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MISSION POSSIBLE: Baer’s
efforts are increasing awareness of wild pomegranates.
Courtesy Barbara Baer |
In 2001, a radio interview
with a Russian-born botanist planted the seed for publisher
Barbara Baer’s latest venture. “I felt more
than chance had carried Dr. Grigory Levin’s voice
from Turkmenistan to my car radio,” she says about
learning that drought and lack of government assistance
threatened acres of pomegranates in Turkmenistan—the
last place the fruit grows wild. “To my ears,
Levin had been delivering a personal plea—an invitation
for me to visit the last wild pomegranates.”
The native Californian decided to travel to Levin’s
agricultural research station, Garrygala, and her love
affair with pomegranates began.
Awaiting her tourist visa, Baer learned about the fruit
and printed a brochure to raise money for the 1,117
varieties at Garrygala. Folk healers treated illnesses
like dyspepsia and leprosy with pomegranates. The Spanish
once used them to guard sailors against scurvy. Some
biblical scholars believe the pomegranate, not the apple,
was the fruit Eve gave to Adam in the Garden of Eden.
Baer finally received her visa and traveled 10,000
miles to Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, in October 2002. But
once she was there, the local government revoked her
permission to visit Garrygala, citing security concerns.
Levin had since emigrated to Israel and Makmud Isar,
who now ran the research facility, met Baer in Ashgabat.
The two feasted from his bag of yellow, pink, peach,
maroon and purple pomegranates—no two alike.
Back home, Baer wrote about her efforts for Orion
magazine. The story was picked up by the BBC and attracted
wide attention. “Planet pomegranate” is
what Levin calls the collective lovers of the ruby fruit.
“I realized I joined this clan when people from
all over the country and abroad began writing to me
about them,” says Baer.
Levin was later able to reach Baer by e-mail. She
is publishing his memoir, Pomegranate Roads: A Soviet
Botanist’s Exile from Eden, in November through
her publishing house, Floreant Press, in Forestville,
Calif. The story recounts Levin’s work and his
treks to Central Asia and the Trans-Caucasus in search
of the last wild pomegranates. Two other books about
pomegranates have been published partly due to Baer’s
efforts.
The booming interest in this ancient fruit doesn’t
surprise Baer. “Pomegranates have such strong
antiviral properties that in Israel researchers are
experimenting with coating condoms with an extract to
inhibit transmission of sexually transmitted diseases,”
she says. “Also, pomegranate phytoestrogens have
been used as a natural estrogen enhancement.”
She says it is also important to protect them in light
of global climate change: pomegranates, unlike many
plants, can survive increased heat.
Of course, this juicy fruit is also delicious. In November
2005, a blind tasting of 40 pomegranate varieties took
place at the Wolfskill Experimental Orchard at UC-Davis.
Levin had sent the repository his rare varieties years
earlier and they had finally produced enough fruit for
the tasting. “The Turkmenistan varieties won the
sweepstakes, which made Levin very happy,” says
Baer.
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