Thursday, June 13, 2013

Moringa Oleifera - The Miracle Tree


                                                       
Moringa Oleifera - The Miracle Tree                             
                                                                     

A Common Tree With Rare Power "Moringa's potential as diet aid, water purifier is seen as boon to hunger  fight. It's cheap, full of nutrients and a known quantity in much of the 
developing world. 

Scientifically speaking, Moringa sounds like magic. It can rebuild weak 
bones, enrich anemic blood and enable a malnourished mother to nurse her 
starving baby.  Ounce for ounce, it has the calcium of four glasses of 
milk, the Vitamin C of seven oranges and the potassium of three bananas. 

Sounds like your Power Bar, you say? Well, consider this: A dash of Moringa 
can make dirty water drinkable. Doctors use it to treat diabetes in West 
Africa and high blood pressure in India. Not only can it staunch a skin 
infection, Moringa makes an efficient fuel, fertilizer and livestock feed. 

Memo to Popeye: Moringa has triple the iron of spinach and more impressive 
attributes than olive oil. And it's not only good for you, it's delicious. 
You can cook Moringa in Moringa oil and top it with Moringa sauce and still 
taste a spectrum of flavors. 

And it's cheap enough to grow on trees. Which is what Moringa Oleifera is: 
A tree, with a gnarly trunk and tousled head of foliage that make it look 
like a cypress that just rolled out of bed. It is a common tree that 
thrives in both the desert and the living room and produces leaves, pods, 
seeds and flowers that each do uncommon things" ......... 
Mark Fritz, LA Times, Staff Writer 

Moringa Oleifera 
Moringa Oleifera is the most well known of the 13 varities of Moringa.  It 
is progated from either stem cuttings or seed.  It is an exceptionally 
nutritious vegetable tree.  Except for the bark, which can be toxic, every 
part of the tree is edible. The young, tender, mustard-favored leaves are 
eaten raw in salads and cooked as a tasty potherb. The cooked leaves are 
also placed in soups and curries. The leaves can also be powdered and used 
as a spice.  The edible flowers taste similar to radish.  Either the 
flowers, fresh or dried, or young leaves can be used for tea.  The immature 
pods are cooked whole or the seeds removed and cooked as peas.  Mature 
seeds are roasted and eaten as nuts.  Mature seeds are also pressed for 
their oil.  The roots can be ground and used as horseradish.  The tree 
itself, is used as a living fence. 

The Miracle Tree 
Moringa is known in 82 countries by 210 different names, but the one name 
that fully encompasses all its attributes is “the Miracle Tree”. The 
indigenous knowledge and use of Moringa is referenced in more than 80 
countries and known in over 200 local languages.  Moringa has been used by 
various societies (Roman, Greek, Egyptian, and Indian to mention a few) for 
thousands of years with writings dating as far back as 150 AD. 

While the continued use of Moringa for food and medicinal purposes by 
cultures in separate and distant parts of the world attest to its 
beneficial effects, Moringa is a recent “discovery” of modern science.  The 
leaves of Moringa Oleifera are nature's multi-vitamin providing 7x the 
vitamin C of oranges, 4x the calcium of milk, 4x the vitamin A of carrots, 
3x the potassium of bananas, and 2x the protein of yogurt.  On top of that, 
science is proving Moringa to be a power house of nutrients; 90 are known 
to date, with the possibility of more yet to be identified.  If that were 
not enough, Moringa has no known impurities, with no adverse reactions ever 
recorded. 

Combats Malnutrition Worldwide 
Moringa can be found in the tropics, world wide.  It also thrives in the 
arid parts of the world where bad water, poor diet, and the diseases they 
promote are leading killers.  The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates 
that nearly 80% of the world’s population relies on traditional medicine 
(the use of plants) for their primary healthcare.  With Moringa being a 
known quantity in much of the developing world, Moringa can meet the needs 
of local populations in terms of availability, accessibility, and 
utilization.  Available in that it is already growing in areas of need, 
with spontaneous growth in many regions, and is a hearty and drought 
tolerant plant.  Accessible in that unlike imported medicine, foods, or 
other supplements, the cost per quantity is very inexpensive making Moringa 
affordable to poor populations.  Its potential as a cheap local supplement 
in the fight against malnutrition is promising.  So promising that dozens 
of humanitarian organizations including the Church World Service, the 
Educational Concerns for Hunger Organizations, Trees for Life, and the 
National Science Foundation now promote the use of Moringa in 
poverty-stricken areas to combat malnutrition. 

Lowell Fuglie, director for Church World Service, West Africa, found that 
powdered Moringa leaves were more readily embraced by rural villagers than 
other dietary aids and decided to put it to the test.  After a two year 
pilot project in the southwest villages of Senegal, the organization 
recently convinced the Senegalese government to promote Moringa as part of 
the national diet.  In a 65 page book on the project, Fuglie described the 
willingness of a hospital administrator to substitute Moringa for the 
classical and costly methods of using whole milk powder, vegetable oil and 
sugar to treat malnutrition.  The administrator, a diabetic who had been 
drinking Moringa tea for years to control his diabetes, had been unaware of 
its nutritional properties.  One star of the project was a premature baby 
weighing only 3lbs. 5 oz at birth.  Due to her birth weight along with her 
mother not producing enough milk, baby Awa was not expected to live. 
According to Fuglie, when mom and baby were both placed on a Moringa diet, 
mom started producing enough milk and baby quickly grew quite fat. 

Amadou Ba, director of a Senegalese village health post concurs, "We were 
all trained in the classic solutions for treating malnutrition-- whole milk 
powder, sugar, vegetable oil, sometimes peanut butter. But these 
ingredients are expensive and the recovery of malnourished infants can take 
months. Now we have replaced this with Moringa. We start seeing 
improvements within 10 days." 

Combats Childhood Blindness 
Lack of vitamin A (due to malnutrition) causes 70% of childhood blindness 
around the world.  That translates into 500,000 children going blind every 
year due to lack of vitamin A.  The Bethesda, Maryland based International 
Eye Foundation, is using Moringa with its high content of beta carotene, 
which is converted to vitamin A by the body, to combat childhood blindness 
around the world. 

Better Protein than Soy 
Moringa is considered to have the highest protein ratio of any plant so far 
identified, with the protein in Moringa being comparable in quality to that 
of soy.  Food scientists once believed that only soy had protein comparable 
to meat, dairy, and eggs.  Now they have added Moringa to that very short 
list.  Some even consider Moringa protein better than soy protein as it is 
non-allergic.  Proteins are digested into smaller units known as amino 
acids.  Moringa contains 18 of the 20 amino acids required by the human 
body including all eight of the essential amino acids found in meat 
products.  (Meat is a luxury most people around the world cannot afford). 
The body cannot manufacture those eight essential amino acids and must get 
them through the food we eat.  Moringa is one of very few plants that 
contain all eight. 

More impressive than Olive Oil 
Oleifera, Latin term meaning oil containing 
The oil, known as ben oil, (due to the high concentration of behenic acid 
contained in the oil) is extracted from the seeds.  Moringa Oleifera seeds 
contain 35-40% of oil by weight and can yield more oil per hectare than 
sunflower or peanuts.  The oil has more impressive attributes than olive 
oil.  It is used in cooking and cosmetics; and because it won’t spoil and 
turn rancid, it is also used as a preservative and machinery lubricant, 
even being used as a lubricant in fine watches.  What’s left after the oil 
has been extracted from the seeds is called seed cake, which is used as 
feed to increase milk production in cows. 

Purifies Water 
Lack of drinkable water is one of the world’s most serious threats.  Water 
related diseases account for more than 80% of the world’s sickness. 
People in many developing nations simply do not have acess to clean safe 
water, leaving them with little choice but to drink and wash with water so 
contaminated that we wouldn't even dare to walk in it. 

Professor Suleyman Aremu Muyibi, of the International Islamic University of 
Malaysia, believes Moringa seeds could potentially provide a renewable, 
sustainable and biodegradable material for treating global water supplies. 
When Moringa seeds are crushed and added to dirty, bacteria laden water, 
they purify the water.   As part of a Nigeria-based study, Muyibi feels 
that such an opportunity could be especially attractive in developing 
countries, where roughly 1.2 billion people still lack safe drinking water, 
with an estimated 25,000 people dying from water-borne diseases every day. 

Britain’s University of Leicester is also studying the coagulating 
properties of Moringa seeds for its water purifying abilities.  Researchers 
at the school believed the Moringa seeds would work better than the common 
water purifier, aluminum sulfate, which can be toxic, and have successfully 
replaced the imported alum system of a Malawi village with a simpler full 
scale system using Moringa seeds. 


In Conclusion 
Moringa may be the new kid on the block, where modern science is concerned,  but with all its attributes Moringa will not only continue to help people  who live a world away from us not only in location but also in need; it 
will also be integrated into many industries of the western world including 
food, pharmaceutical, and cosmetics