Biography Of Dhirubhai Ambani In Gujarati Pdf

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  1. Biography Of Dhirubhai Ambani In Gujarati Pdf Download
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Dhirubhai Ambani Video CollectionDhirubhai Ambani Video CollectionThe above two are the great videos about Dhirubhai Ambani and his entire success story.Dhirubhai Ambani was the Indian Rags to Riches story, who founded Reliance Industries in 1969 with a seed capital of just US $ 1000 and later on made it Fortune 500 company.Today Reliance Industries is worlds largest polyester manufacturer and leading petrochemical refinery. His two sons, Mukesh and Anil Ambani are Forbes Billionaires and Indias Top 10 richest persons according to Forbes.Dhirubhai Ambani VillageDhirubhai Ambani is the Indian Rags to Riches story. He was the founder of Reliance Industries, Indias largest textile and petrochemical company.

Today his two sons Mukesh and Anil Ambani are Forbes Billionaires and Indias Top 10 richest persons.was born on 28 December 1932 at Kukaswada near Chorwad in the then princely states of Junagadh. (now the state of Gujarat India) to Hirachand Gordhandhas Ambani and Jamnaben in a Gujarati family of modest means.

Hirachand Gordhandhas Ambani was a village school teacher with little income. Hirachand and Jamanaben had two daughters – Trilochanaben and Jasuben and three sons – Ramnikbhai, Dhirubhai and Natubhai. Dhirubhai was the second son.

Dhirubhai was precocious and highly intelligent. He was also highly impatient of the oppressive grinding mill of the school classroom. He chose work which used his physical ability to the maximum rather than cramming school lessons. When Jamnaben once asked Dhirubhai and Ramnikbhai to help his father by earning money, he angrily replied “Why do you keep screaming for money? I will make heaps of money one day”.

During weekends, he began setting up onion/potato fries stall at village fairs and made extra money which he gave to his mother.Dhirubhai Ambani Polyester Princeby Hamish McDonald is the only real biography of Mr.Dhirubhai Ambani. But this book is out of circulation now.In this book, the author has mentioned in a very detail that how during the time of Licence Raaj, Dhirubhai Ambani took Reliance Industries to new levels and made it Fortune 500 Company?This book covers many shocking and controversial aspects of the life of Mr.Dhirubhai Ambani. The book also states that, Reliance Industries is worlds largest legal ZERO TAX CORPORATION which saves lots of tax through lots of legal loopholes.This is a MUST read book for entrepreneurs.Dhirubhai Ambani Nusli WadiaDhirubhai Ambani was the founder of Reliance Industries.

Dhirubhai Hirachand Ambaniघिरजलाल हिराचंद अंबानीDhirubhai Ambani in 1992Born28 December 1932,Died6 July 2002 (aged 69),NationalityIndianOccupationbusiness tycoon; Chairman of; investorNet worth$6.10 billionReligionSpouseKokilaben AmbaniChildrenDhirubhai Hirachand Ambani (: ધીરુભાઈ અંબાણી) also known as Dhirubhai, (28 December 1932 – 6 July 2002) was an Indian and entrepreneur who founded, a petrochemicals, communications, power, and textiles and the only privately owned Indian company in the. Ambani took his company public in 1984. Dhirubhai has been one among the select Forbes billionaires and has also figured in the Sunday Times list of top 50 businessmen in Asia. His life has often been referred to as a true ' story.Dhirubhai started off as a small time worker with Arab merchants in the 1950s and moved to Mumbai in 1958 to start his own business in spices.

After making modest profits, he moved into textiles and opened his mill near Ahmedabad. Dhirubhai founded Reliance Industries in 1958 and today the company, with over 85,000 employees, provides almost 5% of the Central Government's total tax revenue. Ambani was credited with introducing the to the average investor, and thousands of investors attended the Reliance annual general meetings, which were sometimes held in a football stadium, with millions more watching on television.In 1986 after a heart attack he handed over Reliance Group to his sons Mukesh and Anil. After his death, the group was split into, headed by and (Reliance ADAG), led by.Early lifeHe was born into a Gujarati family. Hirachand Gordhandhas Ambani was a village school teacher with little income. Hirachand and Jamanaben had two daughters - Trilochanaben and Jasuben and three sons - Ramnikbhai, Dhirubhai and Natubhai. Dhirubhai was the second son.

Dhirubhai was precocious and highly intelligent. He was also highly impatient of the oppressive grinding mill of the school classroom. He chose work which used his physical ability to the maximum rather than cramming school lessons. When Jamnaben once asked Dhirubhai and Ramnikbhai to help his father by earning money, he angrily replied, 'Why do you keep screaming for money? I will make heaps of money one day'. On weekends, he began setting up onion/potato fries stall at village fairs and made extra money which he gave to his mother.Life in Aden (1949-1958)Just after Dhirubhai was through his annual matriculation examination and even before the result was out, Hirachandbhai called him home to Chorwad.

Dhirubhai ambani wife

Hirachandbhai had been unwell for quite some time and had grown extremely weak and frail. 'Dhiru, do you know why I have called you here?' Hirachandbhai asked his son the very night he reached home. 'Well, I'll tell you. You know I have been unwell for past several months. I cannot work any more. I know you want to study further but I can't afford that any more.

I need you to earn for the family. I need your money.

The family needs it. You must work now. Ramnikbhai has arranged a job for you in Aden. You go there.'

Dhirubhai had really wanted to study for a bachelor's degree, but his ambition melted when he looked into the anxious eyes of his sick father. 'I'll do as you say' he said and the very next morning he left for Rajkot to get his passport.

Those days Indians did not need a visa for entering Aden but there were rumours around that the no visa regime was about to change any day. So he needed to hurry up before the visa rules changed.

In a few days he was in Bombay to board the ship to Aden. It was on board the ship that Dhirubhai learnt from Gujarati newspaper that he had passed his matriculation examination in second division.On reaching Aden, Dhrubhai joined office on the very day of his arrival. It was a clerk's job with the A. Besse & Co., named after its French founder Antonin Besse. Those days Aden was the second busiest trading and oil bunkering port in the world after London handling over 6,300 ships and 1,500 dhows a year.And, there in Aden, A.

Was the largest transcontinental trading firm east of Suez. It was engaged in almost every branch of trading business-cargo booking, handling, shipping, forwarding, and wholesale merchandising. Besse acted as trading agents for a large number of European, American, African and Asian companies and dealt with all sorts of goods ranging from sugar, spices, food grains and textiles to office stationary, tools, machinery and petroleum products.

Dhirubhai was first sent to the commodities trading section of the firm. Later, he was transferred to the section that handled petroleum products for the oil giant Shell.' I learnt business at the Besse which was then the best trading firm this side of the Suez,' he used to tell friends in later years. He was quick on the uptake. He learnt the ways of commodity trading, high seas purchase and sales, marketing and distribution, currency trading, and money management.

During lunch break he roamed the souks and bazaars of Aden where traders from numerous different continents and countries bought and sold goods worth millions of pound sterling, the then global currency, during the day. He met traders from all parts of Europe, Africa, India, Japan and China. Aden was the biggest trading port of the times, a trading port where goods landed from all parts of the world and were dispatched to the farthest corners of different continents. Speculation in manufactured goods and commodities was rife all over the Aden bazaars.Dhirubhai felt tempted to speculate but had no money for that and was still raw for such trading. To learn the tricks of the trade he offered to work free for a Gujarati trading firm. There he learnt accounting, book keeping, preparing shipping papers and documents, and dealing with banks and insurance companies., skills that would come handy when he launched himself into trading about a decade afterwards in Bombay.

At the Besse office during the day he polished his skills in typing and Pitman shorthand, drafting commercial letters, and composing legal documents.At the boarding house where he lived with another twenty-five or so young Gujarati clerks and office boys, he devoted long hours of the night mastering English grammar, essay writing, current affairs and a host of subjects that took his fancy from week to week. He was the first to snatch the English, Gujarati and Hindi daily papers and weeklies as soon as they arrived by the ship ever day. The Times of India, Blitz, Janmabhoomi and Navajeevan formed his favourite reading material. He also devoured all sorts of books, magazines and journals the passengers arriving from various European and Indian ports left in the ships and at the offices of various shipping agents.' Of all the books I read so avidly those days one I remember most fondly are (Jawaharlal Nehru's) the 'Glimpses of World History' and the 'Discovery of India,' he would recall long after his Aden days.

Biography Of Dhirubhai Ambani In Gujarati Pdf Download

'They were fat, big books but written in simple English and to me they opened a whole new world of adventure, of human wisdom and human folly. I began reading them not to learn of world history but to practice my English but once I opened their pages their breadth of vision had me in a thrall. I used to keep a dictionary by my side when reading these books and note down every new word I came across to increase my vocabulary.

Later when I used to draft letters to ministers and senior officials during my early Bombay days, I used whole lot of quotations, phrases and impressive words from these two books.' He also gorged on dozens of books and magazine articles on psychology that became his favourite subject for a long time.

'I learnt much from this class of my reading,' he sometimes said, 'I learnt how we humans and animals love to be loved more than anything else, how we are driven by desire to earn the love, affection and honour of those around us, what it is to be a leader, how to motivate those whom we want to attain great heights, how ideologies and interests clash and reconcile or cancel each other.' More than anything else I learnt that nothing big can ever be achieved without money, influence and power and I also learnt that money, influence and power alone cannot achieve anything in life, big or small, without a certain soft, delicate, sensitive, understanding human touch in all one's deeds and words.'

After he thought he had learnt the basics of commodities trading, Dhirubhai began speculating in high seas purchase and sales of all sorts of goods. He did not have enough money of his own for such speculative trading. So he borrowed as much as he could from friends and small Aden shopkeepers on terms nobody had ever offered them. 'Profit we share and all loss will be mine' became his motto.

During lunch break and after office hours he was always in the local bazaar, trading in one thing or the other.Soon, those around him found that he had an uncanny knack for such speculative trading. He seldom lost money in any deal. 'I think I had an animal instinct about such trading but there was a lot of reading and understanding of market trends behind that animal instinct of mine. I read every bit of paper I could lay my hands on about what was happening around the world, I listened carefully to every word uttered in the market, picked every bit of gossip in the shipping circles and pondered long through the night in the bed about the pros and cons of every deal I wanted to make.'

Meantime, the Shell oil refinery and the first oil harbour came up in Aden in 1954, the year Dhirubhai returned home to Gujarat to marry Kokilaben. As expected, A. Became the agents for distribution of Shell refinery products. Dhirubhai had done well at the office during his first five years. Now he was sent on promotion to the oil filling station at the newly built harbour.He liked the new job, though it was a lot more demanding than the desk job in the commodities section.

Here he had to service the ships bunkering for diesel and lubricants. He enjoyed visiting the ships, making friends with sailors and the engine staff I heard from them first hand accounts of their voyages in different parts of the world of which he had until then read about only in books and magazines.

And, here it was that he first began dreaming of one day building a refinery of his own.' It was a crazy idea for a petrol pump attendant to want to build a refinery of his own, but that is the sort of crazy ideas I have been playing with all my life,' Dhirubhai recalled at the time Reliance's 25-million ton oil refinery, the largest grassroots refinery in the world, went on stream in Jamnagar in 1999. 'I have been able to build this refinery because I decided long years ago not to settle for anything else,' he said, 'I had heard a Yemeni proverb in Aden 'la budd min Sana'a wa lau taal al-safr' (You must visit Sana'a, however long the journey takes).

I never forgot that saying.' By the late 1950s it became clear that the British rule in Aden would not last long in the face of growing Yemeni movement for independence supported by Gamal Abdel Nasser's revolutionary government from across the Suez. The large Indian community of Hindu and Parsee Gujaratis began preparing to move out of Aden. Some began returning home to India, while some chose to settle in Britain.

Aden Indians those days were allowed to settle in Britain.Where to go on leaving Aden was debated among the colony's settlers heatedly every day. Some of Dhirubhai's friends told him that he should migrate to London where, considering his talents, acumen and guts, he could find better opportunities of growth. At the port and on ships at Aden he often heard glowing accounts of post-war Britain and the promises of a life of much greater ease there than one could ever hope to find in India.Dhirubhai weighed his options.

By now he had saved some money and was thinking of setting up some business of his own. Although Dhirubhai's father had died in 1952, he had in the meantime been blessed with his first son, Mukesh D. Ambani, in April, 1957. Kokilaben and Mukesh were back home in India.The choice of opening a shop somewhere in London was tempting but he felt India was calling him home.Those were exciting years in India.

Final Journey: Dhirubhai Ambani's funeral saw thousands of people attending. And can be seen carrying their father's body as per traditionsDhirubhai Ambani was admitted to the Breach Candy Hospital in on June 24, 2002 after he suffered a major stroke. This was his second stroke.

The first one had occurred in February, 1986 and had kept his right hand paralyzed. He was, latterly, in a state of coma for more than a week. A number of doctors were used. He died on July 6, 2002, at around 11:50 p.m.

(Indian Standard Time).His funeral procession was not only attended by business people, politicians and celebrities but also by thousands of ordinary people. His elder son, performed the last rites as per traditions. He was cremated at the Chandanwadi Crematorium in Mumbai at around 4:30 PM (Indian Standard Time) on July 7, 2002.He is survived by Kokilaben Ambani, his wife, two sons, and, and two daughters, Nina Kothari and Deepti Salgaonkar. Dhirubhai Ambani started his long journey in from the Mulji-Jetha Textile Market, where he started as a small-trader.

As a mark of respect to this great businessman, The Mumbai Textile Merchants' decided to keep the market closed on July 8, 2002. At the time of Dhirubhai's death, Reliance Group had a gross turnover of 75,000 Crore or USD $ 15 Billion. In 1976-77, the Reliance group had an annual turnover of Rs 70 crore and it is to be remembered that Dhirubhai had started the business with just 15,000 (US$350)The country has lost iconic proof of what an ordinary Indian fired by the spirit of enterprise and driven by determination can achieve in his own lifetime.

–, The nation had lost one of the doyens of the modern Indian corporate community, a philanthropist and above all a great human being endowed with great compassion and concern for the underprivileged sections of the society. This new star, which rose on the horizon of the Indian industry three decades ago, remained on the top till the end by virtue of his ability to dream big and translate it into reality through the strength of his tenacity and perseverance he really a great person the most precious thing is he started his business with 15,000 and change it at death time in 70 crores. I think he is the idol person of many people if not then read the biography of Dhiru bhai ambani carefully and make yourself a confidential person like Dhiru Bhai Amabani. I join the people of Maharashtra in paying my tribute to the memory of Ambani and convey my heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family. – P C Alexander, Governor of Maharastra Reliance after DhirubhaiIn November 2004, Mukesh Ambani in an interview, admitted to having differences with his brother Anil over 'ownership issues.' He also said that the differences 'are in the private domain.' He was of the opinion that this will not have any bearing on the functioning of the company saying Reliance is one of the strongest professionally-managed companies.

Biography Of Dhirubhai Ambani In Gujarati Pdf Hindi

Dhirubhai

Considering the importance of Reliance Industries to the Indian economy, this issue and got an extensive coverage in the media., the Managing Director of was seen in media, a close friend of the Ambani family who helped to settle the issue. The brothers had entrusted their mother, Kokilaben Ambani, to resolve the issue. – Kokilaben AmbaniThe Reliance empire was split between the Ambani brothers, getting RIL and IPCL & his younger sibling heading Reliance Capital, Reliance Energy and Reliance Infocomm. The entity headed by Mukesh Ambani is referred to as the Reliance Industries Limited whereas Anil's Group has been renamed Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group (Reliance ADA Group)., a Dhirubhai Ambani Foundation Initiative, was established to promote higher education in various fields of life sciences and related technologies.In popular mediaIn 1998, a book published by titled 'The Polyester Prince' is also an unauthorised biography of Dhirubhai Ambani, outlining all his political and business conquests. HarperCollins didnt sell the book in India, because the Dirubhai threatened legal action. As of 2010, Amazon.com listed the price book at $900.A film said to be inspired by the life of Dhirubhai Ambani was released on 12 January 2007.

The Hindi Film, directed by ace filmmaker, cinematography by and music by shows the struggle of a man striving to make his mark in the Indian business world with a fictional Shakti Group of Industries. The film stars,. In the film, Abhishek Bachchan plays Guru Kant Desai, a character implicitly based on Dhirubhai Ambani. The character is known in the film as 'GURUBHAI', similar to the real-life 'DHIRUBHAI.' California highway patrol cadet shoulder patch reviews.