Amode Ibrahim Atchia
Amode Ibrahim Atchia (1868 – 17 September 1947), otherwise known as Major Atchia, was an entrepreneur and technologist in the Indian Ocean Islands who pioneered the use of scientific concepts and invented structural and mechanical advances in technology for the nationbuilding of Mauritius.[1]
Amode Ibrahim Atchia | |
---|---|
Born | 1868 Rose-Belle, Mauritius |
Died | 17 September 1947 |
Nationality | Mauritian |
Occupation(s) | Entrepreneur, innovator, technologist |
Known for | Mauritius Hydro Electric Company; constructing mosque, ice factory, saw mill, and Cinema House. |
Early life
Born in Rose-Belle, in Grand Port district, AIA was the son of a Surti Muslims merchant called Ibrahim Sulleman Atchia who had arrived from Barbodhan, a village 15 km from Surat, in Gujarat state of India in the course of free trade. Despite little formal education, Amode Ibrahim Atchia, along with his three brothers, set about making unprecedented contributions to laying down the foundations of Mauritian society during the early 1900s.[2]
Enterprise
AIA is credited with setting up the Société Atchia Frères, reconstructing the first mosque at Rose Hill following the historic cyclone of 1892, and constructing the first ice factory and saw mill since the 1920s, with technological innovations in use of wind-energy and pre-fabricated concrete. The Atchias also opened the first Indian-run primary school near the mosque. In 1900, Major with his brother Hossen, dammed a river near Reduit and built the first hydro electric plant and generated electricity,[3] thus introducing hydro-electric power to the people of Mauritius[4] with AIA appointed as self-elected leader of Mauritius Hydro Electric Company.[5] In 1915, he pioneered the country's first Cinema House in Rose Hill, and thereafter in 1930, built the Cinéma des Familles, in Port-Louis, among several others in the same decade, such as La Salle Mon Bijou at Rose Belle, the Salle des Fêtes at Mahébourg, and the Cinema Coronation at Flacq.
The man who, brought electric lighting to Rose-Hill around 1900, built the Cinema Hall and around it the largest leisure centre on the island in 1915, featured evening football matches around 1927 even before England, who built houses, stairs, etc. in prefabricated concrete three-quarters of a century before ‘prefabs’, who used wind energy some 50 years before the ‘éolienne’ was heard of, this exceptional, legendary Rosehillian, was "Major" Atchia" --- (MD, l’express-dimanche 13th October 1985)[6]
References
- Dukhira, Chit. "The genuis [sic]: Amode Ibrahim Atchia, (1868–1947)". lexpess.mu.online.
- Emrith, Moomtaz (1967). The Muslims in Mauritius. Emrith. p. 50.
- "GANDHIJI'S HOSTS – "DIASPORIC" TRAJECTORIES: The Gujarati merchants – a powerful economic base". Lemauricien.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
- Macmillan, Allister (1914). Mauritius Illustrated: Historical and Descriptive, Commercial and Industrial Facts, Figures, & Resources. Asian Educational Services. p. 424. ISBN 9788120615083.
- Selvon, Sydney (2001). A comprehensive history of Mauritius: from the beginning to 2001. M.D.S. ISBN 9789990329964.
- Atchia, Dr. Michael. "Major Atchia, a model of enterprise". lexpress.mu.online.