Juliette de Bairacli
Levy |
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Juliette de Bairacli Levy is a world renowned herbalist, author,
breeder of Afghan hounds, friend of the Gypsies, traveller in search of herbal
wisdom, and the pioneer of holistic veterinary medicine. Juliette has a
long record of spectacular cures to her credit and the books she has written
have been a vital inspiration for the present day herbal renaissance.
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Juliette was born on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11
month, almost in 1911 (actually 1912) in Manchester, England. Her parents were
Jewish - her mother from Egypt and her father from Turkey. Juliette was raised
in a household with three sisters and two brothers, a nanny, chauffeur, maid
and gardener. She was educated at Lowther College, one of the best girls
schools in Britain, and went on to study veterinary medicine at the
Universities of Manchester and Liverpool. However, Juliette did not approve of
the vivisection and animal experimentation that was going on in the
universities in the name of science and health. So she left university after
two years and went to study with the Gypsies and peasants of the world.
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In the late 1930's Juliette ran a distemper clinic in London
where, at a time when many dogs were dying from this disease, she treated and
cured hundreds of dogs with fasting, herbs and a natural diet. Amongst others,
she cured the dogs of Douglas Fairbanks, the tenor Richard Tauber, the owner of
Sutton Seeds and Arthur Guinness (of Guinness Beer). Also, when many Afghan
hound puppies were dying of distemper, Juliette raised a litter of puppies on
her natural rearing methods and these puppies won Best of Show at
Crufts Dog Show. Descendants of this litter, known under Juliette's
kennel name, Turkuman, were later to become Champions in England, America, and
all over the world. In the 1940's Turkuman Nissim's Laurel won Best Of
Show at Westminster - to this day the only Afghan ever to win Best
of Show at this event. Turkuman Nissim's Laurel was pictured on the cover of
Life magazine. |
It was in the 1930's that Juliette developed a line of herbal
supplements for animals known as Natural Rearing Products. For the next
50 years these were the only products of their kind on the market. Today these
supplements are still distributed world wide.
During the World War II Juliette worked in the Women's Land Army
gathering sphagnum moss which was used on soldiers' wounds. After the war she
went to Yorkshire where she cured thousands of sheep who had been declared
incurable by conventional vets. This work brought her to the attention of Sir
Albert Howard, founder of the Soil Association and creator of modern day
"organic" farming methods. Sir Albert Howard encouraged Juliette to learn all
she could about herbal treatments for animals. |
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In the 1940's, while travelling in America, Spain, France, North
Africa and Turkey, Juliette gathered herbal remedies from the nomadic and
peasant peoples of these lands. When her Complete Herbal Handbook for
Farm and Stable was published in 1951, it was the first veterinary
herbal ever to be published as before this time, the art of farriers, gypsies
and peasants had been passed on only by the spoken word. Thus Juliette became
THE pioneer of what is known today as holistic animal care. She went on to
write The Complete Herbal Book for the Dog. Both these books
together with Juliette's Illustrated Herbal Handbook for Everyone
and Natural Rearing of Children have become classics and many
generations of humans & animals have been raised & healed on these
books. |
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| Faber and Faber, Juliette's
publishers, say that for the past 50 years they have always received more
inquiries about Juliette than about any of their other authors who include T.S.
Eliot, Ted Hughes and William Golding. |
Juliette's two children, Luz and Rafik, were born in the early
1950's. She took her children to live in Israel where they raised owls, hawks,
dogs, goats, donkeys and bees. Juliette became famous for saving her hives of
bees from shell attack during the six day war. In Israel and later when she
moved to Greece, Juliette continued to write, to raise Afghan hounds, to garden
and to gather herbal remedies. As well as her herbal books, she has written
several travel books, two novels and three books of poems. Today Juliette lives
on the Azores Islands.
For the past ten years Juliette has been coming to America every
summer to give lectures, workshops and seminars on herbal medicine. In America
she has become recognized as the grandmother of today's herbal renaissance. In
1998 at their HerbFest in Iowa, Frontier Herbs presented Juliette with a
Lifetime Achievement Award for her contribution to the herb world.
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