In an attempt to treat dance as a "serious profession", Jindal started a three-month professional dance course, Professional Dance Study Programme, in 2009.
"We really want people to take it (dance) seriously. Dance is not about just knowing a few steps of a particular dance. It's about mastering the technicalities," he said.
"In our course, we also speak about injury prevention and exercises for strengthening muscles. There are also yoga sessions and diet-sessions. It is important to listen to your body and understand it," Jindal added.
From nine students to 120 students now, Jindal's institute charges Rs. 20,000 for the course.
Aren't western influences corrupting Indian classical dance forms?
"It is a cycle, I believe. Just like the 70s and 80s have come back in Bollywood and fashion, we too will be going back to our roots," Jindal said.
"After all, this is where we belong," he added.