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Zayat Stables : ウィキペディア英語版
Ahmed Zayat

Ahmed Zayat (born August 31, 1962) is an Egyptian American entrepreneur and owner of Thoroughbred race horses. He currently serves as the CEO of Zayat Stables, LLC, a Thoroughbred horse racing business which bred and owns the 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah. Joe Drape of ''The New York Times'' described Zayat as "controversial" and "one of the most successful and flamboyant owners in thoroughbred racing."
Zayat was born in Cairo, Egypt to a wealthy family, and grew up in an ethnically-diverse neighborhood where he learned to ride horses. At age 18, he moved to the United States where he attended college and ultimately obtained a master's degree in business and public health from Boston University. After a brief career in commercial real estate in New York City, he returned to Egypt, and for about a decade ran the Al-Ahram Beverages Company, which he owned as part of an investment group. After the company was purchased by Heineken in 2002, Zayat stayed on a few more years but also began investing in racehorses and established Zayat Stables in 2005. Upon returning to the United States for good in 2007, he made his racing stables his full-time occupation, working with his son, Justin, to build the business.
While generally successful with his race horses, his goal of winning the Kentucky Derby eluded him several times, including three second-place finishes, until his win with American Pharoah. He also filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings in 2010 when a bank called a note due and tried to foreclose on his horses. Zayat Stables successfully completed its Chapter 11 reorganization, but Zayat was next plagued by legal issues related to his penchant for betting large sums of money on horse racing. Nonetheless, Zayat generated considerable positive publicity on social media for his efforts to save his racehorse Paynter from life-threatening health problems, a successful struggle that earned the colt the 2012 NTRA Moment of the Year Award and Secretariat Vox Populi Award.
The Zayat family are Orthodox Jews. He currently lives in Teaneck, New Jersey with his wife, Joanne. They have four children: Ashley, Justin, Benjamin, and Emma. Their eldest son, Justin, helps run the Zayat Stables operation, and their youngest, Emma, inspired the name of Littleprincessemma, dam of American Pharoah.
==Early career and personal life==

Ahmed Zayat ((:zə'jɑːt); (アラビア語:أحمد الزيات)), also known as Ephraim David Zayat ((ヘブライ語:אפרים דוד זיאת)), was born in Egypt in 1962 to an affluent Egyptian Jewish family and grew up an ethnically diverse neighborhood in the Cairo suburb of Maadi.〔 His father, Alaa al-Zayat, was a prominent doctor and professor of medicine, a personal physician to Anwar Sadat.〔 His grandfather, Ahmed Hasan al-Zayyat, was a leading intellectual who established the Egyptian literary magazine ''al-Risala'', described as "the most important intellectual weekly in 1930s Egypt and the Arab world." Born into what was then a peasant family, the earlier al-Zayyat studied at Al-Azhar University before taking up legal studies in Cairo and Paris; he taught Arabic literature at American University in Cairo, and for three years in Baghdad, before founding ''al-Risala'' in 1933.
As a young man, Ahmed Zayat learned to ride horses at the local country club.〔 Zayat competed in show jumping during his early teens,〔 winning national titles as a child in the under-12 and under-14 age divisions.〔 He moved to the United States at the age of 18, and earned an undergraduate degree from Yeshiva University. He obtained a master's degree in public health administration from Boston University. Though the Zayat Stables, LLC website once stated that Zayat attended Harvard University, he did not.〔 After graduation, he worked for Zev Wolfson, a New York City commercial real estate developer and investor.〔〔 Zayat described Wolfson as "the toughest guy I ever worked for ... such a perfectionist. A great negotiator."
Zayat returned to Egypt in 1995 and formed an investment group,〔 which purchased the Al-Ahram Beverages Company in 1997, outbidding Anheuser-Busch and Heineken International.〔 Al-Ahram had been owned by the Egyptian government and Zayat had helped find American investors to take over government-owned businesses that had been nationalized by Gamal Abdel Nasser back in the 1950s.〔 The original beer product was of poor quality, mocked as being able to "power heavy machinery if there was no diesel fuel available."〔 Under Zayat's leadership, additional brands of beer were introduced, and he developed a non-alcoholic beer, Fayrouz, designed specifically for the Muslim market.〔 The company was modernized from a run-down operation to a publicly traded business that sold in 2002 to Heineken International for $280 million, more than three times its pre-acquisition valuation, in what was then the largest corporate buyout in Egyptian history.〔〔〔
Zayat continued to run Al-Ahram until 2007,〔 but periodically returned to the United States, where he started buying racehorses and formed Zayat Stables in 2005.〔 His motivation to return to the US was, in part, to commute less and be more involved with his family and children.〔 Upon leaving Al-Ahram, he declared that he was "retiring", but as his wife explained, "he can't be retired for more than 15 seconds," and he soon expanded his horse operation to include both breeding and racing stock.〔 He still owns other business interests in Egypt, including being the majority shareholder of Misr Glass Manufacturing, which is Egypt's largest maker of glass containers.〔
Zayat lives in Teaneck, New Jersey, with his wife, Joanne. The couple have four children: Ashley, Justin, Benjamin and Emma. Justin, a 2015 graduate of New York University, works closely with his father in the Zayat Stables business.〔 While residing primarily in New Jersey, the Zayats also have residences in New York, Egypt and London.〔 The family are Orthodox Jews; Zayat's Hebrew name is Ephraim (אפרים), used by family and community.〔 Zayat donates to Jewish schools and charities, including those that help special-needs children.〔 Although ''The New York Times'' has stated that Zayat has publicly identified as both Jewish and Muslim at times, his family attends Congregation Bnai Yeshurun in Teaneck, keeps the Jewish Sabbath, and observes kosher laws regarding food. When questioned about his religious affiliation, Zayat stated, "Why is it relevant, and why does it matter? It's personal."〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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