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PAGE/52                       LEGA CY GALA 2018                                                                        DECEMBER 2018                                                                              ISSUE 03  PAGE/53




                                                                                                                                                            Dr. Beryl
                                 Brenda Marjorie                                                                                                            Gilroy

                                 Hale DBE
                                                                                                                                                            -
                                 -                                                                                                                          Black Excellence                           Judge
                                 Diversity
                                                                                  Judge                                                                     in Education                               Patricia Lamour MBE
                                 and Inclusion                                    Peter Herbert OBE
                                                                                                                                                           Dr. Beryl Gilroy (30/8/1924-4/4/2001) became London’s first Black head-

                                 Baroness Brenda Marjorie Hale of Richmond, was born in West Yorkshire.                                                    teacher of Beckford School, West Hampstead (1969-1982). An exceptional
                                 Graduating in law from Cambridge University, she was called to the bar in                                                 and pioneering teacher, writer and ethno-psychologist of the Windrush
                                 1969. In 1984, she was appointed to the Law Commission, worked as a part-                                                 generation, her contribution to education and literature disrupted
                                 time barrister and became Professor of Law at Manchester University.  In                                                  narratives, making black women, their courage and resilience visible.

                                 1989, she was appointed Queen’s Counsel and in 1999 was only the second                                                   Gilroy, a qualified teacher from Guyana, migrated to London for university
                                 woman to be appointed to the Court of Appeal. In September 2017 she was                                                   studies in 1952. Between 1953 and 1956, she worked as a teacher for the
                                 historically appointed as the first woman President of the Supreme Court and                                              Inner London Education Authority and published her autobiographical
                                 is a committed champion of ethnic and gender diversity.                                                                   account Black Teacher in 1976 of her early experiences, regretting ‘that
                                                                                                                                                           the publishers toned down her attacks on the racism she encountered’.
                                                                                                                                                           After her headship, she worked as a multi-cultural researcher at the
                                                                                                                                                           Institute of Education, University of London and developed a pioneering
                                  Malorie                                                                                                                  psychotherapy practice, working mainly with Black women and children.

                                  Blackman OBE                                                                                                             A co-founder in the early 1980s of the Camden Black Sisters group,
                                                                                                                                                           she gained a PhD in counselling psychology in 1987. Honoured by the
                                  -                                                                                                                        Association of Caribbean Women Writers and Scholars, Frangipani House
                                  Educational                                     Judge                                                                    is one of her best-known novels.


                                  Children’s Literature Patricia Lamour MBE

                                 Children’s Laureate Malorie Blackman is acknowledged as one of today’s
                                 most imaginative and convincing writers for young readers and has written
                                 over 70 books. Noughts and Crosses won her the Red House FCBG
                                 Children’s Book Award and is a story which. turns racism upside down.

                                 As Malorie said, “I also wanted to play with the idea that ‘history is luck’
                                 to a certain extent. What if Africans had invented trans-oceanic travel and
                                 colonized Europe and America?”  For her books Hacker,  Malorie won the
                                 Young Telegraph/Gimme 5 Award and the Smarties Silver Book Award for
                                 Cloud Busting. Born in Clapham, Malorie’s latest book Crossfire, is inspired
                                 by Trump and Brexit.  A graduate of the National Film and Television School,
                                 her work has appeared on TV, with Pig-Heart Boy, adapted into a BAFTA
                                 winning TV series. Malorie is now writing for the new Dr Who series.
                                 In 2005, Malorie received the Eleanor Farjeon Award in recognition of her

                                 distinguished contribution to the world of children’s books.  In 2008, she was
                                 awarded an OBE for her services to Children’s Literature and in 2013, Malorie
                                 was appointed the first UK’s black Children’s Laureate.
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