Zerbanoo Gifford | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | writer, human rights campaigner |
Zerbanoo Gifford is a British writer and human rights campaigner of Indian Zoroastrian origin.[1]: 124 She is honorary director of the ASHA Foundation, which she founded,[1]: 125 and President of the World Zoroastrian Organisation.[2]
Gifford was brought from India to Britain by her parents when she was three. She was educated at Roedean School, at Watford College of Technology, at the London School of Journalism and at the Open University. Her first book, The Golden Thread, was published in 1990.[1]: 124
Gifford has been active in charitable work. She has been a director of Anti-Slavery International[3] and of the Charities Aid Foundation.[1]: 125 She is founder of the ASHA Foundation and the ASHA Centre in the Forest of Dean.[4]
In 1982 Gifford was elected a councillor for Harrow,[5]: 378 [6] the first female Asian councillor to be elected for the Liberal Party.[1]: 125 She has stood three times for Parliament,[1]: 125 [7] Hertsmere in 1983 (Liberal/SDP Alliance) and 1992 (Liberal Democrat), and Harrow East (Liberal/SDP Alliance) in 1987. By standing in 1983, she became one of the first three Asian women to stand for Parliament along with Rita Austin (Labour, St Albans) and Pramila Le Hunte (Conservative, Birmingham Ladywood).[8]
In 1986 she chaired the Liberal "Commission of Inquiry into Ethnic Minority Involvement in the Liberal Party".[1]: 125 Gifford was twice elected by the party's membership the Liberal Democrats' Federal Executive, the first ethnic minority person to be elected to a major UK party's supreme body.[9] She was a member of the Race Relations Forum set up in 1998 by then Home Secretary, Jack Straw.[10]
In 1992 Gifford co-chaired the centenary celebrations for the election of the first non-white MP, Dadabhai Naoroji.[11]
Gifford received the Nehru Centenary Award in 1989. She was nominated for the Women of Europe Award in 1991.[1]: 125 A biography of her by Farida Master, Zerbanoo Gifford: An Uncensored Life, was published in 2015.[12] Gifford was one of the seven former pupils who featured in Roedean school's 125 anniversary celebrations.[13]
Gifford's written works include: