Skip to content
Indian Liberals
Filter:

Tip: search runs across all languages; results are tokenised per-page using the document's lang attribute.

interview

Minoo Shroff on A D Shroff Memorial Trust and the Forum of Free Enterprise

By Minoo Shroff

2015

Summary

Minoo Shroff recounts the origins and evolution of the A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust, founded a year after A. D. Shroff's death to carry forward his work in public education, financial literacy, publishing biographies, and elocution contests — partly overlapping with the Forum of Free Enterprise but filling gaps where no other body existed. He describes a tightly linked ecosystem of liberal institutions in Bombay (the Forum, the Palkhivala Trust, the M. R. Pai Trust, the Leslie Sawhny Foundation) that share infrastructure, donors, and personnel.

Shroff explains how Nani Palkhivala, as his health failed, personally asked him to take over the Leslie Sawhny Foundation, then the Forum, and eventually the A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust after Deepak Parekh found it too demanding alongside his other commitments. He credits M. R. Pai with training the next generation, especially Diwakar, and lists corporate patrons — Piramals, Godrej, ECC, Tatas, ITC — who built sizable corpuses for these bodies.

The interview closes on the operational ethos inherited from Shroff and Palkhivala — punctuality, commitment, traveling across the country to spread economic literacy — and on the Forum's continuing brand strength: RBI Governors and ex-finance ministers (Shroff cites D. Subbarao) readily accept invitations to its platform.

Key points

  • The A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust was founded a year after A. D. Shroff's death to continue his work in public education, financial literacy, biographies of notable figures, and elocution contests.
  • A cluster of allied trusts — Forum of Free Enterprise, Palkhivala Trust, M. R. Pai Trust, Leslie Sawhny Foundation — each holds a distinct niche but shares infrastructure and donors.
  • Major corporate patrons include the Piramals, Godrej, ECC, the Tatas, and ITC, with especially large corpus donations to the Palkhivala Trust.
  • Nani Palkhivala, as his health declined, personally handed succession to Minoo Shroff across the Leslie Sawhny Foundation, the Forum, and ultimately the A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust.
  • M. R. Pai was central to training the next cohort of speakers and organizers; Diwakar was one of his major contributions and now drives the elocution and training programs.
  • Punctuality and time management — values Shroff and Palkhivala personally embodied — remain a hallmark of the institutions' culture.
  • The Forum's brand draws figures of national stature, including RBI Governors and ex-finance ministers like D. Subbarao, to its memorial lectures and platforms.

Transcript

Minoo Shroff on A D Shroff Memorial Trust and the Forum of Free Enterprise

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rI3OuqWi7k Duration: 267.8s

Minoo Shroff (00:08): Yes, it was founded a year after he died and there are many people who said that this is fine, but why don’t you have a memorial trust for objects which were… because one was public education, financial literacy, partly overlap of the Forum. But if Forum was not there, this would… because there was no organization. Then it was for publishing biographies of famous people and elocution contests and the other because he was a professor, part time professor in Sydenham College. So keep the memory on, started in a small way, now we are much better organized because we have so many trusts’ support, you see, Palkhivala Trust is there, they have a large corpus. And Forum is there, M. R. Pai Trust is there, all have their separate niche. And now everybody is supporting, Piramals, Godrej is supporting Palkhivala Trust. And ECC and Tatas gave large corpus donation, ITC also, to Palkhivala Trust and because Palkhivala, if there is a body, it can carry on. So we provide the infrastructure, the word which has become common. And Pai was central and he trained up… One of Pai’s great contributions was Diwakar. It was a great help. When when Mr. Palkhivala was getting… had his strokes and was getting very inactive, he approached me, and I took on first the Leslie Sawhny Foundation for Democracy. He asked me to take over and then the Forum of Free Enterprise. He asked me to preside at a meeting and then followed. And then A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust for a year or two, Deepak Parekh was there. So Deepak says you are a natural choice and I’ve got so many things in. It requires more attention. By that time, I was the executive vice chairman of the JK group, very involved with Raymond and going abroad. Malegam is associated with the A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust. Adi Godrej is there. Deepak Parekh is there. They’re all senior to me, my colleagues, but I’m there. And in Forum also, have got a battery of… but people with active involvement is involved, giving money, raising money. So we have built up quite a solid corpus now and I also go and speak at various… You see people with vast experience are very few. It is difficult to go across now. So he has got an assistant who was with ICICI, Swati Kapadia, she is also very helpful. So at least in our periphery and even to Southern states, most colleges call us. So we have mobilized several trainers and we get very laudatory remarks of these people have never had like good grooming, effective speaking, time management. He was very, very particular about time management. Even now, Diwakar gets very impatient when we start a minute late whether there is audience or not. He is training from five because both Mr. Shroff and Mr. Palkhivala were immaculate about keeping time and keeping their commitments. They went around the country, they spoke to people, opened their eyes. But you see now the things have opened up, Forum’s role is on the economic literacy and so on. Our booklets are very much appreciated. We have memorial lectures, two, one — A. D. Shroff by Forum, now we have decided to have one. Difficult, all people who are worthwhile have, if you see our booklets, I write to anybody worthwhile, he will say, if people like Governors of Reserve Bank, ex finance ministers have all come on your platform, how can I say no? Like Subbarao. When he couldn’t come, he said, look, can I do it next day? He rang me up. So you see the… it has that brand image.

Notable passages

"So Deepak says you are a natural choice and I've got so many things in."
Deepak Parekh's transfer of the A. D. Shroff Memorial Trust chairmanship to Shroff
"And in Forum also, have got a battery of... but people with active involvement is involved, giving money, raising money."
Shroff's view of the Forum's working leadership and fundraising base
"Then it was for publishing biographies of famous people and elocution contests and the other because he was a professor, part time professor in Sydenham College."
The mandate of the memorial trust drawn from A. D. Shroff's own interests
"We have memorial lectures, two, one — A. D. Shroff by Forum, now we have decided to have one."
His legacy carried through annual memorial lectures
"And ECC and Tatas gave large corpus donation, ITC also, to Palkhivala Trust and because Palkhivala, if there is a body, it can carry on."
Corporate India's substantial endowment of the Palkhivala Trust
"both Mr. Shroff and Mr. Palkhivala were immaculate about keeping time and keeping their commitments. They went around the country, they spoke to people, opened their eyes."
Palkhivala's working style as a touchstone for the institutions
"And Pai was central and he trained up... One of Pai's great contributions was Diwakar. It was a great help."
Pai's enduring contribution was institutional — building the people who would carry the work forward
"So Deepak says you are a natural choice and I've got so many things in. It requires more attention."
Parekh's reasoning for handing the chairmanship to Minoo Shroff

Metadata and summary are AI-extracted from the source PDF and reviewed for editorial accuracy. The original work is available via the Read PDF tab above (where present); paragraph-level citation inside the PDF is deferred to a future engagement.

People in this work

Related across the archive