The Scotsman

The Rev Alistair Mcgregor QC

Talented lawyer who set aside his Silk to become a man of the cloth

- IAIN G MITCHELL QC

The Rev. Alistair Gerald Crichton Mcgregor QC. Born: 15 October 1937. Died: 13 June 2020, aged 82

Ifirst met Ali stair McGregor in the 1970 s when he was Junior Counsel for the objectors at a long-running public enquiry in Port kill and I was an apprentice solicitor, dispatched to cover the enquiry. Alistair's cross-examinatio­n of the witnesses revealed a sharp, forensic mind clothed in a self-deprecatin­g good humour which made him a hugely effective advocate: I knew, instantly, that this was the person to whom I wanted to devil, and so there began not only a profession­al relationsh­ip, but a true friendship which lasted until his death.

The more I came to know Alistair, the more I appreciate­d the concern for people which was at the heart of all he did in his life, his calling to the law and then, when his legal career seemed to be set fair to lead him to the very top of the profession, his eschewing of the glittering prizes to turn, instead, to the Church of Scotland ministry. For Alistair, it was a characteri­stic choice, for, as he said, “I did not come into the law to help government department­s, but to help people.”

But to begin at the beginning: Alistair Gerald Crichton Mcgregor was born to James and Dorothy McGregor in Seven oaks, Kent, in 1937. He shared a happy childhood with his only sibling, Fiona. He was educated at Charterhou­se School, Surrey, and from there went onto do his National Service with the Intelligen­ce Corps in Krefeld in Germany. Even though his duties included cutting grass with nail scissors and painting coal black, he enjoyed his time in Germany, particular­ly the opportunit­y to use his German and to explore the country.

The family had friends in Vancouver, and, when he finished his time in National Service, Alistair went to spend a year with them helping them in their business. He sailed over the Atlantic, travelled across Canada by train and, after his time in Vancouver, returned through the United States by Greyhound bus. The journey left him with a love of travel and of adventure.

From 1959 to 1961, he attended Pembroke College, Oxford where he obtained a BA in Jurisprude­nce, before moving on to study Scots law at Edinburgh University and graduating LLB in 1964. There followed a period as a solicitor in his uncle's law firm, where he met Margaret, to whom he was married in August, 1965.

In 1967, he was called to the Bar. He had a highly successful career, and attracted a number of devils who, inspired by his teaching and example, went on to themselves to achieve prominence in the law, including Rita (later Lady) Rae.

It was Alistair who shaped and directed my own formation as an Advocate, yet, looking back on that time, the moments which come affectiona­tely to mind are the moments when Alistair's sense of fun transforme­d what might have been, at best, unremarkab­le, and, at worst, tedious cases: leaving Ayr Sheriff Court at the end of the day and building sandcastle­s together on the beach; on the way back from Arbroath, trudging, in blacks, through ploughed fields to inspect Ardestie and Carlungie earth houses; standing on the pier at Lochmaddy on a soft summer's evening trying out the Procurator Fiscal's new Japanese fishing rod; and Alistair, caparisone­d in wig and gown coming down the narrow staircase in the Logierait Hotel (the unlikely setting for Perth shire Highland District Licensing Court) declaiming: “Here's Batman!”

It was this sense of humour and of fun working its alche - my on his considerab­le forensic abilities which earned him both affection and respect from his colleagues and which made him such an effective advocate. He was appointed as Standing Junior Counsel to several Government department­s, a Planning Enquiry Reporter and part-time Chairman of the Potato Marketing Board Discipline Committee. Above all, his qualities an advocate were recognised when he took silk in 1982, only a year before he changed career, to take up his studies at New College from which he graduated BD in 1985, though his legal background enabled to him to take up a classier student job than his fellow students could aspire to: Temporary Sheriff.

Following his training, he was called as Minister of North Leith Parish Church, a position which he held until his retirement in 2002. Former parishione­rs recall the genuine warmth of his friendship, the way that he stood by them in hard times, bringing comfort and support. Following his retirement, he joined the outreach team of St. Andrew's and St. George's West, where he worshipped.

This calling manifested itself in the context of the Church of Scotland from the time when he first came to Edinburgh in 1964 right on until he was well into retirement. He served as an Elder and Depute Session Clerk at Palmer st on Place Church, a member of the Church of Scotland Board of Social Responsibi­lity and a co -author of the Rep or t on Obscenity, a member of the Board of Practice and Procedure, and Convenor of the Legal Questions Sub-committee, a member of the Church and Nation Committee, Convenor of the Judicial Commission of the General Assembly, and, latterly, a general Trustee of the Church of Scotland and a member of the World Mission Middle East Committee.

To all of these roles, he brought his customary gentle sense of humour. Colleagues on the General Trustees still recall the time when there was a serious discussion about a church in Glasgow which was subsiding into the sandy soil. One member ventured the comment that there was something somewhere about building one's house on sand. There was a chilling silence until Alistair broke it by laughing loudly, and the others followed suit.

His ministry also saw the developmen­t of his passion to help the Palestinia­n p eo - ple in Israel/palestine in their difficult circumstan­ces. This was first awakened when, early in his ministry, he led a group from North Leith Parish Church to visit the Holy Land, and developed when, in 1993, he took a Sabbatical in St George's College Jerusalem. The following year, Margaret and he went olive picking in Israel/palestine, a place they were to visit on a further six occasions seeking to help and to champion the cause of peace and of justice for the Palestinia­n people.

Passionate as he was about these causes, still this serious purpose was leavened by his sense of humour. Margaret recalls Alistair's confident unflappabi­lity when they arrived in Jordan at a really cheap and, as Alistair was certain, good hotel which he had found and booked on the internet, but which turned out to be the sort of establishm­ent which more usually rented out its rooms by the hour.

With such a remarkable and energetic public life, Alistair was, yet, very much am an devoted to his family. He was a loving brother, husband, father and grandfathe­r. His personal life was touched by the tragedy of outliving two of his three children, but, hard though this was to b ear, yet still, Alistair lived his life for all of those others, the people in Scotland and in Palestine and elsewhere, whom he felt called upon to love and to serve.

He passed peacefully away at home on 13 June 2020, in the presence of his immediate family, mourned by Margaret, his sister Fiona, his son Euan, and his three grandsons, Connor, Kieran and Alexander; and all who knew him..

In Umberto Eco's The name of the Rose, there' s an old monk, Jorge de Burgos, who refuses to believe that Christ ever laughed. One needs only to look at the joyous life of Alistair Mcgregor to see that could never be true.

 ??  ?? 0 The Rev. Alistair Gerald Crichton Mcgregor QC
0 The Rev. Alistair Gerald Crichton Mcgregor QC

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