The Rife clinic in Veldhoven near Eindhoven, The Netherlands – which offers frequency therapy first developed in the early 20th Century by American Dr Raymond Royal Rife (see below) – first came to my attention two years ago. I read the testimonies of people recovering from a spectrum of illnesses and ailments as a result of frequency therapy, and without medication. Colleagues, friends and relatives who visited the clinic returned with corroborating testimonies. Certain patients had been diagnosed with terminal illness and given months to live, yet went on to recover. Others suffering with chronic fatigue returned home with their symptoms significantly reduced. As a qualified Kinesiologist who regularly treats people for whom ‘conventional’ health treatments have not been effective, I was keen to familiarise myself with the work of the Rife clinic.
Susan’s story
I was soon to learn more through a couple, Tony and Susan, who visited our Balanced Health Clinic in June 2015. Susan had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in March and given six months to live. The Island’s Hospital could only offer her palliative chemotherapy, which they warned would make her very poorly. I mentioned the Rife clinic and the accounts I had heard. A day later, Tony contacted us to say that he had made contact with Jacob , and that he and Susan were heading to Holland immediately.
After one week, Tony reported that Susan was pain relief medication and pain-free, and appearing much brighter. She was using the Rife equipment four days a week and taking daily draughts of Colloidal Gold (a formula made from minute gold particles mixed with water). As it became clear that the treatment would take more than a few weeks, Tony and Susan rented an apartment in the area. Over the next few months, I received regular, positive updates. At the 10-week mark, Susan reported that she had neither been unwell nor suffered any pain since her arrival. She was eating well, with her diet including ‘ViJo’ drinking yoghurt and the Goldwater (formulated to strengthen the body’s immune system) provided by Jacob.
In November 2015, I went to stay with Susan and Tony, and pay a visit to the clinic.
Visiting Veldhoven Eindhoven
Susan looks thin yet well, with her hair and skin in noticeably good condition. She sticks to a healthy diet which includes the ViJo yoghurt and green juices. Since moving to Holland, Tony and Susan have been unsuccessful in their attempts to obtain a new scan for Susan. Unless they pay thousands of pounds, they cannot access this service in mainland Europe without a referral from the hospital on the Isle of Man. Repeated approaches to the hospital have not been successful, and breaking treatment in Eindhoven to wait for progress in the Isle of Man has been advised against by Jacob. Tony and Susan’s frustration is augmented by the scepticism they have encountered from their GP: “When we told the doctor what we were doing”, added Tony “we might as well have told him we were going to the moon to make green cheese”.
The next morning, we go to the clinic with Phil and Sandra, a couple from the UK who live in the same apartment block as Tony and Susan, and who have been visiting Jacob’s clinic for nine years. The clinic is a welcoming, entirely un-clinical space with a relaxed atmosphere and friendly staff. Various Rife devices – designed and developed by Jacob – are situated around the room. Upon meeting Jacob, it is quickly apparent that he shows genuine kindness and concern for everyone who comes to him, taking time to talk individually with each client. He has been running the clinic successfully for over 20 years, opening four days a week and eschewing holidays. This is clearly his passion and a source of joy to give people a better and healthy lives.
Sandra’s story
I start talking to Sandra, a retired nurse and midwife who underwent a double mastectomy after being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2007. “I never wanted chemo or radiation therapy” she says, “although the hospital really tried to make me take that route”. A further scan revealed bone cancer: the full-body X-ray showed black marks, like leopard spots, all over her body. She began visiting the Rife clinic 5 times a year for 3 days. In 2012, 5 years later, a bone scan revealed she was completely clear of cancer, so she reduced the clinic visits to 4 times a year for 3 days.
In 2013-2014, Sandra, who was by this time visiting the clinic 3 times a year for 3 days, was studying in order to keep her job, the stress of which Sandra believes caused the aggressive return of the cancer. Phil believes, that by only visiting the clinic sporadically, we were “just knocking the cancer back”.
Changing hospitals to attend one closer to home, she undergo more tests. She was told that if the results were positive, they could not offer any more treatment. In November 2014, she underwent surgery to remove a parotid tumour. A PET scan showed secondary bone and lymphatic tumours and Sandra’s prognosis was 4-6 months. She returned to the Veldhoven clinic for 9 weeks. Sandra had a further scan in April 2015 which she describes as an “excellent scan”.
During July – August 2015 after 10 weeks at the Veldhoven clinic a scan showed all the bone and lymphatic secondaries had returned. Sandra puts this down to not having an Etmitis device in their apartment. In the August she returned to Veldhoven this time on a daily basis and Jacob kindly lent Sandra and Susan an Etmitis device for their apartment.
The efficacy of Sandra’s treatment has, she says, been influenced by her personal use of one piece of equipment called the Etmitis. This is a device which magnifies neutral radiation from the earth and pushes away harmful radiation – such as that emanating from satellite dishes and mobile phone masts. Sandra believes that the abatement of her bone cancer between her first and seconds scans was a direct result of having an Etmitis device in their apartment. I hear further positive testimonials about the Etmitis’ ability to relieve a wide range of symptoms. Jacob views it as a cornerstone of Rife treatment.
I ask Sandra how she feels the doctors view her ‘alternative treatment’. “Ok”, she says, “but they keep telling me, ‘you’re the lady who refused chemotherapy’ as if that is a bad thing”. Phil adds that he believes their hospital dissuade others from the Rife route by saying it does not work. Sandra will have her fourth scan in December 2015.
As the morning goes on, more people pour into Jacob’s. Some position themselves at or near a device and read, while others simply make themselves comfortable and fall asleep: as the frequencies fill the building evenly, patients receive the benefit regardless of where they are positioned. Clients come here from all over Europe. The Rife frequency therapy is by no means cheap but alongside comparable methods, it is the most affordable.
Further case studies
The next day, upon our return to the clinic, Jacob points out a Dutch lady who was diagnosed with lung cancer and given two months to live. It’s now been three and a half years.
I meet Ann, originally from Wales, who moved to Holland when she married a Dutchman. In 2011, she was diagnosed with a brain tumour and told she had three months to live. She began treatment at Jacob’s. She had become fed up with the medical route. I asked her when she last visited a doctor. “Two years ago”, she replies. She rarely takes any medication. Currently, she spends one hour per fortnight at the clinic.
I’m keen to know what other illnesses and conditions bring people here. They range from arthritis, macular degeneration and Crohn’s Disease to stress, depression, psoriasis and whiplash.
I hear of one woman who was paralysed in 2002 and confined to a wheelchair. Now, she uses the chair only occasionally and can walk up to 12km before tiring. One man who had been dianosed with leukaemia in February was given the all-clear by his doctors only three months later. A woman diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease found that her shaking stopped after one day. Sandra tells me of a lady with Lyme Disease who was suffering with debilitating pain in her hands. She spent three days at the clinic and it was five months before her symptoms began to return.
What about the unsuccessful cases, I wonder? Jacob reports that with conditions such as ME, Multiple Sclerosis and Muscular Dystrophy, one tends to see neither improvement nor deterioration. There have also been cases where patients have seen improvements only to deteriorate and pass away months or years later, having returned to medical treatment or sought no further aid.
“Some come and die because they have left it too late,” says Sandra. “It’s not a quick fix, you have to be patient. Some people hear or read about other treatments and don’t return here. Cancer can take many years to develop. Don’t expect it to go in three days. Practical help and support from families on the home front can be invaluable while the person is here receiving treatment”.
Which way forward?
Certain common threads emerge from our conversations at the clinic. One is that everyone reacts differently, and that there is no hard and fast rule regarding how long a treatment may take or how enduring its success will prove to be. Secondly, maintaining a positive mindset is of paramount importance as the mind has a huge influence over the body’s ability to respond to treatment. Lastly, the people who follow so-called alternative routes to recovery feel very strongly that they should not be ‘written off’ or subject to stigma as a result of their choices. Having listened to many and varied accounts during my visit to the clinic, I fully concur that each individual should always be supported in their choice of treatment, be it medicinal, natural or a combined approach.
My personal belief – shared by an increasing number of people – is that frequency therapy provides the body with the tools it needs to balance and heal itself. Witnessing first-hand the technology and methods of the Rife clinic has been an inspiring and illuminating experience. As for Jacob, he is hopeful that Rife devices will be used in hospitals within the next decade. Progress will, of course, vary from country to country, and it could take many years before Rife technology is embraced by the medical profession as it has been by the people who have been helped by Jacob and his work.
More information about the Auror Scalar clinic and it’s therapies can be found here https://www.aurorscalartechnology.com/en/
The Dr Rife Story
Born in Nebraska in 1888, Dr Raymond Royal Rife was awarded an honorary Doctor of Parasitology degree by Heidelberg University, Germany, in 1914. By the early 1930s, Rife had invented the first, and currently still most powerful, universal microscope, which had a magnification of 60,000 diameters and a resolution of 31,000 diameters. He was the first person to see living viruses since even the most powerful electron microscopes today kill the organism being observed.
Rife then turned to electro-magnetic frequencies, exposing bacteria and viruses to various frequencies and watch the effects. He discovered that each microbe and each virus had a particular frequency to which it was vulnerable. Rife called this the “mortal oscillatory rate”, a term still used to this day. The theory, in layman terms, can be explained using an analogy of an opera singer who uses her voice to shatter a crystal glass. The glass is vibrating at a certain frequency and when the opera singer sings at that particular frequency, the glass shatters in the same way as the organism shattering when it is exposed to the frequency generated by the Rife machine.
In 1934, a group of physicians led by Dr Milbank Johnson – President of the Southern Californian American Medical Association – in an experiment sponsored by the University of California, brought 16 terminally ill patients from a hospital in San Diego and placed them in apartments on the Scripps estate at La Jolla, California. Here, they were subjected to the frequencies recommended by Rife for a period of 90 days. Fourteen of the patients were declared free of any cancer at that time. The other two required an additional month of treatment to be completely cured.
In 1938, the first ‘Rife Ray’, designed and built by Rife’s engineer Philip Hoyland, was revealed to the world.
In 1939, Rife was invited to address the Royal Society of Medicine in London, and received further invitations to speak in France and Germany. In 1944, a Dr R. Seidel announced the Rife Ray tube system therapy for the treatment of cancer in the journal of the Franklin Institute. Rife’s microscopes, and his treatments of virus and bacterial infections, were praised in a Smithsonian Institute article that same year.
Sadly, Rife’s work eventually came to a halt. Dr Morris Fishbein, who had acquired the entire stock of the American Medical Association by 1934, attempted to buy the rights to Rife’s machine. He refused. Then arsonists burned the Burnett Lab in New Jersey, which was validating Rife’s work. Millbank Johnson died in 1944 and Dr Nemes, another Rife supporter who had duplicated some of his work, died in a fire which destroyed his laboratory and research papers. Soon, doctors and scientists began denying that they had ever met Rife and his research was soon discredited.
Dr Royal Raymond Rife died penniless in 1971, aged 83, at the Grossmont Hospital, El Cajon, California following a heart attack and an accidental overdose of valium and alcohol. He never received any recognition for his work.