
KATHLEEN
JANNAWAY - A COMPASSIONATE LIFE
Sincere thanks to Mary Jannaway and Mark Gold for much of the information
contained in this summary of Kathleen's life. Extracts from Mark’s book 'Animal
Century' are highlighted in bold type and reproduced with his permission.
For full size photographs, see links at the end .
Kathleen Jannaway was
born on 6th February 1915, in Tooting, London. Kathleen was the daughter of
William Jannaway and Eileen Mew, who had married in 1913. Eileen, a Roman
Catholic from Cork in Ireland, died of pleurisy shortly after Kathleen’s birth.
William was a confectioner and tobacconist and later a projectionist in an
early cinema. He had been disabled by TB in his hip as a boy and only outlived
his wife by a few years. Kathleen, an only child, was brought up by her
paternal grandparents. Describing her childhood as impoverished, Kathleen
remembered the financial circumstances in fascinating detail: "When my
grandfather died we had a total income of 17s and 6d, plus the 15s Granny’s
sons gave her. Out of this we had to pay 14s weekly rent. But my grandmother
was a good manager and I never went hungry - though I can remember that
sometimes on Thursday nights we had to go to bed early in the evening because
we hadn’t a penny left for the gas meter." The family had no
electricity at that time.
Kathleen was an intelligent child and won a scholarship to the County Secondary School, Streatham, a new and radical grammar school with pupil participation in the government of the school. Kathleen left in 1933, after successfully passing her school certificate, and then trained as a junior schoolteacher at Fursedown Training College. She taught in several London schools as a biology teacher. Lecturers, teachers, employers and colleagues described her as idealistic, dedicated and understanding.
From such a background is it possible to discern the seeds of radicalism
which later created an indefatigable and visionary campaigner? Kathleen herself
believed it was. Her father was a member of the Socialist Party of Great
Britain (before it became the Labour Party) and regularly preached a message of
peace and the dignity of working people from a soapbox in the local park. Her grandmother
was sufficiently unconventional to be deeply disturbed when young Kathleen
wanted to join the local Girl Guides, considering the organisation unhealthily
representative of the status quo! Kathleen also cited her good fortune in
attending progressive schools where she was always encouraged to question and
think for herself.
In 1938 Kathleen
married her cousin Jack - this was truly to be a lifetime partnership. Together
they were early members of the Peace Pledge Union and helped to distribute Peace
News. When the war began, Jack, with Kathleen’s full support, was accepted as a
conscientious objector. Unlike many others in a similar position they
encountered little hostility. "We were lucky: people were always able to
respect Jack’s honesty and integrity and they realised that it was simply
impossible for him to kill or be part of the killing of another human
being". They spent the first part of the war living in a community in
Sussex, where they became vegetarians. Kathleen recalled that, at precisely the
same time as she was slicing up their meagre ration of roast lamb, "there
was a bit of a commotion in the corner of the field outside our window and all
the lambs hastily raced for their mothers. I realised that it would be no good
crying for mum when the slaughterhouse lorry arrived". Both she and
Jack decided never to eat meat again.
The war years also saw Kathleen undertake her first public speaking
engagement, though it was not for the animal cause. She helped to organise a
meeting in Tunbridge Wells of the newly formed Oxford Movement for Famine
Relief (later to become Oxfam). Kathleen said that "people often think
that my main motivation is animals but actually my principal concerns have
always been peace and world hunger. My involvement in the animal movement
developed out of these, particularly when I began to make connections between
the different issues."
Kathleen taught in the local school. She and Jack moved into a cottage on the farm where Jack worked and Kathleen cycled along the railway line to work. Their eldest son Richard was born in 1945. A freak bomb destroyed their cottage and this had a profound and upsetting effect on Kathleen. With Richard, she made a nightmare journey to stay with Jack’s parents.
After the war, and now living in Pittsea in Essex, Kathleen was advised to have another baby 'to make everything alright again'. Mary was born in 1948 and Patrick in 1950. Kathleen devoted the next 15 or so years to her family. They moved to Stoneleigh in Ewell, Surrey, and Jack travelled to London daily. After unhappy experiences at the local primary school, Richard was sent to New Sherwood, a progressive school in Epsom. He was later joined there by Mary and Patrick. The school fees meant that Kathleen had to return to teaching, first at a small private school and then at the junior school in Leatherhead. This involved moving again - to the house where Jack and Kathleen lived for the next 30 years.
Kathleen taught children with learning difficulties and transferred to a special centre doing pioneering work with children with dyslexia and developing new teaching materials. At the same time the whole family attended and became members of Dorking Quaker meeting, where Kathleen was soon very involved with the childrens' committee and the work of the meeting. Actively campaigning for peace, she and Jack were founder members of Quaker Green Concern, now Quaker Green Action. Kathleen was an active member of a group in Leatherhead during the Freedom from Hunger Campaign.
Kathleen always valued the work and writing of others. Gandhi was a great
inspiration, as was Richard St Barbe Baker, with whom she was friends. Tierhard
De Chardin and many others also influenced her. Kathleen said that 'taking a
broad view, Gandhi’s beliefs are closer to my own than those of any other
person'. Kathleen was an early member of the Gandhi Foundation and served on
its executive committee for many years.
It was not until 1964 that she took the step which led to the most important of her working achievements. The catalyst was a two page review of Ruth Harrison's book 'Animal Machines' in 'The Observer'. It revealed how veal calves were separated from their mothers, solitarily confined in two foot wide crates where they were unable to lie down comfortably, and denied solid food. "At this point I realised that these calves were the surplus of the dairy industry and that the milk which nature intended for them was being fed to us. I decided to give up milk and live without any animal products there and then." Kathleen and Jack had been so affected by what they discovered that they became strictly vegan and worked tirelessly for the cause for the rest of their lives. Kathleen travelled all over the country to speak and campaign. They joined the Vegan Society - Kathleen was later, in 1972, to become General Secretary. During this time virtually all the Society's literature - leaflets and booklets - were written and typed by Kathleen and illustrated and copied by Jack. Working together they made an indefatigable team.
Their Leatherhead house
and garden became a venue, attended by many over the years, for meetings and
garden parties to raise funds for the many concerns they were involved in. Many
will remember Kathleen and Jack’s garden as the place where they came together
each year with vegans from up and down the country. These meetings provided a
wonderful opportunity for fellowship with kindred spirits - especially
important for people who were isolated and knew no other vegans living near to
them - and for vegan children to be together.
The Vegan Society's BBC Open Door programme showed Kathleen in her garden
with her compost heaps. She and Jack worked hard to make their garden into a
plot that provided living proof that more people could be sustained on less
land in a more self-sufficient way on a vegan diet. Mark Gold recounts that in
1996, when Kathleen was eighty-one, she was still harvesting bumper crops of
which any gardener would be proud, all grown from her own vegan compost. She
was particularly proud of her perfectly formed carrots, averaging 6 oz each and
carrot-fly free. Stores of vegetables, fruit and protein crops such as haricot
beans lay neatly packed away in sufficient quantities to provide most of the
food needed to see the Jannaways through the winter.
"I think it is important to show people how much of our food is home
produced" said Kathleen. "I don’t grow the wheat for bread, though I
do have enough land and could do so. And of course, the soya we use is
imported. Haricot beans are an alternative I use in many dishes, but I would
like to see a lot more work put into developing different plant protein crops
which would grow successfully in this country.
"If I’ve done anything in my life I am really proud about, it is the
number of people who’ve gone over to veganic growing following our example.
They write to me to say that they’ve only got a small garden or patio, but now
they are producing at least some of their own food".
Kathleen’s particular strength was in linking the compassionate desire to
avoid animal products with rational use of the world’s resources. This led to
Kathleen and Jack forming The Movement For Compassionate Living when Kathleen
left the Vegan Society in 1984. The promotion of local methods of food
production, as an alternative to the use of cash crops from developing
countries which result in environmental damage and famine, was a central focus
for the ecological vegan message Kathleen spread through the literature she
wrote for the Movement for Compassionate Living. A particularly important
element of her philosophy was raising awareness about the potential of food
crops from trees as an alternative to animal based farming, which would reduce
soil erosion and the impact of global warming. Most revolutionary of all,
she envisaged 'a world-wide network of self-reliant, tree-based, autonomous
vegan village communities (STAVVs)', based loosely on the ideas of Mahatma
Gandhi, to replace 'the huge conurbations of the industrial era'.
Jack’s death in 1999 was an enormous blow. Kathleen insisted, however, on moving to a new home in Devon. This was shared with her daughter and son, Mary and Patrick, and she briefly enjoyed the beauty and the challenge of the new garden. Kathleen remained active, researching and writing for MCL in her last years. Her amazing thirst for knowledge was unquenchable: she was an avid reader of journals such as New Scientist until her eyesight began to fail significantly in the last year of her life. Kathleen continued to campaign for tree planting to combat global warming, and to spread the other MCL messages until illness and exhaustion overcame her. Even in the few weeks before she died, Kathleen asked for progress reports about the work of MCL.
Despite living in a
world that was so far away from her own ideal, Kathleen always managed to
maintain a tremendous sense of optimism about the future. She believed in the "capability
of compassion in every human being... If life is going to go on we must develop
that capacity. Otherwise we’re finished. Eventually I think we will come
through".
Kathleen had often said the only way to be happy was to forget herself in
something bigger, and that she would rather 'wear out than rust out'. She never
spared herself and was never satisfied with herself or her efforts. In the
last thirty years, Kathleen saw thousands of people adopt a vegan diet and
believed the trend would continue. In her interview with Mark Gold for his
book 'Animal Century', Kathleen commented that her only regret would be that
she would not be around to find out how her vision would be fulfilled. "My
saddest comment on my age is the Browning one, 'O what the world will do, And I
not here to see it.' "
Kathleen died on 27th January 2003 in her local cottage hospital, a few days before her 88th birthday.
The following extracts from Kathleen's writing attempt to capture her main messages of compassionate living and demonstrate how long ago these ideas crystallised into the principles that led to the foundation of MCL. We are now seeing respected mainstream contemporary thinkers starting to catch up and follow where Kathleen led.
There is widespread concern over the human 'population explosion' which
threatens to lead to grave shortages of food and other essentials and to add
seriously to the pollution of the environment. Few people realise that the
earth is having to support another population explosion - that of the animals
deliberately bred by man for food. This population puts an even greater strain
on the environment and one that is quite unnecessary, for man can get all the
food he needs much more economically direct from plants.
Land released from livestock feeding and luxury crops and made available
for the growth of essential plant foods for direct human consumption could
provide plenty for all the world’s people. Accompanied by a system of just and
secure land tenure by local producers, such a policy could eliminate one of the
major causes of disease, unrest and war.
The chief obstacles to man's survival on this overburdened planet lie in
the minds of men. Most people find difficulty in adjusting to ideas that do not
fit in with the habits and thought patterns of generations - especially when,
as with feeding habits in the West, both producers and consumers are subject to
the high pressure salesmanship of the meat, dairy and chemical industries.
If we are to meet the challenge of the human population explosion, we
must free ourselves from all 'sacred cows', all outdated ideas and learn to
think and act boldly, imaginatively and compassionately.
Two Population Explosions (Vegan
Society leaflet) - 1972
As the environment crisis heats up, it becomes obvious that the Age of
Man the Exploiter is over. He is wasting his resources and fouling his nest.
The Age of the New Man is dawning. He bases his life on reverence for all life.
The vegan is the prototype of the New Man of the New Age.
The Vegan - 1972
Addiction to meat and dairy products and to factory processed food has
got such a hold on the minds of people of the dominant Western culture that they
find it difficult to question it in their own lives, but, often with the best
intention, they are spreading it throughout the world. This wasteful trend must
be arrested if the famines of today are not to be repeated on an even more
horrifying scale as the population of the world increases.
First Hand, First Rate - 1974
The Movement for Compassionate Living the vegan way has a special
contribution to make - to dispel the illusion that animal exploitation is
necessary for human health and well-being. We know the opposite is true - that
peace and the right use of the world’s resources will never be achieved until
humans extend their compassion to animals and stop breeding and exploiting
them. Freedom from dependence on the slaughterhouse nurtures faith in the
possibility of creating a compassionate age.
New Leaves No.5 - 1986
Most humans are locked in false inhibiting concepts: they believe that
animal products are necessary for health. The opposite is true: animals yield
nothing, not even fertiliser for the soil, that cannot be got more efficiently
from plants. On the contrary, the second population explosion of deliberately
bred animals competes with the human for plant foods and vital diminishing
resources of land, water, energy, research, skills… Their increasingly cruel
exploitation threatens just retribution.
The Vegan - 1990
The way of life generally accepted and followed in the industrially
developed countries of the world, both East and West, and being encouraged in
the developing world, is not sustainable. It is wasting resources, polluting
the air, the water, the soil and the whole environment, and it is assaulting
the life supporting systems of the planet. It cannot go on.
Moreover, the present system does not meet the genuine needs of people:
quite the opposite. It is damaging the health of the comparatively affluent,
and increasing poverty, hunger and disease among the rapidly increasing
millions of the poor in many areas of the world. 'Aid', however well motivated,
does not get to the root of their problems. The present over-industrialised
system degrades people to machine slaves and to programmed consumers of machine
products, depriving them of their creativity and other essentials of spiritual
growth.
Ecological veganism requires living as far as possible in harmony with
all one's fellow creatures in a sustainable manner. It has an important part to
play in speeding the birth of a new age of peace and creativity.
Recipes for a Sustainable Future -
1990
We are faced with the challenge of providing for the needs of a rapidly
increasing world population from the diminishing resources of a finite and
endangered planet.
Fundamental changes in the values and practices of the dominant world
system, which has created a situation in which millions of people and animals
already suffer extreme deprivation and die prematurely, is essential.
What is needed is a trend towards compassionate living the vegan way,
with the emphasis on the use of trees and their products.
As people face the challenge of environmental crises, as the supreme
importance of using awesome intellectual powers with compassion for all
sentient beings is realised, an evolutionary leap will be achieved. An era of
truly abundant living will dawn in which humans, at peace with themselves, with
each other and with all living creatures, will reach heights of creativity as
yet unimagined.
Abundant Living in the Coming Age of
the Tree - 1991
Thanks to the Jannaway family for photographs. For full size photographs, click links: KJ01.jpg KJ02.jpg KJ03.jpg KJ04.jpg KJ05.jpg
Elaine and Alan Garrett
from : The Movement for Compassionate Living's quarterly journal, "New Leaves" - No.70, April-June 2003
MCL,
105 Cyfyng Road, Ystalyfera, Swansea SA9 2BT, UK.