Misplaced Pages

David Gaiman: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 19:05, 28 August 2008 editCirt (talk | contribs)199,086 edits References: added back the categories← Previous edit Revision as of 22:55, 28 August 2008 edit undo65.78.13.238 (talk) remove redundant categories ("English *" is a sub-category of "British *")Next edit →
Line 49: Line 49:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gaiman, David}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Gaiman, David}}
] ]
]
] ]
]
] ]
] ]

Revision as of 22:55, 28 August 2008

David Gaiman
Occupation(s)Owner, G&G Foods, East Grinstead
Public Relations Director, Church of Scientology (ret.)
SpouseSheila
ChildrenClaire Edwards, Neil Gaiman

David Bernard Gaiman is a prominent member of the Church of Scientology who lives in the UK. He and his wife Sheila joined Scientology in the early 1960s and Gaiman served as public relations director and commonly in the media during the British controversies over Scientology in the 1960s and 1970s. During that period, he held the titles Deputy Guardian for Public Relations World Wide and Minister of Public Affairs for the Churches of Scientology Worldwide, as well as serving as public spokesman.

In 1969, Gaiman was involved in an attempt by the Church to take over the British mental health charity, the National Association for Mental Health (now Mind). Some 300 Scientologists joined the group and nominated Gaiman, among others, for high office. Gaiman was nominated for the Chairmanship. Eventually, the Scientologists were asked to resign but contested that request in court. Scientologists also held demonstrations for, according to Gaiman, "humane treatment and a bill of rights for mental patients and the protection of their bodies and their well-being. We want an independent enquiry into conditions in mental hospitals. We want no more whitewashing from certain mental health organisations like the one across the road. Our stand is not on being asked to resign but for humane psychiatry."

Family

Gaiman's family is of Polish Jewish origins; after emigrating from the Netherlands in 1916, his father eventually settled in the Hampshire city of Portsmouth on the south coast of England and established a chain of grocery stores. Born in 1933, Gaiman was educated at The Portsmouth Grammar School, though he did not excel academically. He subsequently joined the British Army where he rose to the rank of sergeant. He returned to Portsmouth on leaving the army to work for his father in the grocery stores, though he detested this job.

He eventually decided to go into business for himself, much to his father's displeasure, and the family moved away from their home in Portchester in 1962. When the Gaimans discovered Scientology they moved to East Grinstead, West Sussex in 1965. David Gaiman joined the staff of the Church of Scientology at nearby Saint Hill Manor, eventually becoming the Church's chief UK media spokesman. In the same year, David and Sheila Gaiman co-founded a vitamin shop, G&G Foods. By 2005 the company had become a major local employer, with 80 employees and an annual turnover of over £4 million. The Gaimans are prominent figures in the local community and are well known for their sponsorship of the local arts scene.

Gaiman has three children, a son and two daughters. His son is Neil Gaiman, the well-known fantasy author; one of his daughters, Claire Edwards, is head of Scientology Missions International.

One of David Gaiman's odder claims to fame is that he came joint last in the inaugural London Marathon, in 1981.

See also

References

  1. Paulette Cooper, The Scandal of Scientology, Appendix,
    In January, 1971, I wrote to David Gaiman, Public Relations Director of Scientology in England, with whom I had had some earlier correspondence, informing him that this book was to be published and offering him a chance to give the Scientologists' side of the story in brief. I also requested information on some of Scientology's rehabilitation programs -- their Human Rights Commission and Narconon, their program in India -- so that some of this could also be included.
  2. Van Wert Times Bulletin, September 7, 1968.
  3. Bucks County Courier Times, March 13, 1969.
  4. C.H. Rolph, Believe What You Like
    Meanwhile, all members of the NAMH (or most of them) received a letter from Mr David Gaiman, the spokesman of scientology, to whom their names and addresses had been perforce supplied by the NAMH.
  5. ^ Lancaster, James (2005-10-11). "Everyone has the potential to be great". The Argus (Brighton). pp. 10–11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. Neil Gaiman's Journal, April 6, 2004
  7. Lancaster, James (2005-10-11). "Everyone has the potential to be great". The Argus (Brighton). pp. 10–11. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) David Gaiman quote: "It's not me you should be interviewing. It's my son. Neil Gaiman. He's in the New York Times Bestsellers list. Fantasy. He's flavour of the month, very famous."
  8. "Head Bars Son Of Cult Man.", The Times, London, England, 13 August, 1968, p.2 col. c. (convenience link), Alternate.
    A headmaster has refused the son of a scientologist entry to a preparatory school until, he says, the cult "clears its name". The boy, Neil Gaiman, aged 7, (...) Mr. David Gaiman, the father, aged 35, former South Coast businessman, has become in recent weeks a prominent spokesman in Britain for scientology, which has its headquarters at East Grinstead.
  9. "Freedom Magazine". Retrieved 2006-10-22.
  10. "bbc.co.uk, 1981: Triumph at first London Marathon". Retrieved 2008-03-29.
Scientology
Beliefs and
practices
History and
controversies
Litigation
Organizations
(and properties)
Countries
Officials
Affiliated
organizations
and recruitment
Popular
culture
Categories: