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Solitary
Research the Root of a Cure
A mainland herbalist has been acclaimed for his natural
cancer cure, but only after years in the wilderness,
writes Vincent Mak
HONG KONG STANDARD MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1998
A FAMOUS Chinese legend says Shen Nung (Divine Farmer),
a mythical emperor born 3,000 years ago, experimented
with 100 different herbs on his own body and became
the nation’s first herb doctor.
The Shen Nung legend is probably folklore but the story
of Wang Zhenguo is genuine.
Born into dire poverty as the son of herb collectors
in the Changbaishan area of the country’s northeast,
he set out on his research for anti-cancer herb prescriptions
in the 1970s.
With no other help, he received recognition and respect
only after a decade of solitary observation, research
and experimentation.
For Mr. Wang, this meant trying out different dosages
and prescriptions on rabbits, rats-and himself.
"I just took larger and larger doses on of a herb
until it reached the maximum acceptable dose,"
he recalled calmly.
"Once I got my face all swollen because of one
experiment."
His trump card research result -marketed as "China
No. 1 Tian Xian Liquid" - has already been proven
by the United States National Cancer Institute to have
"80 per cent curing effect" on cancer patients.
Mr Wang has received hundreds of letters from grateful
patients in the United States, Canada, Japan, South
Africa, Taiwan and the mainland who have benefited from
his invention.
Mr. Wang was born in Tong Hua City, Jilin province,
in 1954. He had nine years of schooling in the 1960s
which was marked by memories of collecting herbs after
school.
"My family was so poor that I had to collect herbs
in the mountains to pay for my school fees," he
said.
"I followed my parents and other collectors up
into the hills and learned bits and pieces of knowledge
about herbs through them." Once his mother had
a headache, he went into the hills, picked some herbs
and cured her.
"From then on I wished to become a doctor,"
he said. At 16, armed only with crude knowledge of herbs,
he began studying basic Chinese medicine while he became
an amateur doctor in the neighborhood.
"First I bought a cheap compendium of herbs in
northeast China," he said.
"When I got more money I bought better references.
Thus later I managed to buy Li Shihchen’s Ben
Cao Gang Mu (Great Pharmacopoeia)."
Li was the 16th century Chinese scholar whose name
is inextricably linked with his masterpiece, Great Pharmacopoeia,
which described more than 2,000 drugs and presented
directions for preparing more than 8,000 prescriptions.
Li has always been a source of inspiration of Mr. Wang
since the beginning of his career. "Li only had
six years of formal education, less than mine. But Li
managed to compile his 1.9-million word classic. I therefore
told myself that one can achieve great things by sheer
willpower," said Mr. Wang, who has hung an imagined
portrait of Li in his room since his teens.
Mr Wang’s self-tuition began in the mainland
in 1969, when society was too busy with other things
to be too concerned with Chinese herbal medicine. But
Mr Wang persisted with his studies and in 1971 he joined
a traditional doctor before he enrolled at the Tong
Hua City Health School, where he received a basic training
in Western and Chinese medicine.
During his stint at the school, Mr Wang came across
an old woman and her 13-year-old granddaughter who inspired
him to undertake a lifelong battle against cancer.
"I met the little child a day in 1972. Her grandmother
was then dying from liver cancer. She knelt before me
and in tears besought me to heal her grandma,"
Mr Wan said.
"I can never forget the incident. I told myself:
"I must find a cure for cancer."
Mr Wang graduated from the school in 1975 and worked
mostly on his own, spending his own money and sought
loans until 1986, when his Tian Xian pills were listed
as one of the fundable research items in Scientific
Research Development Scheme of Jilin province.
Mr Wang traveled around the country, including to Guangdong
province, to collect folk prescriptions and also ordered
herbal prescriptions from overseas. He spared all his
rice rations for his rats and rabbits and ate sweet
potatoes himself. He built a brick laboratory with his
own hands and when he needed to refrigerate some materials
he dug a hole in the ground and buried them in the cool
soil of his homeland.
Mr Wang made ingenious innovations from local traditions.
For example, when he was a child his family prepared
salted eggs for sale in the market.
"My family was so poor that they could not afford
salted eggs for 40 days, the usual time needed, "
he said.
"But my parents salted the eggs with a herb and
that shortened the time to only 20 days."
Mr. Wang then assumed the herb could perforate cell
walls to facilitate the absorption of salt. He later
discovered that the herb could selectively destroy cancer-cell
walls, so that other anti-cancer agents could attack
cancer cells more effectively.
Mr Wang started his experiments in the early 1980s,
all by trial and error, and when his father-in-law was
dying from cancer in 1983, Mr Wang tried his first Tian
Xian pills on him. That was a failure, for his father-in-law
died a few days after he took a drug. Afterwards, no
one believed Mr Wang.
"I visited the cancer patients of a hospital and
asked them to try my pills for free. But no one was
willing to try them, " he said.
Finally, in late 1983 , and old man took Mr Wang’s
pills and recovered from cancer. In 1984 Tianjin Medical
Research Institute confirmed the value of his invention
after clinical trials.
No Mr. Wang has his own anti-cancer research institute
in Tong Hua and his products are promoted by a Taiwanese
company based in Hong Kong and used by patients in over
30 countries.
Mr Wang has since been invited to attend medical conferences
and lecture worldwide.
He was presented "the best invention award by
individual research in the world" at the "World
Eureka Expo" in Belgium in 1989 and organization
have recognized the importance of his inventions
Mr Wang’s Tian Xian products include pills, plasters,
liquid and suppositories. The series also includes a
liquid for cancer prevention.
The Tian Xian liquid, the star in the series, was found
to be successful in treating early and mid-stage cancer;
it has also been effective with some terminal cancer
cases. About 80 percent of its content comes from herbs
which profuse in the rich volcanic soil in the Changbaixiang
region. The rest comes from herbs from other parts of
the mainland and India.
Mr Wang’s products have been tried out by many
patients in the West.
"I am not against Western medicine," Mr Wang
said.
"Tian Xian Liquid can control and contain cancer
tumours. It should certainly be used alongside Western
medicine and surgery. Only that Western chemotherapy
produces a lot of side effects."
He expects to achieve major breakthrough with an anti-cancer
scheme complaining Chinese medicine and Western chemotherapy
in the year 2000.
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