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On a Sunday afternoon my bandmate Anthony got me to run down to Edge of
the Woods, a small vegan/veggie friendly store in New Haven on Whalley
Avenue, for a vegetarian meeting. There was something special about
this meeting though. Jenna, an activist working with Vegan Outreach was
coming to speak on behalf of the group. After listening to hear speak
and eating some fine vegan food, I made arrangements to send a few
questions her way. The following is how she answered them.
How long have you been a vegetarian/vegan and what made
you start?
I went vegetarian
when I was nine years old, and to this day I’m not sure what prompted that
change. My family always had pets and was
very compassionate toward animals (though not vegetarian), and I’m sure
something just felt uncomfortable about loving one animal while consuming
another. In high school, I read Animal Liberation by Peter Singer and
that was what prompted the change to veganism.
At that point, I really became interested in activism and speaking on
behalf of the billions of animals exploited in the United States.
When did you begin your work with Vegan Outreach?
When I went away to
school in fall 2003, I became a volunteer for Vegan Outreach’s Adopt-A-College
program (www.veganhealth.org/adoptacollege). About once a week, I would set up a table in
our campus center and distribute pro-vegetarian literature to my fellow
students. It felt like the most
effective form of activism I had ever done – I was able to have
person-to-person to contact with dozens of people, and the information that I
was distributing was comprehensive enough to answer most of the recipients’
questions. It was something they could
take with them and consider on their own time.
I was hooked.
I continued my
volunteer leafleting throughout my college career, first as an individual and
then as a part of Compassionate Consumers, an animal protection and consumer
advocacy group in western NY. In spring
of 2006, Vegan Outreach announced its intention to hire a full-time leafleter, and
having just graduated from college, this was the perfect opportunity for
me. I’ve been the Northeast Outreach
Coordinator for VO since September of 2006.
Tell me
some of your tactics when approaching people face to face about the lifestyle.
It’s always been
really important to me to keep the animals’ suffering as the first and foremost
reason for my activism: I’m not out to make anyone feel guilty, I’m not out to
win an argument, and I’m certainly not out to insult anyone. Unfortunately, the realities of factory
farming are often hidden from the eyes of the public, and what I strive to do,
everyday, is lift the veil of secrecy and encourage people to widen their
circle of compassion. I try to remain
upbeat, happy, and friendly, and I’ve found that this not only makes people
more comfortable when I approach them, but it also leaves them with an
impression of an activist that actively dispels the “angry, deprived vegan”
stereotype.
What are some of your most memorable moments while
pamphleteering?
I have had so many
great experiences during my past year of leafleting! Probably the best moments are when
individuals tell me that they received a Vegan Outreach brochure in a previous
semester and it prompted them to go vegetarian or vegan. Those are the times when I really feel like
I’m making change happen. There are also
times when I’m leafleting around lunch time, and students who receive a
brochure tell me that they had a vegetarian lunch that day. Those are tangible results for all of the efforts
that the Adopt-A-College team put in each semester.
Has
there been a musical connection to your change? (I began my change by listening
to the band Propagandhi. Totally inspired me.)
I think there has
been a huge upswing lately in the number of musical groups who are promoting a
cruelty-free lifestyle, and that is really inspiring. I recently went to a show featuring Ben
Gibbard (of Death Cab for Cutie), and he told the audience that later he was
going to a local pizza place to get some vegan pizza and explained the reasons
for avoiding dairy! I also started to
learn about the straightedge scene when I was a teenager, so groups like Earth
Crisis, Good Clean Fun, and Youth of Today were definitely in my musical
vernacular. And of course I have to give
a shout-out to Beloved Binge, who not only sing about veganism but who actually
get out there and leaflet while they’re on tour.
Have you ever questioned the methods of either your
group or another animal rights group? If so why?
I think the modern
animal activism movement needs a general refocusing of its efforts, because it
would seem that a lot of time and money have been contributed since its rebirth
in the 1970s and yet the number of animals killed per year have the biggest impact,
we should go after those enterprises in which the biggest atrocities are being
committed; 99 out of every 100 animals killed in this country are killed for
food. And the suffering of farmed
animals is systematic, widespread, and generally accepted by people. Right
now, there is an endemic of “do something, do anything” activism, and to me
that feels like a waste of our limited resources as animal advocates. I believe very strongly in what Vegan
Outreach does, because it is cost-effective, is efficient, and targets an
appropriate animal enterprise.
What are some new ways Vegan Outreach is trying to get
the word out?
Vegan Outreach’s
primary form of animal advocacy is in the printing and distribution of our
comprehensive materials about factory farming and cruelty-free living. Our primary program is Adopt-A-College, in
which students and volunteers disseminate our literature on college campuses
across the U.S. and Canada. We think that approaching college students
with this information has the greatest potential for change, because not only
are these people at a time in their lives when they are being exposed to new
ideas and in a position to make changes with minimal influence of habit and
other constraints, but they also have long lives ahead of them as vegetarians
and activists. As of today, Vegan
Outreach has distributed over 700,000 brochures in the Fall 06/Spring 07 school
year.
You mentioned that although obesity is at an all time
high, diabetes etc…and that the Earth suffers greatly due to the consumption of
animals…meat eating is at an all time high. What would you attribute this to
and how does Vegan Outreach go about combating it?
I think there is a
lot of misinformation and ignorance about the horrific abuses involved in food
production, and as long as industry and government continue to mislead people
about the negative impacts that meat and dairy consumption can have, the
average person is not going to feel compelled to change anything about their diet
or lifestyle. People don’t want to
support animal cruelty, and there is a total disconnect between the cow on the
factory farm and the steak or the milk we’re having for dinner. Vegan Outreach simply tries to disseminate
factual, non-biased information to the general public in hopes that it will
open their hearts and minds to change.
Does your group or do you personally combine efforts
with groups that aren’t of the Vegan/Veg kind, for the greater good? Like say,
though most don’t eat meat, combining efforts with an environmental advocacy
group because your causes are similar since they both positively affect the
planet?
We’re definitely
seeing “greenness” become more popular and accepted in the public forum now,
and I know many vegetarians – myself included – have been excited to see the
negative aspects of meat consumption making headlines. At this time, Vegan Outreach doesn’t really
have the resources to combine with other groups or take on campaigns other than
those which we’re already spearheading, but we’re supportive of efforts to get
people to reduce or eliminate their meat consumption.
To
varying degrees, no matter which scene I am dip in at any given time, leftist
politicking, the underground music scene, volunteer work of any kind, sexism
seems to rear its ugly head from time to time. Have you had to deal with it in
your work and if so, how did you? Again if so, were you surprised by it more
than say another situation because of the work you do?
Thankfully, the work
we do with Vegan Outreach is very low-key and non-controversial – there are no
loud demonstrations, no flashy media campaigns, no celebrity endorsements. There’s not much chance of anyone crying
sexism on fully-clothed volunteers distributing pamphlets on busy street
corners. Personally, I feel like the
grassroots tactics we employ at Vegan Outreach are extremely effective – and
they do not require the oppression of one to promote the liberation of another.
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