Wednesday, 30 July 2025


Book Review

Guru: A Long Walk to Success by Narendra Raval - A Testament to Grit, Purpose, and Unyielding Faith



Reviewed by Hezekiel Gikambi

Tagline: From temple steps to factory floors—Narendra Raval’s life story reminds every Kenyan youth that the journey to greatness begins with purpose, not privilege.

In a world often enamoured with polished finishes and the glamour of final success, Narendra Raval’s Guru: A Long Walk to Success takes us behind the curtain to the sacred and sobering terrain of beginnings—raw, uncertain, disciplined, and unyielding. It is the kind of story that, when told well, transcends biography. It becomes doctrine.

Raval’s journey, which begins in the narrow corridors of a temple monastery in Gujarat, India, and stretches into the thundering halls of industrial enterprise across East Africa, is not merely linear. It spirals upward with the slow grind of grit, propelled not by capital or connections, but by obedience, spiritual fidelity, and an irrepressible belief in duty. By the time the reader meets the present-day Raval—philanthropist, industrialist, and chairman of the Devki Group—they understand that this is no ordinary success story. It is, instead, a deeply human one, textured with moral clarity and anchored in values that today’s youth, especially those growing up in remote parts of Kenya, can embrace as a compass for life.

Raval does not shy away from revealing the weight of his early years. At just eleven, he left home to serve as a priest. This act of surrender marked his entry into a life of rigorous asceticism—waking at 4:00 a.m., fasting for spiritual purification, reciting scriptures, and undertaking tasks without question. To many, this may seem alien or even harsh, but it is precisely this crucible of obedience and denial that shaped the moral steel of the man he would become. This kind of spiritual discipline is almost absent in most narratives of business success, and yet in Raval’s case, it is the unshakable foundation.

The story takes a dramatic shift when his Guru commands him to move to Kenya. Raval obeys—not knowing where Kenya was, not having money, and not understanding the culture or language. That single act of obedience would redefine his destiny. The Kenya he finds is foreign, but not forbidding. He learns Swahili. He sells incense. He sleeps in the backroom of a shop. He stumbles but does not fall. He absorbs. He adapts. And, most importantly, he serves. His customers become his teachers. His honesty earns him trust. Slowly, the seeds of business are planted—not on the strength of ambition, but on the soil of relationship and reliability.

Kenyan readers will see in Raval a portrait of the youth they know: hardworking, constrained by opportunity, but bursting with potential. The boy who walked barefoot to school in India could well be the girl from Baringo or the boy in Kitui, dreaming of university. Raval does not suggest that the road is easy. On the contrary, the title of the book is deliberate. It is a “long walk.” The story affirms that shortcuts are illusions. Success, in his telling, is spiritual before it is material. And so it becomes possible—even beautiful—to endure, to wait, to struggle.

One of the most moving aspects of the book is Raval’s constant insistence that wealth is not to be hoarded. “Give more than you take” is not a mantra for him; it is a principle of existence. He funds hospitals and schools. He pays staff medical bills without fanfare. He builds temples not as trophies, but as tributes. This generosity is not performative. It is spiritual. It is deeply Gandhian, and perhaps more rare because it is not accompanied by noise or vanity.

And yet, the book is not overly moralistic. Raval acknowledges his imperfections, his moments of doubt, his fears, and the many times he risked everything. One particularly telling episode is when he decides to build his first steel mill, mortgaging almost all he had. People called him mad. He nearly lost everything. But he persisted—not because of recklessness, but because of a vision that refused to retreat. In those moments, one feels the full weight of what it means to walk by faith, not by sight.

Kenya is not a backdrop in this story; it is a central character. Raval speaks of Kenya with affection, reverence even. It is here that his journey flourishes, and he never forgets it. In fact, one senses that he considers himself more Kenyan than Indian—not in ethnic terms, but in soul and allegiance. He invests not just in business, but in the future of the country—its youth, its institutions, and its communities. There is a particular resonance for readers in counties like Samburu, Garissa, or Kwale—where young people often feel neglected by the national conversation. Raval’s story tells them: you matter. You can rise. You can build.

What is striking is that Guru does not read like a conventional business book. There are no frameworks, no bullet points, no prescriptions. Instead, there is story—rich, honest, painful, redemptive. There are characters who serve quietly: his wife Neeta, a pillar of support; his mentors, who shaped his spirit; his employees, who became his family. These are the unseen heroes, and Raval honours them with tenderness.

This book belongs not only in libraries and bookstores but in schoolbags and community halls. It should be read by every young person who has been told their dream is too big for their circumstances. It should be discussed in youth groups, dissected in leadership seminars, and quoted in sermons. For in it is the anatomy of true greatness—not the loud kind, but the luminous kind.

In the end, what Narendra Raval offers Kenya is not just cement and steel. He offers belief. Belief that the temple boy can become a tycoon. That the foreigner can become a patriot. That wealth can wear humility. That success, when rooted in service, is not something to be feared but to be emulated.

Guru: A Long Walk to Success is not just a book. It is a pilgrimage into what it means to build, to endure, to give, and to believe. For a country in search of moral renewal, it is exactly the kind of story we must tell ourselves—again and again. Having already been translated into Gujarati, the book deserves to find voice in Swahili, the lingua franca of over 200 million speakers across Africa and beyond. A Swahili translation will not only extend its reach but also ensure that millions of readers in East and Central Africa can draw inspiration from Guru Narendra Raval’s journey, anchoring its values of resilience, entrepreneurship, and accountability within their own cultural and linguistic heritage.

Gikambi is the Author of Safari ya Serengeti, a Swahili Scholar, a Communications Professional, a Language technologist and a Translation Consultant based in Nairobi, Kenya.

E-mail: hezekielgikambi@gmail.com

 

Book Review Guru: A Long Walk to Success by Narendra Raval - A Testament to Grit, Purpose, and Unyielding Faith Reviewed by Hezekiel G...