India too has its share of rags to riches heroes. And
Dhirubhai Ambani is one of the best known among them. This founder of Reliance
Industries was one of the three sons of Hirachandbhai, a school teacher, and
Jamanaben. He also had two sisters. An anecdote from his childhood is that he
once bought a tin of groundnut oil on credit from a local wholesaler and sold
the oil in retail on the roadside. He earned a few rupees as profit from
this transaction. Apparently, during weekends when his school was closed,
he used to set up bhajia stalls at village fairs to make ends meet at home.
According to R-ADAG, when he was 17, he went to Aden (now
Yemen) in search of opportunity, and worked as a dispatch clerk for A. Besse.
That was in 1949. A couple of years later, the company became a distributor for
Shell products and Dhirubhai was promoted to manage the company’s oil-filling
station at the port of Aden. It was here that he dreamed of setting up and
owning a refinery, which he later realized with his petrochemicals venture.
After returning to India, he started his first textile mill in Ahmednagar.
Though his businesses were a huge success, there were also issues regarding
Ambani’s control over stock exchange. His detractors accused him of
illegal or unethical transactions and acts but an investigation by the RBI did
not find any evidence of it. By 2007, the combined fortune of the Ambani
family stood at $60 billion, making Ambani’s the second richest family in the
world.
(taken from yourstory.com)
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