Gregory David Roberts

Gregory David Roberts (born Gregory John Peter Smith; 21 June 1952[1]) is an Australian author best known for his novel Shantaram. He is a former heroin addict and convicted bank robber who escaped from Pentridge Prison in 1980 and fled to India, where he lived for ten years.

Gregory David Roberts
Roberts in 2020
BornGregory John Peter Smith
21 June 1952 (1952-06-21) (age 68)
Melbourne, Australia
OccupationFormer armed robber, Gun runner and fugitive. Current novelist, charity organiser and screenplay writer
PeriodNovelist from 2003–present
Website
shantaram.com

Life

Roberts reportedly became addicted to heroin after his marriage ended, and he lost custody of his young daughter. In his efforts to finance his drug habit, Roberts became known as the "Building Society Bandit"[2] and the "Gentleman Bandit", because he had chosen to rob only institutions with adequate insurance, he would wear a three-piece suit, and he always said "please" and "thank you" to the people he robbed.[3]

Roberts believed at the time that in this way he was lessening the brutality of his acts, but later in his life he admitted that people only gave him money because he had made them afraid.[4] He escaped from Pentridge Prison in 1980.[1][5]

In 1990, Roberts was captured in Frankfurt after being caught smuggling himself into the country. He was extradited to Australia and served a further six years in prison, two of which were spent in solitary confinement. According to Roberts, he escaped prison again during that time, but relented and smuggled himself back into jail. His intention was to serve the rest of his sentence to give himself the chance to be reunited with his family. During his second stay in Australian prison, he began writing Shantaram. The manuscript was destroyed by prison wardens, twice, while Roberts was writing it.[6]

Writing career

After leaving prison, Roberts was able to finally finish and publish his novel, Shantaram. The book's name comes from the name his best friend's mother gave him, which means "Man of Peace", or "Man of God's Peace".

There is debate as to how much of Shantaram is based on true events or is a conflation of real life and fantasy.[7] On that aspect of Shantaram and of the follow-up novel, The Mountain Shadow, Roberts has stated:

Some experiences from my life are described pretty much as they happened, and others are created narratives, informed by my experience. I wanted to write two or three novels on some bare elements from my life, allowing me to explore the themes that interested me, while keeping the narrative immediate by anchoring it to some of my real experiences. They’re novels, not autobiographies, and all of the characters and dialogue is created. It doesn’t matter how much of it is true or not to me, it’s how true they are to all of us, and to our common humanity.

Roberts lived in Melbourne, Germany, and France and finally returned to Mumbai (Bombay), where he set up charitable foundations to assist the city's poor with health care coverage. He was finally reunited with his daughter. He got engaged to Françoise Sturdza, who is the president of the Heart for India Foundation. Roberts also wrote the original screenplay for the movie adaptation of Shantaram.[7]

In 2009, Roberts was named a Zeitz Foundation Ambassador for Community. Ambassadors help raise awareness and shape activities in their areas. In 2011, Roberts stepped aside as an Ambassador due to the pressure of other commitments but continues to assist the Zeitz Foundation as a Friend.[8]

The follow-up novel The Mountain Shadow was released on 13 October 2015 by Little Brown.[9]

Bibliography

Notes

  1. Murdoch, Lindsey (23 July 1980). Pentridge convicts jump free, The Age
  2. 1 June 1978. Societies' bandit: 23 years, The Age; accessed 7 April 2015.
  3. Roberts, Gregory David (2003) Shantaram Carlton North, Vic. Scribe Publications; ISBN 1-920769-00-5.
  4. Gearin, Mary (8 November 2003). "Building Society Bandit hits big time". 7:30 Report. ABC1. Retrieved 21 September 2008.
  5. Conroy, Paul (15 December 1989). Five New Names Are Posted On State's 10 Most Wanted List, The Age; accessed 6 April 2015.
  6. Husain, Mishal (5 January 2004). "Greg Roberts' amazing story". BBC News Online. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
  7. Shantaram, IndiaMike.com; accessed 6 April 2015.
  8. "Zeitz Foundation Newsletter Issue 2 2011" (PDF). Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  9. ""The Mountain Shadow" - Long-awaited sequel to Shantaram coming in October". Little Brown. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
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References

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