Juan Yarur Lolas

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Juan Yarur Lolas
Museo de la Moda - Santiago de Chile 09.jpg
Statue in the Museum of Fashion, Santiago, Chile
BornJanuary 8, 1894
DiedAugust 21, 1954
Santiago, Chile
OccupationBanker
ChildrenJorge Yarur Banna
RelativesLuis Enrique Yarur Rey (great-nephew)

Juan Yarur Lolas (January 8, 1894 - August 21, 1954) was a Palestinian-Chilean banker.

Biography[]

Lolas emigrated from Palestine with his younger brother Nicolas in 1902 and set out for Latin America, where they already had relatives in Chile and Bolivia. After working as peddlers for a few years, the two eventually set up a small textile plant in La Paz in 1929. They were invited by President Arturo Alessandri in the mid-1930s to set up larger operations in Santiago, even offering generous incentives that included no custom duties on imported machine tools, low tariffs for imported supplies, and a loan exceeding $1 million USD from the country's largest bank. The brothers accepted it and founded a cotton manufacturing company in 1936. By 1948, this plant was employing more than 3,000 workers and was producing around 60% of the country’s cotton fabric, making it the largest textile plant in Latin America at that time.[1]

Earlier in 1937, Yarur also co-founded Banco de Crédito e Inversiones,[1][2] serving as its president from 1946 to 1954.[3] The bank is still owned by his descendants.[2]

Yarur was the president of the Arab colony in Santiago, Chile.[4] Together with the German colony, he tried to hire Hjalmar Schacht, Adolf Hitler's Economy Minister, as a "financial adviser" shortly after World War II, but the plan fell through when it became news.[4]

In April 1971, the Yurar textile factory was forcefully nationalised by the Allende government, alongside other successful enterprises owned by Palestinian immigrants. In light of these immigrants' quick economic success, they received relatively little sympathy from the Chilean bourgeoisie.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Baeza, Cecilia (2014). "Palestinians in Latin America: Between Assimilation and Long-Distance Nationalism". Journal of Palestine Studies. 43 (2): 59–72. doi:10.1525/jps.2014.43.2.59. ISSN 0377-919X.
  2. ^ a b Baeza, Cecilia (2006). "Les identités politiques à l'épreuve de la mobilité. Le cas des Palestiniens d'Amérique latine". Raisons Politiques. 21 (1): 77–95. doi:10.3917/rai.021.0077 – via Cairn.info. La BCI (Banco de Créditos e Inversiones), est ainsi la seule parmi les plus importantes banques du pays, a être encore entre les mains de la famille fondatrice : créée en 1937 par Juan Yarur Lolas, la BCI est aujourd’hui dirigée par Luis Enrique Yarur Rey, troisième génération du clan.
  3. ^ "Historia Bci". Banco de Crédito e Inversiones. Retrieved December 27, 2016.
  4. ^ a b Aronsfeld, C. C. (September 8, 1950). "Nazis in South America". The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. p. 3. Retrieved December 31, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. An effort to secure the immigration of Dr. Schacht, the former Ministry of Economy, was made by the Santiago German colony. They worked in league with the local Germany colony, whose President, Juan Yarur, one of the wealthiest industrialists in Chile, was to have engaged the doctor as "financial adviser." Timely publicity helped to frustrate the clever design.


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