Chapter Three
AN APPLE A DAY
A review of entrenched scientific error in history; the
vitamin-deficiency concept of cancer as advanced in 1952 by Dr.
Ernst T. Krebs, Jr.; and a survey of the evidence both in nature and
in history to support that concept. |
A review of entrenched scientific error in history; the
vitamin-deficiency concept of cancer as advanced in 1952 by Dr.
Ernst T. Krebs, Jr.; and a survey of the evidence both in nature and
in history to support that concept.
The history of science is the history of struggle against entrenched
error. Many of the world's greatest discoveries initially were
rejected by the scientific community. And those who pioneered those
discoveries often were ridiculed and condemned as quacks or
charlatans.
Columbus was bitterly attacked for believing the Earth was
round.
Bruno was burned at the stake for claiming that Earth was
not the center of the Universe. Galileo was imprisoned for
teaching that the Earth moved around the Sun. Even the Wright
Brothers were ridiculed for claiming that a machine could fly.
In the field of medicine,
-
in the year 130 A.D., the physician
Galen announced certain anatomic theories that later proved to
be correct, but at the time he was bitterly opposed and actually
forced to flee from Rome to escape the frenzy of the mob
-
In the
Sixteenth Century, the physician Andreas Vesalius was
denounced as an impostor and heretic because of his
discoveries in the field of human anatomy. His theories were
accepted after his death but, at the time, his career was
ruined, and he was forced to flee from Italy
-
William Harvey was disgraced as a
physician for believing that blood was pumped by the heart and
moved around the body through arteries.
-
William Roentgen, the
discoverer of X-rays, at first was called a quack and then
condemned out of fear that his "ray" would invade the privacy of
he bedroom. William Jenner, when he first developed a vaccine
against smallpox, also was called a quack and was strongly
criticized as a physician for his supposedly cruel and
inhuman experiments on children
-
Ignaz Semmelweis
was fired from his Vienna hospital post for requiring his
maternity staff to wash their hands
Centuries ago it was not unusual for entire naval expeditions to be
wiped out by scurvy.
Between 1600 and 1800 the casualty list of the
British Navy alone was over one million sailors. Medical experts of
the time were baffled as they searched in vain for some kind of
strange bacterium, virus, or toxin that supposedly lurked in the
dark holds of ships. And yet, for hundreds of years, the cure was
already known and written in the record.
In the winter of 1535, when the French explorer Jacques Cartier
found his ships frozen in the ice off the St. Lawrence River, scurvy
began to take its deadly toll. Out of a crew of one hundred and ten,
twenty-five already had died, and most of the others were so ill
they weren't expected to recover.
And then a friendly Indian showed them the simple remedy. Tree bark
and needles from the white pine - both rich in ascorbic acid, or
vitamin C - were stirred into a drink which produced immediate
improvement and swift recovery.
Upon returning to Europe, Cartier reported this incident to the
medical authorities. But they were amused by such "witchdoctor cures
of ignorant savages" and did nothing to follow it up.(1)
1. See Virgil J. Vogel's American Indian Medicine (Norman, Oklahoma:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1970).
Yes, the cure for scurvy was known. But, because of scientific
arrogance, it took over two hundred years and cost hundreds of
thousands of lives before the medical experts began to accept and
apply this knowledge.
Finally, in 1747, John Lind, a young surgeon's mate in the British
Navy discovered that oranges and lemons produced relief from scurvy
and recommended that the Royal Navy include citrus fruits in the
stores of all its ships. And yet, it still took forty-eight more
years before his recommendation was put into effect.
When it was, of
course, the British were able to surpass all other sea-faring
nations, and the "Limeys" (so-called because they carried limes
aboard ship) soon became the rulers of the Seven Seas. It is no
exaggeration to say that the greatness of the British Empire in
large measure was the direct result of overcoming scientific
prejudice against vitamin therapy.
The twentieth century has proven to be no exception to this pattern.
Only two generations ago large portions of the American
Southeast were decimated by the dread disease of pellagra. The
well-known physician Sir William Osier, in his Principles and
Practice of Medicine, explained that in one institution for the
insane in Leonard, North Carolina, one-third of the inmates died of
this disease during the winter months. This proved, he said, that
pellagra was contagious and caused probably by an as yet
undiscovered virus.
As far back as 1914, however, Dr.
Joseph
Goldberger had proven that this condition was related to diet, and
later showed that it could be prevented simply by eating liver or
yeast.
But it wasn't until the 1940's
- almost thirty years later - that
the "modern" medical world fully accepted pellagra
as a vitamin B deficiency.(1)
1. See Edwin H. Ackerknecht, History and Geography of the Most
Important Diseases (New York: Hafner Publishing Co., Inc., 1972) pp.
148 -149.
The story behind pernicious anemia is almost exactly the same. The
reason that these diseases were so reluctantly accepted as vitamin
deficiencies is because men tend to look for positive
cause-and-effect relationships in which something causes something
else. They find it more difficult to comprehend the negative
relationship in which nothing or the lack of something can cause an
effect.
But perhaps of even more importance is the reality of
intellectual pride. A man who has spent his life acquiring
scientific knowledge far beyond the grasp of his fellow human beings
is not usually inclined to listen with patience to someone who lacks
that knowledge - especially if that person suggests that the solution
to the scientist's most puzzling medical problem is to be found in a
simple back-woods or near-primitive concoction of herbs and foods.
The scientist is trained to search for complex
answers and tends to look with smug amusement upon solutions that
are not dependent upon his hard-earned skills.
To bring this a little closer to home, the average M.D. today has
spent over ten years of intensive training to learn about health and
disease. This educational process continues for as long as he
practices his art. The greatest challenge to the medical profession
today is cancer. If the solution to the cancer puzzle were to be
found in the simple foods we eat (or don't eat), then what other
diseases might also be traced to this cause?
The implications are
explosive.
As one doctor put it so aptly,
"Most of my medical
training has been wasted. I've learned the wrong things!"
And no one
wants to discover that he has learned - or taught - the wrong things.
Hence, there is an unconscious, but
natural, tendency among many scientists and physicians to reject the
vitamin-deficiency concept of disease until it is proven, and
proven, and proven again.
By 1952, Dr. Ernst T. Krebs, Jr., a biochemist in San Francisco, had
advanced the theory that cancer, like scurvy and pellagra, is not
caused by some kind of mysterious bacterium, virus, or toxin, but is
merely a deficiency disease aggravated by the lack of an essential
food compound in modern-man's diet.
He identified this compound as
part of
the nitriloside family which occurs abundantly in nature in
over twelve-hundred edible plants and found virtually in every part
of the world. It is particularly prevalent in the seeds of those
fruits in the
Prunus Rosacea family (bitter almond, apricot,
blackthorn, cherry, nectarine, peach, and plum), but also contained
in grasses, maize, sorghum, millet, cassava, linseed, apple seeds,
and many other foods that, generally, have been deleted from the
menus of modern civilization.
It is difficult to establish a clear-cut classification for a
nitriloside. Since it does not occur entirely by itself but rather
is found in foods, it probably should not be classified as a food.
Like sugar, it is a food component or a food factor. Nor can it be
classified as a drug inasmuch as it is a natural, non-toxic,
water-soluble substance entirely normal to and compatible with human
metabolism. The proper name for a food factor that contains these
properties is vitamin.
Since this vitamin normally is found with the
B-complex, and since it was the seventeenth such substance to be
isolated within this complex, Dr. Krebs identified it as vitamin
B17.
He said:
Can the water-soluble non-toxic nitrilosides properly be described
as food? Probably not in the strict sense of the word. They are
certainly not drugs per se... Since the nitrilosides are neither
food nor drug, they may be considered as accessory food factors.
Another term for water-soluble, non-toxic accessory food factors is
vitamin.(1)
1. Krebs, The Laetriles/Nitrilosides in the Prevention and Control
of Cancer (Montreal: The McNaughton Foundation, n.d.), p. 16.
A chronic disease is one which usually does not pass away of its own
accord. A metabolic disease is one which occurs within the body and
is not transmittable to another person. Cancer, therefore, being all
of these, is a chronic, metabolic disease.
There are many of these diseases that plague modern man, such as
muscular dystrophy, heart disease, multiple sclerosis, and
sickle-cell anemia. Scientists have spent billions of dollars
searching for a prevention of these cripplers and killers, but they
are no closer to the answers today than they were when they started.
Perhaps the reason is that they are still looking for that something
which causes these diseases instead of the lack of something.
Dr. Krebs has pointed out that, in the entire history of medical
science, there has not been one chronic, metabolic disease that was
ever cured or prevented by drugs, surgery, or mechanical
manipulation of the body. In every case - whether it be scurvy,
pellagra, rickets, beri-beri, night blindness, pernicious anemia, or
any of the others - the ultimate solution was found only in factors
relating to adequate nutrition.
And he thinks that this is an
important clue as to where to concentrate our scientific curiosity
in the search for a better understanding of today's diseases,
particularly cancer.
But there are other clues as well. As everyone who owns a dog or cat
has observed, these domesticated pets often seek out certain grasses
to eat even though they are adequately filled by other foods. This
is particularly likely to happen if the animals are not well. It is
interesting to note that the grasses selected by instinct are
Johnson grass, Tunis grass, Sudan grass, and others that are
especially rich in nitrilosides or vitamin B17.
Monkeys and other primates at the zoo when given a fresh
peach or apricot will carefully pull away the sweet fleshy part,
crack open the hard pit, and devour the seed that remains.
Instinct compels them to do this even though they have never
seen that kind of fruit before. These seeds are one of the most
concentrated sources of nitrilosides to be found anywhere in
nature.
Wild bears are great consumers of nitrilosides in their natural
diet. Not only do they seek berries that are rich in this substance,
but when they kill small grazing animals for their own food,
instinctively they pass over the muscle portions and consume
first the viscera and rumen which are filled with nitriloside
grasses.(1)
1. See Peter Krott, Ph.D., Bears in the Family (New York E.P. Dutton
& Co., 1962
In captivity, animals seldom are allowed to eat all the foods of
their instinctive choice. In the San Diego Zoo, for example, the
routine diet for bears, although nutritious in many other respects,
is almost totally devoid of nitrilosides. In one grotto alone, over
a
six-year period, five bears died of cancer. It was generally
speculated by the experts that a virus had been the cause.
It is significant that one seldom finds cancer in the carcasses of
wild animals killed in the hunt. These creatures contract the
disease only when they are domesticated by man and forced to eat the
foods he provides or the scraps from his table.
It is amazing how cancer researchers can come face-to-face with this
evidence and still fail to realize its significance. Dr. Dennis P. Burkitt, the man who first identified the form of cancer known as
Burkitt Lymphoma, delivered a lecture at the College of Medicine at
the University of Iowa.
After two decades of experience and research
in Uganda and similar parts of the world, Dr. Burkitt observed that
non-infectious (chronic metabolic) diseases such as cancer of the
colon, diverticular disease, ulcerative colitis, polyps, and
appendicitis, all seem to be related in some way.
"They all go
together," he said, "and I'm going to go so far as to suggest that
they all have a common cause."
He went on to say that all of these
diseases are unknown in primitive societies and "always have their
maximum incidence in the more economically developed nations."
Then Dr. Burkitt turned his attention to cancer specifically and
observed:
This is a disease caused by the way we live. This form of cancer is
almost unknown in the animal kingdom. The only animals who get
cancer or polyps of the large bowel are those that live closest to
our way of life - our domestic dogs eating our leftovers.(1)
1. "The Evidence Leavens: We Invite Colon Cancer," Medical World
News, Aug. 11,1972, pp. 33, 34.
These are all excellent observations. But apparently neither Dr.
Burkitt nor anyone in his esteemed audience could find any meaning
in these facts. The lecture closed with the conclusion that colon
cancer probably is related to bacteria in the large bowel and that
we should all eat more bran and other cereal fibers to increase the
roughage content of our intestines and the size of our stools!
At least Dr. Burkitt was looking at the foods we eat, which was a
huge step forward. He may have been heading in the wrong direction,
but at least he was on the right track. If more cancer researchers
would think in terms of foods and vitamins
rather than bacteria and viruses, it wouldn't take them long to see
why the cancer rate in America is steadily climbing.
Measured in terms of taste, volume, and variety, Americans eat very
well, indeed. But expensive or tasty food is not necessarily good
food. Many people assume that it makes little difference what they
put into their stomachs as long as they are full. Magically,
everything that goes in somehow will be converted into perfect
health. They scoff at the thought of proper diet. Yet, many of these
same people are fastidious about what they feed their pedigreed dogs
and cats or their registered cattle and horses.
Dr. George M. Briggs, professor of nutrition at the University of
California, and member of the Research Advisory Committee of the
National Livestock and Meat Board, has said:
"The typical American
diet is a national disaster... If I fed it to pigs or cows, without
adding vitamins and other supplements, I could wipe out the
livestock industry."(1)
A brief look at the American diet tells the story. Grocery
shelves are now lined with high carbohydrate foods that have
been processed refined, synthesized, artificially flavored, and
loaded with chemical preservatives.(2)
1. "University of California Nutrition Professor, A Health Advisor
to the U.S. Government... Charges the Typical American Diet is a
National Disaster," National Enquirer, Dec. 5,1971, p. 2.
2. There are now approximately 3,000 additives used in U.S. food
products for
flavoring, coloring, preservation, and similar purposes. Most are
safe in the quantities used, but many of these chemicals pose a
serious health hazard with prolonged use. See Toxics A to Z, by
Harte, Holdren, Schneider, and Shirley (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1991).
Some manufacturers,
aiming their advertisements at the diet-conscious consumer, even
boast of how little real food there is in their product.
Everyone knows that modern processing removes many of
the original vitamins from our foods, but we are told not to worry
about it, because they have been put back before sending to market. And so we see the word "enriched" printed cheerfully
across our bread, milk, and other foods. But make no mistake
about it, these are not the same as the original.
As the June 1971
Journal of the American Geriatric Society reported:
Vitamins removed from food and returned as "enrichment" are not a
safe substitute, as witnessed by the study in which Roger J.
Williams, Ph.D., reported that rats fed enriched bread died or were
severely stunted due to malnutrition. Rats fed a more whole bread
flourished, for the most part, by comparison.
Much illness, we are learning, may be due to vitamin-mineral
deficiencies. Even senility has been proven to be caused by a
deficiency of Vitamins B and C.
Indeed, here is a worthy experiment that can and should be carried
out in every grade-school science class. Rodents fed only "enriched"
bread very soon become anti-social. Some even become cannibalistic,
apparently responding to an instinctive drive to obtain the vital
food elements they are lacking. Most will die within a month or two.
Once children have witnessed this, they seldom retain the same
appetite for white bread that they may have had prior to the
experiment.
"Enriched" bread is just one small part of the larger picture.
Millet once was the world's staple grain. It is high in nitriloside
content. But now it has been replaced by wheat which has practically
none at all - even whole wheat. Sorghum cane has been replaced by
sugar cane with the same result. Even our cattle are fed
increasingly on quick-growing, low-nitriloside grasses so there is
less vitamin B17 residue in the meat we eat.
In some places,
livestock now are being fed a diet containing fifteen percent paper
to fatten them quicker for market.(1)
1. "Paper Fattens Cattle," (UPI) Oakland Tribune, Nov. 22,1971.
In retrospect, there were many customs of our grandparents that,
although lacking in scientific rationale at the time, were based
upon centuries of accumulated experience through trial and error,
and have since been proven to be infinitely wise.
"An apple a day
keeps the doctor away" could well have been more than an idle
slogan, especially in an era when it was customary for everyone to
eat the seeds of those apples as well. It is a fact that the whole
fruit - including the seeds - of an apple contains an amazingly high
concentration of vitamins, minerals, fats, and proteins that are
essential for health.
Apple seeds are especially rich in nitrilosides or vitamin B17. The distasteful "spring tonic" or
sorghum molasses and sulphur also was a rich source of nitriloside.
And grandma's apricot and peach preserves almost always contained
the kernels of these canned fruits for winter eating. She probably
didn't know what they contained or why they were good for you. But
she knew that they were good for you simply because her mother had
told her so.
And so we see that the foods that once provided the American people
with ample amounts of natural vitamin B17 gradually have been pushed
aside or replaced altogether by foods almost devoid of this factor.
Significantly, it is during this same period that the cancer rate
has moved steadily upward to the point where, today, one out of
every three persons in the United States is destined to contract
this disease.
It cannot be argued that the cancer rate is up merely because other
causes of death are down and, thus, people are living longer. First
of all, they are not living that much longer - only a few years, on
the average, over the past four generations. In 1972, a year in
which the average age of the American population was headed
downward, a year in which the population growth rate had shrunk
practically to zero, the death rate from cancer rose to the highest
level it had yet reached: three times the 1950 rate.(1)
1. "Cancer Cure Still Eludes Scientists," (NEA) News Chronicle
(Calif.) Aug. 29, 1973, p. A-9.
Secondly, in
those countries where people live longer than in the United States,
the cancer rate for them is lower than for us.
There is no escape from the significance of these facts. While the
medical world, the federal government, and the American Cancer
Society are spending billions of dollars and millions of man-hours
searching for an exotic cancer virus against which they plan to
spend an equal amount to create an effective man-made immunization,
the answer lies right under their noses.
In fact, it has existed in
the written and spoken record for thousands of years:
And God said: Behold I have given you every herb-bearing seed upon
the earth, and all trees that have in themselves seed of their own
kind, to be your meat.
(Genesis 1:29)
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