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Dr. Zak Sabry, Berkeley Nutritionist Who Led Canada’s First National Nutritional Survey, Dies at 92
The UC Berkeley School of Public Health has announced that Dr. Zak Sabry, a professor emeritus specializing in nutrition and epidemiology, passed away in Ottawa at the age of 92.
Dr. Sabry was a leading public health nutrition scientist whose work helped shape international nutrition policy and our understanding of diet and chronic disease prevention. His work on the relationships between dietary patterns and public health outcomes helped shape nutritional guidelines that have benefited communities worldwide, including in Canada.
Dr. Sabry was born in Egypt, and completed his undergraduate degree at Ain Shams University in Cairo. He came to the United States to attend graduate school, first completing a master’s in food science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and then receiving his PhD in biochemistry from Pennsylvania State University. At Penn State, he met his first wife, a Canadian named Dr. Jean Henderson.
After several years teaching at the American University in Beirut, the couple moved to Canada after Dr. Sabry accepted a position at the University of Toronto. From 1970-1974, Dr. Sabry led Nutrition Canada, the first comprehensive national nutrition survey in the country. This work took him across the country, and up to the Yukon territories.
Following a brief tenure as professor at the University of Guelph, Dr. Sabry directed the Food Policy and Nutrition division of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in Rome from 1979 to 1983. He joined the faculty of UC Berkeley in 1984, where he remained until his retirement 20 years later. Following his retirement, Dr. Sabry returned to Canada, where he taught as a visiting professor at Ryerson University in Toronto.
Dr. Sabry’s colleagues and students remember him as a caring mentor who was always willing to offer guidance to others. School of Public Health Dean Michael C. Lu said that Sabry was not only “a visionary leader”, but “one of the most beloved teachers and mentors in our school’s history”. In 2004, grateful doctoral students spearheaded the Zak Sabry Faculty Membership Award, which honors School of Public Health faculty members with a distinguished history of mentorship.
Dr. Sabry is survived by two sons, three stepchildren, numerous grandchildren, and five siblings. He was predeceased by his parents, two wives, a stepdaughter, and a brother. |