Hom Jay Dinshah | |
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Born | November 2, 1933 Malaga, New Jersey, USA |
Died | June 8, 2000 Malaga, New Jersey, USA |
(aged 66)
Occupation | Vegan Advocate, Social Reformer |
Nationality | Indian/American |
Ethnicity | Parsi Indian |
Citizenship | United States |
Period | 20th century |
Genres | philosophical, spiritual |
Subjects | veganism, ahimsa |
Literary movement | vegan movement |
Notable work(s) |
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Notable award(s) | Vegetarian Hall of Fame, North American Vegetarian Society |
Spouse(s) | Freya Smith Dinshah |
Children | Daniel Dinshah, Anne Dinshah |
Relative(s) | Darius Dinshah, author of Let There Be Light, ISBN 0933917287, Pages: 128, Edition: 9, Hardcover, Dinshah Health Society |
Influenced
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www.americanvegan.org |
Hom Jay Dinshah (November 2, 1933 – June 8, 2000) was founder and president of the American Vegan Society and editor of its publication, Ahimsa magazine (1960–2000).
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Dinshah was born in New Jersey, United States. His father was a United States citizen who was born in India and whose ethnicity was Parsi, and his mother was a United States citizen whose family was of German ancestry. A lifelong vegetarian, in 1957, Jay Dinshah became vegan. He married the English-born Freya Smith in 1960. The two children of Jay and Freya Dinshah are Daniel and Anne.
Jay Dinshah founded the American Vegan Society[1] early in 1960 and later that year married the English-born Freya Smith. Freya, whose parents were active in the Vegan Society (of England), contributed to the early growth of the American Vegan Society and is president of the American Vegan Society today. The American Vegan Society is headquartered at Malaga, New Jersey, on a family-owned parcel of land which they call "Suncrest", or "the Suncrest Educreational Center". The center is characterized by vegan publishing and outreach, vegan archiving, spiritual inspiration, providing people with an experience of vegan living, vegan food preparation demonstrations, maintenance of a small vegan garden, and extensive networking. Dinshah served the American Vegan Society as its president, and as an editor of its publication, Ahimsa magazine (1960–2000)
Ahimsa was a quarterly publication that explored compassionate living ("Ahimsa" meaning "dynamic harmlessness") as a philosophy, practical aspects of vegan living, and personal and cultural resources for vegans. They include vegan menus and recipes, and news about food. The American Vegan Society continues to publish a quarterly periodical, now titled "The American Vegan, with the subheading "Ahimsa lights the way." The American Vegan Society is now run by Freya Dinshah, Jay Dinshah's widow, and an AVS Board of close comrades in vegan living and outreach, nearly all of whom live within a short driving distance of Suncrest.
The American Vegan Society, follows views similar to Natural Hygiene but enhances them with Jain attitudes of ahimsa and the elimination of all animal products and clothing apparel.
Jay was co-organiser of the 23rd World Vegetarian Congress in 1975, held in Orono, Maine, which was hosted by the North American Vegetarian Society (NAVS) and sponsored by the International Vegetarian Union (IVU). From this event, the American Vegan Society and the North American Vegetarian Society were formed, and a movement to found and develop modern vegetarian organizations in North America was born, tapping the energies, insights, and resources of parallel movements throughout Europe and India.
Dinshah died in 2000 aged 66, reputedly of a chronic heart ailment unrelated to diet. The International Vegetarian Union memorialized Jay Dinshah in their IVU News issue of October 2000[2] That same year, he was posthumously awarded the prestigious (among global or international vegetarians) Mankar Memorial Award [3] during the 2000 World Vegetarian Congress, held in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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