As we started as a music based charity, the name was a play on the types of music we were working with Rock and Roll and Rap.
Was including popular musicians, athletes and teams important partly because of their celebrity, making it "cool" to recover food?
Yes. We did not include them as much as work with them. Their celebrity was used more to help get students to participate in our School Program. We have 25 celebrities sign blank certificates of appreciation and gave them to students who started food recovery programs in our schools, to emulate the bands and teams. The most popular ones were Dave Matthews, Anthony Kedis, David Wright and Eli Manning.
Your parents were Holocaust survivors. Is there a connection between that fact and what you have chosen to do with your life?
I have dedicated my work to their survival as teenagers over all odds. Their parents were murdered on June 8, 1942, when the entire Jewish population of the town of Szczkowa, Poland, was gassed and cremated. My parents were slaves and were starved in German concentration camps. I heard these stories growing up and vowed to end hunger in their honor. I wear tattoos on my arms, which reminds me each day about their lives.
You mentioned before that while you have kept up your food
redistribution, your think tank is working on reducing poverty. Can you
explain what the difference is between the two?
Hunger is a symptom of poverty. We work to attack the root causes of poverty. The great Gandhi once said "Poverty is equal to violence and hunger inflicts its deepest wound."
A new book came out recently to rave reviews called Waste: Uncovering the Global Food Scandal. In it, British author Tristram Stuart claims that as much as 50% of all food is wasted in the US. Are you familiar with the book? Its coming out now can't help but buttress your efforts.
What a huge waste, literally. Let's take a break. When we come back, Syd will tell us more about how RWU has become such a success. I hope you'll join us.
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Part two of my interview with Syd
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