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European mistletoe - Viscum album
A photograph by François Meignant. Local English names for this epiphyte include Churchman's Greeting (Somerset), Kiss-and-Go (Dorset) and Masslin (Suffolk). Mistletoe is a hemiparasite growing high up on trees such as pine, apple, plum, poplar and spruce across northern Europe and Asia. The ripe white berries are poisonous. The leaves and young twigs may contain yet-to-be-discovered medicinal compounds. For example, mistletoe is rich in the lectin agglutinin-I (VAA-I) which possesses potential therapeutic properties and immunomodulatory activities. The ancient shamans of Europe, now referred to as Druids, held that mistletoe had both positive and negative potential in healing and magic. In Roman times in England, Druid priests used golden sickles to cut away mistletoe growing on oak trees. They took care to spread a white cloth on the ground under the tree to prevent the mistletoe trimmings touching the ground and losing their intrinsic power. Mistletoe is a plant that grows without touching the earth and was considered to have come directly from the gods. As such, it was a plant manifestly free from conventional mortal (earthbound) restrictions and had the energy of divinity coursing through it. Mistletoe is an unusual plant producing both flowers and ripe berries in the depths of winter. The Druids called it ‘All-Heal’. In Sweden, epileptics carried about with them a knife having a handle of oak mistletoe. This was thought to ward off epileptic attacks. Because the mistletoe-associated Druids were more powerful white magicians than most early Church priests, Roman Churchianity banned the use of mistletoe in its churches in England. One church-invented propaganda-legend had it that the wood of the cross of Christ was made from mistletoe (Sanctae Crucis Lignum). For that reason the mistletoe plant was doomed to live life as a parasite, condemned to reliance on the alms of other trees. More mistletoe pictures can be found here



Mistletoe cures woman's cancer after she shuns chemotherapy

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1238835/Mistletoe-cures-w...


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1238835/Mistletoe-cures-w...

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