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Business News/ News / India/  Amul pays tribute to Rahul Bajaj with a monochrome doodle. See post
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Amul pays tribute to Rahul Bajaj with a monochrome doodle. See post

Amul captioned the post, '#Amul Topical: Tribute to one of India's most dynamic and respected industrialists'

Amul shared a monochrome doodle of Rahul Bajaj on social media that is now going viral.Premium
Amul shared a monochrome doodle of Rahul Bajaj on social media that is now going viral.

Amul India never fails to win hearts. As India lost its veteran industrialist Rahul Bajaj, the popular dairy brand paid a heartfelt tribute to him that will make you emotional. Amul shared a monochrome doodle on social media that is now going viral.

It showed a monochrome doodle of the head of the Bajaj group. On top of the pic, the tagline reads, “Mera, uska, unka, inka, hamara Bajaj…" Amul captioned the post, “#Amul Topical: Tribute to one of India's most dynamic and respected industrialists."

On Saturday, a statement from the Bajaj Group said that the industrialist, who had not been keeping well for some time, had died in the “presence of his closest family members".

Check it out:

The picture went swiftly viral online and netizens simply loved the moving tribute.

Bajaj, whose name was synonymous with road transport in India, died Saturday aged 83, his company said.

He "had not been keeping well", the Bajaj Group said in a statement, adding he would be cremated on Sunday in Pune.

Bajaj was born into the Indian elite -- his grandfather was one of Mahatma Gandhi's closest aides.

He led the eponymous family-owned conglomerate for more than 40 years, and was best known for overseeing the stratospheric success of the Bajaj Chetak scooter in the 1970s and '80s.

The sturdy and affordable vehicle -- based on a design by Italy's Vespa and named after the legendary horse ridden into battle by a Hindu Rajput king in the 1500s -- became wildly popular with the Indian middle class following its 1972 launch.

But in the heavily regulated economy of the time the firm was only allowed to make 6,000 units a year, leading at one point to a 10-year waiting list.

Bajaj was considered relatively clean in a country where corruption is widespread.

After stepping down as head of the firm in 2005, he served a term in the upper house of the Indian parliament, for the Congress party.

He was unusually outspoken for an Indian billionaire, many of whom seek to avoid conflict with the authorities.

After Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party came to power in 2014, Bajaj said industrialists feared criticising the government despite a plunging growth rate and weak economy.

"If we criticise you there is no confidence that you will appreciate that," Bajaj had reportedly said at a private event in 2019 in the presence of home minister Amit Shah.

Last year, he expressed concerns over the impact of strict lockdowns imposed by the government to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

But PM Modi tweeted on Saturday that he was "pained" by Bajaj's demise, adding that he would be remembered for his "noteworthy contributions to the world of commerce and industry" and was a "great conversationalist".

Fellow industrialists paid tribute, with Harsh Goenka, chairman of conglomerate RPG Group, tweeting: "The 'spine' of Indian business cracks."

Bajaj, he added, "was a visionary, straight talking and very respected for his value systems. An era ends!"

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, the billionaire founder of Indian biotechnology company Biocon, said the country had "lost a great son & nation builder".

"I am devastated - he was a dear dear friend and will miss him dearly," she tweeted.

Bajaj was born on June 10, 1938 in the eastern Indian city of Kolkata.

After studying economics in New Delhi and law in Mumbai, he took an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1964 before joining the family business in Pune a year later.

The conglomerate was split into separate units in the 2000s following a family dispute.

But Bajaj Auto is now among the world's top 10 motorcycle-makers, and number one in three-wheelers, with a 72 percent market share according to Autocarpro.

"Rahul Bajaj's passing is a big loss to India," tweeted Rahul Gandhi. "We have lost a visionary whose courage made us proud."

With agency inputs

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Published: 13 Feb 2022, 04:23 PM IST
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