Manataka
American Indian Council
![]()
To Preserve Their Health and Heritage, Arizona Indians Reclaim Ancient Foods
Desert's bounty cuts overweight and diabetes
Both fruits and pads of the prickly pear cactus are rich in slowly absorbed
soluble fibers that help keep blood sugar stable.
Going back to one's roots could soon take on a more literal meaning for the
Indians of the American Southwest, as well as for peoples elsewhere in the world
who are poorly adapted to rich, refined foods.
For the sake of their health, as well as their cultural heritage, the Pima and
Tohono O'odham tribes of Arizona are being urged to rediscover the desert foods
their people traditionally consumed until as recently as the 1940's.
Studies strongly indicate that people who evolved in these arid lands are
metabolically best suited to the feast-and-famine cycles of their forebears who
survived on the desert's unpredictable bounty, both wild and cultivated.
By contrast, the modern North American diet is making them sick. With rich food
perpetually available, weights in the high 200's and 300's are not uncommon
among these once-lean people. As many as half the Pima and Tohono O'odham
(formerly Papago) Indians now develop diabetes by the age of 35, an incidence 15
times higher than for Americans as a whole. Yet, before World War II, diabetes
was rare in this population.
Similar problems have been found among Australian aborigines, Pacific Islanders
and other peoples whose survival historically depended on their ability to stash
away calories in times of plenty to sustain them during droughts and crop
failures. The Pima and Tohono O'odham Indians seem unusually efficient at
turning calories to body fat; nutritionists say they gain weight readily on the
kinds and amounts of foods people of European descent can eat with no problem.
One tablespoon of buds from the cholla cactus has as much calcium as eight
ounces of milk. The buds are rich in soluble fiber that helps regulate blood
sugar.
Preliminary studies have indicated that a change in the Indian diet back to the
beans, corn, grains, greens and other low-fat high-fiber plant foods that their
ancestors depended upon can normalize blood sugar, suppress between-meal hunger
and probably also foster weight loss.
These findings may also prove valuable to non-Indians who are susceptible to
overweight and diabetes, and perhaps also those prone to high blood pressure and
heart disease. The benefits, which are also found in a few more familiar foods
like oat bran and okra, stem from primarily two characteristics of native foods:
their high content of soluble fibers that form edible gels, gums and mucilages,
and a type of starch called amylose that is digested very slowly. The combined
effect is to prevent wide swings in blood sugar, slow down the digestive process
and delay the return of hunger.
Peaks in blood sugar increase the body's need for insulin and dips in blood
sugar can trigger feelings of hunger. In the form of diabetes that strikes these
Indians the overweight body becomes insensitive to insulin weight loss increases
the body's sensitivity to insulin and slow digestion diminishes the need for
insulin.
On the Arizona desert, the desirable food ingredients are found in edible parts
of such indigenous plants as the mesquite (mes-KEET) tree, cholla (CHOY-a) and
prickly pear cactus, as well as in tepary (TEP-a-ree) beans, choa (CHEE-a) seeds
and acorns from live oaks. Tribal elders speak fondly of these one-time
favorites, which in recent decades have been all but forgotten as hamburgers,
fries, soft drinks and other fatty, sugary, overly refined fast and packaged
foods gained flavor.
Acorns from live oaks are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of
maintaining stable blood sugar levels. They can be eaten whole or ground into
meal.
Even those Indians who still rely heavily on beans and corn are today consuming
varieties that have little or none of the nutritive advantages found in the
staples of their historic diet. For example, the sweet corn familiar to
Americans contains rapidly digested starches and sugars, which raise sugar
levels in the blood, while the hominy-type corn of the traditional Indian diet
has little sugar and mostly starch that is slowly digested.
Similarly, the pinto beans that the Federal Government now gives to the Indians
(along with lard, refined wheat flour, sugar, coffee and processed cereals) are
far more rapidly digested than the tepary beans the Tohono O'odham once depended
upon. Indeed, their former tribal name is a distorted version of the Indian word
meaning "the Bean People."
When Earl Ray, a Pima Indian who lives near Phoenix, switched to a more
traditional native diet of mesquite meal, tepary beans, cholla buds and
chaparral tea, he dropped from 239 pounds to less than 150 and brought his
severe diabetes under control without medication. In a federally financed study
of 11 Indian volunteers predisposed to diabetes, a diet of native food rich in
fiber and complex carbohydrates kept blood sugar levels on an even keel and
increased the effectiveness of insulin. When he switched back to a low-fiber
"convenience-market diet" containing the same number of calories, the
volunteers' blood sensitivity to insulin declined.
Much Foliage, Few Beans
In addition to the potential health benefits of traditional desert foods,
agricultural and economic factors strongly favor their production. Marty
Eberhardt the director of the Tucson Botanical Gardens, pointed out that the
plants that produce these foods are naturally adapted to growing under
conditions of high heat and little water.
Government food programs replaced the tepary bean, which is rich in fiber,
protein, iron, and calcium, with the pinto bean, which is far more quickly
digested and also lower in protein.
Martha Burgess, education director of Native Seeds/ Search, a seed bank and
research and education organization here that studies and promotes the use of
native desert plant foods, said, for example, that "If tepary bean plants are
given lots of water, they produce tons of foliage and few beans," adding, "But
if the plants are starved of water, they put their effort into flowers and seeds
and produce beans that can have as much protein as soybeans."
Under the direction of Dr. Gary Paul Nabhan, Native Seeds/Search, (the acronym
stands for Southwestern Endangered Arid-lands Resource Clearing House) is
studying the value of native desert foods for controlling diabetes among Indians
and Hispanic Americans of the border region. Dr. Nabhan, an ethnobotanist, was
recently named a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation grant to pursue his studies
of the agronomic characteristics and health value of desert food plants.
The group, which is housed on the grounds of the Tucson Botanical Gardens,
teaches health professionals about native foods and promotes their use through
school and community programs, seed distribution and cooking instruction.
"We should be eating the foods that grow here naturally instead of spending so
much to bring in packaged foods," Ms Eberhardt said. "People find themselves
shin-deep in mesquite beans they don't know what to do with, and some of us feel
guilty throwing them into the landfill."
Although most Arizonans consider mesquite, which occupies 70 million acres in
the American Southwest, a pesky weed, it is loaded with nutritious pods that
have a natural caramel-like sweetness. Carolyn J. Niethammer, the author of
"American Indian Food and Lore" and "The Tumbleweed Gourmet," a cookbook
published by the University of Arizona Press that features desert plants, said
that mesquite pods were good sources of calcium, manganese, iron, and zinc. The
seeds within them are about 40 percent protein, almost double the protein
content of common legumes. Even during a drought, mesquite is a prolific
producer of seed-filled pods.
Tribal elders speak fondly of one-time favorites that are highly
nutritious.
The Value of Mesquite
Carlos Nagel, who heads Friends of Pronatura, an American affiliate of a Mexican
conservation agency, remarked that " A healthy stand of mesquite produces as
much food value through its pods as does a wheat field under cultivation, and
the mesquite does it without capitalization, pesticides, fertilizer or
irrigation and with minimal cultivation."
Mesquite pods were once a treasured part of the Pima and Tohono O'odham diet.
The sweet pods are a good source of calcium, manganese, iron, and zinc. The
seeds within are 40 percent protein. Mesquite flour from grinding the whole pods
produces fructose, which can be processed without insulin, and soluble fibers,
which are slowly absorbed, without a rapid rise in blood sugar.
Dr. Nabhan, who has participated in medical studies of mesquite and other desert
foods, said that despite its sweetness, mesquite flour (made by grinding whole
pods) "is extremely effective in controlling blood sugar levels" in people with
diabetes. The sweetness comes from fructose, which the body can process without
insulin. In addition, soluble fibers, such as galactomannin gum, in the seeds
and pods slow absorption of nutrients, resulting in a flattened blood sugar
curve, unlike the peaks that follow consumption of wheat flour, corn meal and
other common staples.
"The gel-forming fiber allows foods to be slowly digested and absorbed over a
four- to six-hour period, rather than in one or two hours, which produces a
rapid rise in blood sugar," Dr. Nabhan explained. He likened this "slow-release"
New World food to two Old World legumes, guar and carob, that are being used in
Europe to help control blood sugar levels in people with diabetes.
Dr. Nabhan, who has scoured the Southwest for remnants of nutritious wild and
once-cultivated plants, said, "Prior to World War II, mesquite was the single
most important wild food staple for the native desert peoples and probably
protected them from developing diabetes. However, such wild foods were
discouraged by the force of civilization and they dropped out of native diets."
Mesquite pods and acorns from the Emory Oak, a non-deciduous oak of the arid
Southwest, are among the 10 best foods ever tested in terms of maintaining
stable blood sugar levels, Dr. Nabhan said. After falling from the trees, these
small tasty oval nuts are naturally toasted by the hot desert sun. They can be
shelled and eaten whole as a snack or ground into meal to make burgers and
muffins.
Also rich in health-promoting fiber are the drought-hearty tepary beans, the
only cultivated beans with heat-resistant enzymes that can withstand the 100
plus degrees of the Sonoran Desert, Mr. Burgess said. Teparies, rich in protein,
iron and calcium, once sustained many Indians of the Southwest, as well as the
famed Tarahumara Indian runners of Mexico. But when post-war government welfare
programs began giving pintos to the Tohono O'odham and Pima Indians, they lost
their incentive to grow teparies, which are better for them because they are
digested more slowly.
Jell-O of the desert
Today Mr. Nagel is trying to reverse the trend. In a cooperative program with
Mexican farmers, he is fostering cultivation of a variety of tepary beans, which
are already being grown commercially by Pima Indians in Sacaton, Arizona.
Seeds are rich in high-quality protein. Both greens and seeds have large amounts
of calcium. Raw greens are high in vitamins A and C and iron.
Amaranth, known to some gardeners as pigweed, is another nutritious
drought-tolerant plant that thrives in the desert, producing both greens and
seeds that once nourished the Indians. The seeds are rich in high-quality
protein, and both the seeds and greens are loaded with calcium. Mrs. Burgess
said that amaranth is but one of many edible weeds commonly discarded by home
gardeners, who fail to appreciate their nutritive and culinary value.
Mrs. Burgess is also enthusiastic about protein-rich chia seeds from a salvia
plant that produces two seed crops a year. When mixed with water, the fiber in
chia forms a gel that lowers cholesterol and keeps blood sugar stable. She tells
Native American children that chia is "the Jell-O of the desert."
Cactus, the signature plants of the desert landscape, round out the nutritious
native foods diet. Buds from the cholla are rich in calcium: One tablespoon has
the calcium equivalent of eight ounces of milk. Cholla buds and the fruits and
pads of the prickly pear are also rich in soluble fibers that help to normalize
blood sugar.
Dr. Nabhan said that 20 other native desert foods were now being analyzed for
their fiber and starch content and he predicted the availability of an
ever-widening menu of nutritious ingredients.
Among the main remaining hurdles is the need to develop commercial sources of
foods like mesquite meal and to convince diabetes-prone Indians that it is worth
the trouble to prepare and consume their traditional foods. Native American
interns are assisting in the effort, which is being pursued in school lunchrooms
and classrooms and at reservation clinics and health fairs.
Still, Mrs. Burgess said, habits are hard to change. "The most frequent question
from potential consumers is, "If I eat these foods can I then eat all the
hamburgers and ice cream I want?" she said. "Everyone is looking for a quick
fix."
Effects of a Traditional Lifestyle on Obesity in Pima Indians Objective
The Pima Indians of Arizona have the highest reported prevalence of obesity and
non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). In parallel with abrupt changes
in lifestyle, these prevalence in Arizona Pimas have increased to epidemic
proportions during the past decades. To asset the possible impact of the
environment on the prevalence of obesity and NIDDM, data were collected on
member of a population of Pima ancestry (separation 700 ? 1,000 years ago)
living in a remote mountainous location in northwestern Mexico, with a lifestyle
contrasting markedly with that in Arizona.
Research Design and Methods
Pima heritage was established by history and by use of Pima language.
Measurements of weight, height, and body fat (bioimpedance), blood pressure,
plasma levels of glucose, cholesterol, and HbA were obtained in 19 women (36 +
13 years of age) and 16 men (48 + 14 years of age) and compared with sex-, age-,
and diabetes status-matched Pimas living in Arizona (10 Arizona Pimas for each
Mexican Pima).
Results ? Mexican Pimas were light and shorter with lower body mass
indexes and lower plasma total cholesterol levels than Arizona Pimas.
Only two women (11%) and one man (6%) had NIDDM, contrasting with the
expected prevalences of 37 and 54% in female and male Arizona Pimas,
respectively.
Conclusion
The preliminary investigation shows that obesity, and perhaps NIDDM, is less
prevalent among people of Pima heritage living in a traditional lifestyle than
among Pimas living in an affluen? environment. These findings suggest that,
despite a similar potential genetic predisposition to these conditions, a
traditional lifestyle, characterized by a diet including less animal fat and
more complex carbohydrates and by greater energy expenditure in physical labor,
may protect against the development of cardiovascular disease risk factors,
obesity, and NIDDM.
Eric Ravussin, Mauro Valencia, Julian Esparza, Peter Bennet, Leslie Schulz
From Diabetes Care, vol. 17, no. 9, Sept. 1994
EMAIL | HOME | INDEX | TRADING POST