04/11/2025
The day I saw my mother cry because she didn’t have enough money to buy bread...
That was the moment I realized —
if I wanted a different life, I would have to build it with my own hands.
My name is Amancio Ortega, and I was born in a small village in Spain —
the son of a railway worker and a cleaning lady.
In our home, silence was plenty… everything else was scarce.
I still remember that day vividly.
My mother went to the grocery store to ask for food “on credit.”
The owner looked at her coldly and said he couldn’t do it anymore.
We walked home in silence,
but her tears said everything.
I was 12 years old.
And that day, I made myself a promise —
poverty would not be my destiny.
I left school and started working as a delivery boy for a clothing store.
I delivered packages, but I also learned —
how to sew, how to sell, how to talk to customers.
Every night I came home with thread marks on my fingers
and dreams stitched into my mind. 🧵
Years later, my wife and I started making bathrobes by hand.
We sold them door to door —
no store, no money, no name.
Just determination.
We shivered through winters to save on heating.
One Christmas, thieves took everything we had.
I thought about giving up…
but I didn’t.
In 1975, I opened a small shop in La Coruña.
I had no idea that one day, that little store would become ZARA.
I believed in one simple, powerful idea:
beautiful, quality clothes at a price everyone could afford.
Today, that idea lives in more than 90 countries.
And even though the world calls me an entrepreneur,
I’m still that boy who once watched his mother cry over a loaf of bread.
No luxury. No labels.
Because I learned something far greater:
Respect can’t be bought — it’s earned.
Your past doesn’t define who you are.
But it can be the spark that ignites you. 🔥