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Nita Ambani, originally named Nita Dalal, comes from an ordinary background and a middle-class Gujarati family.
Nita and Tina Ambani, two iconic women from India’s most powerful family, lead lives of immense grace and grandeur. From ...
Nita Dalal belonged to a middle class household before she married Mukesh Ambani. Ravindrabhai Dalal, the father of Nita Dalal Ambani, was formerly part of a top management at the Aditya Birla ...
They don't just stand beside India's richest men, they stand out in classrooms, boardrooms, art halls, and charity galas, ...
Nita Ambani and her sister Mamta Dalal are said to share a close bond. A few months ago, Mamta Dalal was spotted wearing Nita Ambani's Gucci co-ord set at Isha Ambani's twin's birthday celebrations.
Did you know that Nita Dalal (her maiden name) had put one condition before marrying Mukesh Ambani, who is the richest man in India today? Read on to know more about it here!
Nita Ambani has a younger sister, Mamta Dalal, who works at Dhirubhai Ambani International School as a primary school teacher. She prefers to maintain a low profile and stays away from the limelight.
How Mukesh Ambani proposed to Nita Dalal. According to various media reports, Mukesh and Nita were driving around one day, when Mukesh pulled up at a traffic light, faced Nita, and proposed to her.
Mamta Dalal prefers to maintain a low profile and stays away from the limelight. Talking about her bond with sister Mamta Dalal and the importance of education in their lives, Nita Ambani, in an ...
Mamta Dalal, is the younger sister of Nita Ambani and the youngest child of Ravindrabhai Dalal and Purnima Dalal. Despite not being as publicly visible as Nita Ambani, Mamta Dalal plays a vital ...
“I’m a passionate Indian,” Nita Ambani is fond of saying. She has channeled that passion into an ever-expanding array of initiatives, activities, and institutions that are as humanitarian as ...
Ambani was born Nita Dalal and grew up in a traditional “joint ­family”—her parents and sister combined with relatives totaling 12 women and girls—in a suburban Bombay bungalow.