The Essiac Story and Essiac – the follow-up
by Su Palmer-Jones
‘The
 Essiac Story’ appeared in the Green Handbook for South West Scotland, 
Summer 1998.  The sequel, ‘Essiac – the follow-up’, appeared in Summer 
2000.  Although both articles predate this website, I thought people who
 missed them at the time might be interested to read them.
The Essiac Story
In the spring of 1998, I read an extraordinary book called The Essiac Report.
  If someone set out to write a melodrama about the establishment (with 
the usual few glowing exceptions) trying to suppress any form of 
medicine that doesn’t fit their parameters, no writer would come up with
 anything as extreme as this.  But this really happened.
In 1902,
 an Englishwoman went out to Canada to join her husband who was working 
there as a prospector, camping in an area inhabited by Ojibwa Indians.  
When a hard mass developed on her breast, the local Ojibwa medicine man 
reassured her.  He had a remedy given by the ancestors, ‘a holy drink 
that would purify her body and place it back in balance with the great 
spirit.’
The Edwardian lady politely declined.  Then she was 
diagnosed as having breast cancer – and her husband did not have the 
money to pay for surgery.  She went back to the medicine-man, who taught
 her how to make a herbal tea and told her to drink it twice daily.
Twenty
 years later, still alive and with two breasts, she told her story to 
Rene Caisse, the head nurse of an Ontario hospital.  Rene wrote down the
 herbal recipe and tried it on her aunt, who had been diagnosed with 
terminal cancer of the stomach and liver.  The aunt drank the tea twice 
daily for two moths and recovered. (She lived for another 20 years).
The
 doctor in charge of the case was impressed and allowed Rene to give the
 tea to other terminal cases, whose condition improved dramatically.  
More doctors sent Rene their ‘hopeless’ cases, who were healed.  (The 
tea was now named ‘Essiac’ – Rene’s surname spelled backwards.)  Seeing 
their ‘terminal’ cases making miraculous recoveries, a group of doctors 
sent a petition to the Department of Health and Welfare asking that Rene
 should be allowed research facilities. 
In response, the Department sent two investigators to have Rene arrested for malpractice.
Her only defence was that she did not charge for her treatment.
Rene
 lived in poverty, treating people without charge, until she died (aged 
90) in 1978.  During that time, pharmaceutical companies wooed her with 
offers of huge salaries and luxurious modern clinics where she could 
treat thousands of people – provided she gave her recipe to the company.
  She would not.  The medical establishment similarly wooed her with 
offers of marvellous research facilities provided she gave them the 
formula – and threatened her with court proceedings when she would not. 
 Petitions were circulated on her behalf, one with 55,000 signatures 
from grateful patients and converted doctors.  Bills were put before 
parliament and were defeated because Rene would not give away her 
formula.  At one trial, nearly 400 ‘terminal’ patients arrived, alive 
and kicking when officially they should have been dead, to give evidence
 for Rene.  Only 49 were called to the witness box and their evidence 
was ignored.
After years of persecution, during which Rene 
continued to treat patients without charge, she found a champion in Dr 
Brusch, personal physician to J. F. Kennedy.  Convinced by the results 
he saw from Essiac, he began working in partnership with Rene.  She was 
now 70 years old but still tireless in her wish to help suffering 
humanity with this remedy, which she saw as God’s gift.  She refused to 
give the formula to any company who might use it for profit or to the 
medical establishment which might suppress it.
Fortunately for 
future generations, she did entrust it to Dr Brusch.  After her death, 
he continued to research Essiac with thousands of patients and in 1984 
he used it to cure his own cancer of the lower bowel.  In a radio 
interview that year, he said, ‘Essiac is a cure for cancer.  I’ve seen 
it reverse and eliminate cancers at such a progressed state that nothing
 medical science currently has could have accomplished similar results. 
 I wouldn’t have believed it myself had I not seen it with my own eyes. 
 I feel very strongly that Essiac is the single most beneficial 
treatment for cancer today.’
Phone lines to the radio station 
were jammed with calls.  The interviewer, Elaine Alexander, was 
inundated with letters.  She gave up her job in broadcasting to take up 
Rene’s torch, working to get Essiac to the people who needed it.
Elaine
 decided there was no point in trying to persuade the establishment to 
accept and legitimize a remedy given by a native medicine-man to a 
backwoods housewife.  Instead, she would spread it in the form of a 
simple herbal tea.  As such it could not legally be advertised as a cure
 for cancer – but word would get around.  She found a herbal company 
with the right ethics: they grew herbs organically in the purest 
conditions and treated their workforce well.  Thus Essiac became 
available to a wider public.
‘A holy drink that would purify your body and place it back in balance with the great spirit.’  What more could we want?
Essiac – the follow up
Harlee
 Watson was diagnosed as having cancer in 1997.  Three months after her 
diagnosis, she heard about Essiac.  She took it for nine months.  Since 
then she’s had no symptoms, hasn’t been back to the doctor and feels 
well and healthy.
While she was taking Essiac, she decided to 
become a distributor.  At that time she was living in Moniaive, 
Dumfriesshire. She found an ethical supplier and set to work brewing up 
Essiac tea for anyone who asked for it.  Following Rene Caisse’s ideals,
 Harlee charged only for the cost of the ingredients and postage.  She 
didn’t make a profit on the tea because she felt that giving it freely 
was an important part of the medicine.
‘To begin with, everyone 
who came was through the Green Handbook,’ Harlee told me.  ‘It reached 
people in England, people came from Ayr and Glasgow. Local people came 
too.  Word got around.’
Harlee was put in touch with Melanie 
Klein, who runs The Clouds Trust.  This is a charitable trust which 
gives information to the terminally ill on all the options open to them.
  Research into Essiac is part of the Trust’s work.
Melanie co-authored a book with Shiela Snow, a former colleague of Rene Caisse.  The book, Essiac Essentials,
 gives detailed descriptions of the herbs used in the recipe, with 
instructions on how to prepare the decoction and take the tea.  It also 
relates the history of Essiac and provides case-studies from all over 
the UK.
One GP who recommended some of his patients to try Essiac
 told me: ‘I read the book [Essiac Essentials] and I was impressed.  I 
thought this was potentially useful.  I have recommended it to a few 
people, in certain cases.  If somebody has been given a diagnosis and 
told they can’t have conventional treatment; if they’ve had conventional
 treatment and it isn’t working; or if they are having it and they can 
try Essiac as well.  One case was a chap who had terminal cancer; he 
went for a scan and was told, “You’ve had your dose of radiation, you 
can’t have any more Xray treatment.” I thought this might be an ideal 
person to try Essiac.  He tried it; and three to four months later he 
was doing very well – which was a surprise.  He went for another scan 
and the cancer was in complete remission.  That was quite amazing.  
That’s the only “miracle cure” I’ve seen; the other patients are just 
trundling along.  Unfortunately, that chap wasn’t compliant with 
treatment; he took Essiac for several months and then decided to stop.  
Then he had a recurrence of the cancer and died. 
'As an 
allopathically trained physician, I have to offer my patients 
conventional treatment.  But Essiac has far fewer side-effects than the 
conventional treatment for cancer.  With conventional treatment, many 
patients spend the last few months of their lives in misery.  When they 
take Essiac, they need less conventional treatment and the quality of 
their life improves.’
Harlee confirmed this from observing the 
people who came to her for Essiac. ‘There was a man in his 60s who 
looked as if he was at death’s door.  His doctor had given him six 
months to live.  After he’d been taking Essiac for two or three months, 
he looked so much better.  He lived for 11 months, never had to have his
 medication increased and died at home in bed.  His biggest fear had 
been of dying in hospital.’
What of the other people who came to 
her? ‘Two people who were pronounced inoperable were later given the 
all-clear; someone given a month to live was still here a few months 
later.  People are coming back for more and seem happy.  Some people are
 making it themselves now, which is great because it’s so easy to do.  
Nowadays I put a lot of people in touch with the Clouds Trust directly, 
to encourage them to make Essiac for themselves.’
 
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