Deadly Diet
Since the days of the first “westerns,” Hollywood has
portrayed Native Americans as lean muscular hunters who lived on a diet of meat
and berries with an occasional root threw in for variety. Today’s reality is very different, spend some
time at a Native American clinic and you will see patient after overweight
patient with cancer, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, and high blood
pressure.
The journal Cardiology in 1991 reported, "with
the adoption of Western lifestyles and diet...heart disease has become
relatively common among a number of Native American tribes." Heart disease
ranks as the leading killer of Native Americans, causing more than one-fifth of
all Native American deaths, according to U.S. Indian Health Service (IHS)
figures. Diabetes kills Native Americans
at more than triple the overall U.S. rate, according to the IHS.
One possible reason for these epidemics and overweight
Native Americans may be a "thrifty" gene. This gene, that helps the body store fat, was
a survival trait in the past. It helped
Native American survive leaner times when fatty meat was a rarity in their
diets.
Contrary to Hollywood’s visions, for
thousands of years Native Americans survived and thrived in the Americas on a
diet of small mounts of lean meat with vegetables, legumes, and whole
grains as the staples. One of the
earliest books written about the Carolinas, “A New Voyage to Carolina,”
by John Lawson in 1709 details page after page of plant foods important to
Native Americans. It also describes a
wide variety of fish, game, and shellfish – all of which contain very little
fat.
The Iroquoian tribes, including the Cherokee and Tuscarora of
the Carolinas, grew 17 varieties of corn, seven types of squashes, and 60 types
of beans. They called this trio of
major foods the "three sisters."
Other Native Americans gathered a cornucopia of 34 wild
fruits, 11 nut species, 12 kinds of edible roots, 38 types of bark, 6 fungi,
and maple syrup, the main confection of the Northwestern tribes, according to The
Native Americans published in 1995.
In the western Great Lakes area, Native Americans harvested wild
rice, and maple sugar, blueberries, cranberries, raspberries, grapes, cherries,
nuts, wild onions, and potatoes. Other
crops included peas, watermelons, sweet potatoes, and fruit trees. They also foraged persimmons, plums, hickory
nuts, walnuts, pecans, cherries, grapes, and mulberries.
Current
federal Dietary Guidelines promote a meaty, cheesy diet. The Journal of the American Cancer Society
in 1996 noted that, "Nutrition-related cancers are likely to increase in
the future among Native Americans [because] of changes in diet." A more
traditional diet could reverse that trend as shown in studies by Dr. Dean
Ornish, M.D.
The
1994 study published in Diabetes Care reported that diabetes and obesity
are less prevalent among Mexican Pima Indians living a "traditional"
lifestyle than among Arizonan Pimas in an "affluent"
environment. Switching to a plant-food
diet, and consuming much less fat than current Guidelines suggest, can
greatly reduce obesity and diabetes rates.
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