As a teenager, JRD loved France and flew more than anything else. By the time he entered the autumn of his presence, he had devoted nearly 50 years to leading and defining a unique business organization, and as long as he fought for the interests of India and its thousands of people. Evolution, from a thoughtful young man for fun to a pan-Indian icon revered even by those who knew little about business, contains the essence of the JRD story.
Being one of the last patriarchs in the Indian industry contributed, no doubt, to the formation of his myth, but calling JRD a businessman is like Mahatma Gandhi being a freedom fighter. He regarded his leadership of the Tata party and his dedication to the work of India, and brought these actions both with extraordinary dignity and sense of purpose.
It is said by JRD that he spoke French better than English and both are better than other Indian languages. That did not stop him from forming a special bond with Indians of all ages and backgrounds. Kalpana Chawla, an Indian-born astronaut who died in a Columbia spacecraft disaster, cited JRD and his pioneering planes as his incentives to take on aeronautics. It has touched the lives of many others, rich and poor, manager and employee, as it has become the foundation of the principles and philosophy of Father's House.
No one could have imagined that this would be the future of JRD, Paris in 1904, RD Tata, business partner and relative of Jamsetji Tata, and his French wife Sooni. JRD, the second of four children, was trained in France, Japan, and England before being drafted into the French army for one year. JRD wanted to extend his time in the army (to get a chance to study at the famous equestrian school), but his father would not have it. Leaving the French army saved his JRD life, for soon afterward the army he worked for was terminated while on a mission to Morocco.
Small Start
JRD then took up his idea of getting an engineering degree from Cambridge, but RD Tata called his son to India (JRD would have forever regretted not being able to go to university). He soon found himself on the edge of a business venture in a country with which he was not very familiar. This was a young man who knew his obligations to his family. In a letter to his father on his 21st birthday in 1925, JRD wrote, "I have one more year to go. I haven't received much yet! "
JRD joined Tata as a non-paid person in December 1925. His business advisor was John Peterson, a Scotman who had joined the group after working for the Indian Civil Service. At the age of 22, shortly after the death of his father, JRD was on the board of Tata Sons, a leading party company. In 1929, at the age of 25, he surrendered his French citizenship in order to receive the country that would be his life.
The first flight
JRD’s great journey in business was born of his childhood love of flying. He had grown up in France watching Louis Bleriot's first flying airplanes, and had taken joyride on a plane as a 15-year-old. In 1929, JRD became one of the first Indians to be licensed to fly. A year later, a proposal came to Tata's headquarters to launch an airmail service that would connect Bombay, Ahmedabad and Karachi. The JRD did not need to be moved, but it would require Peterson to convince Dorabji Tata, the former Tata chairman, to allow a small ace to make its way.
In 1932 the Tata Aviation Service, which preceded Tata Airlines and Air India, went into space. The first flight in the history of Indian airlines has taken off from Drigh Road in Karachi and JRD under the control of Puss Moth. JRD nurtured and cared for his baby plane until 1953, when the Jawaharlal Nehru government turned Air India into a country. It was a decision JRD fought with all his heart.
Nehru and JRD shared an unusual relationship. They had been friends for a long time and there was a lot of mutual respect, but they were very different from the economic policy India needed to follow. JRD was not a political beast and would not agree with the status of a socialist beast at the time who ruled the settlement (he once joked, many years after Nehru's passing, that China's Taj Group of Hotels had imported more than he had). The JRD was a clear and persistent vote of economic freedom long before it took effect in India.
The Air India saga hurt JRD, but he was not the type to hold a grudge. Nehru insisted that he continue to lead the country's president and that is what the JRD did, until 1977, when another government action forced him to step down. Indira Gandhi, when he returned to power, returned JRD to the chair, but at that time he had no desire to do the job.
Air India was never just a JRD operation; it was a labor of love. Dad's management will always complain - privately, no doubt - that their Chairman has spent more time worrying about more flights than he did for Tata's entire party. JRD's enthusiasm and commitment to Air India is what made it possible, at least during his tenure, to become a country manager. Anthony Simpson wrote in his book Empires of the Sky: "Air India's smooth operation seemed almost out of line with Indian culture on the ground ... [JRD] could prevent Air India from having a domestic obligation to perform services and provide kindness."
The qualities JRD brought to Air India's performance were most evident in his leadership of the Tata team. The ‘permit raj’ period has created a difficult, if not hostile, business environment. The socialist ideology of the day emphasized that capitalism was a creature that had to be strictly controlled, tolerant but never trusted. JRD and Tata's party were certainly shaped by the political and orientation of the day.
Expanding the Kingdom
When JRD was promoted to the ranks of Tata's party in 1938, taking over as Chairman of Sir Nowroji Saklatvala, he was the youngest member of the Tata Sons board. During the next 50 years of his administration, the group grew into chemicals, automobiles, tea, and technology. In violation of the Indian business practice of having your family members work different jobs, JRD sought to bring in professionals. Tata's party has become a business venture where business and professional talent is promoted.
Years ago, the program began to deteriorate at the end of it. Critics argue that it was damaged, as authorities and shelters emerged to challenge the infrastructure of the Tatata. If the JRD can be blamed for failing to understand the dangers of giving too much control to the operations of certain Tata companies, it should also be acknowledged that he was leading the group when the news came to a standstill. JRD was brave enough to use a gauntlet and was a man enough to deal with the fusillade coming after him.
Construction facilities
Making business empire news as intimidating and complex as that of Tatars would have been a very good job, but JRD had a lot to offer. He has played a very important role in increasing the Indian quotient in science, medicine and the arts. Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Tata Memorial Hospital, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, National Institute of Advanced Sciences and National Center for the Performing Arts, each exemplary of excellence in its field, were projects that could not be reached. fruit without strong JRD support.
In India the term ‘national interest’ means all kinds of things to all sorts of people. For JRD, it meant advancing the country's scientific and economic skills. He had strong views on what could help India and what would hinder its great struggle to eradicate poverty. Although he did his part in it, common sense did not have charms on him. His tendency to put his money where his beliefs led to the founding of the JRD Tata Trust, in 1944. A few years later she sold some of her shares and a flat in Bombay to establish JRD and Thelma Tata Trust, which works to improve the status of disadvantaged women in India.
The Animal Team and JRD were India’s most sensitive race between humans and their production. Here again, he disagreed with Nehru, who thought that "population is our power". JRD has spent a lot of time and resources on finding and disseminating ways to control population growth in the country. To date, he has helped to establish what became an International Institute of Population Studies. In 1992, JRD received the United Nations Population Award, a late recognition for lifelong love.
Despite his public appearance, JRD was a shy man who loved to talk. He never served after being honored but was washed with them, much to his surprise. When told that the Indian government was considering giving him the Bharat Ratna, the country's highest medal, he reportedly said: "Why me? I don't deserve it. The Bharat Ratna is usually given to the dead or given to politicians.
Self-explanatory, humble, popular and lovable are just a few adjectives used to describe JRD. It wasn’t all the peaches and cream, though. JRD did not suffer from stupidity and was angry when confronted with beauty or hypocrisy. There was always about him a dapper and a universal spirit, with a dry ingenuity thrown in to light up the burden of myth. When a friend started a letter to JRD greeting 'Dear Jay', he wrote: "I looked up the dictionary and found that Jay was a 'European bird with a loud and noisy bird' and, figuratively speaking, 'he is a senseless or easy wander. , please note that my name is spelled 'Jeh', with the words 'Jehangir'. Any similarities between me and this bird are purely coincidental. "
He and his wife, Thelma, whom he married after the Paris affair in 1930, had no children, but JRD always seemed comfortable with the children. For adults, the biggest problem, he showed a generous spirit that, whether in business or in life, was important people. When JRD died for the last time, in a hospital in Geneva on November 29, 1993, it can truly be said that the era is over. Honorable India - and Indianness - left for good.
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