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Ady Barkan Age, Birthday, Daughter, Documentary, Death, Obituary

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Ady Barkan Age, Birthday, Daughter, Documentary, Death, Obituary  – Ohad “Ady” Barkan was an American lawyer and liberal activist. He was born on December 18, 1983, and died on November 1, 2023, at the age of 39.

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Barkan was a co-founder of the Be a Hero PAC and was an organizer for the Center for Popular Democracy, where he led the Fed Up campaign.

He rose to fame after confronting Senator Jeff Flake on a plane in 2017, asking him to “be a hero” and vote no on a tax bill that threatened cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.

Barkan, who was diagnosed with the terminal neurodegenerative disease ALS (also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease) in 2016 shortly after the birth of his son, was called “the most powerful activist in America” in a headline from 2019 in Politico Magazine.

In 2020, he was included on Time’s list of the 100 most influential people in the world.

Ady Barkan Age

Ady Barkan / People.com

Ady Barkan age at death: Barkan died on November 1, 2023, at the age of 39.

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Ady Barkan Birthday

Ady Barkan’s birthday is on December 18. He would have turned 40 on December 18, 2023.

Ady Barkan Daughter

Barkan was married to Rachael King, an English professor.

King and Barkan, who met as undergraduates at Columbia, had two children: a son, born in 2016, and a daughter, born in 2019.

Barkan lived in Santa Barbara, California, with his wife and children.

Ady Barkan Documentary

Barkan was the author of a 2019 memoir, “Eyes to the Wind: A Memoir of Love and Death, Hope and Resistance,” and the focus of the 2021 documentary “Not Going Quietly.

Ady Barkan Death

Ady Barkan was an activist who fought for access to universal health care, improved home health support and other reforms to America’s health-care system as he suffered from the degenerative disease ALS. He died on Nov. 1 at a hospital in Santa Barbara, Calif.

The cause was complications from the medical condition, sometimes known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, that had steadily robbed him of his ability to move and speak, said Liz Jaff, who co-founded the political advocacy group Be a Hero with Mr. Barkan.


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