Medical Marijuana Advocate Dr. Mike Alcalay Dies

Wilbur

New Member
Longtime advocate and activist, Dr. Mike Alcalay died Saturday in Oakland California.

He was the medical director of the Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative - a free medical marijuana clinic under Proposition 215. Prop. 215 legalizes medical marijuana in California.

Dr. Alcalay lived with AIDS and was a medical marijuana patient himself. He was also a pediatrician and Vietnam veteran.

Mike Alcalay was the founder of a migrant farm workers clinic in Watsonville, CA, and had used his medical skills all over the world -- including England, Germany, Kenya, Mexico and Nicaragua.

Dr. Mike Alcalay
1941 - 2006

You can watch a video of his brother being interviewed by Amy Goodman Here

Newshawk: User - 420 Magazine
Source: Democracy Now
Pubdate: November 2006
Copyright: 2006 Democracy Now
Contact: Democracy Now!: radio and TV news
Website: Article Here
 
This was not available earlier in the day when I posted....


AMY GOODMAN: As we turn now to our last segment. Longtime advocate and activist Dr. Mike Alcalay, died on Saturday in Oakland, California. He lived with AIDS for more than 20 years; he died of leukemia. He was the Oakland Director of the Cannabis Buyers Cooperative, a free marijuana clinic under Proposition 215. That proposition legalizes medical marijuana in California. The doctor lived with AIDS, was a medical marijuana patient himself, a pediatrician as well, a veteran. Mike Alcalay was the founder of the migrant farm workers clinic in Watsonville, California and used his medical skills all over the world including Britain, Germany, Kenya, Mexico and Nicaragua. This is Dr. Alcalay being interviewed two years ago, for the “Stepping Out of Babylon” radio series.

DR. ALCALAY: I see the medical marijuana movement as part of a much larger movement that is global now and it has to do with economic and social justice. And most of it you're not going to hear in the corporate media. It's all below the radar, but anybody who's in these various movements the tentacles are linking together. Pacifica radio is part of it. Air America is now a part of it. The internet in great measure is a part of it and we're coming together in ways that the other side doesn't even want to acknowledge and will do everything to stop. But, we're in the great majority.

AMY GOODMAN: Mike Alcalay, on the radio several years ago. He died this weekend of leukemia. Glen Alcalay, is Mike’s brother, he’s an anthropologist here in New York. We welcome you Democracy Now! and condolences on the loss of Mike.

GLENN ALCALAY: Thank you Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Mike was a remarkable humanitarian, activist. I co-hosted, I think it was the Sixth International AIDS Conference with Mike when he was -- well, in the first years of his diagnosis with AIDS, about, oh, well, many years ago. He lived -- he was so healthy for so long, it was remarkable.

GLENN ALCALAY: Yeah, he was one of those medical textbook cases of a person living with AIDS. And he was actually in it from the very beginning. He was infected in 1986 and went through a lot of different trials. Every type of trial he was involved with, there was one famous one in Stanford. He was to commute down to Stanford twice a week for those trials and that eventually led to AZT, those trials. And so he's one of the survivor -- had been one of the survivors of aids.

AMY GOODMAN: He was a remarkable communicator, also was the producer of the radio program "AIDS in focus" for a number of years. Briefly summarize Mike's life for our listeners and viewers who didn't know him. For anyone who didn't know him that's a loss.

GLENN ALCALAY: He was an incredible person. I'm a little biased of my older brother. He, after med school, he went into the army. That was the deal. He had spent a year in Vietnam. So he was a Captain and then eventually a Major. And then he came back and lived in the Bay Area and started a health clinic, as you mentioned, in Watsonville.

And he actually had the idea of bringing down doctors and nurses to volunteer with the farm workers, the migrant farm workers in California. And he saw that the farm workers, though they were invisible, they were illegal, and but the children's illnesses were not invisible. He had an idea to set up in an old warehouse, a clinic, exam tables, actually take a look at the children of the farm workers. And that eventually turned into a very large clinic in Watsonville.

AMY GOODMAN: And then his activism, pediatrician, how did he get into radio?

GLENN ALCALAY: That's a good question. He was always interested in video, film, media, radio. It was quite natural.

AMY GOODMAN: And the whole Cannibis Virus Club?

GLENN ALCALAY: Yes. He got involved with that about 12-13 years ago. Actually grew Sensamillion in his back yard in his Oakland home and distributed it for free. And had written over a thousand prescriptions, medical marijuana prescriptions in California which were legal. So then he became the Medical Director for the Oakland Cannabis Cooperative.

AMY GOODMAN: And was a spokesman for that right to the end of his days.

GLENN ALCALAY: Yes, indeed.

AMY GOODMAN: He is survived by his two grown-up twin sons.

GLENN ALCALAY: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: And you and his greater community, family.

GLENN ALCALAY: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: What did mike want to be remembered for?

GLENN ALCALAY: That's a really good question. I think just all the people's lives that he touched. He--

AMY GOODMAN: He went down to New Orleans in January.

GLENN ALCALAY: He was in New Orleans in January. He believes that's where he contracted the leukemia. Uthero-leukemia, a very rare fast-spreading leukemia and the two causes of that particular leukemia are radiation and benzene. He's convinced he was exposed to benzene while he was covering a story in New Orleans in January and then on top of his AIDS, his already compromised immune system. It probably exacerbated the leukemia.

AMY GOODMAN: The funeral?

GLENN ALCALAY: There’s gonna be a memorial in January. Anybody who knew Michael in the Bay Area, please contact KPFA, the local radio station in Berkeley. They will have all the details. Sometime--we haven't set the exact date yet, but it will be sometime in January.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much, Glenn, for joining us. You who also have been a longtime activist around the issue of nuclear testing in the South Pacific brought to the attention of Americans what was happening there with the French nuclear testing. Thank you for your work as well.

GLENN ALCALAY: Thank you very much Amy.

To purchase an audio or video copy of this entire program, click here for our new online ordering or call 1 (888) 999-3877.
 
Back
Top Bottom