and foundation status, you should keep it in your permanent records.

As a private foundation, you must comply with the expenditure responsibility requirements under sections 4945(d)(4) and 4945(h) of the Code, and section 53.4945-5 of the Income Tax Regulations.

You are required to make available for public inspection a copy of your exemption application, and supporting documents, and this exemption letter. You are also required to make a copy of your return available for public inspection in accordance with section 6104(d) of the Internal Revenue Code. Failure to make these documents available for public inspection may subject you to a penalty of $10 per day for each day there is a failure to comply (up to a maximum of $5,000 in the case of an annual return). See Internal Revenue Service Notice 88-120, C.B. 454 for additional information.

IRS Approval of Grants to Individuals

Internal Revenue Service Department of the Treasury Washington, DC 20224 The Infinity Foundation

Dear Applicant:
This is in response to the ruling request submitted with your cover letter dated July 31, 1997, wherein you requested advance approval of your grant making procedures pursuant to section 4945(g) of the Internal Revenue Code. You have previously been recognized by the Service as exempt from federal income tax under section 501©(3) of the Code and you were also classified as a private foundation under section 509(a).

You state that your mission is “to enhance the understanding of the spiritual dimension of life by creating, disseminating, and expanding a body of knowledge which clarifies or integrates philosophy, religion, science, psychology, and non-traditional mystical disciplines; and bridging Eastern philosophies with Western thought.” You refer to this body of knowledge as the “Topic”.

One of your programs will be the awarding of grants to individuals for travel, study, fellowships or scholarships or for the production of a product which supports the Topic. A grantee’s activities in pursuit of the Topic might involve study, research, writing, teaching, lecturing, attending an educational institution as a visiting scholar, developing or speaking at a symposium, publishing a treatise in either print or electronic media, or engaging in any other activity which would serve to improve the skills or talents or broaden the understanding of the grantee in the Topic area, and which would make a contribution to the body of knowledge in the Topic area.

In the grant application the prospective grantee will describe his or her project in support of the Topic. You will select grantees under procedures described below, monitor their projects, and evaluate their work to assure that grant funds are properly utilized.

You describe your grant-making procedures as follows:

  1. Grant recipients will not be chosen from any particular educational or scientific institution, or from any particular geographic location.
  2. The key criterion will be a demonstrated commitment to the Topic area
  3. A grant recipient must either be an individual whose activities will make a contribution to the Topic, or whose funded project(s) will enhance the knowledge, or improve the skills and talents of the grantee in the Topic area. A grantee must be either (i) a scholar, teacher, visionary, or spiritual leader whose work would be enhanced by a grant from you, or (ii) a student attending an educational institution described in Code section 151(c)(4), in which case the grant would be utilized for the grantee’s tuition and related expenses at such educational institution as long as the course of study pursued by the student would further the purposes of the grant.
  4. Your Board of Directors will contact both traditional and nontraditional educational, scientific, cultural,and religious institutions to make known the availability of the grants. You will also publicize the grant program in various publications and make the grant applications generally available to the public.
  5. Your Board of Directors will select grant recipients from among the individuals who submit completed applications.
  6. You will pay the grant funds directly to the grant recipient, except where the grant will be used to cover tuition at an educational institution, in which instance you will make payment to the school.
  7. Each grant recipient must agree in writing to use the grant funds to defray the expenses associated with the approved project or to apply the funds to enrollment in an educational institution.
  8. You intend to award grants on an objective and nondiscriminatory basis.
  9. You will not use grant funds to compensate recipients for performing personal services for you.
  10. You will not award any grants to your creator, founder, officers, or directors, or to members of the founder’s family, or to any disqualified person with respect to you, or for a purpose that is inconsistent with the purposes set forth in Code section 170(c) (2)(B).

With respect to the monitoring of grants, you provide the following information: you require a written progress report from each grantee at least once a year. This report must include a summary of the use of the funds awarded, and how such use fulfilled grant purposes. If the grantee is enrolled at an educational institution, the report must be verified by the institution. You also require a final report.

A condition of each grant made to support the enrollment of a grantee at an educational institution is that the grant will be used only for qualified tuition and related expenses within the meaning of Code section 117(b)(2) and for room and board.

In those instances where the reports submitted, or other information (including the failure to submit reports) indicate that all or any part of a grant is not being used for intended purposes, you will investigate and will withhold further payments to the extent possible until you receive delinquent reports.

If you learn that all or any part of a grant is being diverted from the intended purposes, you will take all reasonable and appropriate steps to recover the grant funds and/or to ensure restoration of the diverted funds to the purposes of the grant. This would include legal action if deemed appropriate under the circumstances.

You shall retain complete records with respect to all grants awarded. These records shall include all information obtained by you to evaluate the qualifications of potential grantees, the identification of grantees (including any relationship of any grantee to you or to any of your directors or officers), the completed application of each grantee, the amount of each grant, the date(s) of each grant payment, evaluation reports from grantees, and any additional information that you may secure in the course of the grant administration process.

Section 4945(a)(1) of the Code imposes an initial tax on a private foundation for each taxable expenditure it makes. If such expenditure is not corrected within the taxable period, then additional taxes are imposed under section 4945(b)(1).

Section 4945(d)(3) of the Code provides that a “taxable expenditure” includes any amount paid or incurred by a private foundation as a grant to an individual for travel, study, or other similar purposes by such individual, unless such grant satisfies the requirements of subsection (g).

Section 4945(g) of the Code provides, in part, that subsection (d)(3) shall not apply to an individual grant awarded on an objective and nondiscriminatory basis pursuant to a procedure approved in advance by the Service, if it is demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Service that (1) the grant constitutes a scholarship or fellowship grant which would be subject to the provisions of section l17(a) (as in effect on the day before the date of the enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1986) and is to be used for study at an educational organization described in section 170(b) (1) (A)(ii), or (2) the purpose of the grant is to achieve a specific objective, produce a report or other similar product, or improve or enhance a literary, artistic, musical, scientific, teaching, or other similar capacity, skill or talent of the grantee. Section 53.4945-4(b) (1) of the Foundation and similar Excise Taxes Regulations provides that in order for a private foundation to establish that its grants to individuals are made on an objective and nondiscriminatory basis, it must demonstrate that its grant program is consistent with:

  1. the existence of the foundation’s exempt status under section 501(c)(3);
  2. the allowance of deductions to individuals under section 170 for contributions to the granting foundation; and
  3. the requirements of subparagraphs (2), (3), and (4) of this paragraph.

Section 53.4945-(4)(b)(2) of the regulations provides that the group from which grantees are to be selected must be sufficiently broad so that the awarding of grants to members of such group would fulfill a purpose described in section 170(c)(2)((B). However, the foundation may impose reasonable restrictions on the group of potential grantees. For example, selection of a qualified research scientist to work on a particular project does not violate the requirements of section 4945(d)(3) merely because the foundation selects him from a group of three scientists who are experts in that field.

Section 53.4945-4(b) (3) of the regulations states that the criteria used in selecting grant recipients from the potential grantees should be related to the purpose of the grant.

Section 53.4945-4(b)(4) of the regulations provides that the person or group of persons who select recipients of grants should not be in a position to derive a private benefit, directly or indirectly, if certain potential grantees are selected over others.

Section 53.4945-4(c)(3) of the regulations provides that with respect to a grant made under section 4945(g)(3), the private foundation shall require reports on the use of the funds and the progress made by the grantee toward achieving the purposes for which the grant was made. Such reports must be made at least once a year. Upon completion of the undertaking for which the grant was made, a final report must be made.

Section 53.4945-4(c)(4) of the regulations sets forth procedures for the investigation of jeopardized grants. Briefly, where the private foundation has evidence that funds are being diverted from intended purpose, then the foundation is required to either recover the funds or to ensure their restoration to proper grant purposes. The foundation must also cut off all further payments until it has received the grantee’s assurance that future diversions will not occur.

The information furnished by you in your ruling request indicates that your procedures for awarding grants satisfy the fundamental requirements of objectively and nondiscrimination and otherwise conform to the requirements of sections 4945(g) (1) and (3) and corresponding regulations. Accordingly, we rule that grants made in accordance with procedures described herein will not be taxable expenditures under Code 4945(d) (3). We have not considered whether grants made under your procedures are excludable from the gross income of recipients under section 117 of the Code.

This ruling is conditioned on the understanding that there will be no material change in the facts upon which it is based. It is further conditioned on the premise that no grants or loans will be awarded to your organization’s creators, officers, directors, trustees, or members of the selection committee, or for a purpose that is inconsistent with the purposes described in section 170(c) (2) (B).

The approval of your grant-making procedures is a one time approval of your system of standards and procedures for selecting recipients of grants that meet the requirements of section 4945(g). Thus, approval will apply to succeeding grant programs only as long as the standards and procedures under which they are conducted do not differ materially from those described in your request.

We are sending a copy of this ruling to your key District Director for exempt organizations matters. Because this letter could resolve any questions about your exempt status, you should keep it with your permanent records.

If you have any question, please contact the person whose name and telephone number are shown in the heading of this letter.

This ruling is directed only to the organization that requested it. Section 6110(j) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that it may not be used or cited as precedent.

Thank you for your cooperation. Sincerely, Gerald V. Sack Chief, Exempt Organisations