Why We Don’t Use the Eight Herb Formulas
There has been a great deal of controversy, confusion and false claims surrounding eight-herb teas that claim to be Essiac. Unfortunately, these false claims are still being promoted on the internet by unethical retailers.
Most of the eight-herb formulas on the internet contain two herbs which Rene Caisse did not use–blessed thistle and kelp. Therefore, they are not Essiac tea. The two most commonly encountered eight-herb teas that are mistakenly referred to as Essiac tea are Dr. Brusch’s tea and Elaine Alexander’s “Flor•Essence®” tea. There are other incorrect variations on the internet that are not Essiac tea.
Fortunately, Essiac historian/biographer Sheila Snow had collected more than sufficient evidence to set the record straight on this matter. Anyone can read these findings in THE SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE’S HERBAL PHARMACY and THE ESSIAC BOOK both written by Sheila Snow and co-author Mali Klein.
Q: Did Rene Caisse give the Essiac formula to Dr. Charles Brusch?
A: No. Rene Caisse emphatically stated that she did not give the Essiac formula to Dr. Brusch. The issue of whether or not Dr. Brusch obtained the Essiac formula from Rene Caisse was finally settled on July 11, 1977. In reference to her Essiac formula Rene Caisse told Sheila Snow: “I didn’t give it to Doctor Brusch and I’m not giving it to anyone else.” [1]
Furthermore, even Dr. Brusch admitted it was his formula, not Rene Caisse’s Essiac formula. Dr. Brusch wrote to Mary McPherson* in 1987 that he was working on “Herb Formula 1 and 5”. He further stated: “It is mostly ‘our own’, plus one or two herbs which do not interfere in any way with our formula, but in fact enhance it. How happy Rene would be.” [Note: Rene Caisse had been dead for nine years when he made this statement.]
This letter was written in 1987, two years after Dr. Gary Glum had purchased the Essiac formula from one of Rene’s former patients (Pat Judson) and had made it public. 1987 was also the year that Dr. Glum interviewed Dr. Brusch.
Additionally, the webmaster for the Health Freedom Info website had many conversations with Dr. Gary Glum over a two-year period. Dr. Gary Glum purchased the Essiac formula from one of Rene Caisse’s former patients, Pat Judson. Before that no one knew what the Essiac formula was except for a handful of people who had to swear to keep it secret.
“I have had many conversations with Dr. Gary Glum who interviewed Dr. Charles Brusch regarding his involvement with Rene Caisse. Dr. Glum assured me that Dr. Brusch did not know Rene Caisse’s formula and recipe for Essiac tea. He further indicated that he believed that Dr. Brusch’s signature was forged on documents in Elaine Alexander’s apparent attempt to market their own version of Essiac tea called “Flor•Essence®”, which contained eight herbs.”
“Four of the herbs in “Flor•Essence®” are identical to the four-herb Essiac formula that Dr. Gary Glum made public with the release of his video tape and book CALLING OF AN ANGEL in 1988. Dr. Glum told me that Elaine Alexander got the Essiac formula from him. Also, Dr. Glum interviewed Dr. Brusch in 1987 before he and Elaine Alexander began manufacturing their own eight-herb formula.”
Sheila Snow knew Dr. Brusch and thoroughly researched this controversy. In short Sheila Snow & Mali Klein stated: “Considering Sheila’s 16 years’ association with Dr Brusch and his wife, and examining the evidence of the letters exchanged between them and with Mary McPherson, we must conclude that we do not believe that Rene ever gave Dr Brusch the Essiac formula. Therefore we must question any subsequent claims by people associated with Dr Brusch as having access to the original Essiac formula.” [2]
Q: Did Rene Caisse work with Dr. Charles Brusch for twenty years?
A: No. Rene Caisse worked with Dr. Brusch for a “brief period from 1958 to 1959″1 and “He made no further contact with her until September 1976.”1
Q: Were there false documents and apparent fraud perpetrated to promote the eight-herb teas that are still being (falsely) called Essiac?
A: Sheila Snow received a handwritten note from Dr. Brusch’s wife, Jane, dated 20 January 1993, which stated: “Thanks for your note and information. I am infuriated over all the different things I am hearing. I can’t believe that so many people are using Charlie’s name and the things they are coming up with — old signatures etc — requests for peoples’ records and histories — all lies. I turn all these over to our lawyer — I am dumbfounded. Hope you are fine, Love, Jane.”
Sheila Snow and Mali Klein further state in THE SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE’S HERBAL PHARMACY that: “Dr Brusch apparently became partners with Elaine Alexander in 1988 [three years after Dr. Gary Glum purchased the standard four-herb Essiac formula from one of Rene’s former patients], and was claimed to have worked exclusively with Rene for 20 years in perfecting the Essiac herbal formula. To reinforce this claim, THE ESSIAC REPORT by Richard Thomas has reproduced a legal document signed by Dr Brusch on page 125. Paragraph 7 exactly quotes Dr Benjamin Leslie Guyatt’s public statement of 1940 concerning Essiac, wrongly attributing the words to Dr Brusch over fifty years later….He [Dr Brusch] died on 21 October 1993 aged 85. Elaine Alexander died on 30 April 1996. The company they founded was still publishing leaflets as late as March 2000 describing Elaine as ‘Today’s Custodian of…’ and discussing her in the present tense, which has proved very confusing to cancer patients prepared to put their faith in their product. There is no evidence to prove that Dr Brusch worked with Rene for 20 years.”
Dr. Brusch indicated to Sheila Snow in a telephone conversation in 1980 that he did not know the formula. This occurred two years after Rene Caisse died. [1]
*Rene Caisse’s best friend was Mary McPherson, the only person that Rene allowed to make Essiac tea for her cancer patients. On December 23rd, 1994, Mary McPherson recorded a sworn affidavit that revealed officially for the first time what the true Essiac tea formula and recipe was in order to settle the controversies over the true Essiac formula. This was the final Essiac formula that Rene Caisse had developed after fifty years of research with laboratory mice and real cancer patients in her Bracebridge cancer clinic.
Click here to view the only verifiable and legal documentation of the true Essiac formula that Rene Caisse was using at the end of her life.
Sheila Snow obtained further documentation for the Essiac formula from Dr. Chester Stock of the Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in 1979. The letters between Rene Caisse and Dr. Stock revealed the sheep sorrel roots are “very essential” to the Essiac tea formula.
Here is what Mary McPherson stated in the video interview below regarding Rene Caisse’s Essiac tea formula and recipe:
“It was advertised by Dr. Gary Glum, who wrote the book, “Calling of an Angel”, and he made this recipe public. Before that it was a secret. And it was a pretty well kept secret for a good many years. But once the book came out, why, it went all over.
“Then various people decided that it might be better if we changed this or that or the other, you know, how everybody thinks they know better. And that’s how I think it has gotten so many different versions at the present time.
Question: “And do you think Rene knew that this would happen?
Mary: “Oh, of course she did. She told me many times that she would have printed this in the newspaper, only that nobody would follow it. Everybody would change it.
“First thing she said they would do was make it shorter because it takes too long to make it. So she didn’t want any short cuts done at all. She had a reason for everything she did in this recipe.”
REFERENCES:
1. THE ESSIAC BOOK by Sheila Snow and Mali Klein, 2006, pages 74 & 75
2. THE SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE’S HERBAL PHARMACY by Sheila Snow and Mali Klein, 2001, p. 13
To learn more about the herbs that Rene Caisse did use we recommend reading ESSIAC: The Secrets of Rene Caisse’s Herbal Pharmacy.
Rene Caisse stated that sheep sorrel roots are part of the Essiac tea formula. Click here for the sheep sorrel root documentation.
“If it works, don’t change it.” — Rene M. Caisse, R.N.
* BUYER BEWARE! Most Essiac companies and herb suppliers are now obtaining Sheep Sorrel leaf from Bulgaria and Croatia and it is dead plant material and not even green! Therefore, most of the Essiac sold in the US now has little medicinal value for cancer patients. We are concerned that this may eventually give quality Essiac Tea an undeserved reputation for being ineffective against cancer. This may also give false hope for cancer patients.
This is why we place so much attention on how we grow our certified organic herbs and the extra effort and care we place on quality, even though our Essiac Tea Herbs cost significantly more than other Essiac tea providers. As the old adage goes: “You get what you pay for.” *
We do not sell nor are we associated with the trademarked (TM) or registered (R) “ESSIAC” products that are sold by other companies in Canada and the US. We only sell the herbs so that people can make Rene Caisse’s tea in their own homes. Rene Caisse never registered, patented or trademarked “Essiac” which was simply her last name spelled backwards and was originally derived from a traditional native American herbal remedy for cancer. The word “Essiac” was in common usage in the 1930s, decades before anyone tried to corner the market by “registering” or “trademarking” the word “Essiac”. Furthermore, we only use the “Essiac” formula which Rene Caisse’s best friend, Mary McPherson, officially entered into the public domain in a sworn affidavit in 1994 in Bracebridge, Ontario. This formula uses Turkey rhubarb root which is much more pleasant tasting than the Indian rhubarb products on the market (which is why Rene Caisse switched to Turkey rhubarb in her final Essiac tea formula). The HealthFreedom.info website has posted Mary McPherson’s “Essiac” formula affidavit here. This is the formula we use.
Twenty years ago HealthFreedom.info was the first website to obtain and publish on the internet a certified copy of Mary McPherson’s Essiac formula affidavit from the Town of Bracebridge, Ontario, thus settling the controversy over what Rene Caisse’s true Essiac Tea formula was.
We include sheep sorrel roots in all our Essiac Tea products at precise percentages. The percentages refer to the ratio of sheep sorrel root to the total sheep sorrel content in the formula.
The information on this website is for educational and historical purposes and not to be construed as medical advice. Everyone’s body is different so there is no one-size-fits-all for health issues. It should be noted that medical doctors are not usually taught about such subjects as herbal medicine, nutritional supplements, non-pharmceutical approaches to health, etc. Therefore, choosing an appropriate health professional is a human right and that is up to the individual seeking health improvement.
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