Pronunciation of 'educate'
Solution 1:
British English is the same: most native speakers do not distinguish clearly between "dyu" and "ju".
Solution 2:
In America, it's /'ɛdʒəket/, with secondary stress on the last syllable, and primary stress on the first syllable. The second syllable is always reduced to shwa /ə/. Some people, sometimes, when they're trying to appear (what they consider) formal and/or prim, might say /'ɛdjʊket/, with secondary stress on both of the last two syllables, but the main stress is always on the first syllable. Americans in general wouldn't notice the difference between /dj/ and /dʒ/ anyway; but the stress difference they would notice immediately.
What you give as the Indian pronunciation, if I read you correctly, might be something like /ɛ'dʒʊket/, with primary stress on the second syllable. Many Americans would not understand this pronunciation, or might take a second to recognize it in speech. Of course in writing there is no problem, isn't it?