91桃色

Skip to Content

Ved Nanda Celebrates 50 Years of Teaching at 91桃色

Back to Article Listing

 •
Prof. Ved Nanda

It was the only spanking he ever got from his mom, jokes Ved Nanda, international law professor at the 91桃色 Sturm College of Law. As a young boy living in Gujranwala, India, Nanda had gotten a tattoo from a man on the street. He was proud of the artwork. His mother was outraged.

But the little tattoo on his left hand became a symbol that guided Nanda鈥檚 life. The tattoo is the sign for om, a Hindu spiritual symbol that 鈥渕ystically embodies the essence of the entire universe鈥 鈥 the belief that we are all connected.

Decades later, the tattoo is still visible on Nanda鈥檚 hand, and he continues to embody the notion that we are all connected. In February, the University will celebrate Nanda鈥檚 50th听anniversary of teaching at 91桃色.

When it comes to international law and human rights, Nanda鈥檚 extraordinary work, leadership and teaching have put the 91桃色听on the map.

Following the lead of Yale Law School, he introduced an听International Human Rights Law (IHRL)听听at Denver Law, making it the second IHRL course of its kind in the nation at that time. Nanda created the law school's听听in 1972, and that same year established the听Denver Journal of International Law and Policy听(), just to name a few accomplishments.

But what matters most to Nanda are relationships with his students. 鈥淥ftentimes students who come into my office don鈥檛 come in simply for law, don鈥檛 come in simply for career, but come in to talk about themselves and family affairs,鈥 says Nanda. 鈥淭hey open their hearts to me for assistance. And if I can help, I will.鈥

His compassion for 鈥渢he outsider鈥 emerged at a young age. In 1947, his native country, India, was partitioned. The area where he lived had more Muslims than Hindus. Nanda was born into a Hindu family. Houses where Hindus lived were burned to the ground and people were being killed. But Nanda remembers the kindness of Muslim friends who helped his family get out of town safely and leave for Kashmir.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that 14 million Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims were displaced during that time.

Prof. Ved Nanda
Prof. Ved Nanda

Nanda did make it to safety and went on to place first in his LLB class at Delhi University. He earned his LLM at Northwestern and went on to study as a postgraduate fellow at Yale Law School.

When he finished with his education, Nanda had many offers at universities across the country, but he chose the 91桃色. 鈥淚t has been a wonderful, wonderful experience,鈥 says Nanda. 鈥淚 think I have taken more than I have given, and I feel very good about being able to help people,鈥 he says.

Apparently, Nanda鈥檚 students feel very good about their professor as well 鈥 in 2006, several of them provided funds to launch the听.

Ved Nanda鈥檚 50th听anniversary celebration is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 25, at the Cable Center. For more information and to register to attend,听.