Page 8 - Winter2014
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THE PIONEERING SPIRIT OF DR. MARY G. ENIG (1931-2014)

                 My mentor and friend Dr. Mary G. Enig, PhD, recently died at the age of eighty-three. I want to honor her life by
             talking about her pioneering research, and the profound impact it has had on the fields of nutrition and health.
                 Early in her career, Mary challenged the widely held assumption that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart
             disease and cancer. She established the connection between margarine and other partially hydrogenated fats and
             the development of heart disease, cancer and other ills. Furthermore, she found cogent evidence that trans fatty acids
             contribute to such diseases by foiling the liver’s oxidase enzyme system so that it cannot properly metabolize drugs
             and pollutants. By researching and publishing data on the trans fatty acid composition of more than five hundred
             commonly eaten foods, Mary gave nutritionists and their clients a useful tool for knowing which foods to eliminate
             from their diets. This is vital information for anyone who desires optimum health and longevity. All of us who are eat-
             ing butter today instead of margarine should be grateful for the research—and bravery— of Dr. Mary G. Enig.
                 Mary furthermore pioneered research on coconut oil, a much maligned and misunderstood saturated fat that
             was vilified for years by establishment “health experts.” Thanks to Mary, it’s now widely known that coconut oil pro-
             motes optimum health. Coconut oil is rich in lauric acid, a health-promoting fatty acid with anti-microbial properties
             that has been proving its mettle in trials with AIDS patients and others suffering from compromised immune systems.
             Mary’s theories about “conditionally essential” saturated fats are already proving to be one of the missing links to the
             development of effective anti-aging therapies.
                 Mary inspired me every day with her courage and integrity. Over the years, she was consistently ahead of main-
             stream scientists and nutritionists, pushing their envelopes, thinking outside the box, and threatening the status quo.
             Not surprisingly, she was subjected to a great deal of criticism, not to mention bullying from powerful food industry
             interests. Mary not only refused to kowtow to these pressures but boldly moved on to new and equally controversial
             causes, even as the world of health science caught up with, and belatedly recognized, her earlier findings.
                 Mary’s commitment to education led her to teach classes and workshops for college students and professionals.
             Even more importantly, she became active with the Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation of San Diego, California,
             and then served as a founding board member and vice president of the Weston A. Price Foundation in Washington,
             DC. I was deeply honored to succeed Mary as vice president of WAPF when she retired to emeritus status in 2011.
             Our 15th annual Wise Traditions Conference was dedicated to her memory.
                 By teaming up with Sally Fallon Morell, founding president of WAPF, Mary found a highly effective way to fight
             the diet dictocrats and ensure that her work would reach the public far sooner than the narrow and often entrenched
             world of academia would ever allow. Their book, Nourishing Traditions, first published in 1996, plus dozens of articles
             and letters to the editor written for Wise Traditions, Nexus, the Townsend Letter and other magazines and newspapers
             had an impact on tens of thousands of men, women and children. The work of the “brazen duo”—as they were often
             called—invariably incited controversy, but helped people think for themselves regarding such issues as fat in the diet,
             the deficiencies of vegetarian diets, the dangers of commercial infant formulas and other important diet and health
             topics.
                 Finally, Sally and Mary helped blow the whistle on the food industry-sponsored myth of soy being the miracle
             food for the millennium. Their articles pulled no punches and drove me to begin research on the dangers of soy, a
             project that led, in turn, to my enrolling in a PhD program in nutritional sciences at the Union Institute and University
             in Cincinnati. My 2004 Union dissertation became the 2005 book
             The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health
             Food.
                 Mary graciously served on my doctoral committee at Union,
             and generously shared her expertise on fats and oils and their
             myriad roles in health and longevity. She held me to high standards
             of academic excellence, took genuine pleasure in my successes
             and encouraged me to thank her by paying it forward. I am deeply
             blessed to have known this remarkable woman and role model.

                                          Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN
                                          Vice  President
                                          The Weston A. Price Foundation



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