Cancer Cure Found in Secret Native American Herbal Formulation ...
The medical establishment, having spent billions of dollars of taxpayer and donation money on funded research, still resorts to the basic premise in cancer treatment: operate, inject toxic chemicals during chemotherapy, and use controlled doses of radiation to kill cancer cells and tumors. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
The Ojibwa Indian ?midewiwan? befriended an English couple who settled in Northern Ontario, Canada, at the turn of the century. By 1902, the couple and other prospectors had come to the region hoping to get rich in the forested wilderness where the Ojibwa still lived according to traditional Native American ways.The prospector?s wife developed a hard mass in her breast. When the Ojibwa healer heard of the woman?s condition, he offered a remedy that had been passed down by "the grandfathers."
The shaman told the woman and her husband that the remedy was ?a holy drink that would purify her body and place it back in balance with the great spirit.?
Skeptical, the couple traveled to Toronto where the mass was diagnosed as breast cancer. The doctors urged immediate removal of the breast. The two were afraid and had no money for the operation, so they returned to the frontier, where the Ojibwa midewiwan prepared a brew. ?Midewiwan? means ?good hearted.? It is the Ojibwa expression for healer or medicine man.
The Englishwoman was to drink the brew two times a day until, as the story is told, the cancer victim?s body was ?back in harmony with the great spirit.?
Twenty years later, a 33-year-old nurse in a small provincial Ontario hospital met this Englishwoman. The woman?s breast was scarred where the cancerous mass had been. When the country nurse inquired, the old Englishwoman told her how her breast cancer had been cured by the Ojibwa medicine man.
The nurse was Rene Caisse. She kept notes of the herbs that the Englishwoman told her were used in the brew. Her notes were put away and forgotten until Rene Caisse?s aunt developed cancer of the stomach and liver. The aunt? s condition was terminal. Nurse Caisse consulted the attending physician, who said that trying the herbs could do no harm since the aunt was condemned to die from the cancer.
Her aunt recovered after two months of treatment with the herbal cure and lived 20 more years. This began rural nurse Rene Caisse?s lifelong devotion to treating and curing patients with terminal cancer at no charge?only the satisfaction of bringing condemned cancer victims back to life.
The Ojibwa medicine man?s cure was never accepted by the medical establishment. Nurse Rene Caisse began what became a 60-year struggle to have the herbal mixture clinically tested and administered as a treatment for cancer.
When she died in 1978, after an operation on a broken hip, 90-year-old Rene Caisse left behind a miracle cure for cancer that was still veiled in controversy and conflict with the Canadian Ministry of Health and Welfare?s Cancer Commission.
Rene Caisse passed down the secret of the cure to Dr. Charles A. Brusch, M.D. Dr. Brusch was the well-known founder of the Brusch Medical Research Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and personal physician to President John F. Kennedy.
Rene Caisse?s Ojibwa Indian brew is now marketed as an herbal tea without any claims of health benefits for cancer patients. This avoids recrimination by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Canadian Health Ministry.
The medical establishment, having spent billions of dollars of taxpayer and donation money on funded research grants, salaries, fellowships, fancy offices, and laboratories, still resorts to the basic premise in cancer treatment: operate, inject toxic chemicals during chemotherapy, and use controlled doses of radiation to kill cancer cells and tumors.
Attempting to discover whether new clinical trials and laboratory tests were ever conducted on Rene Caisse?s herbal formula, people called the National Cancer Institute (NCI).
The clearest answer relative to established medicine?s approach was given when the NCI was asked about Essiac or Flor-Essence, which are the trademarked commercial remedies prepared from nurse Caisse?s original Ojibwa formulation: ?We do not have information on alternative medicine. We send callers brochures about traditional cancer treatments,? was the courteous response from the taxpayer-funded NCI.
When asked what response the agency would give if a caller asked for information about Essiac or Flor-Essence, the reply was, ?We refer them to a list of libraries where they can read about non-traditional medicine.?
The American Cancer Society very thoughtfully replied that they could not find information about Essiac or Flor-Essence in their database.
Information: The book ?The Essiac Report, Canada?s Remarkable Unknown Cancer Remedy,? is available from The Alternative Treatment Information Network, 1244 Ozeta Terrace, Los Angeles, CA 90069; telephone toll-free 1-800-446-3063; phone 310-278-6611. Flora, Inc. can be contacted at 1-800-446-2110 or 1-360-354-2110, or visit the website at www.florahealth.com.
Dr. John Christopher Fine is the author of 24 books on a variety of subjects. His articles and photography appear in major magazines and newspapers in the United States and Europe.
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