Sarabhai family
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The Sarabhai family is a prominent Indian family active in several fields. The patriarch, Ambalal Sarabhai, was a leading industrialist. While he created significant wealth, his children interested themselves in a wide variety of other endeavours, and the family is better known for those activities, rather than for industrial enterprise, which is now all but defunct.
Family history
The Sarabhai family are major business family of India belonging to the Shrimal Jain community.[1]
Its twentieth century doyen Sheth Ambalal Sarabhai, was a Gujarati industrialist. He had five daughters and three sons who were involved in the family business as well as the Indian independence movement. After India's freedom, the family remained involved in developmental tasks undertaken by the government of India.
Ambalal Sarabhai was a prominent mill-owner and also interested in philanthropic activities. His wife Sarladevi Sarabhai was impressed by the Maria Montessori philosophy and in the year 1922, Montessori sent E. M. Standing to India for the homeschooling of Sarabhai children.
Sarabhai Enterprises branched out after India's independence and many pioneer ventures were made in fields dominated by foreign companies. The manufacture of drugs and pharmaceuticals, chemicals and intermediates, dyes and pigments, industrial and household detergents, soaps and cosmetics, industrial packaging and containers, and later engineering and electronic products.
Family members
Prominent members of the Sarabhai family include:
- Ambalal Sarabhai. Patriarch of the family. Born into a family of tradesmen, he invested the family wealth into various industrial enterprises in the early 1900s, including Sarabhai Textile Mills at Ahmedabad, which was one of the largest in India at that time.
- Anasuya Sarabhai (Ambalal's sister), a trade unionist, activist and freedom fighter. Married young, she never cohabited with her husband.
- Saraladevi Sarabhai, devoted wife of Ambalal and the mother of his eight children (three sons and five daughters)
- Suhrid Sarabhai Sr. (Ambalal's son), industrialist
- Suhrid Sarabhai Jr (elder Son of Suhrid Sr)
- Sanjay Sarabhai (younger son of Suhrid Sr)
- Gautam Sarabhai (Ambalal's son), industrialist and philanthropist
- Mana & Shyama, daughters of Gautam sarabhai
- Mridula Sarabhai (Ambalal's daughter), freedom fighter and Indian politician; unmarried
- Vikram Sarabhai (Ambalal's son), co-founder of ISRO and IIM Ahmedabad.
- Mrinalini Sarabhai. Wife of Vikram Sarabhai and herself a noted danseuse.
- Kartikeya Sarabhai (son of Vikram Sarabhai), educationist and environmentalist
- Mallika Sarabhai (daughter of Vikram Sarabhai), noted danseuse and activist; briefly married to Bipin Shah, a publisher
- Revanta Shah Sarabhai, son of Mallika Sarabhai and Bipin Shah; a dancer by profession, he chooses to be known by his mother's famous maiden name
- Anahita Sarabhai, performance artist, co founder of QueerAbad[2]
- Leena Mangaldas (Ambalal's daughter), founder of Shreyas Foundation. She is married to Madanmohan Mangaldas Girdhardas, noted industrialist
- Kamal Mangaldas (son of Leena Mangaldas), noted architect
- Gira Sarabhai (Ambalal's daughter), unmarried; a dedicated Gandhian
- Gita Mayor, (Ambalal's daughter)
- Bharti Sarabhai, (Ambalal's daughter), unmarried
- Suhrid Sarabhai Sr. (Ambalal's son), industrialist
Institutions built by Sarabhai family
- Calico Mills - Ambalal Sarabhai
- Jubilee Mills - Ambalal Sarabhai
- Kasturba Gandhi Rashtriya Smarak Trust - Sarladevi Ambalal Sarabhai
- Majoor Mahajan - Anasuyaben Sarabhai
- Jyoti Sangh - Mridulaben Sarabhai
- Vikas Gruh - Mridulaben Sarabhai
- Shreyas Foundation & School - Leenaben Mangaldas
- B.M. Institute of Mental Health - Gautam Sarabhai
- The Physcotherapy Study Group - Gautam Sarabhai
- National Institute of Design - Gautam Sarabhai and his sister Giraben Sarabhai
- Darpana Academy of Performing Arts - Mrinalini & Vikram Sarabhai
- Calico Museum of Textiles - Giraben Sarabhai
- Ambalal Sarabhai Enterprises, Baroda - Gautam Sarabhai, a commercial (corporate) venture
- Centre for Environment Education - Kartikeya Sarabhai
- VIKSAT - Kartikeya Sarabhai
- CHETNA - Kartikeya Sarabhai
- Sangeet Kendra - Geeta Mayor
- Darpana for Development - Mallika Sarabhai
- Mapin Publishing - Mallika Sarabhai and her husband Bipin Shah
Major Institution Building Efforts of Vikram Sarabhai (1947-1971)
- Ahmedabad Textile Industry’s Research Association (ATIRA)
- Physical Research Laboratory (PRL), Ahmedabad
- Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad
- Community Science Centre (CSC), Ahmedabad
- Nehru Foundation for Development (NFD), Ahmedabad
- Ahmedabad Management Association (AMA), Ahmedabad
- Sarabhai Chemicals, Baroda
- Sarabhai Glass, Baroda
- Suhrid Geigy, Baroda
- Synbiotics, Baroda
- Sarabhai Merck, Baroda
- Sarabhai Engineering Group, Baroda
- Operations Research Group (ORG), Baroda
- Sarabhai Research Centre (SRC), Baroda
- Systronics, Ahmedabad
- Swastik Oil Mills, Bombay
- Standard Pharmaceuticals, Calcutta
- Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS), Trivandrum
- Space Science and Technology Centre (SSTC), Trivandrum
- Shriharikota Rocket Range (SHAR), Sriharikota
- Experimental Satellite Communication Earth Station (ESCES), Ahmedabad
- Satellite Communication System Division (SCSD), Ahmedabad
- Electronics System Division (ESD), Ahmedabad
- Microwave Antenna Systems Engineering Group (MASEG), Ahmedabad
- Audio Visual Instructional Division (AVID), Ahmedabad
- Remote Sensing and Meteorological Division (RSMD), Ahmedabad
- Indian Scientific Satellite Project (ISSP), Bangalore
- Satellite Instructional Television Experiment (SITE), Ahmedabad
- Indian National Satellite (INSAT) Satellite Launching Vehicle (SLV) Trivandrum
- Satellite Communication Earth Station,
- Arvi Fast Breeder Reactors (FBR), Kalpakkam
- Nuclear Centre for Agriculture, New Delhi
- Variable Energy Cyclotron Project (VECP), Calcutta
- Electronic Prototype Engineering Laboratory (EPEL), Bombay
- Electronics Corporation of India (ECIL), Hyderabad
- Uranium Corporation of India (UCIL), Jaduguda, Bihar
No.4 was renamed as the Vikram A. Sarabhai Community Science Centre after Dr. Sarabhai’s death in 1971. No.18 & 19 were merged under the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre after Dr. Sarabhai’s death in 1971. Nos.21,22,23,24,25 and 26 were merged under the Space Applications Centre after Dr. Sarabhai’s death in 1971. No. 31 was renamed as Vikram Earth Station after Dr. Sarabhai’s death in 1971.
See also
References
- ^ "Vikram A Sarabhai". Outlook. 19 August 2002. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
- ^ https://scroll.in/magazine/890421/in-ahmedabad-two-women-are-giving-the-queer-community-a-safe-space-where-they-can-ask-questions