My Contempt for the Rich: Allan Gray, one of the Richest White men died: Was he Scottish or Jewish?

[Below is what I could find in wikipedia. I looked at various sources and saw, and posted a Jewish business report on him. They say he was “extremely private”. In all my time in SA I've never seen this man on TV or in public. But I know about his investment fund.

I can't find any overt suggestions that he is Jewish. He seems to genuinely be from Scotland.
But he had to have been 100% Jew friendly or he could never have reached these heights.
I do have a general contempt for the rich whites in South Africa, and pretty much worldwide, at how they help everyone and pander to everything except the whites. It is hard to see exactly what he did, due to all the secrecy. But I think its fair to say he helped non-whites far more than whites.
I have a contempt for the rich, who, while making money in South Africa, then go and live elsewhere. They do not live in this place, to suffer the result of their madness.
Truly, these people are shit. They leave the common white person to slowly die. I have contempt for these people. And the English-speakers in South Africa have a serious love of money. All whites do. This country was like the USA once in terms of sophistication and wealth. Everyone chased money only. And in the process they lost the country.
My view of the USA is that it will end up the same way, unless whites fight back. But every white who fights back DOES MAKE A DIFFERENCE. It is important to FIGHT BACK to reclaim the Western world for whites. Jan]

Allan William Buchanan Gray (8 April 1938 – 10 November 2019) was a South African billionaire businessman and philanthropist.[3] He was the founder of the privately-owned Allan Gray Investment Management, and the non-profit Allan Gray Orbis Foundation, and the Allan and Gill Gray Charitable Trust. Before he donated his stake in Allan Gray Investment Management, his net worth was estimated to have been US$10.5 billion (Rand 105 billion) in 2013.[4]
Contents

Early life

Gray was born in the South African city of East London in 1938. His family migrated from Aberdeen, Scotland to the then Cape Colony town of Butterworth in the 1890s.[5] His grandmother was the first female mayor in South Africa when she was elected mayor of Butterworth years later and had attended the University of Aberdeen.[5] Gray stated that his grandmother played a large role in his future success by instilling a family focus on education.[5]

After completing high school at Selborne College, he studied accounting at Rhodes University and went on to earn an MBA at Harvard Business School in 1965.[6][7] Grey was known to be dyslexic.[5]
Career

After Harvard, Gray started working for the asset management firm Fidelity Management and Research in Boston, where he stayed for eight years.[6] He established a reputation for being a successful contrarian investor in the economic crash of 1962.[5]

He returned to South Africa in 1973 to found what would become Allan Gray Investment Management in Cape Town. The company initially focused on investment counseling, later growing to include institutional clients. He then set up Orbis Investment Management in 1989 in London to focus on investing in international markets. Two years later the company relocated its headquarters to Bermuda.[6][4] By 2015, Orbis was managing over $30 billion in assets. Similarly, Orbis’s sister company, Allan Gray Investment Management grew to be South Africa’s largest privately held investment management firm, managing over $35 billion in client capital, making Gray one of Africa’s richest men, with a net worth above $2 billion. [8] The return on investment from Allan Gray and Orbis since its founding is comparable in success to Warren Buffett’s firm Berkshire Hathaway.[9]
Philanthropy

Gray established the Allan Gray Foundation in 2007 with a US$130 million endowment to fund bursaries and scholarships for talented South African high school students. This was the largest single recorded donation to a charity in South Africa at the time.[6][10] In 1979 he founded the Allan and Gill Gray Charitable Trust.[11] In 2016 Allan donated his entire stake in his company to the Allan and Gill Gray Charitable Trust so that dividends from his share in both the South African company and the Orbis Group can be exclusively used for philanthropic purposes.[8][12]
Awards and honours

In 2012 Gray was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Cape Town.[11]
Death

He was married to Gill Gray, and they lived in Hamilton, Bermuda.[2] Their son, William Gray, was president of Orbis in 2007.[13]

He died of a heart attack in Bermuda on 10 November 2019.[14][15]

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Gray_(investor)

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