The National Institutes of Health (NIH), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the primary Federal agency for conducting and supporting medical research, has started to pay attention to an important plant. A recent article in the March 2008 issue of NIH Record held a "mystery plant challenge." The following is an excerpt of that article:

NIH Celebrates Earth Day 2008
What Is IT?

Each year Earth Day organizers choose a mystery plant that has sources of potentially important medicines. This year's mystery plant has important medicinal properties. In fact, perhaps like no other single species, this plant has the potential to help reverse multiple major environmental problems and provide for many unmet human needs. Here are some clues to help you guess what this year's mystery plant is:

Unlike the plants in previous contests that came from Africa, IT originally came from Tamil Nadu. But you can now find IT grown in many tropical areas of the world.

IT can easily be grown in drought, on poor, damaged soils and can also help to reclaim them. ITs seeds also contain oil that can be used as a source of renewable energy. IT is truly amazing because IT can be:

As you may have already guessed, the mystery plant is our very own Miracle Tree, Moringa oleifera. Thanks to our Scientific Advisory Board Member, Dr. Monica Marcu for identifying the tree and bringing this article to our attention. It's fun to see the world begin to endorse and recognize Moringa as the miracle we already know it to be at Zija. Drink life in!