| THE HISTORY OF ROOIBOS
Rooibos (pronounced roy-boss) tea was first used
hundreds of years ago by natives in South Africa when they mashed the
stems and leaves of the rooibos plants with hammers. The natives then
left the remains of the rooibos plants to ferment in the sun and created
from that result with hot water a flavourful drink.
That same drink was then discovered and reported in
1772 by botanist Carl Humberg. Unfortunately, at the time, the healing
powers of the plant were left unknown, and it simply became popular because
of its special taste.
In 1904 Benjamin Ginsberg, who came from a family that
were tea traders for centuries in Europe, became interested in Rooibos
tea and started commercializing it.
In April 1986, almost 200 years after Humberg reported the drink, a South
African mother named A.Theron was worrying about her allergic infant that
had been struggling with colic attacks for 14 months. In her stress, she
had accidentally added Rooibos Tea to her baby's milk. Soon the constant
crying and vomiting had stopped, and the baby slept peacefully for over
three hours.
Obviously, this was an exciting discovery, and after failing to find any
documented evidence of these healing properties, Mrs Theron took it upon
herself to perform her own research on the properties of Rooibos. Soon
after, eighteen babies with similar problems were given the Rooibos tea
treatment, and the mothers quickly sent in news that the babies were doing
better.
Mrs Theron findings were then published, and to date,
those findings have helped thousands upon thousands of allergic people
of all ages to overcome their symptoms with Rooibos.
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