Claire Loewenfeld

Claire Loewenfeld
Claire Loewenfeld
Born Claire Lewisohn
27 September 1899(1899-09-27)
Berlin, Germany
Died 20 August 1974(1974-08-20) (aged 74)
Buckland Common, Buckinghamshire
Resting place St Lawrence's Church, Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire
Religion Jewish
Spouse Günter Emanuel Loewenfeld (1895–1984)
Parents Arthur Lewisohn, Jeanette Jacobi

Claire Loewenfeld, born Lewisohn in Berlin, Germany[1] (27 September 1899 – 20  August 1974) was a nutritionist and herbalist who worked in England during and after the Second World War promoting the importance of good nutrition, most notably rosehips from Britain's hedgerows as a source of vitamin C.[2][3] She studied at Maximilian Bircher-Benner's clinic in Zurich, Switzerland,[4] and worked as a dietician at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children in London, where she developed a fruit and vegetable diet for the treatment of coeliac disease.[5]

Loewenfeld was the founder of Chiltern Herb Farms in England,[6] one of the earliest producers of high-quality dried herbs, and was one of the first members of the Soil Association.[7] She wrote a number of books about nutrition, including Britain's Wild Larder: Fungi (1956), Herb Gardening (1967) and Everything you should know about your food (1978).

Contents

Early life

Claire was born in Belin, Germany. Her parents were Arthur and Jeanette (née Jacobi) Lewisohn. She married Günther Emmanuel Loewenfeld (November 1895–January 1984) on 5 July 1921. They continued to live in Berlin in the period followng their marriage.[8] Both Claire and Günther were from Jewish families, however, Günther was brought up in the Protestant faith.[9] Between 1923 and 1925 they spent their weekends with friends Fritz and Lily Pincus in a rented house, in Glienicke, on the outskirts of Potsdam. In 1925 the Loewenfelds and Pincuses moved out of Berlin to a rented property which they shared on the Küssel, a peninsula jutting out into Lake Templiner in a rural district of Potsdam. Both husbands commuted to Berlin to work. By 1931 Claire and Günther had two children, Peter and Verena, likewise the Pincuses had two children. Both couples also had their relatives living with them from time to time and as more living space was needed they decided to jointly buy the property and enlarge it. Das Haus auf dem Küssel (The House on the Küssel) as it had become known was redesigned, to include both shared areas and private quarters, by a well-known Potsdam architect, Stephan Hirtzel.[10] Another close friend of both families, Paul Tillich, a German-American Protestant theologian wrote a dedication on the inauguration of their new home entitled, (in English), Space and Time in Dwelling.[9][11] The Loewenfeld and Pincuses' house soon became a meeting place for Tillich and his circle of German intellectuals until Tillich, whose writings brought him into conflict with the Nazi movement, was subsequently forced into exile in the U.S.[12][13]

During early 1936 the Loewenfelds travelled to Syria and Palestine where they witnessed at first-hand the initial stages of the Arab uprising against British mandate and Jewish immigration. They spent the summer of 1936 near Cortina in the Italian Dolomites where they met Tillich who was on a European lecture tour. In Tillich's diary an account of their time in Palestine records:

"While in Palestine, Claire and Guenther were in constant danger of their lives. Once, the only thing that saved them was their Arab guide saying they were German Nazis. Hitler is the big man with the Arabs. Mussolini gives them money to spite the British." [13]

From 1937 Claire and Lily's home in the Küssel provided a refuge for Jewish children, whose parents had been arrested or had been abandoned and were homeless.[10] Claire's family continued to live in Germany until the latter part of 1938 when they left Potsdam due to the increasing likelihood of arrest. The Loewenfelds had made arrangements in advance for their belongings to be transported to England and for their children to be evacuated to an English boarding school, St Christopher School, Letchworth, Hertfordshire.[14] Meanwhile Günther joined relatives in England and Claire travelled first to Switzerland before rejoining her husband in early 1939.[10] The family settled in rural Buckinghamshire in 1941.[15]

Career

Rose hips are a particularly rich source of vitamin C

During her time in Berlin in the 1920s Claire worked at an institute "providing slides and illustrations" for a university.[8] In late 1938 Claire Loewenfeld studied at the Maximilian Bircher-Benner's clinic in Zurich, Switzerland obtaining a special diploma in nutrition.[10] During the Second World War, she worked at the Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children in London, England as a dietician.[5] While there she specialised in the treatment of coeliac disease and successfully developed a new diet to treat it, based on Bircher-Benner's recipes, involving raw vegetable and fruit juice; she was also involved in longitudinal comparative studies assessing various treatments for the condition.[16]

During the war, Loewenfeld wrote to The Times and the British Medical Journal about the negative impact the shortage of fresh fruit and vegetables was having on the nation's health, and advocated the collection and distribution of rose hips from the hedgerows, as they provided "our highest home-grown source of Vitamin C".[3][17] As a result a leaflet she had prepared called Wild Rose Hips in War Time. Their Collection, Preparation and Use on how to exploit rose hips was immediately in huge demand.[18][19] Over 18000 leaflets were sent by Claire to individuals as well as being widely distributed to schools and hospitals. In response, the government organised a nationwide initiative to collect roadside rose hips which, with the help of the Women's Institutes, were processed into syrup for babies and children. This was the first of several leaflets; there were an additional three under the title Wild Plants and Herbs, and three more grouped together under the heading Wild Fruits and Berries which were also distributed with the assistance of the newsagent WH Smith.[20]

Later life

After the war, Claire set up Chiltern Herb Farm in Buckland Common, Buckinghamshire, with her husband, who before the war had practiced as an attorney and later had become a landscape architect.[12] Her experience of using dried herbs to treat sick children during the war had made her aware that the standard preparation techniques resulted in material of poor nutrional value. Experimentation led to methods for producing dried herbs of higher quality which coincided with an increasing demand in Britain for such culinary products.[20] She also gave lectures and demonstrations,[21] and wrote and collaborated on several books about healthy eating, herb gardening, and cooking with herbs and spices, some of which were also translated into German, Dutch and Spanish.[22] She was a vegetarian [5] and also promoted the benefits of Birchermüesli, or müesli as it is better known, which she learned the health benefits of while training at the Bircher-Benner Clinic. She translated into English the book by Ruth Bircher which also contained the original recipe for the cereal food (Bircher 1961). She was one of the first members of the Soil Association, advocating freshly prepared food and campaigning against the processing of food and addition of chemicals.[23] Claire was also a member of the women's volunteer organisation, Soroptimist International.[8]

Claire Loewenfeld died on 20 August 1974, and is buried at St Lawrence's Church, Cholesbury, Buckinghamshire, near where she lived, alongside her husband Gunther Loewenfeld's cousins, Margaret Lowenfeld and Helena Wright née Lowenfeld.

See also

Works

  • Britain's Wild Larder – Nuts. Faber and Faber, 1957. ASIN B000Q9DOS0
  • Britain's Wild Larder – Fungi. Faber and Faber, 1957. ASIN B0000CJC09
  • Herb Gardening. Faber and Faber, 1970. ISBN 0-571-09475-9
  • Everything You Should Know About Your Food. Faber and Faber, 1978. ISBN 0-571-11256-0
  • with Beck, Philippa. The complete book of herbs and spices. David & Charles, 1974. ISBN 0-7153-7656-X
  • ______________. Herbs for Health and Cookery. Macmillan, 1978. ISBN 0-330-25336-0
  • with Bosanquet, Patience and Beck, Philippa. Britain's Wild Larder. David & Charles, 1970. ISBN 0-7153-7971-2
  • (trans.) Bircher, Ruth. Eating Your Way to Health: the Bircher-Benner approach to nutrition. Faber and Faber, 1961. ISBN 0-571-06984-3

External links

References

  1. ^ Tillich, Paul et al. Ein Lebensbild in Dokumenten, Walter de Gruyter, 1980, p. 389.
  2. ^ Contemporary Authors, A bio-bibliographical guide to current authors and their works, Volume 2. Gale Research, 1978.
  3. ^ a b Loewenfeld, Claire. "Vitamin C from Rose Hips," British Medical Journal, volume 1 (4199), June 26, 1941.
  4. ^ Snell, Reginald in Bircher-Benner. Fruit Dishes And Raw Vegetables, Health Research Books, 1985, p. 3.
  5. ^ a b c Gobell, Lisa. The House in the Sun, Ashgrove Press, 1986. ISBN 0-906798-65-5
  6. ^ Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society, Royal Horticultural Society (Great Britain), 1964, p. 497.
  7. ^ Loewenfeld, Claire. British Medical Journal, April 1, 1978, volume 1, issue 6119: "Claire Loewenfeld, who died in August 1974, was one of the first members of the Soil Association, reintroduced the use of flavouring herbs in Britain, and worked out a vegetable and fruit juice diet for children with coeliac disease at Great Ormond Street Hospital. A protagonist of natural vitamins, and a sturdy campaigner against processed foods and the health hazards of added chemicals ..."
  8. ^ a b c Gale Literary Databases - Claire Loewen feld, Accessed 28 August 2010
  9. ^ a b Pauck, Wilhelm & Marion, Paul Tillich: His Life & Thought–Volume 1: Life. New York: Harper & Row, 1976
  10. ^ a b c d Pincus, Lily Verloren, gewonnen: Mein Weg von Berlin nach London, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1980
  11. ^ Tillich,Paul; Palmer, Michael F. Writings in the philosophy of culture Ch. 9 Das Wohnen, der Raum und der Zeit, De Gruyter, 1980
  12. ^ a b Tillich, Paul; Albrecht, Renate; and Hahl, Margot. Ein Lebensbild in Dokumenten, Walter de Gruyter, 1980.
  13. ^ a b Tillich, Paul. My Travel Diary, 1936; Between Two Worlds. Harper & Row, 1970.
  14. ^ Alien and Exemption from Internment - Refugee Records from 1939 Held by The National Archives, Kew HO 396/56/231 & HO 396/56/230
  15. ^ Note:-Loewenfeld listing in British Telephone Directory 1941
  16. ^ Wyllie, W. G.; Payne, W.W.; and Beynon, D. W. "A Dietetic Approach to the Coeliac Affection", Arch. Dis. Child., 1951, vol 26, pp, 4–19, accessed August 29, 2009.
  17. ^ "Fruit from the hedgerows - Vitamins in Rose Hips," The Times, August 29, 1941.
  18. ^ "Vitamins in Rose Hips," The Times, October 4, 1941.
  19. ^ "Notes on Books - Claire Loewenfeld," British Medical Journal, Volume 2 (4254), June 27, 1942.
  20. ^ a b (Loewenfeld and Beck 1974). See Introduction p.13 of Revised 1978 edition published after Claire's death
  21. ^ The electrical journal, Volume 131 Retrieved, 03-09-2009
  22. ^ WorldCat listing for Claire Loewenfeld Retrieved, 03-09-2009
  23. ^ Loewenfeld, Claire. British Medical Journal, April 1, 1978, volume 1, issue 6119.

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