Rajendra Gandhi: rubber soul: Mumbai businessman Rajendra Gandhi has made recycling a matter of moral principle.LIKE MANY IN India, Rajendra Gandhi looks forward to the clay when his country might stage Formula 1 motor racing motor racing n (BRIT) → carreras fpl de coches; automovilismo motor racing motor n (Brit) → course f automobile . He has a special interest, for his company would be in the market to recycle the worn tyres. 'Creating wealth out of waste', as he puts it, appeals to Gandhi, Managing Director of Gujurat Reclaim and Rubber Products Ltd (GRRP GRRP Generic Registry-Registrar Protocol ). What better product to recycle than rubber? It is non-biodegradable, so recycling it is environmentally friendly Environmentally friendly, also referred to as nature friendly, is a term used to refer to goods and services considered to inflict minimal harm on the environment.[1] . Old tyres and tubes--from buses and bicycles, cars and coaches, tractors and trucks--as well as used latex gloves and worn hosepipes all pass through the company's two plants in the states of Gujurat and Maharashtra. GRRP is India's largest rubber recycling company and is among the top four in the world. It supplies the world's major tyre companies: Bridgestone Firestone fire·stone n. 1. A flint or pyrite used to strike a fire. 2. A fire-resistant stone, such as certain sandstones. Noun 1. , Continental Tyres, Cooper, Dunlop and Pirelli. Recycling Gandhi founded GRRP in 1973 after reading a World Bank report which said that recycling would be an up and coming business in developing countries. 'I was quite fired up by that thought," he says. What also appealed to him was running a company without the compromises of corruption. India's economy in those days, under Prime Minister Indira Gandhi Noun 1. Indira Gandhi - daughter of Nehru who served as prime minister of India from 1966 to 1977 (1917-1984) Gandhi, Indira Nehru Gandhi, Mrs. Gandhi , was much more centrally-controlled than today's. 'In any other industry that might have meant having to pay bribes,' says Gandhi. 'In the controlled economy controlled economy n → economía dirigida ," he explains, 'I would have needed a quota license for getting raw materials, and it was customary to bribe government officials to get the maximum quota. But my raw material was scrap rubber and I didn't need to bribe anyone to get that as it was readily available.' A liberalized economy, he implies, is a potentially less corrupt one. He relies on a network of agents who supply the scrap rubber from all over India. Gandhi also pioneered the design and manufacture of machinery for rubber recycling in India. Again, his motive was to avoid the corruption involved in importing technology,' from overseas. "To get an import license you had to pay bribes to officials in New Delhi New Delhi (dĕl`ē), city (1991 pop. 294,149), capital of India and of Delhi state, N central India, on the right bank of the Yamuna River. .' So Gandhi asked a rubber technologist, WG Desai, if it was possible to make the machinery himself. Desai said it was. 'It was a big risk for me as I had no knowledge of the industry," says Gandhi. 'But with his help and with the support of bank loans we started to put the technology together." He needed seven million rupees ($US250,000 in those days) in startup capital, which came from bank and family loans as well as a public issue of shares. The company's launch was delayed when Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a State of Emergency in 1975, which included restrictions on paying dividends, and meant that Rajendra Gandhi's plan to raise the capital through a public issue collapsed. He finally raised the money needed in 1977, alter the Emergency ended, and went into production in 1978. Overcoming fear The process involves pulverizing the old rubber into powder and sifting out any metal and fabric. The powder is treated with oils and chemicals under heat and the resultant soft rubber is made into flat sheets, cut to size according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the customers' requirements, and sold by the ton. The company processes some 27,000 tons of reclaimed rubber per year, out of India's total of 80,000 tons. None of this might have happened had Gandhi not overcome his tear of his father, about which he speaks frankly and openly. Vadilal Gandhi was the owner of a silk mill in the Mumbai suburb of Ghatkopar and a local Congress politician. He had a reputation for philanthropy but at home had a fiery temper. He sent his son off to boarding school at the age of nine and from there Rajendra went to live in a student hostel at Mumbai's prestigious Indian Institute The Indian Institute in central Oxford, England is located at the north end of Catte Street on the corner with Holywell Street and faching down Broad Street from the east.[1] of Technology (IIT IIT - Integrated Information Technology ), where he studied metallurgy. His father remained a remote figure. White man on a bus Travelling on a bus one day, the young Gandhi found himself sitting next to a Westerner west·ern·er also West·ern·er n. A native or inhabitant of the west, especially the western United States. Westerner Noun a person from the west of a country or region Noun 1. who was reading a copy of a magazine called Himmat. "The fact that he was travelling on a bus amused me,' says Gandhi, as whites usually went by taxi. They fell into conversation. The man, from Wales Wales, Welsh Cymru, western peninsula and political division (principality) of Great Britain (1991 pop. 2,798,200), 8,016 sq mi (20,761 sq km), west of England; politically united with England since 1536. The capital is Cardiff. , was working on the staff of the magazine in India. He invited Gandhi to see a film produced by Moral Re-Armament Moral Re-Armament: see Buchman, Frank N. D. (now Initiatives of Change). Gandhi thought it would be a Hollywood movie, it turned out to be very different from what he expected: a drama dealing with racial conflict in colonial Africa. A young Indian at the film show invited Gandhi to visit the Moral Re-Armament centre in the hill town of Panchgani. The centre, a day's drive from Mumbai, was being built by Rajmohan Gandhi Rajmohan Gandhi (1935, New Delhi, India) is a biographer and grandson of Mahatma Gandhi. His maternal grandfather was C.Rajagopalachari Rajaji, the first Indian Governor General of independent India and one of the foremost freedom fighters. , a grandson of Mahatma mahatma (məhăt`mə, –hät`–) [Sanskrit,=great-souled], honorific title used in India among Hindus for a person of superior holiness. Mohandas Gandhi is the best-known figure to whom the title was applied. Gandhi, who at that time was the Editor-in-Chief of Himmat. 'There I was challenged to look at my life,' says Rajendra Gandhi. 'I felt a strong urge to be honest with my parents; I had been spending my pocket money on movies and trashy books whilst telling them it was going on text books. I was afraid of my father so it took courage to write him an honest letter of apology. 'I wrote, 'This is the type of son you've had and I have decided to change my life'. He gave the letter to his mother to give to his father, 'because I didn't have the courage to give it to him'. Legacy When his father read the letter he asked him to come home immediately. For five minutes his father didn't say a word. Then he said, 'I feel very sad about what you have been up to.' He told him exactly what he thought of him, but didn't flair up into the usual temper. Then, to his surprise, his father began to talk about the things he had done as a young man. 'As he talked I could feel the generation gap, that wall from him, breaking. And I felt a respect for him, coming out of love instead of fear.' Not long afterwards he borrowed his father's new radio, when he was away on business and without his permission, 'to listen to the cricket commentary'. Within a day it was stolen from his room at the IIT. He was overcome by fear of facing his father again. 'After a while I knew I must own up to him. When he returned two or three days later I told him and said I was sorry. He raised hell and said I was totally irresponsible. I knew I had to take this with humility and face the consequences.' Humiliating hu·mil·i·ate tr.v. hu·mil·i·at·ed, hu·mil·i·at·ing, hu·mil·i·ates To lower the pride, dignity, or self-respect of. See Synonyms at degrade. as this experience was, the net effect of Gandhi's honesty was to remove the fear he had of his father. it gave him the courage to discuss and disagree with Verb 1. disagree with - not be very easily digestible; "Spicy food disagrees with some people" hurt - give trouble or pain to; "This exercise will hurt your back" him on business matters. He graduated in metallurgy in 1971, and at first joined his father's silk mill. But after reading the World Bank report on recycling, he asked his father's permission to start his own business. 'I didn't want to live in the legacy of what my father was doing,' says Gandhi. 'My decision to be honest with him gave me the courage to branch out on my own; otherwise I might have remained under his shadow and control. As well as supporting me he allowed me to use family money to start my own business.' GRRP made a cash profit of US$1.5 million in 2004-05, on a turnover of over $10 million, and now exports to 35 countries. But what most satisfies Gandhi is to know that his plants, in Ankleshar, Gujurat, and Sholapur, Maharashtra, have given jobs to 500 people 'at well above the minimum wage'. |
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