The Healing Tree, Stephanie Rose Bird
The Healing Tree, Stephanie Rose Bird
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The Healing Tree
Botanicals, Remedies, and Rituals from African Folk Traditions

Author: Stephanie Rose Bird

Narrator: Deanna Anthony

Unabridged: 9 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/04/2024


Synopsis

The Healing Tree celebrates the forest: its powers, spirits, magic, medicine, and mysteries. Author Stephanie Rose Bird shares how trees have provided her with personal healing, then allows us to share in that process for our own benefit and, by extension, provide healing for Earth's beleaguered forests.

Reclaiming traditional botanical and herbal practices has never been more important than it is today. So much of our future depends on our ability to use ancient Earth knowledge. Although many botanicals and herbals have been published, they tend to focus on Europe and the Americas. For many, the word "rainforest" is synonymous with the endangered Amazon Basin, as if that were Earth's only endangered patch of healing green. Africa, the Mother Continent and reputedly the birthplace of the entire human race, remains largely ignored. Yet African wild lands are as endangered as the Amazon. Equally endangered are the traditional indigenous cultures of Africa, caretakers of sophisticated botanical medicinal systems whose roots stretch back to the proverbial dawn of time.

The book offers functional, accessible recipes, remedies, and rituals derived from a variety of African and African American traditions to serve mind, body, soul, and spirit.

About Stephanie Rose Bird

Stephanie Rose Bird holds a BFA cum laude from the Tyler School of Art and Architecture at Temple University, and an MFA from the University of California at San Diego. Bird works as an artist, herbalist, and aromatherapist. She is co-owner of SRB Botanica with her daughter.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Andre on May 14, 2025

A very informative and interesting text. We have much to learn from observing nature and Ms. Bird makes it abundantly clear about the role of trees in African culture and society. Some of these trees will be immediately familiar to readers, but the uses of their bark and juices surely will not. The......more