by Bogdan Munteanu
Just like Saul of Tarsus (the future Saint Paul) was a devout Pharisee, trying his best to destroy the Christian ‘sect’ that was threatening the purity of Judaism, T. Colin Campbell – professor of nutritional biochemistry at Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York – believed that animal proteins were a sine qua non condition of good health. Thus, for most of his 60-year career dedicated to scientific research, he wanted to gather evidence for what seemed an obvious truth to him.

It seemed impossible to believe anything of the opposite, as
he confessed during his first presence in Romania, in May 2016, at the Ultimate
Health Experience Conference in Poiana Brașov: “Born in 1934, I grew up on
a farm, where I had been milking cows since I was only five years old, ate a
lot of dairy, eggs and meat”.
Later on, in The Philippines, he was part of a team of
American physicians attempting to decrease the infant mortality rate by
prescribing more protein of animal origin. What else could he support, as long
as, for generations, people had been told that nothings else helps better the
harmonious growth of children?
Little by little, througout his career, he became aware of
studies linking the intake of animal proteins with the increase of cholesterol
and the development of coronary disease and most common types of cancer.
Researchers had discovered a possible threat that animal proteins pose to
health as early as 1926, yet the scientific community ignored these warnings.
Dr. Campbell’s own experiments researching the dietary
causes of liver cancer would later produce new findings that strongly disagreed
with his training and his bias in favour of a diet based on animal proteins.
No matter how carefully planned and executed, experiments often produced more
questions than answers, Campbell once confessed, and he was eager to get the
opportunity to test his hypotheses on a larger scale.
The China Study
That chance occurred at the beginning of the 1980s, when he
was was among the scientists leading the “China-Cornell-Oxford” study that
examined the diets, lifestyle, and disease characteristics of 6,500 people in
65 rural Chinese counties. Funding was provided by Cornell University, the
University of Oxford, and the government of China – without any contribution
from a pharmaceutical or food company.
In 2004, The China Study, a book a wrote by Professor
Campbell and one of his sons, summarized the discoveries made in China and, by
making correlations with numerous other researches, stated that a diet based
on animal products (including beef, pork, mutton, poultry, fish, eggs, cheese
and milk) is a serious cause of chronic illnesses such as coronary heart
disease, diabetes, breast, prostate and bowel cancer.
Like Saul of Tarsus’ conversion on the road to Damascus, The
China Study gives evidence to Campbell’s epiphany: all he had been
believing in since childhood was wrong. Instead, Professor Campbell argued that
people who eat a whole-food, plant-based/vegan diet – avoiding all animal
products and reducing their intake of processed foods and refined carbohydrates
– will escape, reduce or reverse the development of numerous diseases.
Although the publishers of the book warned that it would
probably not sell more than a few thousand copies, it soon ranked among the
best-selling publications on nutrition in the USA. By 2016, The China Study was
translated into some 40 languages and Romanian was the first. Unsurprisingly,
vegans hailed the book, while the medical establishment is still reluctant to
embracing it full-heartedly.
Cured patients as the best supporting evidence of
Campbell’s claims
Unlike other arrogant self-proclaimed visionaires, Colin
Campbell has been always responding to all questions doubting the validity of
the ideas he supports. Over and over again, he insisted that he has never been
on the payroll of any private company, repeating this during his speech in
Poiana Brașov: “My research was funded by taxpayer money, so I feel morally
obliged to share to the public what I discovered.”
Also, he explains that he is not against animal products for
ideological reasons and he wouldn’t describe himself as a vegetarian, since
many vegetarians are eating unhealthy processed foods full of carbohydrates,
fats and sugars.
In order to live a healthy life, Professor Campbell advises
people to eat mainly – if not exclusively, like he has done since 1990 – a diet
based on whole foods that are unprocessed and unrefined, including: unpolished
grains, vividly coloured vegetables and fruits, nuts and seeds. He also says
that there is no need to add oil in our dishes, nor to take nutrient
supplements. If we really can’t do without it, only a few grains of salt should
be poured.
This would be a major change for many of us, wouldn’t it?
Well, according to Campbell, three types of evidence support the view that it
is worth making that change. First, the research data from his own studies that
are summarized in The China Study. Second, many other laboratories
around the world reached the same conclusions.
Third and the strongest piece of evidence is represented by
the clinical experiences of practicing physicians such as John McDougall,
Caldwell Esselstyn, Jr., Terry Shintani, Joel Fuhrman and Alan Goldhamer. All
these professionals have been prescribing – before or after the release of The
China Study – whole food plant-based diets to their patients with
tremendous success: heart diseases and cancers were cured!
“Our culinary culture is built on tradition, but also on
addiction”
Without having ever intended to start a ‘revolution’,
Campbell’s findings are against most culinary tradition of modern mankind,
against evolutionary beliefs that the first humans ate mostly to almost
exclusively meat and surely against the interests of big pharmaceutical
companies and food corporations.
To all those still doubting his good intentions and honesty
in research, Campbell reminds that “our culinary culture is built on
tradition, but also on addiction.”
Sadly, even he confessed that he had friends dying who died
after they refused to follow his advice and change their diet. Yet, according
to this man who spent 60 years studying nutrition, this is one of the best
decisions we could take in our lives, as long as “the right nutrition can
create more health than all pills and medical procedures combined.”
Five ideas that Dr. Colin Campbell invites mankind to
reflect upon
Cancer
can be reversed by nutritional means – vegetal proteins help the human
body’s defence mechanisms.
Heart
diseases can be cured by the right food – not only kept under control by
various medicines prescribed today.
Type-2
diabetes can also be resolved – especially since this is a disease of
modern civilisation, triggered by an abundance of unhealthy foods on the
market.
Genes
are responsible for disease risk – by eating the right food, we can
prevent the action of bad genes.
Nutrient
supplements don’t help, but increase health risks – our bodies know better
how to extract what they need from whole foods.
