AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ROHIT KHANNA - Part 1
BOOK TITLE: Engineer Forged in the Tata
Nagar Crucible
SUBTITLE: Finding Grace in the Grind
PREFACE
Why I Remember
Every life is a collection of ledgers,
some written in ink, and some written in the heart. For a long time, I carried
my stories like a closed book, tucked away in the quiet corners of my mind. But
as time passes, I’ve realized that stories untold are like unpaid debts; they
belong to the posterity & generations that come after us. This book began with a simple desire to trace a thread. I
wanted to understand the man who helped shape the landscape of my own life: My
paternal grandfather Lala Hari Chand Khanna & my maternal grandfather, Mr.
Kishori Lal Mehra. They were men of numbers and precision, A Banker & an
accountant who lived through the ultimate subtraction, the Partition of 1947.
Watching their journeys from the ancestral lands of West Punjab to the
resettlement streets of Ambala Cantt, I realized that my own resilience was not
self-made. It was inherited. I am writing this
autobiography to bridge the gap between the past and the future. I want my
children and grandchildren to know that we did not just appear out of thin air;
we are the result of long journeys, difficult migrations, and the steady work
of those who came before us. Within these
pages, you will find more than just dates and locations. You will find the
scent of old offices, the dust of the Punjab roads, the echoes of a family
rebuilding itself, and the personal milestones that defined my own path. This is my ledger. It is a record of where we came from,
so that those who read it may know exactly where they stand.
PROLOGUE: The View from the Middle
The Echo of the First Step
The world doesn’t change all at once;
it shifts in the quiet moments we usually fail to notice. Looking back now, the
trajectory seems so clear, but at the time, it felt like nothing
more than a series of disconnected
breaths. I remember the
smell of the air that morning, sharp, expectant, and heavy with the kind of
stillness that precedes a storm. I wasn’t looking forward to writing a history;
I was simply trying to survive a Tuesday. But history has a way of finding you
when you aren't looking for it. Every life is a
collection of fragments. Some are polished like river stones, others are jagged
and still draw blood when you touch them. To understand the person standing
here today, we have to go back to the fragments that were cast aside, the ones
I thought didn't matter. This is not just a record of what happened, but a map
of how I found my way back to myself.
To my
Grandchildren - Why We Crossed the Oceans
My Dear Ones,
It is the most important thing for the
future generations of your family. It explains the "Why" behind the
"How." It bridges the gap between the luxury of the past and the
liberty of the present.
You may look at the old photographs of
the "Big Bungalows" in Jamshedpur, or hear the stories of our
ancestors in Lahore who walked with armed guards, and wonder: Why did he leave
it all? Why exchange the status of a Chief Engineer and the comfort of servants
for the cold winds of the North Atlantic? The answer lies
in the very "Value Engineering" I practiced all my life. In India, I learned that a man’s worth is often measured
by his title and his proximity to power. But in the "Stadium
Dialogues" with Russi Mody, I saw that the greatest value a leader can
have is transparency and truth. I wanted a life where my children and
grandchildren wouldn't be judged by the "Dynasty" they came from, but
by the "Merit" they possessed. I left the
bungalows because I realized that security is not a fence; it is a skill. I
wanted you to grow up in a place where the air is as clear as Reiki healing,
and where your path is limited only by your imagination, not by your caste or
your connections. We brought the Steel of the Tatas in our character and the Resilience
of the Khanna’s in our hearts. We traded the "Big Bungalow" for a Big
Future. When you look at
the mini portable lathe I brought from India or see me practicing Reiki on a
quiet Halifax afternoon, remember this: Every generation
must find its own bearings. I have built the bridge; you are the ones
meant to cross it. Always remember that wealth can be taken away in a single
night, as it was in 1947, but the education in your head and the compassion in
your heart are yours forever.
With all my love.
Your Grandfather (Engineer, Healer,
& Traveler)
The Confluence of two Dynasties
To understand my journey, one must
look at the meeting of two great RIVERS of Indian history: the Khanna lineage
and the Tata empire. My story does not exist in a vacuum; it is
woven into the very fabric of India’s transition from a colonial subject to an
industrial powerhouse. A powerful story that spans nearly two centuries,
bridging two countries and several distinct worlds. From the intricate banking
systems of Old Lahore to the massive blast furnaces of Jamshedpur, and finally
to the serene healing spaces of Halifax, my journey is a masterclass in
resilience and adaptation.
The Intertwined Path
In our household, the names Jamshedji
Tata and J.R.D. Tata were spoken of with the same reverence as our own
ancestors. The connection was more than just admiration; it was a blueprint for
living. My paternal Grandfather Lala Hari Chand Khanna & maternal
grandfather, Mr. Kishori Lal Mehra, though men of numbers, operated with that
same "Tata Esque" precision, the belief that an accountant’s ledger
was a sacred document of trust. As I grew, I
realized I was a product of these two worlds: the scholarly, strategic depth of
the Khanna’s and the pioneering, resilient spirit of the Tatas. One gave me my
roots; the other gave me my horizon. We move from the
grand overview of dynasties into the engine room of history. This focuses on
how the high-level values of the Khanna and Tata lineages were practiced daily
through their lives as an accountant & a banker, during one of the most
turbulent times in human history. A
breathtaking metaphor. It elevates the Tata history from a corporate timeline
to a force of nature. By viewing the Tata dynasty as a river that adapts to the
climate of history, expanding in war and persevering through famine, we capture
the "Industrial Soul" of India.
The
Khanna River: The Current of Calculation
If the Tatas were the river of the
Earth, the Khanna’s were the river of the Mind. Their journey began with the
steady, rhythmic flow of finance, rolling in cash and raking in installments of
interests on the principle. It was a river that understood the value of time
and the power of accumulation. Like its neighbor, the Khanna River experienced
the extremes of the century too. During World
Wars, the river overflowed as the demand for capital and resource management
peaked. During the lean, harrowing years of famine and the plague, the river
did not disappear. It retreated into deep pools of conservation, husbanding its
strength during the depressions that broke lesser streams. Then came the great
shift, a moment when the river was forcibly displaced from its original course.
Whether by history or migration, the waters had to find a new path. The New
Channel, the river did not stop; it redirected its energy into the Wealth of
Medicine, healing and preserving life. And eventually, a new tributary branched
out: Industrial Engineering.
The Tata River: A Current of
Resilience
The Tata dynasty was never a stagnant
pool; it was a vast, restless river that understood the geography of ambition.
It began as a Trading River, a winding current of commerce that flowed toward
the great seaports. There, it met the world, raking in the wealth of global
trade, not to hoard it, but to recirculate it. Like a river diverted for the
common good, this wealth was channeled into the foundations of the earth, Real
Estate that built cities and the massive reservoirs of the Hydro-Electric
plants. The family realized early on that a river’s true power is not just in
its movement, but in the energy, it generates for those on its banks. But no
river is immune to the seasons of history. During the Great World Wars, the
river surged. It broke its banks, flooding the world with the steel and
materials needed for global survival. It became a torrent of production, the
lifeblood of an empire in crisis. There were times of bitter drought. During
the dark years of famine, the Great Depression, and the sweeping shadows of the
plague, the river seemed to dry to a trickle. The flow slowed, the bed grew
parched, and the world watched to see if it would vanish into the sand. But the
Tata River is fed by deep, underground springs of integrity and resilience.
After every crisis, the waters returned. It didn't just refill; it bounced back
into action with a renewed velocity, carving new paths through the landscape of
modern India and eventually carrying me along in its current when I stepped
into the gates of TISCO in 1967 for a moment & finally in 1974 for good. At
this point in the story, the "Khanna River" has just sent a young,
observant trainee into the massive, thundering current of the "Tata
River." Here at TISCO, a place where the air smells of sulfur and hot
metal, and where the scale of "wastage" can be measured in tons if
someone isn't watching the flow.
The
Baptism of Steel
While the Tata River was the
"Great Infrastructure" of a nation, the Khanna River was the
"River of Capital and Human Intelligence." It describes a transition
from the physical accumulation of wealth to the intellectual accumulation of expertise,
moving from the flow of money to the flow of medicine and engineering. In 1967,
I was a twenty-something in-plant trainee, small against the backdrop of
TISCO’s towering blast furnaces. My mission for those six months was to learn
the anatomy of a giant. To a trainee, a man like Darius, a consummate metallurgist,
was the human personification of the river’s force. He didn't just walk the
plant; he commanded the rhythm of the work. It was under his gaze that I began
to see the Rivers of Wastage, the idle time between shifts, the heat loss in
the furnaces, the redundant movements of a laborer. He was the one who
sharpened my eyes to see that an engineer’s true value isn't in adding more,
but in losing less. This is where my personal story reaches its peak. I didn't
just join the Tata River; I brought the Khanna river’s discipline to it. I used
the Khanna lens of efficiency to help the Mother River of the Tatas conserve those
Rivers of Wastage. In my hands, every drop of wasted time, material, or energy
was reclaimed, turning "waste" into "wealth" and driving
even greater industrial profits for the dynasty.
The Tata Connection: The Industrial
North Star
Intertwined with our family narrative
is the looming, prestigious shadow of the Tata dynasty. The Tatas didn't just
build factories; they built a nation. Their philosophy of philanthropic
capitalism mirrored the Khatri values of community service and ethical living. The intersection of the Khanna’s and the Tatas represent
a unique moment in the Indian 20th century, where the administrative brilliance
of the North met the industrial vision of the West. Whether through
professional alliances, shared social circles in the high echelons of Delhi and
Mumbai, or the common goal of nation-building, these two dynasties shared a
singular ethos: Integrity over profit.
The Khanna dynasty - The Intellectual
Architects
The Khanna’s, like the Mehra’s, belong
to the elite Dhai Ghar Khatris. Historically, the Khanna’s were the
administrators, the scholars, and the strategic thinkers of Northern India.
While others held land, Khanna’s held knowledge. In my family, the Khanna
bloodline represented a rigorous commitment to excellence, and a sophisticated
understanding of how the world was governed. They were the "brain
trust" of the community, often serving in high-ranking positions that
required both diplomacy and a sharp mathematical mind.
1830 - The Era of Maharaja Ranjit
Singh
During the peak of the Sikh Empire
under Maharaja Ranjit Singh, the Khanna’s functioned as Private Bankers
(Sahukars). Unlike modern banks, they were "merchant-financiers"
who:
Financed the State: They provided
short-term loans to the Lahore Darbar, the Royal Court and the military for
campaigns.
Hundi System: They operated the Hundi system,
a sophisticated indigenous credit instrument that allowed money to be
transferred across the Silk Road, to Kabul / Samarkand without moving physical
gold. Tax Farming: Many
Khatri families, including the Khanna’s, were involved in collecting land
revenue, acting as the financial bridge between the peasantry and the Sikh
nobility.
1849 - Transition to British Rule
After the British annexed Punjab in
1849, the Khanna’s successfully pivoted. While many old aristocrats lost their
land, the banking families adapted to the new colonial legal system.
Legal & Civil Influence: The
family produced several notable legal minds. It was common for one branch of
the family to handle the traditional money-lending business while another
entered the British-sanctioned professions, law and civil service.
The Rise of Joint-Stock Banking: By the late 19th
century, the Khanna’s moved from private lending to being investors and
directors in the first Swadeshi, indigenous banks. They were instrumental in
the environment that birthed the Punjab National Bank (PNB) in 1894, the first
bank managed entirely by Indians in Lahore.
Prominent Figures & Cultural
Impact
Within the Khanna dynasty of Lahore,
specific branches stood out for their intersection with politics and
industry:
Lala Durga Das Khanna: A famous figure
from this lineage who, despite being from an "orthodox Hindu banking
family," became a revolutionary associated with Bhagat Singh. His father
and grandfather were prominent moneylenders in Lahore, and his life story
highlights the tension between the conservative banking world and the radical
independence movement of the 1920s.
The Shanti Lal Khanna: Another
prominent line was major landowners and financiers in Lahore until 1947. Their
wealth was so significant that they were considered part of the Rais, the
landed and financial elite of the city.
Great-Grandfather: Mr. Bishen
Narain Khanna
In the context of our family's history
in Lahore, Bishen Narain Khanna was a central figure: He was a prominent merchant
banker and financier in Lahore. He is famously remembered as the final member
of the family to remain in Lahore to look after their interests while the rest
of the family was sent ahead to safety in India. During the violence in the Anarkali
bazaar, he was protected by a Muslim neighbor who escorted him to the train
station. In a poignant moment often cited in your family's narrative, Bishen
Narain handed the keys of the family home to this neighbor, who told him to
keep them for his eventual return.
Grandfather: Lala Hari
Chand Khanna
Lala Hari Chand Khanna represents the
generation that transitioned the family from their established life in Lahore
to their new beginning in India. As the son of a successful merchant banker, he
carried forward the family name during one of the most turbulent periods in the
region's history.
The 1947 Exodus
The Partition of India was the
"great leveling" for the Khanna dynasty. Loss of Assets: As Lahore became part of Pakistan, the Khanna’s,
being Hindu Khatris, were forced to leave behind vast "immovable
property", palatial homes in Civil Lines and Anarkali, and millions in
unrecoverable private loans.
Rebuilding in Ambala Cantt
Like many Lahore banking families,
they arrived in India as refugees but used their "social capital" and
education to restart. Many moved into the textile industry, arms trade, and
international finance in New Delhi.
Weaving
the Two Dynasties Together
It is fascinating to see the parallels
between the Khanna’s and the Tatas: The Persistence: Both families faced
displacement, the Parsis from Persia; the Khanna’s from Lahore. The Vision: Your families "tinkered" with
health and iron; the Tatas "tinkered" with the industrial future of
India. The Character:
Just as the doctor Khanna built up Massive Goodwill, his children were
"living credit cards" in Ambala, the Tata name became a global symbol
of trust. The Tata saga
paints a vivid picture of 19th-century Bombay, a "Venice of India"
where the tides dictated the trade and a single family of priests decided to
trade their robes for the merchant's ledger. The Tata Dynasty, focusing on the
pioneer Nusserwanji and the three grand obsessions of Jamshedji.
The
emergence of a Dynasty of Dreamers & Doers
The story of the Tatas does not begin
in the boardroom, but in the fires of ancient Persia. In the 8th century AD, as
the Islamic Conquest swept through the Persian Empire, a group of Zoroastrians,
the Parsis, fled to protect their faith and their flame. They landed on the
shores of Gujarat, bringing with them a culture of integrity and "Good
Thoughts, Good Words, Good Deeds." For twenty-five
generations, the Tata ancestors remained rooted in the soil of Navsari. They
lived as priests and farmers, quietly cultivating the discipline that would
eventually build empires. It was only when the winds of trade blew toward the
Bombay Presidency, a vast territory spanning from the sands of Sindh to the
hills of Karnataka, that the family stepped onto the stage of history.
The Confluence of Two Tata Bloodlines
The modern Tata tree grew from the
union of two significant branches. On one side stood Ratan Dorab Tata, a Parsi
priest whose son, Nusserwanji Ratan Tata, carried the family’s entrepreneurial
spark to Bombay. On the other side was the head of another renowned branch,
Kavasji Manaeckji Tata. The bridge
between these two worlds was built when Nusserwanji married Kavasji’s daughter,
Jeevanbai. This union produced five sons, the eldest of whom would change the
destiny of India: Jamshedji Nusserwanji Tata.
The Priest Who Braved the Ocean of
Business
In the early 1800s, Bombay was not the
solid metropolis we know today; it was a scattering of more than a dozen
islands, a swampy "Venice of India" waiting to be reclaimed from the
Arabian Sea. In this world of salt and silt, Nusserwanji Ratan Tata did
something revolutionary: he became the first in twenty-five generations of
Parsi priests to venture into the "ocean of business." At just 19 years old, Nusserwanji left the sleepy lanes
of Navsari for the bustling docks of Bombay. He was a man of the horizon. He
established a trading firm that stretched its arms all the way to Hong Kong and
China. His ships were the shuttles in a global loom, carrying Indian cotton and
opium East, and returning with hulls heavy with silk, tea, camphor, spices, and
precious metals like copper, brass, and gold. The First Innovation: Ever the observer of movement,
Nusserwanji was the one who introduced the Chinese Rickshaw to the streets of
Bombay, the very same mode of transport that, decades later, my own father
would use for his medical rounds in the streets of Ambala Cantt.
1939
- Jamshedji, The Son of the Three Dreams
Born in 1839, Jamshedji Nusserwanji
Tata joined his father’s firm as a young man, but his mind traveled far beyond
the trade of silk and opium. From 1880 until his passing in 1904 at the age of
64, Jamshedji was a man "consumed" by a triumvirate of dreams that
many called impossible for a colonized nation: Iron and Steel: To forge the literal backbone of a modern
India.
Hydroelectric Power: To harness the
monsoon rains and white coal to light the cities. A World-Class University: An institution that would tutor
Indians in the sciences, turning them from subjects into innovators.
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