Among Friends: Spring / Summer 2021

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friends forever five questions for inspiring changemaker claire coen ‘15 After her college roommate introduced her to food and environmental justice issues, Claire Coen ‘15 was inspired to get involved, leading her to start her own advocacy organization, The PB&J Project, which seeks to make people more aware of where their food comes from and factory farming. Claire will be pitching PB&J to The Changemaker Project this summer in a bid for funding so that she can expand the scope and reach of her work.

1) How did you first hear about the Changemaker Project, and what inspired you to get involved? Can you explain more about the organization? My roommate from college, Ella Rosenblatt, has been a lifelong vegan and advocate for animal welfare and sustainable practices. I credit so much of my growth and knowledge around factory farming and plantbased eating to her. She was invited to join the Changemaker Project because of her involvement with the Factory Farming Awareness Coalition (a great organization that I recommend everyone checks out). Once she explained the project, I couldn’t help but join in. The Changemaker Project equips young people to build and execute an initiative of their choosing and pitch it in front of judges to potentially receive funding. After following a curriculum that covers various

social justice issues, participants form teams, pick an issue to tackle, and begin designing their projects. In June, selected teams attend the Global Pitch and compete to receive funding. I encourage people to visit thechangemakerproject.org to learn more. 2) Why did you choose to pursue PB&J as your social justice issue / project for the Changemaker Project? How did that idea come about? As people particularly passionate about animal welfare and environmental protection, Ella and I wanted to focus on a topic that encompassed both of these issues: factory farming. We aim to address the global issue of factory farming by addressing the lack of awareness surrounding it. Factory farms are intentionally hidden from society so that people can go on consuming their products without any

among friends: spring / summer 2021

moral qualms. Our goal with this project was to break this invisibility and begin to shine a light on the true horrors of animal agriculture, starting with younger audiences. We present factory farming as the problem and propose plant-based eating as the solution. With factory farming, the issues of animal cruelty, human illness, and environmental degradation intersect. In this intersection, a plant-based diet works to combat all three issues while being individually attainable. We also want young people to understand that plant-based food is delicious and nutritious, and offers tremendous ethical and environmental benefits. According to American food journalist, Mark Bittman in his latest talk about his book Animal, Vegetable, Junk, “eating is a language” and


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