Early Life & The Spark of Discovery
Georges Lakhovsky (also spelled George Lakhovsky, born 1869 in the Russian Empire, present-day Belarus) was a visionary engineer, inventor, and biophysicist. He moved to Paris in 1894 and later became a member of the French Academy of Sciences. Lakhovsky was deeply influenced by the work of Nikola Tesla and Arsène d'Arsonval. His 1929 book 'The Secret of Life' laid out the theory that living cells are microscopic oscillating circuits. His crowning achievement was the Multi Wave Oscillator — a device he used to treat cancer and other diseases in French clinics throughout the 1930s. Tragically, after fleeing Nazi-occupied France in 1940, Lakhovsky died in New York in 1942, and his technology was systematically suppressed.
Lakhovsky was deeply influenced by two towering figures of electrical science: Nikola Tesla, whose high-frequency, high-voltage coil technology made the MWO possible, and Ars\u00e8ne d'Arsonval, the French biophysicist who demonstrated that high-frequency currents could pass through living tissue without causing irritation while producing various physiological effects. D'Arsonval's work on "darsonvalization" laid the electrotreatment groundwork that Lakhovsky would build upon.
Lakhovsky's central insight was revolutionary in its simplicity: every living cell is essentially a microscopic radio transmitter and receiver, oscillating at its own unique frequency. Health, he argued, is the natural state of balanced oscillation. Disease — including cancer — is simply an "oscillatory disequilibrium" caused by external interference.
1923: The First Radio-Cellular Oscillator
Georges Lakhovsky, born in 1869 in the Russian Empire (present-day Belarus), moved to Paris in 1894. In 1923, he created his first Radio-Cellular Oscillator — a device that emitted a single high-frequency wave. He tested it on geraniums infected with plant cancer (Bacterium tumefaciens). The results were astonishing: while healthy tissue remained unharmed, the cancerous tumors withered and died. This experiment proved his core theory — that living cells act as microscopic radio transmitters and receivers, and that disease is an 'oscillatory disequilibrium' caused by external interference.
This first experiment was the proof of concept. The geraniums with plant cancer were placed near the oscillator, and while healthy tissue thrived, the cancerous growths dried up and fell off. The implication was staggering: if cancer in plants could be eliminated through frequency alone, what might be possible in humans?
1929: The Secret of Life & The Birth of the MWO
In 1929, Lakhovsky published his groundbreaking book 'The Secret of Life', detailing the theory of cellular oscillation. He argued that every cell vibrates at its own frequency, and disease occurs when that frequency is disrupted. Dissatisfied with single-frequency limitations, between 1931 and 1934 he developed the Multi-Wave Oscillator (MWO). Using concentric open-ended copper rings powered by a high-voltage Tesla coil, the device generated a broad spectrum of electromagnetic frequencies from 1 Hz to 300 GHz — a complete 'buffet' of harmonics that allowed cells to choose their resonant frequency.
The genius of the MWO was its multi-frequency approach. Rather than trying to guess which single frequency a particular cell needed, Lakhovsky broadcast all frequencies simultaneously — a complete symphony of harmonics. Each weakened cell could then "pick out" the exact note it needed from this electromagnetic buffet. This holistic philosophy was fundamentally at odds with the reductionist, single-target approach of pharmaceutical medicine.
1931–1939: Clinical Triumphs in Paris Hospitals
During the 1930s, Lakhovsky received official permission to conduct clinical trials in several Parisian hospitals, including Hôpital Saint-Louis and Val-de-Grâce. Terminal cancer patients who had been given up by conventional medicine showed remarkable improvement under MWO treatment. In 1934, he presented his findings at the International Congress of Radiobiology in Venice, gaining recognition across Italy, Sweden, and Brazil. His devices were adopted in clinics worldwide, and the medical establishment could no longer ignore the results — though they would soon try to bury them.
The clinical results were documented and published. Patients with terminal diagnoses — those whom conventional medicine had declared beyond help — showed improvement after regular MWO sessions. The medical journals of the era carried Lakhovsky's papers. His device was not a secret; it was a published, peer-reviewed medical technology. Yet within a decade of his death, it would vanish from the medical landscape almost entirely.
1940–1942: Suppression, Exile, and Tragic Death
A vocal anti-Nazi of Jewish heritage, Lakhovsky was forced to flee occupied France in 1940 as the Gestapo targeted him. He emigrated to New York City, hoping to continue his research in safety. Tragically, on November 9, 1942, he died from injuries sustained in a car accident. Following his death, his revolutionary technology was systematically suppressed by the medical establishment and pharmaceutical interests. His laboratory was closed, his devices were confiscated or destroyed, and his research was buried for decades.
The circumstances of Lakhovsky's death have been questioned by researchers over the decades. What is not in dispute is what happened next: his laboratory in New York was shut down, his remaining devices disappeared, and his published research was quietly removed from medical libraries. The pharmaceutical industry, which profits from ongoing treatment rather than cures, had every incentive to ensure that a non-pharmaceutical, non-patentable technology like the MWO never reached mainstream medicine.
2018–2025: The Russian Revival
Beginning in 2018, Russian engineers and researchers undertook the painstaking work of recovering Lakhovsky's original technology based on his original patents and clinical notes. They rebuilt the MWO using modern manufacturing precision while staying faithful to the original concentric ring design and high-voltage Tesla coil architecture. Key improvements include a programmable session timer and integrated relaxing music to enhance the healing experience. The technology was featured on official Russian national television channels, bringing this suppressed science back into public consciousness. Today, RusMWO.com continues this mission — making this recovered, refined, and improved technology available to the world.
The Russian revival of the MWO represents one of the most important moments in the history of this technology. Using Lakhovsky's original patents, clinical notes, and published papers, a team of engineers reconstructed the device with modern precision manufacturing. They added a programmable session timer and integrated relaxing music to enhance the healing experience. Most significantly, the technology was featured on official Russian national television channels, bringing this suppressed science back into public consciousness after nearly 80 years of silence.
Own a Piece of Recovered History
The MWO device is available in two packages. Each includes the complete guide and 60 3D files — the same technology Lakhovsky used in Paris hospitals, now rebuilt with modern precision.
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