Passing away
of an Indian legend. . . . On July 27, 2003,
L&T announced the passing away of Henning
Holck-Larsen, aged 96, the co-founder of the
Indian Engineering and Construction conglomerate
Larsen & Toubro Limited.
Born July 4,
1907 in Denmark, Mr. Holck-Larsen was educated at
the University of Copenhagen. Larsen came to
India in 1937 after being sent to do some
construction work. Understanding that there were
only few Indians who had knowledge of engineering
in 1938, he and his former schoolmate Soren
Kristian Toubro established Larsen and Toubro
Limited, which was to become one of India`s
industrial giants. World War II kept Larsen from
returning to Denmark, and he was to spend 60
years in India, and dying there itself in Bombay.
Times of India
ran a tribute to him saying he did not teach, but
he made an environment where Indians sought after
knowledge themselves. He did not do anything, but
he inspired and created a vision they were
motivated to work fort.
Honoured by the
Padma Bushan in 2002 by the Indian Government, he
remarked : "India,
my adopted homeland , have a special place in my
heart. With the Padma Bushan, I`m happy to
realise that I have a place in her heart too. I
regard this honour as a tribute to the unique
spirit of L&T, and the values it has always
stood by: its professionalism, its commitment to
quality, and its concern for the entire community
of stakeholders."
Mr.
Holck-Larsen was a visionary in the true sense of
the word. "It is our ability to anticipate
the future", he once said, "and react
accordingly that will determine our
success." L&T's distinctive place in
Indian industry, its spectacular record of
achievements and its unique character are due, in
great measure, to his inspirational leadership.
The Company's strong customer orientation and its
professionalism can also be traced to the values
he instilled.
Mr.
Holck-Larsen was perhaps the only foreign
industrialist to have spent more than 60 years in
India. L&T is, and always was, an essentially
Indian success story. Once, when asked what he
would define as the single most important
ingredient of his success as an industrialist in
a developing country, Mr Holck-Larsen replied:
"If you want to belong to a country which
becomes a nation, you have to keep the economy
growing by creating jobs. And you can only do
that by investing in tomorrow, and tomorrow is
made by people." So strongly is the Company
and its achievements identified with Indian
aspirations, that its tagline reads ' We make the
things that make India proud'.
On retirement
from L&T, he was made Chairman Emeritius of
the Company. He divided his time between Denmark
and India, and maintained a keen interest in the
working of L&T.
Mr.
Holck-Larsen received several prestigious awards,
medals and honours from around the globe - the
Ramon Magsaysay Award for International
Understanding (1976), a knighthood from Queen
Margarethe II of Denmark (1977), Sir Jehangir
Ghandy Medal for Industrial Peace (1980),
Chemtech Foundation's Chemical Industry Stalwart
Award (2000), the Bombay Management Association's
Lifetime Achievement Award (2001), a citation
from the Indo-European Union Business Summit for
promoting business beyond boundaries (2002), and
the Padma Bhushan (2002) for his contribution to
Indian industry.
Mr.
Holck-Larsen is survived by a daughter, and of
course a legacy of one of India's most respected
companies.
http://www.larsentoubro.com/ - We make the
things that make India proud
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Dødsfald
(28-07-2003)
- Tribute in DanishHenning
Holck-Larsen, civilingeniør, direktør, chairman
emeritus, fhv. generalkonsul, Bombay, er død 96
år. Næppe nogen anden enkeltperson har ifølge
Berlingske Tidende ydet så førsteklasses
u-landsarbejde, uden at det har kostet den danske
stat en krone.
Henning Holck-Larsen, der blev student fra
Metropolitanskolen i 1925 og 5 år senere
cand.polyt., oprettede i 1938 sammen med
skolekammeraten og ungdomsvennen Søren K. Toubro
et firma med sæde i Bombay, som skulle komme til
at bygge cementfabrikker, kunstgødningsanlæg,
boligkarreer, havneanlæg og et atomkraftværk i
Indien.
Ingeniørfirmaet Larsen & Toubro giver i dag
beskæftigelse til godt 20.000 indiske
medarbejdere og har holdt livet oppe hos 300.000.
Toubro og Holck-Larsen bragte know-how til landet
og skabte en række basisindustrier. De udviste
tidligt stor social ansvarlighed og oprettede
klinikker for de mange ansatte.
Holck-Larsen fik i 1976 "Asiens
Nobelpris" for den menneskelige måde,
hvorpå han havde ført teknologien ind i Indien.
Prisen på 10.000 dollars gav han videre til
Indira Gandhis fond for naturkatastrofer. 4 år
senere fulgte Sir Jehangir Gandhy guldmedaljen.
Henning Holck-Larsen trådte tilbage som formand
for Larsen & Toubro i 1980, men da en
storaktionær i 1990 ville slå hul på
pengetanken, vendte han tilbage, da med titlen
Chairman Emeritus, for at beskytte aktiekapitalen
på omkring en kvart milliard kroner og de
betydeligt større indre værdier.
Forfatterinden Iris Garnov skriver i sine
mindeord bl.a., at "Henning Holck-Larsen gik
helt nye veje: Han købte jord, byggede boliger
og sørgede for uddannelser til de voksne
arbejdere; han byggede skoler, hvor arbejdernes
børn fik undervisning... Han blev kendt overalt
på Jorden som den smukke, statelige og elskelige
dansker.. hans kultiverede adfærd var lykkeligt
forenet med hans flotte stil og store charme og
berigede alle i hans nærhed.. hans hjerte var i
Indien, og det var dér, det holdt op med at
slå."
Henning Holck-Larsen boede de sidste mange år
halvdelen af tiden i Gentofte og den anden
halvdel i sit elskede Bombay. Han blev født 4.
juli 1907 i København og døde i storbyen på
Indiens vestkyst 27. juli 2003.
Source: http://u-landsnyt.dk/
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