Over the next month, Ajit read one chapter each night. The Marathi translation was powerful. Words like "इच्छा" (desire) and "आत्मविश्वास" (self-confidence) hit him differently than English ever could. He learned about "definiteness of purpose"—to decide exactly what he wanted.
In the bustling city of Pune, a young man named Ajit worked as a clerk in a small government office. He earned a modest salary, just enough to pay the bills. Every day, he dreamed of starting his own business, but he felt trapped. His friends told him he needed "luck" or a rich relative. Ajit knew he needed a different kind of help—a change in thinking.
The old man smiled. "Beta, this book is not about dollars or luck. It’s about fire within you. It teaches the 13 principles of success—desire, faith, persistence. But yes, it helps to read it in your mother tongue, Marathi." think and grow rich in marathi pdf
"You found it," the old man said.
He found many websites offering free PDFs. Some links were broken, some asked him to fill out surveys, and one even tried to install a suspicious app. But then he found a clean, government-recognized digital library. There it was: विचार करा आणि श्रीमंत व्हा (Vichar Kara ani Shrimant Vha)—a direct, authorized Marathi translation. Over the next month, Ajit read one chapter each night
He wrote down his goal: "Within one year, I will start a tiffin service for office workers near my office."
He downloaded the PDF legally from a source that respected copyright, such as the Marathi e-book section of the Digital Library of India or a publisher’s official site. Every day, he dreamed of starting his own
One evening, while waiting for a bus, he saw an old man reading a worn-out book. The title was in English: Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill. Ajit had heard the name before but had always thought, "That’s for Americans and big businessmen. Not for a Marathi-medium clerk like me."
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