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Photos from top to bottom:
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Noel
(right) conversing with Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II of
England
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Noel (centre, front
row), captain of the ICTA football team, 1960
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For centuries, Caribbean people have used
traditional herbal remedies. Denis Noel has combined the
wisdom of the past with the science of modern medicine.
Denis Noel was born on 13th December, 1937 at
Carlton, St. Andrew's, Grenada. He represented Grenada in
football for several years. On his father's property,
Balthazar Estate, he grew to love nature, and this led him to
pursue a Diploma in General Agriculture at the Imperial College
of Tropical Agriculture (ICTA) in Trinidad. He graduated
in 1960, after which he joined the Grenadian Ministry of
Agriculture as a land use officer.
He served as Chief Technical Officer between
1971 and 1982, after which he became Grenada's Deputy Ambassador
to the Organization of American States (OAS). In 1984, he
returned to the Ministry for three years before entering
politics. He was appointed to the Senate and served as
Minister responsible for Foreign Affairs in the Prime Minister's
Office, Junior Minister of Agriculture, and also Junior Minister
of Communication and Works between 1990 and 1995.
After leaving politics in 1995, Noel
diversified the operations of the Balthazar Estate. He
packaged and marketed herbal tea made from lemon grass. He
was the first Grenadian to cultivate the noni plant and market
noni juice. In 2000, he released Nut-Med - a
pain-relieving spray which combined nutmeg, a traditional
remedy, with conventional analgesics. Nut-Med became
internationally famous and was registered with the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) of the United States. His company
also provides remedies for kidney stones, gallstones and
cholesterol-reduction using Caribbean plants. Flowers from
his estate helped Grenada to earn six Gold Medal awards at the
prestigious Chelsea Flower Show in England over a 10-year
period. The estate is currently Grenada's largest producer
of cut flowers.
In 2005, Denis Noel was inducted into the
Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his contribution to
agriculture and manufacturing.
Denis Noel advises young people that, "Every
person has intrinsic gifts and ideas which, when pursued, can
lead to innovation and can change lives forever."

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