Alex Hershaft

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Alex Hershaft
Hershaft in 2015
Born (1934-07-01) 1 July 1934 (age 89)
Warsaw, Poland
NationalityAmerican
EducationPh.D, Inorganic Chemistry
Alma materIowa State University
Occupation(s)Entrepreneur, author, activist
Known forCo-founding the U.S. animal rights movement
Websitefarmusa.org
With Israeli President Rivlin, May 2015

Alex Hershaft is an American animal rights activist, Holocaust survivor, and co-founder and president of the Farm Animal Rights Movement (FARM),[1][2] the nation's oldest (1976) organization devoted exclusively to promoting the rights of animals not to be raised for food. Previously, he has had a 30-year career in materials science and environmental consulting and a prominent role in movements for religious freedom and environmental quality.

Family and early life[edit]

Hershaft was born in Warsaw, Poland, on July 1, 1934, to fairly assimilated Jewish parents Jozef and Sabina Herszaft. Sabina was a mathematician. Jozef was a chemist researching the properties of heavy water (used as a coolant for nuclear reactors) at University of Warsaw with his colleague Jozef Rotblat.[3]

Their research was in great demand, as Western scientists began to recognize the potential of harnessing nuclear energy, and both received visas to continue their work in the U.K. and the U.S. Rotblat left for the U.K just before Hitler invaded Poland in 1939 and eventually received the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for his subsequent opposition to nuclear weapons. Herszaft insisted on visas for his wife and young son, but those came too late.

During the war, the family was forced to move into the Warsaw Ghetto, with Sabina's parents, across the street from the infamous Pawiak prison. As the Nazis began exterminating the Ghetto in late 1942, sending inmates to the Treblinka death camp, all three were able to escape to the Christian side and remain in hiding.[4][5] Sabina and Alex were liberated by the allies in the spring of 1945. After the war and five years in an Italian refugee camp, Sabina emigrated to Israel, while 16-year-old Alexander arrived in the U.S. in January 1951. Sabina died in Israel in 1996.

Research and consulting career[edit]

Hershaft received his B.A. in 1955 from the University of Connecticut, where he was active in the student senate, the school newspaper, and the soccer team. He went on to study polymer chemistry at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. He gained his Ph.D. in inorganic chemistry in 1961 from Iowa State University, where he was employed by the Ames Laboratory of the Atomic Energy Commission.

Hershaft began his science career at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, where he taught graduate classes in X-ray crystallography. He then spent a year running the chemistry department at the Israel Institute for Scientific Translations in Jerusalem. Upon returning to the United States in 1963, Hershaft analyzed naval operations for the Center for Naval Analyses in Arlington, Virginia.

In 1967, Hershaft joined the Grumman Aerospace Corporation in Bethpage, New York, to review potential areas of new business in air and water pollution control, and solid waste management. In 1969, one year before the first Earth Day, he launched, then managed the Environmental Technology Seminar, a regional forum for study and discussion of tri-state (New York–New Jersey–Delaware) environmental issues.

In 1972, Hershaft moved to the Washington, D.C., area. He joined the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton in Bethesda, Maryland, to evaluate water management alternatives, impacts of electric power plants and transmission lines, and costs and benefit of data from the Earth Resources Technology Satellite.

Hershaft spent a couple more years directing environmental studies for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Council on Environmental Quality with two erstwhile consulting firms: Enviro Control and Interstate Electronics Corporation.

Between 1977 and 1981, Hershaft served as a senior scientist with the Mitre Corporation in McLean, Virginia. He studied emissions from various heating fuels and prepared protocols for assessing and cleaning up hazardous waste sites as part of the U.S. Superfund program.

Social justice career[edit]

Hershaft had been involved in student extracurricular activities throughout his undergraduate and graduate studies. At the University of Connecticut, he served on both the Student Senate and the Campus newspaper.

In November 1961, while working at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Hershaft staged a major demonstration in Tel-Aviv, leading to the formation of the League for Abolition of Religious Coercion in Israel, a massive movement seeking to end repression of secular, Reform, and Conservative Judaism, as well as mixed marriages, by entrenched Orthodox authorities.[6]

Two years later, he turned over leadership to Uzzi Ornan and his other Israeli deputies, as he returned to the U.S. to seek support for the organization. Following the upheaval of the 1967 Six-Day War, the cause of religious freedom in Israel was taken up by the Citizen Rights Party (Ratz) (now Meretz).

Alex Hershaft at Tel Aviv University in May 2015

Between 1965 and 1978, Hershaft served on the board of the American Humanist Association (AHA), a national organization that affirms the ability and responsibility of human beings to lead ethical and fulfilling lives without reference to a supernatural being.

"My first hand experience with animal farming was instrumental [in devoting my life to animal rights and veganism]. I noted the many similarities between how the Nazis treated us and how we treat animals, especially those raised for food. Among these are the use of cattle cars for transport and crude wood crates for housing, the cruel treatment and deception about impending slaughter, the processing efficiency and emotional detachments of the perpetrators, and the piles of assorted body parts - mute testimonials to the victims they were once a part of."

— Alex Hershaft
September 24, 2014[7]

In 1961, shortly after arriving in Israel, Hershaft dropped meat from his diet. In August 1975, he became involved in the vegetarian movement after attending the World Vegetarian Congress in Orono, Maine, and meeting Jay Dinshah.[5][8][9][10] He reports that Robin Hur[11] (then of Harvard Business School in Boston) persuaded him in 1981, after 20 years as a vegetarian, to become vegan.

In 1976, Hershaft founded the Vegetarian Information Service (VIS) to distribute information on the benefits of a vegetarian diet. That same year, he participated in hearings before the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, which led to the publication of Dietary Goals for the United States, and eventually to the periodic publication of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Subsequently, he testified before Congress in favor of the 1978 National Consumer Nutrition Information Act and the Federal Meat Inspection Act of 1978.

During that period, Hershaft also organized several conferences on strategies for promoting vegetarianism. Some participants, influenced by Peter Singer's 1975 treatise Animal Liberation, felt that the scope of these conferences should be expanded to include discussions of animal rights.[12]

Accordingly, in the summer of 1981, Hershaft organized Action For Life, a national conference at Cedar Crest College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, that effectively launched the U.S. animal rights movement. Participants included such animal rights pioneers as Cleveland Amory, Ingrid Newkirk, Alex Pacheco, Peter Singer, Henry Spira, Gretchen Wyler, as well as radio host Thom Hartmann. These conferences continued for seven more years in San Francisco (1982), Montclair, New Jersey (1983), Los Angeles (1985), Chicago (1986), Cambridge, Massachusetts (1987), and Washington (1984 and 1991).[13][14]

Immediately following the 1981 conference, Hershaft founded the Farm Animal Rights Movement (FARM) to promote a vegan lifestyle and animal rights.[15]

As FARM president, he launched World Farm Animals Day in 1983, Great American Meatout in 1985, Letters from FARM in 1996, the second round of national animal rights conferences in 1997, Sabina Fund in 1999, and Pay Per View, now 10 Billion Lives, in 2011.[16][17][18][19] In 2013, he relinquished operation of the organization.

He currently serves on the Advisory Council of Jewish Veg.[20]

Hershaft has written several hundred letters to newspaper editors about the merits of a vegan diet. At the national animal rights conferences, he lectures on personal growth, leadership, social change, campaign strategies, and movement building.

Honors[edit]

Hershaft has been listed in Marquis' Who’s Who in America, American Men and Women of Science, and other biographical directories. He has been inducted into both the U.S. Vegetarian Hall of Fame (1998) and the U.S. Animal Rights Hall of Fame (2001).[21] He is an honorary fellow of the International Vegetarian Union.

Between 1984 and 2000, Hershaft served on the governing council of the International Vegetarian Union. Between 2001 and 2009, he served on the board of In Defense of Animals, a national animal rights organization based in San Rafael, California.

In the summer of 1998, he was inducted into the Vegetarian Hall of Fame of the North American Vegetarian Society.[22]

Personal life[edit]

Hershaft met Eugenie (Genia) Krystal while working at the Israel Institute for Scientific Translations, and they were married in Jerusalem in 1962. They were divorced in 1979. Their daughter, Monica Larissa Hershaft, was born in 1966 and after recovering from a ten-year-long illness which she attributes to a vegan diet,[23] she opened a holistic health and nutrition wellness center in Los Angeles in 2008.

Hershaft became a vegetarian in 1961 and a vegan in 1981. He has been physically active throughout his life, mostly by playing soccer on various school and county teams, running marathons in the early 1980s, and more recently, by engaging in weekly folk dancing and swimming.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Henderson, Greg (March 20, 1985). "Alex Hershaft, president of the Farm Animal Reform Movement,..." UPI. Retrieved October 26, 2016.
  2. ^ Slesin, Suzanne (July 13, 1994). "Kids Who Say, 'Ugh, Cow!'". The New York Times. Retrieved October 26, 2016.
  3. ^ "Alex Hershaft: From the Warsaw Ghetto to the Fight for Animal Rights". September 9, 2014 – via YouTube.
  4. ^ Norm Phelps. The Longest Struggle. Lantern Books, 2004; p. 225
  5. ^ a b "Holocaust survivor heads animal rights group Alex Hershaft throws himself into cause" Archived 2017-03-21 at the Wayback Machine Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2014-3-4.
  6. ^ Haaretz. November 21, 1961. Page 1.
  7. ^ "r/IAmA - I am an 80-year-old Holocaust survivor who co-founded the US Animal Rights movement. AMA". reddit. 23 September 2014. Retrieved 2019-11-05.
  8. ^ Lawrence & Susan Finsen. The Animal Rights Movement in America. Twayne Publishers, 1994; p. 75.
  9. ^ Norm Phelps. The Longest Struggle. Lantern Books, 2004; pp. 190, 222.
  10. ^ "24 Carrot Award" Vegetarians in Paradise. Retrieved 2014-3-4.
  11. ^ Food Reform: Our Desperate Need, by Robin Hur, PhD, 1975
  12. ^ Norm Phelps. The Longest Struggle. Lantern Books, 2004; p. 222.
  13. ^ Lawrence & Susan Finsen. The Animal Rights Movement in America. Twayne Publishers, 1994; p. 76
  14. ^ Norm Phelps. The Longest Struggle. Lantern Books, 2004; p. 223.
  15. ^ Lawrence & Susan Finsen. The Animal Rights Movement in America. Twayne Publishers, 1994; p. 84.
  16. ^ Lawrence & Susan Finsen. The Animal Rights Movement in America. Twayne Publishers, 1994; p. 121.
  17. ^ Norm Phelps. The Longest Struggle. Lantern Books, 2004; p. 226
  18. ^ "The Meatless (and Less Meat) Revolution" Time. Retrieved 2014-3-4.
  19. ^ "The Brains Behind the Great American Meatout" VegNews. Retrieved 2014-3-4.
  20. ^ http://www.jewishveg.com/about-us[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "U.S. Animal Rights Hall of Fame" Archived 2014-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, Animal Rights National Conference, Retrieved October 27, 2016
  22. ^ "Vegetarian Hall of Fame". North American Vegetarian Society.
  23. ^ "Stay Sick or Eat Meat? Facing a Vegan Crisis – Monica Hershaft – #897". YouTube.

Further reading[edit]

External links[edit]