
Celebrating the Life of
February 9, 1943 — January 1, 2024
Gary Baran died on January 1st, 2024 following months of treatment for esophageal cancer. He was in his home surrounded by his family.
Gary was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1943 to Irwin and Esther Baran. During his formative years his family lived in veteran’s housing projects, where he regularly interacted with people from a wide variety of backgrounds and had experiences which laid the foundation for his life-long interest in peace and social justice. He earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Northwestern University and a master’s degree in philosophy from the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he met his future wife Lynne Baran. He went on to teach philosophy at the University of Wisconsin, California State University (where he earned a second master’s degree in Educational Psychology: Counseling and Guidance) and Los Angeles City College. While at LACC he was active in faculty associations, serving as Treasurer and then President of the Academic Senate. He helped organize collective bargaining for the faculty and then served several years as chapter chair of the faculty union (the AFT College Guild) and was a member of the Guild’s contract negotiation team. Gary was also a licensed marriage and family therapist and a certified trainer of Nonviolent Communication. He married Lynne Varco in 1981 and became a stepfather to her two children Andy and Courtney Shanely. Lynne and Gary had two children of their own, Emily Baran and Jordan Baran. After 27 years as a professor at LACC he resigned that position to devote all of his energy to being the executive director of the international Center for Nonviolent Communication, a position he held for nearly eight years.
In 2006 the family moved from Southern California to Eugene, Oregon, where Gary was active in the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Association and other music groups, playing banjo, fiddle and occasionally guitar, and offered training in Nonviolent Communication to a wide variety of groups, including inmates at the Oregon State Penitentiary where he volunteered for several years, and in the University of Oregon Substance Abuse and Prevention Program. For eight years he was a member of the board of directors of the Oregon Network for Compassionate Communication. He and Lynne considered themselves very fortunate to live in Eugene where they found many kindred spirits.
Gary is survived by his wife, Lynne Baran, children Emily Baran and Jordan Baran, step children Courtney Gustin and Andy Shanely, his grandchildren, Lumin and Olin Jacobson, his bother Richard Baran and many loving friends.
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