Editor of Health Freedom News
Board Member and Legal Counsel for NHF
Winter 2004
This column is intended to let NHF members
and other readers learn more about the current members of the
NHF Board of Governors, but in this case we must make an
exception for a very exceptional member of the Board who
recently passed away. Dr. Michael Culbert died suddenly of an
aneurysm on September 11, 2004, at the age of 67, while at
breakfast in Mexico. It was completely unexpected at the
time; and, needless to say, it was a shock to all of us who
knew him, although some had worried for some time about his
poor eating habits and counseled him to change. Despite this
advice, he unfortunately did not; and it may have caught up
with him last September. But Michael had been so long an
important fixture of the health-freedom movement and a guiding
light that we just assumed that he would be around forever.
A Man Wearing Many Hats
At the time of his death, Michael wore many
hats: He was a member of the Board of Governors of the
National Health Federation, he was president of the
International Council for Health Freedom (ICHF), he was the
editor of ICHF’s newsletter, and he was the Information
Director and Vice President of the International BioCare
Hospital and Medical Center in Tijuana, Mexico. But that was
only because he had shed so many other hats over the years.
A life-long investigative reporter and
writer, he had been the editor of Health Freedom News
for several years until earlier this year. The vast
experience that he had brought to our magazine as a writer and
editor harked as far back as the early 1970s when he was one
of the reporters and the editor of the Berkeley Daily
Gazette in Northern California. While working for that
newspaper, Michael got caught up in the State of California’s
persecution of Dr. John Richardson, an M.D. who was using
laetrile to treat his cancer patients. His
libertarian/conservative fervor for medical freedom led him to
become not only a fervent supporter of Dr. Richardson but also
to travel around the United States promoting the
freedom-of-health choice issue.
The Berkeley newspaper wanted Michael to
start writing the other side of the health-freedom issue,
which Michael refused to do. So, the paper fired him. At
that time, Maureen Salaman, who had previously heard of his
health-freedom articles and had gone over to meet with him
about health-freedom issues, immediately snapped him up to
start writing and editing a pro-health-freedom newsletter
called The Choice.
Who Also Wrote Many
Books
Soon thereafter, Michael began to use his
considerable talents as a writer and thinker to author the
first of his more than two-dozen books, Vitamin B17:
Forbidden Weapon Against Cancer (Arlington House, 1974).
This book exposed orthodox medicine’s war against laetrile and
defended the use of laetrile in the treatment of cancer.
This book was followed in turn by many
others, including Freedom From Cancer (1976) and How
You Can Beat The Killer Diseases (1977) (co-authored with
Harold Harper). He also wrote and saw published booklets
called Live Cell Therapy: Medicine for the New Millennium
and Nutritional and Herbal Factors in the Prevention and
Management of Cancer (co-authored with Dante I. Camino).
However, more recently, Michael wrote
CFS: Conquering the Crippler (1993) and his best-known and
largest book Medical Armageddon (1998). Medical
Armageddon details the medical calamities of the world,
including biological warfare and the suppression of
alternative therapies, but goes on to describe what the author
sees as the emerging new paradigm in healing for the 21st
century.
The books mentioned above are only some of
the books authored by Michael, numerous copies of which have
been sold worldwide and translated into Spanish, German, and
other languages. For his writings, as well as for his
health-freedom advocacy, he won several awards, including the
Lifetime Achievement Award from the New Zealand Charter of
Health Practitioners, and was named by India’s Zoroastrian
College as a “Distinguished Academician.”
But Still Enjoyed
Meeting People and Making A Difference
Despite his relentless workload, Michael
continued to attend numerous international conferences where
he was a welcomed speaker and lecturer. Besides speaking at
the conventions of the National Health Federation, Michael
also spoke at meetings and conferences throughout the United
States, Canada, Sri Lanka, Mexico, Guatemala, the Philippines,
India, Turkey, and in Europe. He was eclectic and would reach
out to everyone who had a genuine interest in the subjects of
alternative medicine or health freedom.
He was a co-founder, president, and
chairman of the Committee for Freedom of Choice in Cancer
Therapy, Inc.; and he took part in the Office of Technology
Assessment’s 1990 study of unconventional cancer treatments.
In the early 1990s, he also had his hand in the founding of
the National Center for Complementary and Alternative
Medicine.
Above all, he was an honest man with
enormous patience except for those whom he saw as unethical.
He was also a very independent and cerebral deep-thinker. As
Maureen Salaman said, “He will be missed throughout the world
for many reasons, but most notably because he was a fine human
being who dedicated his life to the ideal of health freedom,
traveling internationally to find and promote alternative
cures for AIDS and cancer.”