Plant Powered Shabbat is a OneTable series that celebrates the Jewish values of nourishing ourselves and the world around us through plant-based cooking and eating. Hear from OneTable hosts and guests how they’re bringing these values to the Shabbat table!
OneTable team member Naomi Davis (they/them) sat down with OneTable Bay Area host Shiriel King Abramson (she/her) to share about her Shabbat practice and journey to plant-based living.
Tell us a bit about you!
I just finished my Masters in sustainability science and practice at Stanford University. I also work part-time for The Orchard, a young adult Jewish community affiliated with Congregation Beth Am in Los Altos. I founded a Jewish environmental action group at The Orchard. I’m a theater improviser, tap dancer, and you can find me hiking and reading books in my spare time.
What inspired you to go vegan?
I actually went vegetarian first when I was two and a half years old. I was really appalled when I realized I was eating real animals. My family used to serve chicken and fish on Shabbat, and when I learned these were actual animals, I stopped partaking.
As I grew up, I heard about the practices of the factory farm industry. I knew there was bad stuff with the dairy industry, but didn’t want to think about it because I knew it would turn me vegan. When I graduated from college and moved home with my parents during the pandemic, my parents and I were sharing the cooking responsibilities. My best friend had just gone vegan and started sending me videos from Earthling Ed, a vegan activist in the UK. Some of the videos depicted animal cruelty and I was very moved by that. That summer, I began transitioning more toward a vegan diet. It took me a few months, and now I’m “flexi-vegan.” I eat challah on Shabbat (regardless of the egg) and I’ll eat dairy or egg if there is no vegan option available, but other than that, I am vegan! It is still a process.