You don’t have to be rich to do good, says octogenarian billionaire GP Hinduja
The Tete-a-tea session was organized by the Prabha Khaitan Foundation of Kolkata in affiliation with Young FICCI Ladies Organisation (YFLO), Kolkata, and offered by
. Shefali Rawat Agarwal, Chairperson of YFLO, Kolkata, launched the session as a conversationalist, UK-based writer, journalist, and social employee, Mohini Kent Noon, engaged Gopichand Hinduja in a dialog that exposed the octogenarian’s life experiences and a robust perception in karma, samskaras, Vedic knowledge, deep religion in Lord Hanuman and the affect of navagrahas and fogeys in life. G P Hinduja, who belongs to one of many richest and well-known households in London, is the co-chairman of the Hinduja Group that has workplaces in over 48 nations.
“Today, whatever I am, it is because of my parents. In life, the mother is most important because when a child is born, the Sanskars parents give to the child brings an impact based on the navagrahas or the nine planets which work on them. So life is complicated and difficult but if your karma and deeds help you to live comfortably. So what I learned from my mother from childhood was how to be generous and spiritual; how to feed everyone. Our parents taught us one thing that – everything belongs to everyone, nothing belongs to anyone,” Hinduja stated.
Sharing among the ideas his father adopted in life which influenced him, Hinduja stated, “Work to give was the primary precept. The second precept believed in was – the world is a bond – he by no means believed in attorneys, he by no means believed in documentations he used to solely see if he has discovered the fitting particular person and the way to sustain the phrase.
His third precept in life was – development with the partnership. If you’re able to establish an individual and you’ll perceive that you’re coping with the fitting particular person then it helps you to see how this precept can be saved.”
Responding to a query by Lady Mohini Kent Noon – So you take a look at the standard of the particular person, not the challenge? So what are you in search of?
Hinduja stated, “When I say the quality of the person I try to see if the person’s intentions and his philosophy and nature are straightforward. Look! Profit and loss can always happen, this is like life and death. My father always used to believe that he should deal with right-natured people, the right quality of people, and even if he had good projects where he knew he was making good money, and if he found that the character of the person was not good he never used to deal with them. So that is why he said growth with the partnership.”
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