Doug Zohrab

Doug Zohrab
Permanent Representative
of  New Zealand
at  United Nations Office at Geneva
In office
1961–1965
Succeeded by William Gray Thorp (1922)
High Commissioner
for  New Zealand
to  Malaysia
In office
1967–1969
Preceded by Hunter Wade
Succeeded by Dick Hutchens
Ambassador
from  New Zealand
to  Germany
In office
1969–1974
Preceded by Reuel Anson Lochore
Succeeded by Hunter Wade
Personal details
Born July 14, 1917
Wellington
Died June 1, 2008(2008-06-01) (aged 90)
Waikanae
Nationality New Zealand
Spouse(s) Rosemary Alice Miller
Children two sons
Occupation diplomat and public servant

Balfour Douglas "Doug" Zohrab (14 July 1917 – 1 June 2008) was a New Zealand diplomat and public servant. Educated at Nelson College from 1930 to 1933,[1] he was a newspaper copyholder and junior reporter on Wellington's Evening Post newspaper from 1934. Zohrab graduated from Victoria University of Wellington with a master's degree in History in 1937 and became an assistant librarian at Parliament’s General Assembly Library. Apart from his native English, he knew French, Italian, German, some Japanese, some Malay, and taught himself Russian.[2]

In World War II, he was a cipher clerk on General Freyberg’s staff, where his duties included interviewing Italian prisoners of war. He spent time recuperating from illness in Lebanon, then was invalided home from the Middle East. In 1944, he was appointed to the Ministry of Rehabilitation, then to the Prime Minister’s Department, in the section that became what is now known as the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade. He served in London, Moscow, Paris, then in Wellington and, overseas again, in Tokyo. He was the first Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva 1961–64, worked at Wellington headquarters, then was made High Commissioner to Malaysia 1967–69, then Ambassador to Germany 1969–74 accredited also to Austria, Switzerland and Poland. He retired in 1974, after 26 years of service overseas.[2][3]

He was born in Wellington of a part-Armenian family whose paternal ancestor was moved from Armenia to Persia by the Shah in around 1600 AD. Members of the family became influential in Persia and were forced to escape political assassination at the end of the 18th century by fleeing to Turkey. In due course, some family members moved, in turn, to Malta, England, South Africa Australia, and New Zealand. He was an amateur pianist who reportedly played on Radio New Zealand in his youth, and he was interested in the arts generally. His other hobbies were reading, contract bridge and gardening. He married Rosemary Alice Miller in 1947;[4] and died in Waikanae, leaving two sons.[2]

References

  1. Nelson College Old Boys' Register, 1856–2006, 6th edition (CD-ROM).
  2. 1 2 3 Sources: Dominion Post library, T Larkin, J McNeish, M Norrish, Zohrab family et al. (26 June 2008). "Obituary: [Balfour] Douglas Zohrab-Early diplomatic recruit served 26 years overseas". Dominion Post. Fairfax NZ News. p. B7. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  3. "Mr. B. D. Zohrab: Retirement". New Zealand Foreign Affairs Review. Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Wellington, New Zealand. 24 (7): 9–10. July 1974.
  4. Skillander, Katherine (15 October 2010). "Wedding guests of Balfour Douglas Zohrab and Rosemary Alice Miller in London, England, 1947". Retrieved 26 February 2014.
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