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From Bedouin to billionaire: how this entrepreneur beat the odds
Mohed Altrad became the World Entrepreneur of the Year for 2015 despite his humble origins.
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Billionaire Mohed Altrad . Courtesy Mohed Altrad
From Bedouin to billionaire: how this entrepreneur beat the odds
Updated: June 15, 2015 08:23 PM
Marseille, France
// The illegitimate Syrian-born son of a Bedouin tribal leader has
triumphed over a wretched start in life to be named World Entrepreneur
of the Year for 2015.
Mohed Altrad, who is around 65 but cannot be sure of his birth date, has built two prosperous businesses from scratch since arriving in France on a student scholarship.
His Altrad group, created from the ruins of a bankrupt scaffolding supply company, now has 170 affiliates worldwide, 17,000 employees and a turnover of US$2 billion (Dh7.34bn), producing annual profits of around $200 million.
He attributes his remarkable success in part to a business philosophy based on the belief that when workers are happy, they perform better and more efficiently. But he insists he has never forgotten his roots.
Mr Altrad was born in the desert outside Raqqa, now — to his immense sadness — controlled by ISIL. He says his birth was the product of rape, the second time his father, leader of a Bedouin tribe and representing its only lawful authority, had forced himself on a girl barely into her teens.
His elder brother, similarly conceived, died young. He was killed by their father’s maltreatment, according to Mr Altrad.
Their mother was no more than 13 when she died, soon after Mohed’s birth.
Mr Altrad knew no affection from his father and left the nomadic tribe to be brought up in poverty by his maternal grandmother in Raqqa.
“She saw no need for me to go to school,” he said, “since I was just going to be a shepherd.”
He was sent to the southern French city of Montpellier, unable to speak a word of French and having read only two French books, Arabic translations of an appraisal of General Charles de Gaulle, wartime leader and later president, and a Gustave Flaubert novel.
“It was a hard time,” he said. “I’d imagined France as a beautiful country of great culture and history. Arriving in Paris and continuing to Montpellier, it was very different — November with clouds, rain and cold after being in the Syrian heat a day before.
“I started university unable to understand even 10 per cent of what was being said. Algeria had won independence from France, lots of French people had left to resettle in the south of France and there was great hatred of Arabs in general.”
Mr Altrad remembers vividly how he rose above prejudice.
“One day I decided that for me to stay, it was not France that had to change for me, but me for France.”
He mastered French and English, and committed himself to his studies, emerging with a PhD in computer science.
Jobs in telecommunications followed and, in the early 1980s, he answered a call for qualified Arabs needed in Abu Dhabi to help with the development of Adnoc.
“I had a salary, a car and a house and there was nothing much in those days to spend my money on except a cinema showing mostly Indian films,” he said. So he saved.
Returning to France after four years, he joined a university friend in launching a company producing computers, nominally portable but each weighing 27kg.
The company flourished. But after devising a programme for an Arabic version of airport arrival and departure boards, which sold well to Arab countries, Mr Altrad felt he did not have the funds for the necessary business development.
Mohed Altrad, who is around 65 but cannot be sure of his birth date, has built two prosperous businesses from scratch since arriving in France on a student scholarship.
His Altrad group, created from the ruins of a bankrupt scaffolding supply company, now has 170 affiliates worldwide, 17,000 employees and a turnover of US$2 billion (Dh7.34bn), producing annual profits of around $200 million.
He attributes his remarkable success in part to a business philosophy based on the belief that when workers are happy, they perform better and more efficiently. But he insists he has never forgotten his roots.
Mr Altrad was born in the desert outside Raqqa, now — to his immense sadness — controlled by ISIL. He says his birth was the product of rape, the second time his father, leader of a Bedouin tribe and representing its only lawful authority, had forced himself on a girl barely into her teens.
His elder brother, similarly conceived, died young. He was killed by their father’s maltreatment, according to Mr Altrad.
Their mother was no more than 13 when she died, soon after Mohed’s birth.
Mr Altrad knew no affection from his father and left the nomadic tribe to be brought up in poverty by his maternal grandmother in Raqqa.
“She saw no need for me to go to school,” he said, “since I was just going to be a shepherd.”
But the young
Mohed Altrad was inquisitive and found a place in a local school, having
been enthused when peering through cracks in the wall to see children
being taught calligraphy.
Despite his humble origins, he became a
model pupil and, in a country influenced by the French mandate that
ended just after the Second World War, won a scholarship for the best
baccalauréat results of his year in the region.He was sent to the southern French city of Montpellier, unable to speak a word of French and having read only two French books, Arabic translations of an appraisal of General Charles de Gaulle, wartime leader and later president, and a Gustave Flaubert novel.
“It was a hard time,” he said. “I’d imagined France as a beautiful country of great culture and history. Arriving in Paris and continuing to Montpellier, it was very different — November with clouds, rain and cold after being in the Syrian heat a day before.
“I started university unable to understand even 10 per cent of what was being said. Algeria had won independence from France, lots of French people had left to resettle in the south of France and there was great hatred of Arabs in general.”
Mr Altrad remembers vividly how he rose above prejudice.
“One day I decided that for me to stay, it was not France that had to change for me, but me for France.”
He mastered French and English, and committed himself to his studies, emerging with a PhD in computer science.
Jobs in telecommunications followed and, in the early 1980s, he answered a call for qualified Arabs needed in Abu Dhabi to help with the development of Adnoc.
“I had a salary, a car and a house and there was nothing much in those days to spend my money on except a cinema showing mostly Indian films,” he said. So he saved.
Returning to France after four years, he joined a university friend in launching a company producing computers, nominally portable but each weighing 27kg.
The company flourished. But after devising a programme for an Arabic version of airport arrival and departure boards, which sold well to Arab countries, Mr Altrad felt he did not have the funds for the necessary business development.
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