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A WITNESS TO HISTORY: ONE OF UAE’S OLDEST INDIAN RESIDENTS SAW IT ALL

Maghanmal Pancholia recalls the country’s rapid transforma­tion with Ramola Talwar Badam

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Entreprene­ur Maghanmal Pancholia, one of the oldest Indian residents of the UAE, keeps a rich treasury of national history in his stories of life, enterprise and the sheer grit of Arabian Gulf people in the years before Union.

For the 94-year-old chairman of Arabian Trading Agency, who still takes his seat in his Bur Dubai office every morning when others of his generation may favour relaxed retirement, his early struggles contrast greatly with modern life.

Mr Pancholia recalls the thriving pearl business of the early and mid-20th century, how the shockwaves of the Great Depression rippled across the Atlantic from the US, into Europe and on to the Middle East, and how the trade in Japanese imitation pearls dealt a crippling blow to skilled and brave Emirati fishermen.

Adversity, he says, forced residents to work together and create other opportunit­ies. This was the environmen­t he encountere­d on his arrival in Sharjah in 1942.

That was a time without electricit­y or roads, when donkeys carried water on dusty paths.

“Pearl trading was hit badly even before I came. Misfortune never comes alone,” he says.

Seventy-five years ago he arrived to join a family pearl business that had diversifie­d into grocery shops, gold and money exchanges, and would expand into textiles, wholesale food, electronic­s and watches. Mr Pancholia followed a family tradition of making the UAE home, like his father who reached the Gulf in 1895 as a nine-year-old to join his father, who made that journey in 1860.

This was in keeping with a tradition of entreprene­urship founded by a small Thattai Bhatia community that spread across the Gulf from a village near Karachi. They traded in pearls in what were then the Trucial States and across Oman, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

Ideas and initiative brought success in a time of great upheaval. With razor-sharp precision, Mr Pancholia recollects setting up a company to supply electricit­y to Dubai in 1957. He was later appointed director of Dubai Electricit­y Company, formed by the Ruler, Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, from 1961 until 1980, when the company was nationalis­ed.

“I was one of three to four people who bought generators to supply electricit­y. We supplied electricit­y to the stretch of the Creek, the market, to residences and the souk,” Mr Pancholia says.

Another lasting contributi­on was the Indian High School he helped to establish in 1969 for 300 students in a dozen classrooms on land donated by Sheikh Rashid. The origins of the school go back to 1960, when a comment from a teacher prompted Mr Pancholia to rent a villa for pupils. “The lady was from our community and taught six students in her one-bedroom apartment. When I met her on the road, she threw me a challenge I will never forget. She said: ‘Maghan, what are you doing as chairman of the Indian Associatio­n for children? I don’t have space; I’m teaching in my house’.” This makeshift school moved to several villas before taking up permanent residence on Oud Metha Road.

With energy levels that put younger people in the shade, Mr Pancholia wakes at 5am, prepares tea for his 91-year-old wife, and sets out for a brisk three-kilometre walk that takes him 25 minutes.

“I’m a staunch vegetarian. I take lots of salads, fruits and vegetables. I control my intake of sugar, salt and fried, oily food, but don’t completely stop eating it. Too much of anything is bad,” he says.

Lalchand Pancholia, a radiologis­t, says his father’s serenity is a trait he tries to emulate.

“He is calm and takes decisions slowly, in his own time. Just by looking at how he handles the business, we learn to be patient. Even in a crisis, he has a cool temperamen­t.”

The senior Mr Pancholia’s thoughts often stray to the early years and, glancing out of the windows of his office overlookin­g Dubai Museum, he recalls the time before Union when the building was a prison. His thoughts also centre on the vision of the Rulers.

“Dubai has expanded so fast. Many years ago Sheikh Mohammed [bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai] said we had only seen 10 per cent of the growth. We couldn’t believe then that there was room for more, but he meant it,” Mr Pancholia says. “This country has advanced so rapidly because of the sincerity of the Rulers to create opportunit­ies for a better life, to expand the country not in one direction but in all directions.

“It’s not just business but infrastruc­ture, airports, airlines, hotels and now they are also flying to space. You need ideas and ideals in this world, and this country has both.”

This country advanced so rapidly because of the sincerity of the Rulers to create opportunit­ies for a better life

MAGHANMAL PANCHOLIA

Entreprene­ur

 ?? Reem Mohammed / The National ?? At 93, Maghanmal Pancholia still goes to work every morning
Reem Mohammed / The National At 93, Maghanmal Pancholia still goes to work every morning

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