World Vegetarian Day: A Call to Conscious Eating and Planetary Care
October 1 marks World Vegetarian Day, a global occasion established by the North American Vegetarian Society in 1977 to celebrate the joys, compassion, and health benefits of a plant-based diet. More than a symbolic date, it is a call to rethink our relationship with food, the environment, and the other beings that share this planet. As the gateway to Vegetarian Awareness Month, it challenges us to confront the consequences of our dietary choices and consider the profound ethical, ecological, and health-related reasons to adopt vegetarianism.
Few have embodied this ethic more clearly than Richard St. Barbe Baker, the first Global Conservationist according to his biographers Paul Hanley and Camilla Allen. Baker, whose name graces the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area in Saskatoon, was a lifelong vegetarian who eventually embraced a vegan lifestyle. His early experiences on his homestead near Beaver’s Creek, while attending the University of Saskatchewan, revealed the benefits of a meatless diet: enhanced agility, increased vitality, and a heightened sensitivity to animal welfare. Later, his work across East Africa and Nigeria deepened his commitment, linking a plant-based lifestyle to environmental sustainability and ethical responsibility.
Baker’s vegetarianism was inseparable from his broader environmental vision. As Allen notes in her doctoral thesis The Making of the Man of the Trees, Baker was “a life-long vegetarian and was made the first Member of Honour of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in 1969.” His vegetarianism was not a private practice but a moral and ecological stance, part of an ethic that saw human health, animal welfare, and planetary resilience as intertwined. Angus McLaren, in his profile of Baker, observes that Baker’s combination of forester, conservationist, vegetarian, and supporter of the Bahá’í faith made him appear “some sort of secular saint.” Paul Hanley also chronicled Baker’s life in the biography Man of the Trees, emphasizing how Baker’s ethical and environmental convictions shaped his pioneering global conservation work. By the late 1950s, Baker concluded that veganism was “the only sane way of life.”





In a world projected to host eleven billion people by the century’s end, the stakes could not be higher. As Paul Hanley warns in Eleven, humanity faces a dual process of destruction and reconstruction: a full world in which ecological overshoot threatens civilization itself. Transformational change—ethical, cultural, and practical—is not optional; it is essential. Vegetarianism, and its extension into veganism, is one such transformative act. Choosing a plant-based diet reduces environmental pressure, mitigates greenhouse gas emissions, and nurtures biodiversity, all while fostering personal health and ethical integrity. Imagine the irony of chopping down sections of a rainforest—the very lungs of the Earth—just to plant soya beans destined not for people, but to feed cattle for meat production.
Origins and Ethical Foundations
Baker’s vegetarian path was shaped by family, experience, and observation:
- Early influences: Several family members practiced vegetarianism, introducing him to its principles from a young age.
- Canadian experience: Life on the homestead and university studies revealed the practical benefits of a meat-free diet.
- African experience: Working in East Africa and Nigeria reinforced the ethical and environmental dimensions of dietary choice, highlighting the cruelty inherent in meat production and the strain it places on fragile ecosystems.
For Baker, vegetarianism was inseparable from conservation. It was a practical expression of his belief that individual choices ripple outward, influencing global systems and contributing to a more harmonious relationship with the natural world.
Celebrating World Vegetarian Day
Embracing World Vegetarian Day need not be radical; it is an opportunity to learn, cook, and act with awareness:
- Eat Vegetarian: Try a meat-free meal or adapt a favorite recipe.
- World Vegetarian Day: A Call to Conscious Eating and Planetary Care
October 1 marks World Vegetarian Day, a global occasion established by the North American Vegetarian Society in 1977 to celebrate the joys, compassion, and health benefits of a plant-based diet. More than a symbolic date, it is a call to rethink our relationship with food, the environment, and the other beings that share this planet. As the gateway to Vegetarian Awareness Month, it challenges us to confront the consequences of our dietary choices and consider the profound ethical, ecological, and health-related reasons to adopt vegetarianism.
Few have embodied this ethic more clearly than Richard St. Barbe Baker, the first Global Conservationist according to his biographers Dr. Camilla Allen and Pual Hanley. Baker, whose name graces the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area in Saskatoon, was a lifelong vegetarian who eventually embraced a vegan lifestyle. His early experiences on his homestead near Beaver’s Creek, while attending the University of Saskatchewan, revealed the benefits of a meatless diet: enhanced agility, increased vitality, and a heightened sensitivity to animal welfare. Later, his work across East Africa and Nigeria deepened his commitment, linking a plant-based lifestyle to environmental sustainability and ethical responsibility.
Baker’s vegetarianism was inseparable from his broader environmental vision. As Allen notes in her doctoral thesis The Making of the Man of the Trees, Baker was “a life-long vegetarian and was made the first Member of Honour of the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in 1969.” His vegetarianism was not a private practice but a moral and ecological stance, part of an ethic that saw human health, animal welfare, and planetary resilience as intertwined. Angus McLaren, in his profile of Baker, observes that Baker’s combination of forester, conservationist, vegetarian, and supporter of the Bahá’í faith made him appear “some sort of secular saint.” Paul Hanley also chronicled Baker’s life in the biography Man of the Trees, emphasizing how Baker’s ethical and environmental convictions shaped his pioneering global conservation work. By the late 1950s, Baker concluded that veganism was “the only sane way of life.”
Why I Am a Vegetarian
Baker himself explained the personal journey that led him to a plant-based diet:
“When that question is fired at me point blank, I find it a difficult one to answer, because it has become a way of life. To answer it fully would mean telling my life story and the long way by which I have come.
I was not brought up as a vegetarian, although the amount of anything consumed at home other than home-made bread and cheese, vegetables and salads, was infinitesimal. In my case there was no sudden conversion: I cannot claim that I saw the light which transformed my way of life, but I first became conscious of the physical advantage of abstention from meat when, in preparation for settlement in Canada, I went into training on a fruit farm in Hampshire… When camping with him, meat did not enter into our diet: we had eggs, cheese, home-made wholemeal bread, fresh and dried fruit and goat’s milk. Up in the north-west of Canada… home-made wholemeal bread and dates became my staple diet.” Source
For Baker, vegetarianism was not merely dietary—it was practical, ethical, and ecological. He saw the personal benefits in health and vigor, the ethical imperative in reducing harm to animals, and the environmental necessity of conserving resources and biodiversity.
Origins and Ethical Foundations
Baker’s vegetarian path was shaped by family, experience, and observation:
Early influences: Several family members practiced vegetarianism, introducing him to its principles from a young age.
Canadian experience: Life on the homestead and university studies revealed the practical benefits of a meat-free diet.
African experience: Working in East Africa and Nigeria reinforced the ethical and environmental dimensions of dietary choice, highlighting the cruelty inherent in meat production and the strain it places on fragile ecosystems.
For Baker, vegetarianism was inseparable from conservation. It was a practical expression of his belief that individual choices ripple outward, influencing global systems and contributing to a more harmonious relationship with the natural world.
Celebrating World Vegetarian Day
Embracing World Vegetarian Day need not be radical; it is an opportunity to learn, cook, and act with awareness:
Eat Vegetarian: Try a meat-free meal or adapt a favorite recipe.
Learn and Educate: Explore the nutritional benefits and environmental implications of plant-based diets.
Cook and Share: Host a vegetarian potluck or cooking session.
Plant: Grow vegetables at home to reconnect with the sources of sustenance.
In the spirit of Richard St. Barbe Baker, October 1 is more than a dietary prompt—it is a call to consciousness. To eat with compassion, to live with respect for the web of life, and to recognize that the choices we make at our plates echo across ecosystems and generations.
Bibliography
Allen, Camilla. The Making of the Man of the Trees: A Biographical Interrogation of the Early Life of Richard St. Barbe Baker (1889–1982). White Rose Repository, University of Leeds.
Hanley, Paul. Man of the Trees: The Life and Legacy of Richard St. Barbe Baker. (Year TBD).
Hanley, Paul. Eleven: A Call to Consciousness. (2023).
Bahai Chronicles. “Richard Edward St. Barbe Baker – Bahai Chronicles.” WordPress, 7 April 2018. https://bahaichronicles.wordpress.com
WordPress.com. “Green Revolution: Reflecting on Baker’s Holistic Approach.” 10 September 2024. https://wordpress.com
North American Vegetarian Society. “World Vegetarian Day.” 1977. https://navs-online.org - Cook and Share: Host a vegetarian potluck or cooking session.
- Plant: Grow vegetables at home to reconnect with the sources of sustenance.
In the spirit of Richard St. Barbe Baker, October 1 is more than a dietary prompt—it is a call to consciousness. To eat with compassion, to live with respect for the web of life, and to recognize that the choices we make at our plates echo across ecosystems and generations.
Bibliography
Allen, Camilla. The Making of the Man of the Trees: A Biographical Interrogation of the Early Life of Richard St. Barbe Baker (1889–1982). White Rose Repository, University of Leeds.
Hanley, Paul. Man of the Trees: The Life and Legacy of Richard St. Barbe Baker. (Year TBD).
Hanley, Paul. Eleven: A Call to Consciousness. (2023).
Bahai Chronicles. “Richard Edward St. Barbe Baker – Bahai Chronicles.” WordPress, 7 April 2018. https://bahaichronicles.wordpress.com
WordPress.com. “Green Revolution: Reflecting on Baker’s Holistic Approach.” 10 September 2024. https://wordpress.com
North American Vegetarian Society. “World Vegetarian Day.” 1977. https://navs-online.org











