Helena B. Schlachter

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CROATIA

Helena B. Schlachter, author of "Lost Knowledge and Protocols" book, is a master in science of natural medicine with extensive experience in the field of recovery from vaccine injuries, autism, neurological disorders and autoimmune conditions. The activist, mother of three children, two of whom were injured by vaccines, is a fighter for the health of children and adults with over 7,000 reported recoveries in the last two years.

Helena has helped many in Croatia, her native country with MMS, which is the  form she uses of Chlorine Dioxide, and has accumilated over 15,000 testimonies that are being translated into English for the whole world to witness!

Newspaper article of Helena Schlachter winning her court case in Croatia for the use of Chlorine Dioxide.

'It was worth it'

The family that treated their son with the CD protocol defeated the system and prejudice

Written by Maja Medaković, July 8, 2016 @ 7:41 PM

 

When, six months ago, she went public with her confession that, as she believes, she was treating her autistic son with chlorine dioxide drops, she triggered an avalanche of harsh and generally condemning reactions in the public.

 The medical profession and HALMED are clear about this. Chlorine dioxide is not a medicine, but a dangerous and extremely toxic chemical. Helena Begenišić Schlahter and her husband have also been charged with child abuse for this.

A few weeks ago, the criminal charge was dismissed, and the official expert examination of the drop that was carried out, Helena claims, is finally evidence in support of her story.

In the six months that have passed since our last story, HALMED says they have not had a single report related to chlorine dioxide. However, they point out that this is in no way a medicine, but rather a dangerous chemical.

"It is neither a poison nor a medicine. It only benefits our organism, or rather its immune system, to get rid of itself, or to heal the body. So it would be a mistake to put it in both definitions. Is it harmful? No, not at all. After all, we wouldn't put it in the water supply," says Denis Urošević Beroš. Denis is resolute and says he speaks only from his own experience. He also knows the so-called CD protocol well.

"I started using it six and a half years ago, not this year or last, but I've been using it for about 3 to 4 years continuously. The protocol is clear, so it's not a problem at all," says Denis and says that the effect on his health was such that "you don't have to go to the doctor."

The last time he used it, he says, was in the early seventies. Daily use of chlorine dioxide for four years in a row, if it were harmful, would certainly have consequences. The only side effect was mild nausea for the first few days, but he says that it just means that chlorine dioxide attacks parasites in the body.

An explanation that many will find difficult to accept, but, Denis claims, it is nothing unusual. Treatment with chlorine dioxide, or MMS, is a taboo subject in our country.

"We had this show about health for several years. However, when I mentioned that MMS and when I somehow gave certain instructions and promoted MMS and commented on the article in the newspaper, two doctors came forward," says Denis.

And then, says Denis, the chase began, which had never happened before when he talked about other topics on the show. The local radio station received a series of threats precisely because of Denis's guest appearance and the story about chlorine dioxide.

"As far as I know, the director of that radio station told me, that she would take away the right to broadcast. Nothing, I accepted it as I accepted it, you get used to such things, to such clips being thrown under your feet," emphasizes Denis.

Something that Helena and her family did not count on. At the time, they considered themselves messengers of good news. But like Helena and Rožer, these parents from Rijeka also put their children on the so-called CD protocol. And while Helena ended up filing a criminal complaint for abusing her own children, there were no such cases in Rijeka, but the parents say, and the police came to many of them.

That the institutions are doing their job is certainly good and comforting news. But what her family has been through in the past six months, especially on social media, says Helena, is not far from a public lynching. "The most important thing for me is the children," says Helena, adding that at one point she was also afraid because of the threats.

Filip, she says, has made a lot of progress since then, and he finished the first grade of the adapted program with excellent grades.

"He wasn't gaining weight, he was even losing it. All that has changed. Since we started the protocol, he has gained over 8 kilos, and we are on a diet. His intestines are working normally, his stool is regular, all functions have improved," says the satisfied mother.

And according to the findings of the pediatric gastroenterologist, Filip is a healthy child. If the CD protocol was harmful, Helena says, it would have probably been shown in the last six months that the boy has been on it. The tablets, as well as these, according to many, controversial drops, were expertly tested for the purposes of the criminal proceedings at the Ivan Vučetić Center for Forensic Examination, Research and Expertise and the Croatian Institute of Public Health.

"They took the entire antiparasitic protocol from us," says Helena.

The expert tests showed that, if used according to instructions, none of these products are harmful to human health.

We asked the Ivan Vučetić Center, the Croatian Institute of Public Health, and the competent Municipal State Attorney's Office in Dubrovnik for comment and explanation, but we did not receive any answers. The criminal complaint for child abuse against Helena and her husband was dismissed.

"Now that I add it all up and subtract, I should basically thank those who persecuted me, because I am the first in the world to end up in court for using chlorine dioxide, even though millions use it. The first to go through a court process and the first to have a paper, with a toxicological finding that it is not harmful," Helena says in the end.

However, the facts still stand. Conventional medicine does not recognize and in no way recommends the CD protocol, or chlorine dioxide, as a method of treatment.