–excerpt–
Amin Meghji’s family owned a soap, glycerine and oil manufacturing empire in Kenya and Tanzania, and he lived a life of luxury in Nairobi with five servants.
Then nationalization of large companies, first in Tanzania and later Kenya, forced him to flee to Canada in 1976.
“We were really spoiled in Africa. If we wanted anything done we just ordered the staff to do it. Then we came to Edmonton and I had to do my own laundry,” Amin says with a laugh.
He can afford to chuckle these days. Platinum Investments, the family company he runs with nephews Ali and Rahim, owns two of the city’s top-rated hotels and is building another two in the next two years despite the slow economy.
–snip–
Hampton Inns and Marriott also were impressed with the collegial approach taken by the Meghjis, an Ismaili Muslim family of Indian descent, to the hospitality industry.
“We believe in prayer and what has happened to us in Edmonton has been a miracle,” Amin says.
“You can change stones into gold if you believe, but it has to benefit everyone else as well as you.”