Ahmed Juffali

Ahmed bin Abdullah bin Ibrahim Al Juffali (Arabic أحمد بن عبدالله بن إبراهيم الجفالي) (1 January 1924 - 20 July 1994), was a Saudi businessman, and the founder of E. A. Juffali and Brothers, the largest privately owned enterprise in Saudi Arabia.


Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Juffali
Born
Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Juffali

(1924-01-01)1 January 1924
DiedMay 6, 1994(1994-05-06) (aged 70)
NationalitySaudi Arabia
Spouse(s)Suad bint Ibrahim Al Husseini
Parents
Chairman of E. A. Juffali and Brothers
Successor Walid bin Ahmed Al Juffali
Issue Al-Walid
Khaled
Al-Maha
Tarek
Full name
Ahmed bin Abdullah bin Ibrahim bin Nasser Al Juffali
HouseBani Khalid

He was the main founder of the Saudi central bank, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA), and a member of the international advisory board of Chase Bank, and a board member of companies including Wells Fargo, and the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM).

Early life and education

Ahmed was born in Mecca on 1 January 1924, into a family of vast wealth and secrecy from Unayzah, Al-Qassim.[1] The Al-Juffali are members of Bani Khalid dynasty, rulers of Eastern Arabia during the early 1600s to the late 1800s after military defeats against the saudis.[2][1] The Family are most notable for being direct descendants of Khālid ibn al-Walīd.

Ahmed was the third and most favored son of Sheikh Abdullah bin Ibrahim Al Juffali. His mother is Madawi bint Ibrahim Al Obeid which was responsible for the education of her sons. Sheikh Ahmed had two elder brothers, Ibrahim and Ali, which where overseeing their fathers electricity empire. Now known as Saudi Electricity Company.[3][4]

Ahmed attended homeschool in his fathers historic palace in the centre of Mecca, where he was educated by a selection of financial scholars and merchants. Ahmed was particularly interested in the topic of bringing international companies to the local market.[5] Shortly after Ahmed had accumulated the knowledge needed, he had a vision and together with his brothers, embarked on a journey to introduce multinational companies to Saudi Arabia.

Sheikh Ahmed developed great interest in various philanthropic and humanitarian causes. He launched multiple initiatives and programs that continue to serve various sectors of the community and participate in humanitarian development inside and outside the Middle East and neighboring Islamic countries. Ahmed was also fluent in three languages: Arabic, English, German. Sheikh Ahmed taught himself German in his youth as he would always carry a custom made German to Arabic dictionary.

Business portfolio

Sheikh Ahmed founded E. A. Juffali and Brothers, together with his brothers Ibrahim and Ali. Ahmed built a brand new gleaming office building in the middle of a desert wasteland in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Which now houses Daimler AG, Bosch, Dow Chemical, Fluor Corp, Carrier, DuPont, Ericsson, IBM, Liebherr, Michelin, Nissan, Siemens AG, Nabors Industries, and many more.[6]

Humanitarian Projects

  • The Help Centre:

The Help Centre is a philanthropic non-governmental and non-profit organization dedicated to the welfare of persons with intellectual disabilities, from as early as birth to young adulthood and beyond. We seek means by which we can empower and integrate our children to participate fully and assume a rightful place in society, thereby attaining a fair chance at life. The Help Center began operations in November 1985. It soon became apparent that many children with intellectual disabilities required special services that were not available in either the hospitals or regular school settings. These children needed to be taught by specialists who understood the complexities of their problems and who could devise programs to help them live and integrate as independents within the larger community.[7]

Personal life

Sheikh Ahmed had one wife, three sons and one daughter. He married Suad bint Ibrahim Al Husseini in the early-1970s from the Al-Husayni clan. Suad is currently undertaking various philanthropic contributions. They have four children, three sons and one daughter:

Death

On 20 July 1994, Sheikh Ahmed died on the Balearic Sea in his brand new 48 meter yacht "TATASU", after a sudden heart attack. His fortune is in the hands of his last surviving son, Khaled bin Ahmed Al Juffali.[4]

Ancestry

gollark: <@301477111229841410> I have a webserver which does other things, and the memory usage is very very low. So is CPU. I don't get much traffic.
gollark: Browser extensions are generally autoupdated, so they probably *could* release a malicious version which steals them and get a bunch before anyone notices.
gollark: I would be surprised if it could actually run an entirely different language to the one it's designed for. Technically you could maybe run a Python interpreter written in JS, but that would be difficult and hilariously inefficient.
gollark: Obviously your password is decrypted at some point by a password manager. I'm not sure how you'd expect it to work.
gollark: They can still stick there to dissuade people even if they aren't actually binding.

References

  1. Taheri, Amir (2012). "Saudi Arabia: Change Begins within the Family". The Journal of the National Committee on American Foreign Policy. 34 (3): 138 143. doi:10.1080/10803920.2012.686725.
  2. "National Day of the State of Kuwait" (PDF). The Island. 25 February 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  3. Giselle Bricault (21 August 2012). Major companies of the Arab world. Publitec Publications. p. 547. ISBN 9789401197946. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  4. Luqman, Farouk (1 February 2013). "Ahmed Al-Juffali who supplied electricity to Jeddah residents". arabnews. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  5. De Gruyter (21 August 2012). Who's who in the Arab world. Publitec Publications. p. 230. ISBN 9783110930047. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  6. "Juffali". Juffali. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  7. "Founder". Retrieved 19 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.