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A Secret is Revealed
Thousands of years ago, ancient sea-going people journeyed across the oceans in
great outrigger canoes to settle what is now known as French Polynesia. Space in
the canoes was limited; they brought only what they needed to survive. Noni was
prized cargo in these canoes because of its healthful properties and was considered
queen of the 'canoe plants' used to establish new villages.
The story of the Morinda citrifolia plant is also told among the people of the tropics worldwide. In Malaysia, it is called MENGKUDU. In Southeast Asia it is known as
NHAU. The plant is recognized among all peoples of the South Pacific. It is called
NONU in Samoa and Tonga, NONO in Raratonga and Tahiti, and NONI in the
Marquesas Islands and Hawaii.
The fruit of the Morinda citrifolia plant was an important source of food for the early Polynesians, who consumed it in times of famine. Australian aborigines were fond
of the fruit, and people in Burma cooked unripe fruits in curries and ate the ripened
fruit raw with salt. The seeds, leaves, bark, and roots were also eaten by people
versed in the healing properties of this odd plant. Amazingly, every part of the
Morinda citrifolia plant is used.
Traditional Uses:
Polynesians
picked the noni fruit before it was ripe, and place it in
a jar in the
direct sunlight. When fully ripe, the noni fruit was mashed
into a puree and the juice
was
extracted through a cloth. The juice was then ready for use.
People traditionally
took the juice during times of rest, when the body was under
the least amount of stress. Noni was also served as a food
dish.
Traditional
Medicinal Uses:
- Parts of the fruit are used as a tonic and to contain fever (China, Japan, Hawaii)
- The leaves, flowers, fruit, and bark can treat eye problems, skin wounds and abscesses, gum and throat problems, respiratory ailments, constipation, and fever (Pacific Islands, Hawaii)
- Used to treat stomach pains and after delivery (Marshall Islands)
- Heated leaves applied to the chest relieve coughs, nausea, and colic (Malaysia)
- Juice of the leaves is taken for arthritis (Philippines)
- The fruit is taken for lumbago, asthma, and dysentery (Indochina)
- Pounded, unripe fruit is mixed with salt and applied to cuts and broken bones
- Ripe fruit is used to draw out pus from an infected boil (Hawaii)
- Juices of over-ripe fruits are taken to regulate menstrual flow and ease urinary problems (Malaysia)
- The fruit can be used to make shampoo (Malaysia, Hawaii) and to treat head lice (Hawaii).
- Other exotic diseases treated with the plant include diabetes (widespread) and venereal diseases.
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