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Bullied as a boy, now I own a bank

Joel Perlman grew up in crime-ridden Colombia, bullied by non-Jewish schoolmates and Jewish kids alike. But now he's a business success.

March 20, 2017 11:52
Joel 2
4 min read

Bullet-proof cars, crime-ridden streets, the threat of kidnapping at every turn. If you have seen the hit TV show Narcos, you will know that Colombia in the 1970s and 1980s was a brutal place to live.

But for Joel Perlman, such was the reality of life. Born into a Jewish family in Bogotá, he lived in a permanent “hyper-state”— aware that, at any moment, violence could flare up for the smallest of reasons.

Then, there was the added pressure of being part of such a small minority in a Catholic country. Not only did his Judaism set him apart from his classmates in the American School he attended, but on the weekends, it was even worse. As a Sephardi Jew, he was bullied by the Ashkenazi children at Bogotá’s Jewish country club, who beat him up and called him “Falasha”.

Today, sitting inside his state-of-the-art offices in central London, the businessman and entrepreneur could not be further removed from his childhood. But, he explains, the conditions he grew up in were “formative”, setting him on a tireless path to success. His latest venture OakNorth, a new bank specifically focused on lending to entrepreneurs, is testament to that.