In Brief:
Born: 23 October 1942
Died: 10 September 2007
Married: T. Gordon Roddick, 1970
Children: Justine 1969, Samantha 1971
Grandchildren: Maiya Hopi 1994, Atticus-Finch 1998, Osha Sophia
Bluebell 1998
Education: Maude Allen Secondary Modern School for Girls,
Littlehampton;
Newton Park College of Higher Education, Bath
Career 1962-76
Library of International Herald Tribune, Paris
Teacher of English and History, England
Women's Rights Dept. of International Labor Organization (ILO),
based at UN, Geneva
Owner and Manager of a restaurant and hotel in Littlehampton
Opened The Body Shop in Brighton, West Sussex, England on 26th
March 1976
Trustee/Board Member
From 1984 The Body Shop International Plc
From 1989 The Body Shop Foundation
From 1994 Mother Jones' Magazine - Foundation for National
Progress, USA
1996 - 1997 Human Rights Watch, USA
From 1999 The Ruckus Society, USA
From 2003 Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, USA
Patron
From 1991 Schumacher College for Human Scale Education
From 1994 Association for Creation Spirituality
From 1996 Body and Soul (women & families with HIV and
AIDS)
From 1998 EMMA (Ethnic Minority Media Awards)
From 2002 Findhorn Foundation College
From 2002 My Acre Of Africa, South Africa
From 2004 The Forgiveness Project
From 2007 The Hepatitis C Trust
From 2007 Emmaus Hampshire
Selected Awards Received
1984 Veuve Clicquot Business Woman of the Year
1988 OBE - Order of the British Empire
1988 British Association of Industrial Editors, Communicator of
Year
1991 Center for World Development Education's World Vision Award,
USA
1991 The Financial Evening Standard Outstanding Entrepreneur
Analysis Award
1992 National Association of Women Business Owners (US) Business
Leader of Year
1993 Banksia Foundation's Australia Environmental Award
1993 Mexican Environmental Achiever Award
1993 National Audubon Society Medal, USA
1994 Botwinick Prize in Business Ethics, USA
1994 University of Michigan's Annual Business Leadership Award,
USA
1994 Daily Express/Moet & Chandon Business Award
1995 Women's Business Development Center's First Annual Woman Power
Award, USA
1996 Women's Center's Leadership Award, USA
1996 The Gleitsman Foundation's Award of Achievement, USA
1996 Institute of Charitable Fundraising Managers (UK),
Philanthropist of the Year
1997 United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Honouree, Eyes on
the
Environment
1998 Marketing Retail Design Award
1999 British Environment & Media Award
1999 Chief Wiper-Away of Ogoni Tears, Movement for the Survival of
the Ogoni People, Nigeria
2001 International Peace Prayer Day Organisation's Woman of
Peace
2003 DBE (Dame Commander of the British Empire)
Biography
Anita was born in Littlehampton, an English seaside town in 1942,
the child of an Italian immigrant couple. She developed a strong
sense of moral outrage from an early age after reading a book about
the Holocaust aged ten. She trained as a teacher but an educational
opportunity on a kibbutz in Israel eventually turned into an
extended working trip around the world. Soon after she got back to
England, her mother introduced her to a young Scotsman named Gordon
Roddick. Their bond was instant. Together they opened first a
restaurant, and then a hotel in Littlehampton. They married in 1970
and two children followed.
She started The Body Shop on 26th March 1976 simply to create a
livelihood for herself and her two daughters, while Gordon was
trekking across the Americas. She had no training or experience and
her only business acumen was Gordon's advice to take sales of £300
a week. Anita saw entrepreneurship as a means of survival, and
firmly believed it nurtured creative thinking. Running her first
shop taught her business is not financial science, but all about
trading: buying and selling and about creating a product or service
so good that people will want to pay for it. Testament to her
firmly held business beliefs, over 30 years on The Body Shop is now
a multi-local business with over 2,200 stores in 55 different
markets. And she always claimed she didn't have clue how she got
there!
It wasn't only economic necessity that inspired the birth of The
Body Shop. Her early travels gave her a wealth of experience. She
had spent time in farming and fishing communities with
pre-industrial peoples, and was exposed to body rituals of women
from all over the world. Also the frugality that her mother
exercised during the war years made her question retail
conventions. Why waste a container when you can refill it? And why
buy more of something than you can use? She behaved as her mother
had in World War II. The Body Shop reused everything, refilled
everything and recycled all they could. The foundation of The Body
Shop's environmental activism was born out of these ideas.
She was aware that success was more than a good idea. It was timing
too. The Body Shop arrived just as Europe was going 'green'. The
Body Shop has always been recognisable by its green colour, but it
was the only colour that they could find to cover the damp, mouldy
walls of the first shop. She opened a second shop within six
months, by which time Gordon was back in England. He came up with
the idea for 'self-financing' more new stores, which sparked the
growth of the franchise network through which The Body Shop spread
across the world. The company went public in 1984. A whole host of
awards came her way, and as Anita famously claimed; some she
understood, some she didn't and a couple she thought she
deserved.
Anita believed that businesses have the power to do good. That's
why the Mission Statement of The Body Shop opened with the
overriding commitment, 'To dedicate our business to the pursuit of
social and environmental change.' The stores and products are used
to help communicate human rights and environmental issues.
In 1993 she met a delegation of Ogoni people from Nigeria. They
were seeking justice and reparations against the giant oil
multinational Shell that was ravaging their lands through oil
exploration and production. Working with other NGOs, they turned
their campaign into an international cause celebre. Tragically, the
Ogoni's key spokesperson, Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni, were
executed in 1995 by the Nigerian Government. But the campaign
continued and eventually 19 other imprisoned Ogoni were released.
In 1997, after 4 years of unrelenting pressure, Shell issued a
revised operating charter committing the company to human rights
and sustainable development. A year later, they launched their
'Profits and Principles' advertising campaign declaring their
recognition of the interests of ' a much wider group of
stakeholders in our business'. She liked to think The Body Shop had
a hand in getting Shell to think about what it really means to be a
corporate citizen.
In September 2001 Anita joined forces with The Body Shop and
Greenpeace, and many thousands of other organisations and
individual consumers in an international campaign to raise
awareness of the link between the burning of fossil fuels and
global warming, and the alternatives available including using
renewable fuels such as wind and solar.
One key area where business and personal interests naturally
combined was through Community Trade. A trailblazer of fair trade
in the cosmetics industry, The Body Shop was the first cosmetics
company to develop direct relationships with communities in return
for natural ingredients and accessories. Launched over 20 years ago
Anita oversaw the programme, initially under the title of "Trade -
Not Aid". Starting with one supplier in India, Community Trade
programmes now operate from Brazil to Zambia across more than 20
countries and provide essential income to over 15,000 people across
the globe. Anita was aware that the trading relationship with The
Body Shop were never going to make the farmers financially rich,
but it enabled them to maintain their chosen way of life and
through co-operation, achieve autonomy.
One example of a Community Trade supplier is Tungteiya in Ghana,
where Anita and The Body Shop Foundation gave initial help by
providing grinding mills and nut cracking plants to help with the
extraction of shea butter - this for the first time allowed the
women of the Tamale region with a chance to earn a regular and
reliable income, afford schooling, medical care, build and improve
their homes. It has also led to the building of 10 schools and paid
for both equipment and teachers, while the area can now also more
easily enjoy safe piped water and latrines. In a country where 43%
of the population lives below the World Bank poverty line, and
employment opportunities are limited, the story of the Tungteiya
Shea Butter Association is an inspiring one.
There is no doubt that The Body Shop and Anita have always been
closely identified in the public mind. Such was the inspiration she
provided, that The Body Shop has become a global operation with
thousands of people working towards common goals and sharing common
values. That's what has given it a campaigning and commercial
strength and continued to set it apart from mainstream
business.
She maintained that the past few years were the most exciting
period of her life - She believed the older you get, the more
radical you become. She loved a Dorothy Sayers quote, "A woman in
advancing old age is unstoppable by any earthly force". In November
1999, she flew to Seattle to speak out against the role of the
World Trade Organisation and witnessed the 'Battle of
Seattle'.
In 2000 she published her autobiography "Business as Unusual" and
in 2001 she edited "Take it Personally", a collection of provoking
thought pieces to challenge the myths of globalisation and the
power of the WTO.
The excitement and success of these endeavours prompted her to
start her own small activist communications centre, Anita Roddick
Publications. She liked to say they manufactured "weapons of mass
instruction", experimenting with various forms and mediums to
celebrate and advance the same things she always cared about: human
rights, the environment, and creative dissent. Their first two
books were published in 2003: 'Brave Hearts, Rebel Spirits: A
Spiritual Activist's Handbook' and 'A Revolution in Kindness'. In
2004 she published 'Troubled Water: Saints, Sinners, Truths &
Lies about the Global Water Crisis' and 'Numbers'. And in 2005
edited, amended and republished her autobiography 'Business as
Unusual'.
She launched her own website
www.AnitaRoddick.com in
2001 and an activism portal
www.TakeItPersonally.org
in 2004. She was overwhelmed by the potential of the web to link
like-minded people and move them to mass-action.
Latterly there was no doubt that her greatest passions were the
campaigns that she was supporting - from sweatshop labour by
multinational corporations (which she joined forces with the
National Labor Committee on) and joining a group of human-rights
activists to free the American political prisoners known as the
Angola Three. These three men, who were black political activists
in the 1970s, have served nearly 35 years in solitary confinement
in Angola prison.
In 2006 The Body Shop was purchased by L'Oreal, and as Anita said
at the time: "For both Gordon and I, this is without doubt the best
30th anniversary gift The Body Shop could have received.
L'Oréal has displayed visionary leadership in wanting to be an
authentic advocate and supporter of our values. They understand
what a maverick The Body Shop was in the business world and how we
helped change the language of business, incorporating the action of
social change, especially in human rights, animal welfare, the
environment and community trade."
Anita remained on the Board of Directors. During 2007 she took part
in a The Body Shop campaign instore and also provided consultation
to L'Oréal, advising on Community Trade.
In 2007 Anita announced that she had Hepatitis C, which she
contracted from a contaminated blood transfusion in 1971, however
she was not diagnosed with the condition until 2004. She was
completely committed to working with the Hepatitis C Trust, and
became their patron, to raise awareness of the disease and to lobby
the government for more action. In true Anita style, personal
experience promoted her to launch a major campaign to alert people
to an important issue and ensure change in attitudes and
policy.
Dame Anita Roddick passed away on 10th September 2007, with her
husband Gordon and two daughters by her side. Tributes flooded in
from around the world, led by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
"She campaigned for green issues for many years before it became
fashionable to do so and inspired millions to the cause by bringing
sustainable products to a mass market. As one of this country's
most successful businesswomen, she was an inspiration to women
throughout the country striving to set up and grow their own
companies."
John Sauven, the executive director of Greenpeace who worked with
Anita on many campaigns, said "she was an amazing inspiration to
those around her….She was so ahead of the time when it came to
issues of how business could be done in different ways…She was a
true pioneer."
The suppliers of Community Trade cocoa butter in Ghana, Kuapa
Kokoo, said "We are grateful to God that he gave us such an
inspirational figure; a mother whose love for the development of
the vulnerable and the under-privileged will continue to linger on
in our minds till eternity. Anita would be well remembered by the
Kuapa Kokoo family and the chiefs and people, for a school block
she, together with The Body Shop, funded in the Bayerebon
community. The seed she sowed is generating fruits of success and
enlightenment."
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