2020
It Started with a Single Bottle of Nail Polish
March 2020


Local Pages

It Started with a Single Bottle of Nail Polish

“‘I just know that if I pay my tithes, then Heavenly Father is going to bless me.’”

How could a young man from Chatsworth, South Africa, support himself and create a future with only fourteen rand in his pocket? That was the dilemma facing Mervyn Pillay when he returned home a number of years ago after serving a mission in Johannesburg.

“When I came home . . . I said to myself, ‘How am I going to make it with R14?’ . . . but I talked to myself and said, ‘The Lord will bless you as you do what He wants you do.’”1

Soon after this, Mervyn bought one bottle of nail polish with his very limited cash. He went to the market and sold it for a profit. That was the beginning of a business, and soon he was selling more and more nail polish—in the market and door-to-door. Being self-reliant, he had gained some knowledge in repair work, so as he walked door-to-door, he also asked if homeowners had appliances in need of repair and found additional work—and income—that way.

At one home, Mervyn met a man who turned out to be the maker of the brand of nail polish he was selling. When he learned that Mervyn was a savvy salesman who could also make repairs for him, he invited him in and saying, “You can repair my stove.” Then he asked, “And could you also sell this nail polish for me?”

Having learned how to work hard as a missionary, Mervyn energetically applied himself to his new job and, over time, sold about three million bottles of nail polish.

“I bought my home and I started . . . an electrical business and . . . a cosmetics business, and the business has boomed.”2

Many years later Mervyn still runs both businesses and says, “I just know that if I pay my tithes, then Heavenly Father is going to bless me.”

President Gordon B. Hinckley (1910–2008) once noted that as members of the Church, “We have a responsibility and a challenge to take our places in the world of business, science, government, medicine, education, and every other worthwhile and constructive vocation. We have an obligation to train our hands and minds to excel in the work of the world for the blessing of all mankind.”3

The self-made businessman Mervyn Pillay has gone on to indeed bless the lives of many others, including his family, his employees, and those he has served as a branch president and bishop.

Notes

  1. Quotes taken from Mervyn Pillay Oral History Interview, 19 October 2019, Church History Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.

  2. Mervyn Pillay Oral History Interview.

  3. Gordon B. Hinckley, “A City upon a Hill,” Ensign, July 1990, 5.