Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-16 Thread Subhashish Panigrahi
Thank you so much Anna, Gerard, Jorge, Katherine and Katy for your kind words 
-- really honored. I have had the opportunity to work with some of you and the 
experience has been really amazing. Katy, I cannot thank you more for all the 
great support that you have given to us over the years. In the coming days, I 
will continue to connect with you all as a community member, and may be also in 
my professional capacity.

Love,
Subha

Best!
Subhashish Panigrahi
Programme Officer, Access To Knowledge
Centre for Internet and Society
@subhapa / https://cis-india.org

- Original Message -
From: "Katy Love" 
To: "Wikimedia Mailing List" 
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2016 6:24:00 AM
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

Hi Subha,

Congratulations on your new role at Mozilla! I will miss working with you
and learning from you! You have always been kind, patient, and committed to
both sharing and learning. Thank you for all you've done for the Wikimedia
movement! We'll miss you!

Katy

On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 1:06 PM, Subhashish Panigrahi <
subhash...@cis-india.org> wrote:

> 
>
> Friends,
>
> TL; DR
>
> After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
> language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my current
> role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach out
> in volunteer capacity on my talk page.
>
> ——
>
> I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the Wikimedia
> Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
> Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at the
> Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K) [0].
> Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
> family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of trust.
> CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always remain
> my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be quite
> an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the organization
> that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
> privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.
>
> Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
> professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
> world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge community,
> and had the privilege of working on many important projects both locally
> and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I have
> worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been my
> mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such great
> friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
> community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.
>
> This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many as
> three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
> contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
> WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt so
> touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never even
> understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and the
> global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
> rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary project.
> The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
> volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.
>
> In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will be
> able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to create
> typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write the
> Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank to
> colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for his
> guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
> peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
> Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and Wikimedians
> Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
> years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke this
> aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt when
> the opportunity came to lead this project.
>
> Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and the
> larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In the
> long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come. I
> hope to continue working with you in my 

Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-14 Thread Katherine Maher
Thank you Subha for all your service! We look forward to seeing you around
on wiki, and at the intersection of the open web and free knowledge.

On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 12:47 PM, Jorge Vargas 
wrote:

> Best of lucks in your new role with Mozilla, Subha! It's been a pleasure
> meeting you.
>
> On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 11:05 PM, Gerard Meijssen <
> gerard.meijs...@gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
> > Hoi,
> > It was good to work with you. You were part of a wonderful move towards
> > more Wikimedia projects in India. It was a pleasure to see you in action
> > and work with you.
> > Thank you
> >
> > Gerard
> >
> > On 10 November 2016 at 22:06, Subhashish Panigrahi <
> > subhash...@cis-india.org
> > > wrote:
> >
> > > 
> > >
> > > Friends,
> > >
> > > TL; DR
> > >
> > > After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
> > > language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my
> > current
> > > role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach
> > out
> > > in volunteer capacity on my talk page.
> > >
> > > ——
> > >
> > > I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the
> Wikimedia
> > > Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
> > > Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at
> the
> > > Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K)
> [0].
> > > Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
> > > family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of
> > trust.
> > > CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always
> > remain
> > > my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be
> > quite
> > > an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the
> organization
> > > that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
> > > privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.
> > >
> > > Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
> > > professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
> > > world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge
> > community,
> > > and had the privilege of working on many important projects both
> locally
> > > and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I
> have
> > > worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been
> > my
> > > mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such
> great
> > > friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
> > > community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.
> > >
> > > This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many
> > as
> > > three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
> > > contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
> > > WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt
> so
> > > touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never
> > even
> > > understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and
> the
> > > global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
> > > rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary
> > project.
> > > The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
> > > volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.
> > >
> > > In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will
> be
> > > able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to
> > create
> > > typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write
> > the
> > > Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank
> to
> > > colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for
> his
> > > guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
> > > peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
> > > Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and
> > Wikimedians
> > > Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
> > > years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke
> this
> > > aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt
> > when
> > > the opportunity came to lead this project.
> > >
> > > Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and
> > the
> > > larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In
> > the
> > > long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come.
> I
> > > hope to continue working with you in my volunteer capacity, and/or may
> be
> > > in my new role.
> > >
> > > Where I am heading next?
> > > Some of you might know this already. I am super excited that the next
> > > milestone is going to be another open source community as I am joining
> > > Mozilla’s Participation team as South A

Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-14 Thread Jorge Vargas
Best of lucks in your new role with Mozilla, Subha! It's been a pleasure
meeting you.

On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 11:05 PM, Gerard Meijssen  wrote:

> Hoi,
> It was good to work with you. You were part of a wonderful move towards
> more Wikimedia projects in India. It was a pleasure to see you in action
> and work with you.
> Thank you
>
> Gerard
>
> On 10 November 2016 at 22:06, Subhashish Panigrahi <
> subhash...@cis-india.org
> > wrote:
>
> > 
> >
> > Friends,
> >
> > TL; DR
> >
> > After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
> > language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my
> current
> > role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach
> out
> > in volunteer capacity on my talk page.
> >
> > ——
> >
> > I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the Wikimedia
> > Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
> > Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at the
> > Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K) [0].
> > Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
> > family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of
> trust.
> > CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always
> remain
> > my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be
> quite
> > an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the organization
> > that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
> > privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.
> >
> > Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
> > professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
> > world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge
> community,
> > and had the privilege of working on many important projects both locally
> > and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I have
> > worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been
> my
> > mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such great
> > friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
> > community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.
> >
> > This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many
> as
> > three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
> > contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
> > WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt so
> > touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never
> even
> > understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and the
> > global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
> > rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary
> project.
> > The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
> > volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.
> >
> > In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will be
> > able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to
> create
> > typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write
> the
> > Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank to
> > colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for his
> > guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
> > peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
> > Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and
> Wikimedians
> > Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
> > years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke this
> > aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt
> when
> > the opportunity came to lead this project.
> >
> > Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and
> the
> > larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In
> the
> > long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come. I
> > hope to continue working with you in my volunteer capacity, and/or may be
> > in my new role.
> >
> > Where I am heading next?
> > Some of you might know this already. I am super excited that the next
> > milestone is going to be another open source community as I am joining
> > Mozilla’s Participation team as South Asia Community Catalyzer [4]. I am
> > super excited for it. And I will keep seeing you all amazing people on
> the
> > Wikimedia projects like before.
> >
> > Do feel free to get in touch with me in my talk page at User:Psubhashish,
> > or over email at psubhashish (at) gmail (dot) com, or at @subhapa on both
> > Twitter and Telegram.
> >
> > 0. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/CIS-A2K
> > 1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikipediansSpeak
> > 2. https://twit

Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-10 Thread Gerard Meijssen
Hoi,
It was good to work with you. You were part of a wonderful move towards
more Wikimedia projects in India. It was a pleasure to see you in action
and work with you.
Thank you

Gerard

On 10 November 2016 at 22:06, Subhashish Panigrahi  wrote:

> 
>
> Friends,
>
> TL; DR
>
> After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
> language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my current
> role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach out
> in volunteer capacity on my talk page.
>
> ——
>
> I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the Wikimedia
> Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
> Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at the
> Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K) [0].
> Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
> family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of trust.
> CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always remain
> my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be quite
> an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the organization
> that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
> privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.
>
> Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
> professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
> world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge community,
> and had the privilege of working on many important projects both locally
> and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I have
> worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been my
> mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such great
> friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
> community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.
>
> This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many as
> three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
> contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
> WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt so
> touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never even
> understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and the
> global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
> rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary project.
> The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
> volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.
>
> In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will be
> able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to create
> typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write the
> Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank to
> colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for his
> guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
> peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
> Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and Wikimedians
> Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
> years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke this
> aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt when
> the opportunity came to lead this project.
>
> Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and the
> larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In the
> long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come. I
> hope to continue working with you in my volunteer capacity, and/or may be
> in my new role.
>
> Where I am heading next?
> Some of you might know this already. I am super excited that the next
> milestone is going to be another open source community as I am joining
> Mozilla’s Participation team as South Asia Community Catalyzer [4]. I am
> super excited for it. And I will keep seeing you all amazing people on the
> Wikimedia projects like before.
>
> Do feel free to get in touch with me in my talk page at User:Psubhashish,
> or over email at psubhashish (at) gmail (dot) com, or at @subhapa on both
> Twitter and Telegram.
>
> 0. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/CIS-A2K
> 1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikipediansSpeak
> 2. https://twitter.com/wearewikipedia
> 3. https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Project_Ol_chiki
> 4. https://discourse.mozilla-community.org/t/introducing-
> our-new-south-asia-community-catalyzer/11975
>
> Love,
> Subhashish
>
> Subhashish Panigrahi
> Programme Officer, Access To Knowledge
> Centre for Internet and Society
> @subhapa / https://cis-india.org
> 

Re: [Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-10 Thread Anna Stillwell
Thank you for your service, Subhashish. Nice to hear that you will be
headed off to Mozilla.
Warmly,
/a

On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 1:06 PM, Subhashish Panigrahi <
subhash...@cis-india.org> wrote:

> 
>
> Friends,
>
> TL; DR
>
> After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
> language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my current
> role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach out
> in volunteer capacity on my talk page.
>
> ——
>
> I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the Wikimedia
> Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
> Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at the
> Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K) [0].
> Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
> family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of trust.
> CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always remain
> my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be quite
> an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the organization
> that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
> privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.
>
> Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
> professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
> world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge community,
> and had the privilege of working on many important projects both locally
> and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I have
> worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been my
> mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such great
> friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
> community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.
>
> This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many as
> three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
> contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
> WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt so
> touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never even
> understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and the
> global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
> rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary project.
> The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
> volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.
>
> In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will be
> able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to create
> typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write the
> Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank to
> colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for his
> guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
> peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
> Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and Wikimedians
> Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
> years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke this
> aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt when
> the opportunity came to lead this project.
>
> Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and the
> larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In the
> long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come. I
> hope to continue working with you in my volunteer capacity, and/or may be
> in my new role.
>
> Where I am heading next?
> Some of you might know this already. I am super excited that the next
> milestone is going to be another open source community as I am joining
> Mozilla’s Participation team as South Asia Community Catalyzer [4]. I am
> super excited for it. And I will keep seeing you all amazing people on the
> Wikimedia projects like before.
>
> Do feel free to get in touch with me in my talk page at User:Psubhashish,
> or over email at psubhashish (at) gmail (dot) com, or at @subhapa on both
> Twitter and Telegram.
>
> 0. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/CIS-A2K
> 1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikipediansSpeak
> 2. https://twitter.com/wearewikipedia
> 3. https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Project_Ol_chiki
> 4. https://discourse.mozilla-community.org/t/introducing-
> our-new-south-asia-community-catalyzer/11975
>
> Love,
> Subhashish
>
> Subhashish Panigrahi
> Programme Officer, Access To Knowledge
> Centre for Internet and Society
> @subhapa / https://cis-india.org
> ___
> Wikimedia-l mailing list, guidelines at: https:

[Wikimedia-l] Signing out with my official hat!

2016-11-10 Thread Subhashish Panigrahi


Friends,

TL; DR

After almost five years of professional engagement with the South Asian
language Wikimedia communities, I have decided to step down from my current
role. And I will remain a Wikipedian friend of yours who you can reach out
in volunteer capacity on my talk page.

——

I was about to complete my first wiki-versary when I joined the Wikimedia
Foundation’s India Program as a Consultant for Community and Program
Support. The program ran until August of 2012 and then got housed at the
Centre for Internet Society’s Access to Knowledge program (CIS-A2K) [0].
Thanks to Sunil, Pranesh, Nirmita, Nishant and many others at the CIS
family who embraced my team from India Program with great amount of trust.
CIS became more like a family for me all these years. It will always remain
my other home and alma mater - calling CIS a former employer will be quite
an understatement. I feel I grew as a person along with the organization
that is today a noted name for its research in openness, accessibility,
privacy, IP reform, access to knowledge, and digital humanity.

Over these years I have had the most memorable time in my personal and
professional life. I have traveled a lot in the country and across the
world, met many friends in the Wikimedia and the open knowledge community,
and had the privilege of working on many important projects both locally
and globally. The South Asian language Wikimedia communities that I have
worked with have not just been patient and understanding, but have been my
mentor in many ways. I thank you all wholeheartedly for being such great
friends and guides. And I hope that I have added some value to your
community, project and the larger Wikimedia movement.

This was an incredible journey and I feel really honored to see as many as
three new Wikimedia projects taking birth where I had a chance to
contribute. Many of you have shared your stories in an interview series
WikipediansSpeak [1] that I started during my time at CIS, and I felt so
touched and connected to many people that spoke languages that I never even
understood. I want to thank many Wikimedians both from the Indian and the
global Wikimedia community that participated in @WeAreWikipedia [2], a
rotation curation project on Twitter that I started as a voluntary project.
The good news is @WeAreWikipedia has always been and will be a
volunteer-led project even after I leave my professional role at CIS.

In the last few days of my work at CIS, my biggest worry was if I will be
able to give much time to wrap up Project Ol Chiki [3], a project to create
typeface family and input tools for the Ol Chiki script (used to write the
Santali language) that I was leading. I would like to personally thank to
colleagues T.Vishnuvardhan (former Programme Director of CIS-A2K) for his
guidance, Pooja Saxena for designing the typeface and several other
peripherals, Prof. Damayanti Besra and other friends of the
Santali-language community who have reviewed the typeface, and Wikimedians
Jnanaranjan Sahu and Nasim Ali who have created the input tools. A few
years of my childhood was spent in a place where 30% of people spoke this
aboriginal language Santali, and I cannot share how nostalgic it felt when
the opportunity came to lead this project.

Once again, thanks you all the friends in the Wikimedia community, and the
larger openness movement for your kind support over all these years. In the
long road, this was a great milestone but there are many more to come. I
hope to continue working with you in my volunteer capacity, and/or may be
in my new role.

Where I am heading next?
Some of you might know this already. I am super excited that the next
milestone is going to be another open source community as I am joining
Mozilla’s Participation team as South Asia Community Catalyzer [4]. I am
super excited for it. And I will keep seeing you all amazing people on the
Wikimedia projects like before.

Do feel free to get in touch with me in my talk page at User:Psubhashish,
or over email at psubhashish (at) gmail (dot) com, or at @subhapa on both
Twitter and Telegram.

0. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/CIS-A2K
1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikipediansSpeak
2. https://twitter.com/wearewikipedia
3. https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Project_Ol_chiki
4. https://discourse.mozilla-community.org/t/introducing-
our-new-south-asia-community-catalyzer/11975

Love,
Subhashish

Subhashish Panigrahi
Programme Officer, Access To Knowledge
Centre for Internet and Society
@subhapa / https://cis-india.org
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