Rynn berry biography of christopher
Rynn Berry
American historian of vegetarianism
Rynn Berry | |
|---|---|
Rynn Berry at the World Vegetarian Congress in San Francisco | |
| Born | ()January 31, Honolulu, Hawaii, US |
| Died | January 9, () (aged68) New York Methodist Hospital, New York City, Novel York, US |
| Occupation | Author, activist |
| Almamater | University of Pennsylvania, Columbia University |
| Genre | History and biography, concise plays |
| Subject | Vegetarianism and veganism |
Rynn Berry (January 31, – January 9, ) was an American author and scholar on vegetarianism and veganism,[1] as well as a pioneer in the animal rights and vegan movements.[2]
Early life
Berry was born on January 31, , in Honolulu, Hawaii, and grew up in Coconut Grove, Florida, where his mother and maternal siblings lived.
He studied literature, archeology, and classics at the University of Pennsylvania, and ancient history and comparative religion at Columbia University.[3][4]
He became vegetarian as a teenager and vegan at the age of [5] He became a rawfooder in [6]
Career
Berry taught comparative literature at Baruch College and later culinary history at New School for Social Analyze in New York City.[6] He was a scholar of vegetarian history, and wrote a number of books, plays, and other works on this subject.[7]Richard H.
Schwartz, founder of Jewish Veg, called his fourth book, the work, Hitler: Neither Vegetarian Nor Animal Lover (with an introduction by Lantern Books's co-founder Martin Rowe) a "thoughtful and carefully documented book."[8] A frequent international lecturer,[9][10][11] Berry's books have been translated into many languages, and he was locally and internationally known in the vegan community.[12][13]
Berry also wrote the entry on the history of vegetarianism in America for the Oxford Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink (),[14] edited by Andrew Smith, and he was commissioned to write seven entries for The Oxford Companion to Food and Drink in America ().[15] He was also a playwright who contributed a number of brief plays about 'famous vegetarians in history'.[16] He wrote a chapter on the history of the raw food movement for Becoming Raw: The Essential Guide to Raw Vegan Diets.[17]
He was also on the advisory boards of EarthSave,[18] the American Vegetarian Association, and historical advisor to the North American Vegetarian Society.[19] He was an honored member of the American Vegan Society Speakers Bureau, and an instructor at Victoria Moran's Main Street Academy.[20] Berry also contributed to the animal rights movement in Brazil, where he frequently lectured both in English (with a translator) and in Portuguese.[21]
Famous Vegetarians
One of Berry's most notable works, Famous Vegetarians and Their Favorite Recipes: Lives and Lore from Buddha to the Beatles,[7] is a collection of biographical sketches of famous people who were vegetarians at some point in their lives.
Each chapter also contains an illustration of each of the famous vegetarians profiled, followed by some of their favorite recipes. For the Leonardo da Vinci chapter, he translated for the first time into English recipes from De Honesta Voluptate by Bartolomeo Platina.[22] The first edition of the book was published in by Panjandrum Books.[23] In , Pythagorean Publishers released a revised edition with three additional chapters covering Mahavira, Plato and Socrates, and Swami Prabhupada.[24] A review published in Vegetarian Times, considered Famous Vegetarians "scholarship at the end of a fork – and for writing it, he deserves an 'A'."[22] In Religious Vegetarianism: From Hesiod to the Dalai Lama, Kerry S.
Walters and Lisa Portmess said that Berry's book is "a twentieth-century parallel" to Howard Williams's classic The Ethics of Diet.[25] In his book The Vegetarian Revolution, Giorgio Cerquetti recommended "everybody to read Rynn Berry's excellent book."[26]
Death and legacy
Berry lived alone in an apartment in Prospect Park.
He was an enthusiastic amateur runner, despite having asthma.[27]
He was found collapsed and unconscious in jogging clothes in Prospect Park in the Prospect Heights section of Brooklyn, Novel York, on December 31, ,[27] but not identified until January 7, [28] The only clues in his pockets were "keys and an asthma inhaler".[29] He never regained consciousness and died at pm on January 9, [27]
Martin Rowe, author and co-founder of Lantern Books, commented on Berry's death:
"Rynn's impact was literally incalculable, given how many met him, bought his books, or talked with him at the Union Square green market over the many years.
He was the epitome of the kind of unheralded grassroots activist without which any movement for change cannot grow, and he was a witty and erudite figure: the Dr. Johnson of the vegetarian movement.
Podcast: Engage in new window Download. Rynn Berry passed away on January 9, Many of us were shocked and saddened by the news. Another interview from can be heard here.He would be missed greatly, even by those who never met him, but his work will survive on."[30]
Author Chef Fran Costigan wrote that Berry was "a mild soul whose life touched so many."[31]
His life was celebrated publicly and outdoors on March 30, , for about thirty minutes, at the annual Veggie Celebration Parade in New York Metropolis.
On July 5, , he was honored at the annual NAVS Vegetarian Summerfest in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in a plenary led by vegan activist and writer Victoria Moran. In previous years, Berry had been on the staff of Vegetarian Summerfest as a scholar and speaker on veganism and world religions.[32]
“The Rynn Berry Jr.
Papers” are housed in the North Carolina Mention University Libraries’ Special Collections and Research Center.[7]
Bibliography of published writings
- The Vegetarians, Autumn Press, ISBN
- The Recent Vegetarians (updated edition of his previous book, with William Shurtleff interview instead of Marty Feldman's), Chestnut Ridge, New York, Townhouse Press, ISBN; Pythagorean Publishers, ISBN
- Famous Vegetarians and Their Favorite Recipes: Lives and Lore from Buddha to the Beatles.
Pythagorean Publishers. ISBN.
- Food for the Gods: Vegetarianism & the World's Religions, Pythagorean Publishers, ISBN
- Hitler: Neither Vegetarian Nor Animal Lover (with an introduction by Martin Rowe) Pythagorean Publishers, ISBN
- "Veganism," article in The Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink, Oxford University Press, , pp.He assumed—rightly and with some prescience—that getting someone to taste the food would whet her appetite for the philosophy, as well. To that conclude, this highly educated and academically gifted man stood at the edge of the park, with the beggars and the highway performers, slowly and steadily creating a more humane world. Last week, beloved vegan author Rynn Berry passed away at the age of After he collapsed while out for a jog on New Year's Eve, the New York City running society spread the word on social media to get him identified.
–
- Becoming Raw: The Essential Instruction to Raw Vegan Diets (with Brenda Davis & Vesanto Melina), Book Publishing Company, ISBN
- The Vegan Guide to New York City (with Chris A. Suzuki & Barry Litsky), Ethical Living, (20th edition).
ISBN[33]
See also
References
- ^"Heritage Radio Network: Pythagoras' Other Theorem: A Quick History of Vegetarianism". Retrieved
- ^"Rynn Berry, Pioneer in Vegetarianism and Veganism, Has Died".
The Daily Meal. Retrieved
- ^"RYNN BERRY JR's Obituary on New York Times". New York Times. Retrieved
- ^"Rynn Berry". .
- ^Jon Wynne-Tyson, The Extended Circle: A Dictionary of Humane Thought, Centaur Press, , p.
- ^ abIt's Easier To Be Green, the New York Times,
- ^ abcAbraham, Laura ().Rynn Berry January 31, — January 9, was an American composer and scholar on vegetarianism and veganism[ 1 ] as skillfully as a pioneer in the animal rights and vegan movements. Berry was born on January 31,in HonoluluHawaiiand grew up in Coconut GroveFloridawhere his mother and maternal siblings lived. He studied literaturearcheologyand classics at the University of Pennsylvaniaand ancient history and comparative religion at Columbia University. He became vegetarian as a teenager and vegan at the age of
"Discovering Treasures While Processing the Rynn Berry, Jr. Papers". North Carolina State University Libraries. Retrieved
- ^"Judaism and Vegetarianism: Book Review, "Hitler: Neither Vegetarian Nor Animal Lover"".
.
- ^"World Vegetarian Congress - Rynn Berry". International Vegetarian Union. Retrieved
- ^"World Vegetarian Congress - Edinburgh, Scotland, Summer - Rynn Berry". Retrieved
- ^"Rynn Berry".
Retrieved
- ^"Pals of Athlete Who Collapsed in Prospect Park Seek His Good Samaritans". DNAinfo New York. Archived from the original on April 7,
- ^"Go Vegan Radio - Archives - Rynn Berry".
Go Vegan Radio with Bob Linden. Retrieved 27 March
- ^Smith, Andrew F., ed. (). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America (Seconded.). Oxford: Oxford University Compress .In the heart of Brooklyn, amidst the hustle and bustle of city life, unfolded a story that struck a chord with urban dwellers and the running community alike. Rynn Berry, a year-old jogger and a respected figure in the vegan movement, collapsed while running in Prospect Park on December 31, With no identification on him, he was admitted to Recent York Methodist Hospital as John Doe, where he lay unconscious and unidentified for over a week. This incident not only highlighted the vulnerabilities of individuals in a metropolitan setting but also brought forth a wave of community response, as people from various walks of experience rallied together to uncover his identity.
doi/acref/ ISBN.
- ^"Rynn Berry". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^"Palestra de Rynn Berry apresenta os motivos que levaram Da Vinci a adotar o vegetarianismo - ANDA - Agência de Notícias de Direitos Animais".
ANDA - Agência de Notícias de Direitos Animais. January 23,
- ^"Guide to Plant-Based Nutrition: Recommended Reading". One Green PlanetOne Green Planet. 21 May Retrieved
- ^"Welcome to the Triangle Vegetarian Society".
.
- ^"NAVS North American Vegetarian Society". Retrieved
- ^Zukowski, John A. (). "Ten Questions with Victoria Moran: Food Ethics, Spirituality, the Religion of Pop Culture and More".
Rynn Berry (January 31, – January 9, ) was an American author and scholar on vegetarianism and veganism, as successfully as a pioneer in the animal rights and vegan movements.
Spiritual Pop Culture. Retrieved
- ^Gentil e generoso, Rynn Berry contribuiu muito para o movimento animalista no BrasilArchived at the Wayback Machine
- ^ abVegetarian Times, Fev , p.
- ^William Shurtleff and Akiko Aoyagi, History of Soybeans and Soyfoods in South Asia / Indian Subcontinent (–), Soyinfo Center, , p.
- ^Shurtleff and Aoyagi, Op. cit., p.
- ^Kerry S.
Walters and Lisa Portmess, Religious Vegetarianism: From Hesiod to the Dalai Lama, State University of New York Press, , p.
- ^Giorgio Cerquetti, The Vegetarian Revolution: Commentary and Cookbook, Torchlight Publishing, , (ISBN) p.
Many Recent Yorkers remember seeing him, Saturday after Saturday, in just about any weather, standing outside at the Union Square Farmers' Market selling copies of The Vegan Guide to NYC. He assumed—rightly and with some prescience—that getting someone to taste the diet would whet her appetite for th.
viii.
- ^ abcYee, Vivian. The New York Times, January 9, , "Jogger Found Unconscious in a Park Dies, but Not Before Being Identified".
- ^"Mystery Prospect Park Jogger Identified as Vegan Author".
DNAinfo New York. Archived from the original on March 26,
- ^Braunstein, Mark Mathew, (Spring), "Tribute to Rynn Berry", Vegetarian Voice
- ^Edmundson, John (). "Rynn Berry left us a few hours ago - The Veggie Blog".
The Veggie Blog. Retrieved
- ^Bakija, Mary (). "Rynn Berry, Jogger Who Collapsed In Prospect Park, Has Died". BKLYNER. Retrieved
- ^Program for Veggie Pride Parade, March 30,
- ^ - NYC Vegetarian Nourishment Festival - Rynn Berry discussing the Restaurant Guide: The Vegan Guide to New York Municipality on YouTube