Sunday, December 14, 2014

INDIA TO INITIATE 18 NEW AYURVEDIC MEDICAL SCHOOLS IN NEXT YEAR


India.com
New Delhi, India
Sunday, 30 November, 2014

New Delhi: Eighteen new ayurveda colleges have received the Centre's nod this year, against permission for only one such institution in the last three years as government seeks to promote traditional forms of treatment and integrate them into the existing health care system.

Seven of these new colleges will come up in Uttar Pradesh followed by three in Maharashtra, two in Rajasthan besides six others in as many states, Ayush Ministry sources said.

The ministry is in charge of ayurveda, yoga and naturopathy, unani, siddha and homeopathy.

The approval has come this year and has been given against proposals for setting up 39 new ayurveda institutions.

Permission was granted to only one college last year against proposals for 30 new colleges the previous government had received. No permission was given in 2011 and 2012.

There are currently 281 ayurveda colleges in the country offering 15,057 graduate and 3,081 post-graduate seats.

Pitching for integration of ayurveda, yoga and other traditional forms of treatment in the existing health care system, a committee set up by the BJP government to promote "holistic health" had recommended reforms in medical education, research and legal framework.

Noting that Ayush infrastructure is far from satisfactory besides the industry being poorly regulated, the government had notified National Ayush Mission (NAM) in September this year, laying down a detailed road map to shore it up.

NAM aims to improve Ayush education and provide better access to its service through increase in number of Ayush hospitals and dispensaries, besides offering quality drugs by increasing pharmacies, drug laboratories and "improved enforcement mechanism".

"On one hand many Ayush education centres are in poor shape and on the other, lack of quality control often makes people suspect the practitioners and quality of drugs they provide," sources said, adding that government was working to turn things around.

The Centre is also in talks with states to improve legislative framework to regulate Ayush practitioners and drugs.

AYUSH UNIVERSITY LIKELY TO OPEN WITHIN THE YEAR IN SHIMOGA, KARNATAKA


The Hindu (Raviprasad Kamila)
Monday, 17 November, 2014
Mangalore, India

Minister for Health and Family Welfare U.T. Khader said here on Sunday that the [Karnataka] State government will open an AYUSH (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy) university next year.

It is likely to come up in Shimoga but the venue might change, he told presspersons.

Mr. Khader said that it required at least 100 acres for the university and the government might get the land in Shimoga.

In addition to academic activities, the university would conduct research and development.

Mr. Khader said that the government has begun issuing bio-metric cards to AYUSH doctors in the State. It would help in identifying them and keeping away quacks.

He said that unless Ayurveda doctors stopped prescribing allopathy medicines, ayurveda would not grow. “Ayurveda doctors should practice Ayurveda only,” he said.

INDIA HIGHLIGHTS AYURVEDA IN SOUTH AFRICAN EVENT

PTI / Press Trust of India
Sunday, 23 November 2014
Johannesburg, South Africa

Highlighting the potential of Ayurveda, India has showcased its culture, business and cuisine techniques to South African business leaders in Johannesburg, with an aim to increase bilateral trade.

"The new government in India is giving Ayurveda a big boost. We have a new ministry and a new Minister looking after it. To add to Ayurveda, yoga is also something that goes along with it, and soon there will be an International Day of Yoga for which India has piloted a resolution in the UN General Assembly," Indian Consul-General Randhir Jaiswal said.

Speaking at India Week event concluded last week, he said that with the collaboration of Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), University of Pretoria, and the India Business Forum, comprising Indian businesses represented in South Africa, they put together a package of culture, business and cuisine to propel a bigger India-South Africa connect.

"Areas in which South Africa has global competency and a distinct advantage over India include food processing, construction, logistics, mining, tourism and technology solutions. These are areas where we think that South Africa can do wonders with us in our Make in India programme," said Jaiswal.

"At the same time, the 150 Indian companies which are present in South Africa have proven technology and competencies in areas such as information technology, pharmaceuticals and automobiles," he said.

During a session on how India had seen exponential growth in the pharmaceutical sector, special emphasis was placed on the potential for Ayurveda. "Africa is a very fertile ground for traditional medicine because of its ancient cultural traditions. Given the size of the presence of the Indian diaspora here, I see Ayurveda as one area in which we can leverage the strength and also to promote small and medium industry in South Africa," he said.

Abdullah Varachia of GIBS said the event has helped clear up a lot of misconceptions about Ayurveda. "Our Ministry of Health is trying to move in the direction of placing greater emphasis on African Traditional Medicine.

Ayurveda is a great case study of how traditional medicine can have a significant impact on primary health care," he said. Varachia said the event was organised to present India as a dynamic emerging market economy, especially with the massive changes in the last six months, to business leaders in South Africa, but also to share with them the culture, tradition and legacy of India.

"In the last few years, we have only spoken about business, but this time we have also tried to show South Africans the culture and food from different parts of India," Varachia added. Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba engaged the India Business Forum to explain how the South African government was keen to secure even more investment from India.

Professor Dilip Menon from the Centre of Indian Studies at Wits University delivered an innovative presentation, highlighting how Indian cinema has since its inception reflected the changing social and political environment throughout India's history.

The total bilateral trade hit USD 15.7 billion in 2012 with South African exports reaching USD 10.9 billion, whilst Indian imports reached USD 5.7 billion. South Africa has advanced agriculture and food processing sectors due to the use of sustainable technologies, especially in supply, cold chain management and infrastructure development.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

THE AYURVEDIC INFLUENCES ON THAI MEDICINE - NYC NOVEMBER 22nd

Thaiurveda วิทยาศาสตร์เพื่อชีวิตไทย
The Ayurvedic Influences on Thai Medicine: A Presentation by Edward Zachowski
Saturday, November 22, 2014 - 2:30pm

Ed Zachowski of Thaiurveda, a graduate of Sai Ayurvedic College (Miami, FL) will be presenting a lecture on The Ayurvedic Influences on Thai Medicine at the Eighth Annual Indian Festival. Event begins at 2:30 PM Saturday 22 November 2014 at the Engelman Recital Hall at Baruch College, 55 Lexington Ave, New York, NY 10010.

Tickets are $20 each and can be purchased at The India Center or BrownPaper Tickets


Other presenters include:

Guru Calai Chandra started learning Bharat Natyam at the age of 5 years and quit a successful IT career in the US to obtain an MFA in India. Calai is Founder and Artistic Director of STUDIO 102 and has been performing Bharat Natyam professionally for over 10 years. She dances, teaches, choreographs and creates her own dance repertoires. Her school will be presenting Bharat Natyam Dances at the festival

Guru Neelima Raju started studying dance in 1985 and joined the Dr Vempati Chinna Satyam's Kuchipudi Kalakshetra in 1987. She was mentored by Shri Hari Rama Murthy and Guru Dr Vempati Chinna Satyam and graduated with a "Natya Visharada" degree in 2001. She was awarded the Vishaka Music and Dance Academy award, Natya Ravali Ugadi Talent Award, and the Kurella Sita Mahalakshmi Award and is a recipient of the Government of India Scholarship and is currently a member of the UNESCO's International Council of Dance. Her school will be presenting Kuchipudi Dance items at the festival.

Dr. Amita Gupta, Professor of Education at The City University of New York and a Fulbright Research Scholar will speak on Vedic Education and Mr. Vasu Murthy former Prsident of Kannada Koota will speak on the Sanskrit text Amarkosha while Vasthu expert Swamy Manjulanandji who is visiting from India will speak about the benefits of this ancient art.

The Rajasthani Association of North America (RANA) will make a presentation on the glorious culture of Rajasthan.

Monday, November 10, 2014

INDIA PM MODI CREATES NEW, SEPARATE MINISTRY FOR YURVEDA, AYUSH

New Delhi Television/NDTV
New Delhi, India
Monday, November 10, 2014

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has, in his cabinet expansion on Sunday, created a separate AAYUSH portfolio, whose minister will be charged with promoting traditional medicines and practices of Ayurveda, yoga, naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and homeopathy.

As the first ever AAYUSH minister, Shripad Yesso Naik will have Independent Charge. AAYUSH was previously part of the Health Minister's responsibility.

PM Modi begins his day with yoga and had in his speech at the United Nations in September, made a strong pitch to observe an International Yoga Day, which has reportedly been supported by 50 countries, including the US and China.

He also regularly mentions traditional Indian practices in his exchanges with important world leaders. PM Modi had such a discussion with President Barack Obama during his visit to the United States and had gifted a book on Yoga to his Australian counterpart Tony Abbott, who expressed an interest in the traditional Indian forms of physical, mental and spiritual practices when he visited India also in September.

While calling on member countries of the UN to celebrate June 21 as International Yoga Day, Mr Modi had said, "Yoga embodies unity of mind and body; thought and action; restraint and fulfilment; harmony between man and nature; a holistic approach to health and well-being."

PM MODI: AYURVEDA CAN ACHIEVE SAME GLOBAL RECOGNITION AS YOGA


IANS - IndoAsian News SErvice
Sunday, November 9, 2014
New Delhi, India

New Delhi, Nov 9 (IANS) Prime Minister Narendra Modi Sunday said that ayurveda can acquire global recognition, like yoga, if it is presented in the right spirit and as a way of life.

"Yoga had acquired global recognition for people who wanted a stress-free life and are moving towards holistic healthcare. Similarly, if ayurveda is presented in the right spirit as a way of life, it too can acquire acceptance," he said in his address at the valedictory session of the 6th World Ayurveda Congress here.

Modi said the biggest challenge to ayurveda comes from people who have dedicated their life to it as "they too do not trust it fully".

"The biggest challenge for ayurveda is posed by the people associated with it. It is hard to find physicians who are 100 percent committed to ayurveda. Unless the practitioners believe in it fully they cannot convince patients," he said.

The prime minister said instead of projecting ayurveda and allopathy as competing streams of medical science, ayurveda should be described as a way of life.

A disease can be cured by allopathy, but if a person adopts ayurveda, he can ensure that he remains healthy and free of disease, he said, and called on ayurveda practitioners to be dedicated to the stream not just as a profession, but as a service to mankind.

The prime minister said it is essential for ayurveda to reach people in a simple, effective way and for this, the modes of treatment should also be better packaged.

"Space has to be created in international medical and science publications, for articles on ayurveda. But the effort for this has to come from the practitioners and researchers of ayurveda," he added.

Union Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said despite having a rich heritage in alternate systems of medicine, India is behind China in this field.

"China has used its potential and created a lot of potential for employment," he said adding that the government has now decided to pump in around Rs. 5,000 crore in the Ayush mission.

The 6th World Ayurveda Congress (WAC) and Arogya Expo is being held to integrate ayurveda with the mainstream public health system and propagate it globally as a safe and cost-efficient health care alternative. The event was is being organised by the AYUSH (ayurveda, yoga and naturopathy, unani, siddha and homoeopathy) department under the union health and family welfare ministry, in collaboration with the World Ayurveda Foundation (WAF) and the Delhi government.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

WORLD AYUVEDA CONFERENCE TO COMMENCE on NOVEMBER 6th: PRIME MINSTER TO ADDRESS GROUP


ANI Asia News International
New Delhi, India
Saturday, November 1, 2014

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate the Sixth World Ayurveda Conference which opens today, the first of a series of events proposed to celebrate the place of the 'fifth Veda' in the mainstream of the Indian public health system.

"Ayurveda may be ignored today in India, but all Indians will be proud to know that the Museum of Pathology in Chicago Medical School in the US has a portrait of the ancient Indian medical practitioner, Susruta. Under the portrait is a caption which reads 'The man who did the first cataract surgery," Union Health Minister Dr Harsh Vardhan told the media here.

Elaborating on the format of the World Ayurveda Congress, Harsh Vardhan said it will comprise five plenary sessions and 25 technical sessions on 15 research themes. "In all, 750 scientific papers will be presented by scientists from India, Germany, Italy, USA, Argentina, Russia, among other countries," he said.

Harsh Vardhan also announced that the All India Institute of Ayurveda (AIIA) in New Delhi will admit its first batch of post-graduate students during the academic year 2015-16.

"One of my first decisions was to approve the course content. I would like to see this develop into an institution comparable to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) for Ayurveda." Harsh Vardhan said. (ANI)

NAMA 2015 CONFERENCE FOCUSES ON AYURVEDA'S OUTREACH

The National Ayurvedic Medical Association's 2015 Conference - whose theme is "Bringing Ayurveda to Our Modern World" will be held on April 9th through 12th, 2015 at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel and Spa, in Newport Beach, California. The conference will offer a wide variety of activities for participants to enhance their knowledge of Ayurveda as well as network with other ayuvedic professionals, students, researchers and teachers, with 20 information-rich sessions from which to choose. Other activities include optional morning yoga and meditation sessions, book signing with key authors, sponsors and exhibitors with an array of ayurvedic products and services as well as a "silent auction" with a wide variety of unique items at which one can both find a bargain and support the important work NAMA does on your behalf. Featured Presenters include Kulreet Chaudhary, MD; Marc Halpern, DC; Kevin Spelman, PhD; John Douillard, DC; and Christine Horner, MD.

One can register for the event by clicking here. Discounted attendance fees are available to encourage early registration.

Sunday, October 19, 2014

ESSAY: TO BE MODERN & HINDU: MOBILIZING AYURVEDA FOR THE NATION

Mainstream, VOL LII, No 39,
September 20, 2014
by Shivangi Jaiswal

The decades spanning the early 20th century in India were marked by competing claims on ideas, identities and symbols characterising reformist campaigns of the time. In this context, delivering lectures by the educated elite was one of the means through which claims of nation-making were made. This paper is an attempt towards exploring how a well-known Ayurvedic practitioner, Mahamahopadhyaya Gananath Sen Saraswati, in his lectures, employed a version of Ayurvedic past for a range of ideological mediations. Sen was an Ayurvedic practitioner from Bengal and a member of the All India Ayurvedic Congress founded in 1907. Through the Ayurvedic Congress, as Charles Leslie notes, Ayurvedic practitioners organised themselves as a professional interest group, encouraged the revival of ‘indigenous’ medicines and agitated for state patronage.

Sen delivered his lectures on ‘Hindu medicine’ on February 7, 1916 on the occasion of the foundation ceremony of the Banaras Hindu University. He delivered another lecture on ‘The Scientific Basis of Ayurveda’ in Madras before the South Indian Medical Union on October 30-31, 1923. His address on ‘Glory of Ayurveda’ was delivered at the Government Ayurvedic Convocation in Patna on February 19, 1933.

Some of the key questions this paper attempts to engage with, include: what ideological means did Sen deploy to argue for the relevance of Ayurveda? Were the arguments placed by him in defence of Ayurveda concerned solely with its medical merits? Did the shifting contexts (and hence audiences) mark inconsistencies in Sen’s lectures? What forms of political/ideological anxiety underpinned his lectures?

Contextualising the Lectures

The plague epidemics of 1896 dictated the British Government to employ practitioners of ‘indigenous’ medicines because of the shortage of medical personnel. The intervention of the state and its attempts to regulate health conditions in urban areas, Kavita Sivarama-krishnan suggests, were crucial influences in the professionalisation of the vaid‘s (Ayurvedic doctor’s) practices. The standardi-sation of Western pharmacopoeia from the late 1850s led the Europeans to take a critical view of medical practices of British India. This was so since diversity or non-standardisation in the preparations of medicines was central to the Ayurvedic and Unani medical systems. Conscious of the high costs of importing drugs, the British Government began to encourage the use of local remedies. This led to the production of a standard pharmacopoeia of India in 18682 and the regulation of ‘indigenous’ medical practices by the colonial government.

The 1918-19 reforms of Montague and Chelms-ford created the category of ‘transferred’ and ‘reserved’ subjects and a rapid Indianisation of medical services followed. Increase in patro-nage towards ‘indigenous’ medicines became possible as medical services became a ‘trans-ferred’ subject. The growing demand for Indianisation of the medical services signified two things: first, internalisation of the Western medical system, and second, initiation of a counter-hegemonic process within the system.3 However, the state retained the regulation of the medical standards for fear of introducing ‘indigenous’ systems of medicine into the ‘Western’ medical courses. The intervention of the General Medical Council (GMC) checked the intake of medical students by imposing restric-tions on the standards of medical education in India. Ayurveda underwent a phase of state regulated professionalisation.

Absence of any medical registration Act until 1912 in Bengal and until 1914 in other presidencies, resulted in an increase in the number of ‘quacks’, who had dropped out of medical school before obtaining a qualification. A lot of men were making money from practising ‘Western’ medicine. Medical registration Acts passed between 1912 and 1919 did not give space to Indian systems of medicine. The Acts, by implication, excluded the ‘indigenous’ system from its operation and from the patronage of the state. The colonial state relegated the ‘indigenous’ systems of medicines to an inferior status and considered its practitioners unqualified and unscientific. The policies of the colonial state were thus geared towards the implementation of a practice embodying Western knowledge and delegitimising indigenous knowledge.

By the turn of the 20th century, political conflicts ensued over medical issues. The rising nationalist movement embraced revivalism of Indian sciences.5 The proponents of Ayurveda defended it from the encroachments of biomedicine on many platforms. Jean Langford says: ‘On one platform, they defended it as an embodiment of certain eternal truths. On another, they defended it as a symbol of national identity. On another they defended it as a useful addendum to biomedicine. On yet another they defended it as a solution to the atomistic excesses of modern science.’ In 1921, the governments of Bengal and Madras appointed committees to recommend ways to encourage the revival of what they considered ‘Indian’ medicine. Many nationalist leaders and the Congress party passed resolutions supporting its claims for state recognition. Students in many Ayurvedic colleges participated in the non-cooperation movement led by M.K. Gandhi. The Ayurvedic revival was thus getting linked to nationalist politics.

In 1921, the Madras Government appointed a committee on indigenous systems of medicine which was chaired by Mohammad Usman. The first question which the committee raised in its questionnaire was: ‘Whether the indigenous systems of medicine were scientific or not.’ The Usman committee report was, in effect, a manifesto for modernising the teaching and practice of indigenous medicine with state patronage and recognition. As per its recommendations, the professionalisation of indigenous medicine was to approximate that of ‘modern’ medicine. The government’s object of enquiry was ‘to afford the exponents of Ayurveda and Unani systems an opportunity to state their case fully in writing for scientific criticism and to justify state encouragement of these systems.’ The report showed an aware-ness of tension between practitioners of ‘indigenous’ and ‘Western’ systems of medicine. It also noted that those practitioners, who had mastered both systems of medicine, could reasonably apply ‘scientific criticisms’ called for in the government’s objective. The recommen-dations of the Usman committee report were opposed by both, modern medical practitioners, who condemned them as obsolete science and misguided nationalism, and traditional practitioners, who considered them unorthodox. In 1933, the Indian Medical Councils Act was passed. The Act neither gave space nor recognition to ‘indigenous’ systems of medicine or its practitioners. They were labelled as ‘unscientific’, ‘static’ and marked by antiquity. This aroused disenchantment among the practitioners and advocates of Ayurveda.

Three themes were central to the Ayurvedic revivalist discourse, namely, British Orientalism, the synthesis of medical systems, and institu-tionalisation of Ayurveda. State aid to Ayurveda was a contentious issue that pitted not only the British against Indians but also Indians against Indians. The division among Ayurvedic practitioners could be characterised as one between traditionalists and modernists or between ‘those who thought traditional medicine could be modernised and those who did not’. For the traditionalists, the recognition that the survival of Ayurveda was dependent on adopting some elements from ‘Western’ medicine was also accompanied by the fear that Ayurveda would be swallowed up by ‘Western’ medicine. They advocated a more cautious approach to synthesis and cooperation.

Furthermore, medical registration, during the inter-war period, became an important political issue and a central one for the practitioners of ‘indigenous’ medicines. It was considered by them as the legitimate way to gain recognition and status. For instance, the denial of registration to practitioners of ‘indigenous’ systems of medicine by the Madras Medical Registration Act of 1914 was seen as gross discrimination. However, both groups (those who advocated ‘pure’ Ayurveda and those who favoured ‘integrated’ medical systems) saw themselves as better qualified than the hereditary practitioner, thus privileging institutional training over traditional study under a Guru.‘In fixing their gaze on ancient texts... Ayurvedic revivalists tended to overlook intervening centuries of Ayurvedic practice with all its regional variations, innovations, and fruitful exchanges with Unani and other healing practices... it is very difficult to define “eastern” with any clear geographic point of reference for what might be termed “Western”.’

The three lectures delivered by Sen were against this backdrop of Ayurvedic ‘revivalist’ movement and contestations around it.

Stories from Past and Mediating the Present

Sen used stories about what he considered the distinctive contributions of people from ancient India (he actually referred to them as Aryans) towards ‘scientific’ knowledge of the world. In his lecture at the BHU, he claimed:

When the greater part of the world was submerged in the abyss of ignorance, it is the Indian sages who first understood the necessity of dissection of the human body in the education of Physicians and Surgeons... Hindu medicine still holds its own to no mean extent against all foreign rivals. Instrinsic merit based on solid clinical foundations cannot be denied by thoughtful men to such an exponent of ancient glory, whatever its shortcomings at the present day.

He seems to convey the idea that the importance of Ayurvedic learning lay not merely in its medicinal superiority, but also as a symbol of ‘ancient glory’. In addition, he defended Ayurveda on the ground that the ‘progress’ it had made has not been recorded in history. For him, ‘India’s past glory’ seems to reside in the Vedic age and the birth of Buddha puts an end to that. It was during the Vedic period, extending over hundreds of years, he said, that the Medical Science as well as many other branches of science and literature made ‘great progress and shed their luster on distant climes like Egypt, Greece and Arabia...’.21 He spoke in a similar tone in his lecture in Patna as well. The history of India now taught in our schools, he said, was only the history of India’s decline. The glorious past of India was to be chronicled by future historians.

Furthermore, he was grateful to the Brahmins for preserving the ancient ‘glory’ of India: ‘....a great part of the ancient glory of India still survives—notwithstanding greater crushing influences in the past, in the modest hamlets of the simple pundits...’. The arrival of the British, he argued, stabilised the earlier situation. He said: ‘Let us hope that, as time rolls on, our benign government will come forward with wider sympathies to help the rejuvenation of Ayurveda for the good of humanity.’ His praise for the British Government (in spite of the discrimi-nations faced by Ayurvedic practitioners under the Medical Registrations Acts), on the occasion of the foundation ceremony of the BHU, might have been on account of the fact that Lord Hardinge, the then Governor-General and Viceroy, laid the foundation stone of the University in the presence of an assembly of Governors, Princes and the elite of India. It was the first combined effort made by the highest representatives of the British and rulers of so many states to establish an educational institution which sought to combine the usefulness and efficiency of the modern system of education with the so-called highest spiritual ideals of ancient India. He, in his lectures, consistently attempted to carve out a ‘legitimate’ space for Ayurveda by being grateful to figures of ‘authority’ (Brahmins and the colonial govern-ment) during the period. He narrated the same story in his lectures in Madras and Patna.

He also attempted to ‘define’ Ayurveda in different ways through which what he calls ‘Western’ medical system could authorise it. He foregrounded a north Indian Sanskritic version of Ayurveda as discussed above and, at the same time, restructured its contents in terms of theories of the ‘Western’ medical system. In his lecture at the BHU, he noted: ‘Ayurveda is not only Medicine but Surgery, Midwifery, Opthalmology, Treatment of mental diseases etc.’ He assimilated the grounds on which Ayurveda was confronted with by the ‘Western’ medical system, into the rubric of the former by producing equivalence between them. On the one hand, he valorised the antiquity of Ayurveda and, on the other, looked into it for elements claimed by the ‘Western’ medical system as ‘modern’. For example, in his lecture in Patna, he claimed: ‘History testifies that for thousands of years past Ayurveda was the only systematic healing art not merely of India but of the whole world.’

On the one hand, he was critical of ‘silences’ in history which hides the ‘progress’ that Ayurveda had made in the past (as discussed in the preceding section). On the other hand, he considered history as a testimony for Ayurveda’s contributions. It could be argued that he attempted to make the definition of Ayurveda as inclusive as possible in order to avoid confrontations against it in terms of it being inefficient or merely empirical. However, in his lectures, Ayurveda’s distinctiveness from ‘Western’ medicine is maintained. He consistently based his ‘truth’ claims on the foundation of the authoritative medical texts in Sanskrit, namely, Charaksmahita and Sushrutasamhita, and at the same time, drew upon the discourses of nationalism and ‘scientific rationality’ and theories of Orientalism.

All the three lectures give the impression that certain notions of ‘modern’ science were considered by him as normative in exploring the ‘scientific’ nature of Ayurveda. He attempted to prove Ayurveda as ‘scientific’ by claiming that Ayurveda anticipated future ‘scientific’ developments. He explored in Ayurveda, theories analogous to the ‘Western’ medical system. In his lecture in Madras, he argued:

I do not believe that anatomy and physiology were not known to our ancients. There are plenty of ancient texts to prove their deep knowledge of these subjects... conception of Vayu is not incompatible with any of the teachings of modern physiology.

He elaborated in detail in his lecture the tridosha theory of Ayurveda in terms of ‘modern’ physiology. Thus, he did not attempt to meet the challenges faced by Ayurveda by extracting theories from it to confront the ‘Western’ medical system. Rather, he took up theories with which Ayurveda was confronted with, and claimed analogical characteristics in the latter. He strove to speak about Ayurveda in the language of ‘Western’ science. By saying that the practitioners of the ‘Western’ medical system were not to be held responsible for misunderstanding Ayurveda, he blamed Ayurvedic practitioners for their inability to speak about Ayurveda in the language of ‘modern’ science. He, by speaking in such a language, sought to assert that Ayurveda was a ‘science’ in terms of Western understanding.

What Sen’s account leaves out is critically important. Steven Engler30 writes that claiming Ayurveda as ‘scientific’ implies defining it in terms of materialism, empirical observation, experimentation, falsification of theories, quanti-fication, a developed conception of proofs etc. He intended to defend ‘Hindu civilisation’ in the light of ‘modern’ ‘scientific’ thoughts by claiming that science was a part of the former and Ayurveda was not at odds with ‘modernity.’

‘Indigenous’ Medical Science, a Singular ‘Hindu’ Nation

Sen, in his lectures, attempted to legitimise the claims of a unified, singular ‘Hindu’ nation by using Ayurveda as a metaphor. While talking about the ‘decline’ of Ayurveda, he said in his lecture at the BHU:

After the great invasion of Alexander came the devastating hordes of Scythians and after them the locust armies of the Huns, all of whom continued bloody warfare and pillage for hundred years. History bristles with the accounts of horrors perpetuated by these barbarians. No doubt much of the treasures of Indian literature was lost during these dark ages of pillage and incendiarism... the worst came when since the advent of India’s arch-enemy Mahmud of Ghazni (11 century AD), the upper half of India was overrun and cruelly sacked, times without number by the savage Saracens... with Aurangzeb followed another reign of terror and Hindu-hatred and after him a period of rapine and anarchy which made the cultivation of science practically impossible.

While speaking in terms of “great invasion”, “arch-enemy”, “barbarians”, he assumed the existence of ‘India’ as an already constituted entity in the distant past. ‘India’, however spoken here, is a metonym for ‘Hindu civilisation’, outside which exists ‘barbarians’ and ‘arch-enemies’. In talking about the decline of Ayurveda, he actually valorised ‘Aryans’ and what he called the Vedic age, ‘the Golden Age’ whichdeclined on account of destructions by ‘barbarians’ and ‘enemies’ in the ‘dark ages’. In his lecture in Madras, he claimed:

...you must remember the great misfortunes that befell India. First came the depredations by the Scythians, then by the Hunas and then the civil wars amongst the Hindus and the Buddhists. Then followed the ruthless invasions by MahomedansinNorthern India and by the Portuguese and Dutch in Southern India. They all came and carried things before them by fire and sword. It is a wonder how so much of Indian culture has survived these shocks. While the glory of Egypt, Greece and Rome exists only in their tombs, mummies, pyramids and ruined edifices, theglory of India survives in the valuable literature that has been left to us by our forefathers as a great legacy.

He, by using the terms like ‘glory of India’, ‘Indian culture’, ‘our forefathers’, actually intended to speak about glory of the Aryans, Aryan culture and Aryans as forefathers. By doing this, he foregrounded India as a singular, unified entity inhabited by the Aryans. He targeted whom he calls ‘Mohammedan invaders’ in particular, for destruction of the Ayurvedic literature:

Ayurvedic literature, which grew fast at one time, considering the commentaries and the supplement that were written on each work, gave us a volume of literature that was many times what it is now. You all know how the Mohammedan invaders destroyed them. A Sikh friend, a learned professor, was telling me to-day that the Mahomedan conquerors burnt everything of Sikh literature except two or three works. So they did with Hindu literature. They could not bear the sight of even a good temple. South India has been saved to some extent by her geographical conditions—that is why you have still the possibility of getting back many of the ancient Ayurvedic works from South India. It is however necessary that a great all-India search for ancient Ayurvedic works should be taken up at once.

He attempted to depict ‘Muslims’ as ‘outsiders’ by mentioning them as ‘conquerors’ or ‘invaders’ and thus posited them as the ‘other’ of not only the ‘Hindus’ but also Sikhs. By doing so, he attempted to depict ‘Hindus’ and ‘Muslims’ as distinct communities, marked by animosity.

Furthermore, he acknowledged south India in the task of searching for ancient Ayurvedic texts but relegated it into the background in valorising the antiquity of Ayurveda by considering Aryans as central to its medical knowledge. He hardly spoke about Siddha, a Tamil variant of Ayurveda, while delivering his lecture in Madras and rather mentioned it as an offshoot of the latter. He said, ‘... the teaching of this Siddha Sampradaya is so similar to the teaching of the Rasavaidyaschool of Ayurveda that the conclusion that it must be an off-shoot of Ayurveda is inevitable. In addition, he did not consider Unani as an autonomous medical system rather as a system which has Ayurveda as its base.

While talking about the language in which Ayurveda ought to be studied, he valorised Sanskrit. He said:

I ask my Indian friends practising the Western system, —some of whom have devoted a year or two to the study of German or French for the better understanding of medical works in their original why they should not devote a year or two to the study of Sanskrit which is the language of Ayurvedic literature and the language of their forefathers. In my opinion the language is easy to learn because it fits in easily with the genius of Indian scholars. Except in a few languages like Tamil and Canarese, Sanskrit words abound in the majority, of the languages of India, for example in Hindi and Bengali. I must therefore plead for your trying to understand Ayurvedic truths in their original works and not in their translations.

By saying that Sanskrit is the language of Ayurveda, he intended to foreground a homo-genous version of Ayurveda, relegating into background any possibility of practices of the latter in vernaculars. As evident from the above quote, he dismissed the presence of Sanskrit words in Tamil and Canarese. He was critical of translations of any kind, of Ayurvedic texts in Sanskrit. For him, these were ‘original’ works and hence ‘Ayurvedic truths’ could be under-stood only through the medium of Sanskrit.

Aligning Ayurveda with national identity, he attempted to link the latter with ‘Hindu’ identity. And a North Indian version of Ayurveda was claimed by him as the ‘indigenous’ medical science of India. Nationalist projects co-opt medical systems and define them with reference to state and national boundaries. Ayurvedic medicine, Joseph S. Alter notes, is nominally unmarked but the fact that it is so closely associated with Sanskrit literature and a history of practice located in central South Asia, that it is claimed to be of present day India. Historically, he says, it is as closely linked to what is now Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Tibet, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Furthermore, it needs to be underlined that Sen mentioned the medical system of the West as the ‘scientific’ medical system or ‘modern medicine’ without attempting to define it. This discursive fluidity helped him to define Ayurveda as (Sanskritic north) Indian, ancient (belonging to the Vedic period) and modern at once.

In his lecture in Patna, he spoke about the ‘renaissance of Ayurveda’ in which he said:

.....in India, the cradle of the Healing Art, a few offspring of Ayurveda has been growing steadily though slowly and poorly as a neglected child. This poor but ambitious child is Modern Ayurveda as we understand it. She adores her mother but wants to outgrow her. She keeps before her mind’s eye the bright picture of her mother’s past glories. She understands the need for developing her body. Thanks to the all-India efforts of the Indians themselves and to the sympathetic treatment she had at last received from the Governments of at least three provinces of India, she has grown in stature and aspires to be like her mother in her youth.

In these lines spoken by him, the practice of Ayurveda as in the Sanskrit texts is the mother of ‘modern’ Ayurveda which, as he said, aspires to get matured by conforming to the former. He, in producing ‘ancient’ Ayurveda as different from ‘modern’ Ayurveda, attempted, on one hand, to shield the former from the challenges faced by ‘Western’ medical system, and contest the hegemony asserted by the latter by coupling the term Ayurveda with ‘modern’, on the other. His attempts at foregrounding a version of ‘indigenous’ medical science could be thus seen as a quest towards constructing a ‘different modernity’.

Conclusions

The above analysis of Sen’s lectures gives an impression that neither the project of the colonial government nor that of the nationalists could give full shape to its ambitions in the domain of medicine because of certain ‘practical constraints’ they encountered. His lectures for promoting Ayurvedic learning were delivered during the time when state medical intervention and regulation of medical practice had incited ‘indigenous’ practitioners to argue in support of their practice.

One could mark certain predicaments which Sen encountered in delivering his lectures. On account of contradictions and tensions which surrounded Ayurveda (by the mid-19th century to the first three decades of the 20th century), there were ‘inconsistencies’ in his arguments across all the three lectures and even within the lectures. For instance, he was grappled with the means through which what he said, ‘renaissance’ of Ayurveda has to come, namely, through going back to the Sanskrit texts of Ayurveda or through its synthesis with the ‘Western’ medical system or by explaining it in the vocabulary of the latter. Another instance of ‘inconsistency’ in his lectures could be seen while talking about ‘truth’ claims of Ayurvedic texts in Sankrit. In his lectures in Banaras (1916) and Madras (1923), he absolutised the authority of the ‘truth’ claims of the Ayurvedic texts in Sanskrit (namely, Charaksamhita and Sushrutasamhita), whereas he shifted ground when delivering his lecture in Patna (1933). One reason could be that the intensity of the threat Ayurveda and its practitioners faced increased in the 1930s and he had to negotiate this. One may argue that these ‘inconsistencies’ are a product of the anxiety to be national and modern at once under the dominance of colonialism.

Speaking about Ayurveda, Sen actually spoke about a range of things, namely, nation, language, region, caste, religion etc. and at the same time attempted to defend Ayurveda as ‘modern’. Ayurveda had been used by him as a metaphor for speaking about the ‘Hindu’ nation, Sanskrit language, ‘Aryans’ as a ‘civilised’ race, ‘Muslims’ as enemy, Brahmins as what he says, ‘genuine scholars’ etc. In doing so, his version of Ayurveda marginalised certain groups such as ‘popular’ practitioners who had non-Sanskritic ways of practising Ayurveda, vernacular languages by condemning translations of Ayurvedic texts, south India as a region by considering ‘Aryans’ as forefathers of all ‘Indians’ and as central in contributing medical knowledge to the latter and by regarding Siddha as an offshoot of Ayurveda rather than a Tamil variant of the latter.

In a manner of speaking, under conditions of colonialism, ambivalence towards modernity seems natural. Yet ambivalence towards the nation is a difficult choice which very few, such as Rabindranth Tagore and E.V. Ramasamy, courted. They are indeed exceptions. This may be the reason why Sen produced an Indian modern which was ambivalent towards the West and yet imagined an unsullied, exclusionary, Sanskritic, upper caste nation. Ayurveda was about Ayurveda but it was also about imaging a future nation.

NEED FOR UPDATED RESEARCH IN AYURVEDA STRESSED

The Times of India
Sunday, October 12th, 2014
Nagpur

Nagpur: Practitioners of traditional Indian medicine have started a renewed effort to showcase the advancements in Ayurveda achieved in the recent years. They believe that more research and scientific evidence of the principles of the ancient science will help not just the science but also Indian economy.

This was discussed at the international seminar on recent advances in herbal medicines organized by Shri Ayurveda Mahavidyalaya in memory of Late Vd Pt Ramnarayanji Sharma, founder of Shri Baidyanath Bhavan. Vice-chancellor of three prominent universities, namely Dr Arun Jamkar of Maharashtra University of Health Sciences, Vaidya Rajesh Kotecha from Gujarat Ayurved University and Vaidya Avinash Pandey of Bundelkhand Ayurved University were present during the inauguration of the seminar.

Special invitees for the event included president and vice president of Central Council of Indian Medicine Vd Vanitha Murli Kumar and Vd Amithabh Kumar. Over 600 delegates from eight countries attended the event. The seminar has been sanctioned by Government of India's department of AYUSH (Ayurveda, Yajurveda, Unani, siddha and homeopathy) as well as MUHS.

President of the college's managing body Suresh Sharma in his welcome speech said, "Acceptability of the herbal Ayurvedic medicine depends on the amount of research that we as practitioners put into it."

Stressing the need of more research in the field, Dr Jamkar said herbal medicines had the potential to boost the Indian economy by $100 billion. Vaidya RH Sharma from Varanasi who delivered the Ramnarayanji Sharma memorial lecture said the effect of herbal medicines on newer diseases of modern era must be researched in an attempt to make Ayurveda more relevant and update the science.

KERALA WILL GET ITS OWN AYURVEDA UNIVERSITY SOON, PROMISES CHANDY

New Indian Express
Kottayam, Kerala, India
Tuesday, October 13, 2014

KOTTAYAM: Chief Minister Oommen Chandy has said that the state will get an Ayurveda University soon. He was speaking at the 51st Ayurveda Seminar organiSed by the Kottakkal Arya Vaidya Sala at the Mammen Mappillai Hall here on Sunday.

He said that the Malappuram District Collector has been assigned with the duty of making proposals for the purpose. “The Collector will submit a report after holding discussions with the various parties. The University, which also gives importance to research, will bring attention to the ‘Kerala Model’ Ayurveda. The government will extend its help in popularising this concept across the country,” he said.

“Kerala will become the first state in the country with Ayurveda dispensaries in every panchayat and municipality. As many as 25 new dispensaries were announced in the previous Budge t and only 1 2 panchayats were left out of the network. However, decision has been taken to launch outlets in these panchayats also,” he said.

He also said that the greatest challenge faced by the industry is the lack of medicinal plants and other raw materials. “The government is encouraging medicinal gardens among planters and farmers. “An amendment was also made encouraging planters to devote five per cent of their farms and orchards for the cultivation of medicinal plants,” the Chief Minister said. He released the book, ‘50 years of Kottakkal Seminar’ by Vaidyaratnam P S Warrier and Ayurveda College associate professor M V Vinod Kumar. The first copy was received by Kottayam district medical officer (Ayurveda) Rati B Unnithan.

The function was presided over by Kottayam Municipal Chairman M P Santhosh kumar. Arya Vaidya Sala general manager K S Mani, Malayala Manorama editorial director Thomas Jacob, municipal councillor K R G Warrier and M V Vinod Kumar also spoke at the function.

ALL'S NOT WELL WITHIN AYURVEDA ...

The Indian Express
Kochi, Kerala
October 6th, 2014
By Steena Joy

The science of Ayurveda, the origins of which lies in our very own Kerala, stands in danger of losing its authenticity and with it, the hordes of wellness tourists who flock to the state in search of a cure that eludes modern allopathy.

The numerous Ayurveda resorts and Kerala government Green Leaf certified treatment centres will also need to focus their attention on sourcing of the medicinal herbs needed in Ayurveda which are slowly depleting.

Dr G G Gangadharan, medical director, Institute of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine (I-AIM) Healthcare Centre and chairman, National Steering Committee for Global Ayurveda Festival, (a biennial get together of the Ayurveda fraternity not only from Kerala but from the world over) says, “The global wellness market is worth some five trillion. India earns Rs 9,000 crore from Ayurveda services alone and we have not even seen the tip of the iceberg as far as this science is concerned.

Ayurveda is the only area where India is 5,000 years ahead of other countries. But this success story is in danger. Now even other countries like Switzerland, and Sri Lanka, our neighbours are offering Ayurveda. We have to make our visa procedures simpler and we have to document and up our research on this science. As Ayurveda is not officially recognised by many countries, it is difficult for patients travelling to India for Ayurveda to get medical insurance.”

He added, “What is even more alarming is on the production front. On the one hand, mass production of Ayurvedic medicines is diluting the science. On the other, a shortage of herbs required to produce these medicines is looming. When the demand for Ayurveda increases, how will the treatment centres get the plants and herbs needed for production? Ayurveda uses some 1600 plants and herbs of which only 120 are in actual usage. Of these about 60 are not easily available.”

Dr Gangadharan felt that a strong backward integration model needs to be adopted. “We have urged the government to implement a nursery technology programme to step up cultivation. Here again, some plants need to be cultivated ‘in situ’ in their original environment or they will lose their medicinal value. Some herbs like guggul which is the most used in Ayurveda is difficult to cultivate. So the government has to subsidise farmers and have a buyback arrangement.”

Baby Mathew, chairman and managing director, Somatheeram Ayurveda Group, opined, “Because of the good climate and soil, and also the availability of herbs and plants, Kerala is the ideal place for practising Ayurveda. It is good that the government has implemented GMP in Ayurvedic medicine manufacturing. But sadly, there are no high standard research facilities for Ayurveda like the IITs for technology or IHMs for hotel management. The government has finally given approval for setting up an Ayurveda University, so at least the tourism department and the health department are on the right track. But, we also need to give our Ayurveda treatment centres the ambience of a resort unlike our old Ayurvedic clinics that had a hospital like atmosphere. This will help in giving a genuineness to the treatment.”

See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/life-style/alls-not-well-with-ayurveda/99/#sthash.nJNReqjl.dpuf 2 Google +1 - See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/lifestyle/life-style/alls-not-well-with-ayurveda/#sthash.EjYeUbJ1.dpuf

PHYSICIANS TO STUDY AYURVEDA, YOGA, CHAKRAS & MEDITATION AT CME CONFERENCE, ALBANY MEDICAL COLLEGE

Albany Medical College
Averill Park, NY (PRWEB)
Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Physicians will learn the practical, ancient skills of meditation, yoga, chakra psychology and Ayurveda at The American Meditation Institute’s (AMI) sixth annual mind/body medicine CME conference November 5-9, 2014 at the Cranwell Resort and Spa in Lenox, Massachusetts. Entitled “The Heart and Science of Yoga,” this 30 CME mind/body medicine training is accredited through the Albany Medical College Office of Continuing Medical Education.

Now in its sixth year of providing physicians continuing medical education credits, this 30 hour CME course will provide easy-to-learn practices that work synergistically (within the intricate medium of the stress system) to reduce inflammation and allostatic load while working toward establishing homeostasis.

Upon completion of this conference, attendees will be able to: demonstrate knowledge of how Yoga Science as mind/body medicine can help heal disease, manage addictive habits, alleviate stress, burnout and inflammation; develop equanimity, discrimination, will power, creativity and energy through a daily practice of meditation and diaphragmatic breathing; incorporate long-term strategies for healthy lifestyle choices using Yoga Psychology; demonstrate knowledge of the principles of both Ayurveda and Epigenomics; understand the physiological benefits of easy-gentle yoga (exercises for lymph system detox, joints, glands, muscles and internal organs); help themselves and their patients reduce conditioned habits of negative thinking through the healing powers of mantra science; utilize food as medicine (diet, nutrition, Functional Medicine) to maximize personal well being; and use Chakra Psychology (subtle emotional/mental causes of stress) to diagnose and treat dis-ease.

Each faculty member is committed to the advancement and training of Yoga Science as holistic mind/body medicine. Leonard Perlmutter, noted educator, philosopher and founder of The American Meditation Institute will serve as conference director. Leonard is the author of the six-time award-winning book The Heart and Science of Yoga and editor of the mind/body medicine journal, “Transformation. Leonard has presented courses at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, the Albany Medical College, the U. S. Military Academy at West Point and “The New York Times” Yoga Forum with Dean Ornish, MD.

Additional presenters will include Mark Pettus MD, board-certified internist and nephrologist; Beth Netter MD, holistic physician and acupuncturist; Susan Lord, MD, holistic physician and Associate Director for Professional Training at the Center for Mind/Body Medicine in Washington, DC; Kathie Swift, MS RDN LDN, leading educator and practitioner in the field of integrative nutrition and author of “The Inside Tract: Your Good Gut Guide to Great Digestive Health;” Rosy Mann, Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery and faculty member of the Kripalu School of Ayurveda; and world-renowned artist Jenness Cortez Perlmutter, co-founder and faculty member of The American Meditation Institute.

According to Leonard Perlmutter, “The more consistently physicians and patients incorporate the therapeutic practices of meditation and Yoga Science into their daily lives, most symptoms of stress related burnout and chronic complex diseases can be diminished or eliminated. This sentiment is echoed by recent conference graduate, Joel M. Kremer, MD, who is Board Certified in Internal Medicine and Rheumatology in Albany, New York, “This teaching has been an enormous benefit in my personal and professional life. I have less stress, more focus, and am able to serve my patients with greater clarity. It becomes surprisingly easy now to recognize the many clinical situations in which patients with somatic manifestations of 'dis-ease' could greatly benefit from Yoga Science.”

In addition to Dr. Kremer, numerous medical pioneers and healthcare professionals such as Mehmet Oz MD, Dean Ornish MD and Bernie Siegel MD have also endorsed this curriculum. Previous conference attendees have also noted that the material presented has made a beneficial impact toward their personal and professional efforts at self-care.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

INTERNATIONAL AYURVEDA CONFERENCE in the NETHERLANDS, APRIL 10-14, 2015

The forthcoming International Ayurveda Conference will take place on April 10-14, 2015 in Holland, with extended days from April 14th – 18th 2015.

This conference will be a first of its kind: It will illuminate the time-tested knowledge of Ayurveda* with the most up-to-date insights of modern science. New research showing the intimate relationship between consciousness and physiology will be presented—locating the inner healing intelligence of the physiology.

Many of the world’s leading practitioners and scientists in the field of Ayurveda will come together to showcase scientific solutions to today’s problems in the field of individual and public health. Vaidyas and health professionals involved in Ayurvedic research are invited to present their findings.

All health professionals who wish to expand the scope and effectiveness of their medical practice are invited to attend. In addition, all health care providers, policymakers and administrators in the field of health are invited to take advantage of this conference to improve health care and reduce costs.

The event will be hosted by MERU: the Maharishi European Research University, in Vlodrop, Holland and is co-sponsored by the All-India Ayurvedic Congress and the International Academy of Ayurveda (Pune). Detailed information on registering for the conference is available online at http://www.meruevents.com/ayurvedaconference/

RETIRED RAILWAY ENGINEER SEEKS TO CREATE MUSEUM OF AYURVEDA


The Hindu
by Venkataramana Rao
Wednesday, June 25, 2014

The house of Pammi Satyanarayana Sastry is a veritable hub for the research and development of Ayurvedic medical sciences. It has over 3,000 books in six languages

Pammi Satyanarayana Sastry, 74, is known to all who care about Ayurveda. After retiring from the Indian Railways as an electrical engineer, Mr. Sastry has earned a name for himself in the field. Though he has no formal degrees, he earned the title Uttama Vaidya.

He is so passionate about the science that he has converted a large part his apartment house into a library which houses some of the most valued texts and books. His house is a veritable hub for the research and development of Ayurvedic medical sciences.

The origin for his strong passion for Ayurveda seems to be his maternal grandfather Chivukula Satyanaryana Sastry who was a legend in the art of Rasasastra, which is a study of medicine that “converts the mortal to the immortal.”

The Dr. Achanta Lakshmipathi Ayurveda Library has over 3,000 books in six languages. Most of the books are in Telugu, but there are also books in Sanskrit, English, Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada. He has some Ayurvedic recipes written on palm leaf (Tala patram) and tree bark (Boorja patram).

Digitalising

Keeping in mind the need to preserve the knowledge for posterity, Mr. Sastry has started digitalising some of the valuable books. Using a digital camera, he has prepared soft copies of as many as 1,000 volumes so far all by himself.

His engineering background has come in handy to him. Currently, he is using DVDs to preserve the data and has plans to shift to BluRay in future. To facilitate future research in Ayurveda, Mr Sastry collected all the Ayurvedic journals he could lay his hands on and even indexed articles in them.

Showing a copy an old Ayurvedic Lexicon, Mr Sastry said the book was published 125 years ago in 1889. His library-cum-residence is full of several other articles, substances like “Garalam” snake venom in crystalline form and Ramasila, floating stone, that is used in the making of Ayurvedic preparations. “Ultimately I want to create a Museum of Ayurveda,” he says.

EFFORT TO PUT NEW REVISION OF THE CHARAKA SAMHITA ONLINE

The Charaka Samhita Online Project is seeking a few good editors of proper English, who have clinical experience, knowledge of Ayurveda, and a willingness to learn medical editing. The English editing team will be editing the 120 chapters of the revered classic text in the next 4 months.

The world has changed since the original publication of the Charaka Samhita. There is an urgent need for a new edition of this treasure of knowledge, incorporating new techniques for accessing the knowledge. A team of 70+ Ayurvedic scholars, biomedical researchers, modern medicine physicians, content managers, business consultants, language editors, illustrators, and audio-visual professionals have been assembled to collaborate on a new 2014 edition of Charaka Samhita. True to its tradition of dialogue between teacher and student, it will be a "living and interactive" text, planned and redacted online to allow maximal outreach to readers and to references online. The new Caraka Samhita has the same sequence of chapters as the original text, as clinical knowledge unfolds like petals of a lotus flower.

If you re interested or can lend your aid to this important effort, please visit the project's website b clicking here.

AYURVEDA POSSESSES ANCIENT, EFFECTIVE MEANS OF TREATING INFERTILITY


The Times of India
Debarati Sen, TNN
Saturday, September 6, 2014

The rate at which infertility is fast becoming a common phenomenon in today's hectic stressful lives, is rather alarming, all thanks to our current lifestyle taking a toll on our overall health.

Dr. Jaydeep Tank, who works on IVF fertility says, "Fertility problems are nobody's fault. Infertility is a medical condition affecting almost one in ten couples trying to conceive. Male fertility problems are the primary diagnosis in approximately 25 % of cases and contribute to a further 15-25% of the remaining cases."

In men, the most common fertility issue is the inadequate production of sufficient normal, motile (moving) sperm. Although there are several factors leading to male infertility, a precise diagnosis, however, in most cases is elusive. This lack of clarity in diagnosis, treatment of male infertility in the large majority of cases remains empirical. It is therefore no wonder that the mainstay of treating severe male infertility still remains assisted reproduction and specifically Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI).

Dr. Urmila Sureka, who specialises in infertility and is an IVF consultant, states, "Approximately 15% of couples are unable to conceive after a year of unprotected intercourse. A male factor is solely responsible in about 20% of infertile couples and contributory in another 30-40%." She adds, "Availability of infertility treatment has improved the probability of pregnancy."

Dr. Anil Patil, a yoga guru who also works on integrated medicines, states that ayurvedic remedies have long been used to address the problems of fertility. He states, "Evidence of the use of herbal remedies for male infertility dates all the way back to 5000 BC. Here (see box below) are some beneficial ayurvedic plants and remedies."

Ayurvedic treatments for male infertility

Mucuna Pruriens (Kawach): A medicinal plant, which has been mentioned in the treatises of ancient Indian texts such as the 'Charaka Samhita' and the 'Susrutha Samhita'. In Hindi, it is called 'Kawach'. The plant is a vigorous climber, bears purple or white flowers and has turgid S-shaped pods. The medicinally valuable parts are the seeds, though studies have revealed the presence of active components in stems and leaves too.

Shilajit: An excellent restorative and rejuvenating tonic, it ensures good physical performance for the individual and leads to balanced and harmonious health. Shilajit is also known as sex tonic in India as it increases the core energy responsible for sexual drive or libido. It balances debility, general fatigue and provides strength to muscles and bones.

Safed Musli: The dried roots of Safed Musli (also known as asparagus adscendens) are used in Ayurveda as an aphrodisiac. Its tubers are used in Ayurvedic medicine preparations. It contains about 30% alkaloids, natural steroid saponin (10-20%), polysaccaroids (40 to 45%), carbohydrates and proteins (5% to7%). White Musli or Safed Musli is primarily used as a tonic to rejuvenate the reproductive system. The regular use of this herb is valuable in impotency, premature ejaculation and low sperm count in men. As it is very rich in glycosides, it works very well in curing impotency and low sperm count

Ashwagandha: This is a very effective medicine for male infertility. As a digestive, it corrects metabolism and helps to provide proper nutrition. It is effective in mental disorders. It also has anti-inflammatory properties. It is a tonic for the nerves and helps in neuritis. It is helpful in sexual disorders like erectile dysfunction and Oligospermia.

Other treatments available include:


- With Azoospermia (no sperms in semen) testicular biopsy is used to define the histological diagnosis and possibility of finding sperm. Spermatozoa should be cryopreserved for use in intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). Even if sperms available are few, fertilisation can be achieved with ICSI.
- Where sperm cannot be retrieved, donor semen can be used for insemination.
- In cases of obstructive Azoospermia obstruction can be bypassed by surgical procedures like Vasovasostomy Tubulovasostomy
- Drug therapy may be used to improve semen parameters in certain cases.
- Ejaculation disorders can be treated using a wide range of drugs and physical stimulation, with a high level of efficacy.
- With availability of genetic studies, genetic disorders contributing to infertility can be identified.
- Counseling can be done regarding the transmission of the defect and its implication depending on the type of defect.

KARNATAKA STATE HEALTH MINISTER TO LOOK FOR AYURVEDA EBOLA CURE


The Times of India
Stanley Pinto,TNN
Thursday, September 18, 2014

Mangalore: Does ayurveda have a cure for Ebola? Karnataka health minister UT Khader was skeptical when some doctors approached him some time ago claiming there is an Ebola cure in ayurveda.

But what caught his interest in the supposed cure was a call from Liberian senator John A Ballout Jr through a common friend Wilfred D'Souza, who returned from Liberia a month ago. Ballout Jr asked Khader whether he could help him by providing a cure for Ebola through the age-old system of medicine.

Khader told TOI: "I was approached by some people about ayurveda having a cure for Ebola. I was more interested in a cure for malaria and dengue. Hence, the issue slipped out of my mind. Now that the Liberian senator has called me, I have decided to call the people who claimed to have a cure and send the medicine through the Liberian consulate in India.''

What is the guarantee the ayurvedic medicine will be effective? Khader said he doesn't know. "It's their claim. If it clicks, well and good. It will help a country that is finding it hard to cope with the crisis. If indeed ayurveda has a cure, it will be a cheap cure for the Ebola virus.''

The letter from Ballout Jr, who represents Maryland County, explains the seriousness of the problem. It says there have been 2,097 deaths from Ebola in five countries - half of them in Liberia. It quotes the WHO warning that it will take six months to control the situation.

"I will call them and get the samples and send them to the consulate,'' Khader said.

Dr Muralidhar Sharma, medical superintendent, SDM College of Ayurveda and Hospital, Udupi, told TOI: "In ayurveda, we definitely have treatment for Ebola-like symptoms. It is mentioned in all ayurveda textbooks, including Charaka Samhita. We have not had a single case of Ebola in India. Hence, we cannot claim to have a cure for it. We cannot prepare a concoction and give it to the patient. We have to examine the patient and then decide on the mode of treatment."

This view was contested by Dr Srinivas Kakkilaya, a physician. "Ebola is viral hemorrhagic fever akin to dengue. But, unlike dengue, Ebola spreads from person to person. It has a high mortality rate. There's no drug to cure it as of now; there is only symptomatic treatment. Ayurveda developed in India and cannot have a treatment for a virus like Ebola, since the virus did not exist in India. In ayurveda, there is no concept of virus and infection."

AYURVEDA FINDS HUGE TRACTION WITH CHINESE


The Time of India
Saswati Mukherjee,TNN
Thursday, September 4, 2014

Bangalore: The popularity of the time-tested traditional healing system of ayurveda seems to have crossed the border and impressed the Chinese too. If the number of aspirants for courses run by Bangalore-based Foundation for Revitalization of Local Health Traditions (FRLHT) is any indication, the new adherents of ayurveda are people of Chinese origin from Southeast Asian nations.

FRLHT runs a foundation course on ayurvedic nutrition and lifestyle thrice a year in Bangalore, and nearly 80% of students in each of the 10-member batches are from Southeast Asian countries. Buoyed by the response, FRLHT is conducting the course twice a year in Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, among other countries. "Our Chinese-origin students come from diverse backgrounds.

While some are engineers, there are students and medical practitioners as well," says Girish Kumar V, training coordinator for international student programme at the Centre for Health Education, FRLHT. At least 10 Chinese, who do the foundation courses, enroll themselves for the two-year diploma in ayurvedic diet and lifestyle. Most of them have some knowledge about the 2,000-year-old traditional Chinese medicine, which includes various forms of herbal medicine, acupuncture, massage, exercise and diet.

Toni Goh from Singapore came to FRLHT with a purpose: To know more about ayurvedic diet and lifestyle. "I want to introduce it to the Chinese community in Singapore and China," he says. His foundation course batchmate Pemla wants to learn more about ayurveda nutrition, and Chu Ning from Singapore is interested in the ayurvedic way of health maintenance. A delegation from Nanhua University in Taiwan will visit the FRLHT campus in Yelahanka on September 12 to explore the possibility of offering ayurveda as a course in their institution. "The time-tested principles of ayurveda are drawing Chinese students. The concept of diet, nutrition, etc, is more elaborate in ayurveda, which makes it popular with students across the globe," said Girish Kumar V, training coordinator for the international student programme, Centre for Health Education, FRLHT.

Friday, September 5, 2014

SAI AYURVEDIC COLLEGE - MIAMI TO BEGIN NEXT TERM JANUARY 10th, 2015

Sai Ayurvedic College will begin its first year Ayurvedic program's next class on Saturday, January 10th, 2015 at Sai Ayurvedic College in Miami, Florida. Classroom instruction as well as distance learning offered by live webcast for students residing outside the Miami area. Apply now and take advantage of discounted tuition rate ($500 tuition waiver if registered before November 30th). Call 305-380-0652 for additional information.

Sai Ayurvedic College is a private, post-secondary degree-granting institution recognized by the Florida Department of Education and Florida Commission on Independent Education as exempt from licensure under the authority of Florida State Statutes, Section 1005.06 and is an approved Continuing Education Provider.

The College is approved as a professional school of Ayurveda by the National Ayurvedic Medical Association with respect to its residential classroom and synchronous webcast programs. Not that that approval does not extend to its asynchronous online independent study option. Sai Ayurvedic College is also approved for the payment of Veterans Educational Benefits by the Florida State Department of Veterans Affairs and the federal Veterans Administration with respect to its residential classroom and synchronous webcast programs, and here also this approval does not extend to its asynchronous online independent study option.

Visit the College's website by clicking here.

HEALTH MINISTERS FROM 11 NATIONS DUE TO DISCUSS AYURVEDIC OUTREACH


The Deccan Herald
New Delhi,
Monday, September 1, 2014

Call it a coincidence but within months of the BJP coming to power at the Centre, Ayurveda is set to make a sound at high places as health ministers from the World Health Organisation’s South-East Asia Regional Office (SEARO) will discuss how traditional medicine can be used for healthcare.

India is the largest nation in this block. The ministers from the WHO’s SEARO region for the first time will deliberate on traditional medicine in a ministerial conference in Dhaka between September 9 and 12. The ministerial consultation will be followed by a global guideline to ensure quality, safety and efficacy.

“Traditional medicine is an important part of health care and most countries in the region have their own form of traditional medicines,” said a WHO official.

WHO SEARO comprises 11 nations — Bangladesh, Bhutan, South Korea, India, Indonesia, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Timor-Leste. India, being an Asian economic power house, takes a lead in the group on several counts. The ministerial follows BJP-led NDA government creating an integrated department of Indian systems of medicine in six new All India Institute of Medical Sciences in Bhopal, Patna, Raipur, Bhubaneswar, Rishikesh and Jodhpur.

India has also taken steps to establish a 100-bed hospital on Indian system of medicine – to be called centre of excellence in holistic medicine – and land for medicinal herb cultivation facility for standardised production of medicines. An expert panel has been constituted to recommend a blueprint for the operationalisation of a yoga training and therapy centre at AIIMS Rishikesh.

WHO officials claimed that the thrust on traditional medicine was in accordance with the health agency’s new (2014-23) strategy on traditional medicine to harness its potential contribution to health and universal health coverage.

Even though several WHO technical committees and advisory bodies underscored the importance of the ancient wisdom on healthcare, this is for the first time the ministers would decide how the traditional knowledge can be integrated to the national healthcare delivery system.

WHO director general Margaret Chan and regional head Poonam Khetrapal Singh will be present at the Dhaka meeting that would also seek to prevent harmful use of alcohol, strengthening surgical care and curb the growing threat of viral hepatitis that kill 5 lakh people every year in the region.

VOLUNTEERS CALLED FOR IN EFFORT TO PUT CHARAKA SAMHITA ONLINE

The Charaka Samhita Online Project is seeking a few good editors of proper English, who have clinical experience, knowledge of Ayurveda, and a willingness to learn medical editing. The English editing team will be editing the 120 chapters of the revered classic text in the next 4 months.

The world has changed since the original publication of the Charaka Samhita. There is an urgent need for a new edition of this treasure of knowledge, incorporating new techniques for accessing the knowledge. A team of 70+ Ayurvedic scholars, biomedical researchers, modern medicine physicians, content managers, business consultants, language editors, illustrators, and audio-visual professionals have been assembled to collaborate on a new 2014 edition of Charaka Samhita. True to its tradition of dialogue between teacher and student, it will be a "living and interactive" text, planned and redacted online to allow maximal outreach to readers and to references online. The new Caraka Samhita has the same sequence of chapters as the original text, as clinical knowledge unfolds like petals of a lotus flower.

If you re interested or can lend your aid to this important effort, please visit the project's website b clicking here.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

BVI SCHOOL OF AYURVEDA TO OPEN IN MICHIGAN, APRIL 2015

The Bodhananda Vedic Institute School Of Ayurveda in Kalamazoo, MIchigan, wil open its doors to its firs class of studnts in Spring 2015.

Founded and operated by The Sambodh Society, Inc., a Michigan Ecclesiastical Nonprofit 501(c)(3) Corporation established in 1998, and guided by His Holiness, Swami Bodhananda Sarasvati, the Bodhananda Vedic Institute is offering a syllabus of courses in the study of Ayurveda, a spiritual science that encompasses and supports all dimensions of human life, in particular a healthy body, mind and spirit. Classes will begin on Saturday, April 18th, 2015.

The program, which is one year in length and leads to certification as an Ayurvedic Consultant, takes place over twelve consecutive months with one entire weekend per month given over to intensive classwork and lecture by a distinguished faculty with both extensive instructional as well as clinical experience. Coursework is designed to thoroughly educate students in the art, science and philosophy of Ayurveda and its evaluative procedures and its therapeutic and preventive protocols.

For further and more detailed information, please click here.

GOVERNMENT TO WORK FOR BETTER GLOBAL ACCEPTANCE OF AYURVEDA

IBN7.com Tuesday, August 4, 2014

New Delhi: The government will work for strengthening global acceptance of ayurveda as evidence-based medicine, Health Minister Harsh Vardhan said Sunday.He was speaking after laying the foundation stone of a "Global museum of Ayurveda and Herbal Medicine" at yoga guru Baba Ramdev's Patanjali Yoga Peeth near Haridwar, according to a health ministry release,

"For the first time since 1947, the government's health policy is going to lay primary emphasis on the ayurveda siddhanta. This is in tune with the times as World Health Organisation (WHO) has given considerable importance to Ayurveda in its activities related to traditional medicine," Harsh Vardhan said.

The release said that WHO has contributed substantially towards the implementation of "pharmaco-vigilance" in Ayurveda. "Now every AIIMS centre will have an indigenous medicine department of which ayurveda will be a major component," the minister said. He said that AIIMS Rishikesh will take the lead on the issue as steps were underway to have a 100-bed AYUSH (ayurveda, yoga and naturopathy, unani, siddha and homeopathy) hospital.

He said the government has set up a "committee of directors" on AYUSH to recommend a blue print for operationalising a yoga training and therapy centre at AIIMS Rishikesh. "The old, allopathy orientation of AIIMS is out of sync with the contemporary trend of integrating indigenous and western forms of cure. That is why I wish to give Yoga, along with ayurveda, unani, siddha and homoeopathy pride of place in the AIIMS system. "All the six new AIIMS will be dynamic institutions of integrated medicine in the years to come," Harsh Vardhan said.

The minister had a detailed discussion with the yoga guru on research trends in modern science and clinical applications of yoga and ayurveda.

GOVERNMENT AYURVEDA COLLEGE STRUGGLES TO GET RECOGNITION

Times of India Friday, August 22, 2014

Varanasi: The Government Ayurveda College and Hospital, situated on the campus of Sumpurnanand Sanskrit University, is struggling for existence. The college was denied recognition by the Central Council of Indian Medicine (CCIM) in 2012 due to lack of faculty members. It had again applied for recognition this year.

The Central Council of Indian Medicine, the governing body of medical colleges, ranks the colleges on the basis of strength of faculty members and infrastructure. "The CCIM had denied recognition to our college in 2012, as it lacked required faculty. According to norms, there should be 12 teachers, including readers and professors. Earlier, we had only 10 teachers. But, now we have 13 teachers after three new teachers joined the college. We hope this year we get recognition," said Dr Vinay Mishra, chief medical officer of Government Ayurveda College and Hospital. Principal S N Singh said that they have applied for recognition this year.

Since the college was denied recognition there have been no new admissions on the 50 seats for the last two academic sessions (2012-13 and 2013-14). Another problem being faced by the hospital is poor infrastructure, which needs immediate attention.The number of patients coming to the hospital had also decreased. For a long time, the woman ward remained locked as there were no patients. The CMO said that earlier about 300-350 patients used to visit the OPD everyday, mainly for the Panch-Karma treatment, but now the number has decreased to 150-200. He added that most of the patients are from the slum area but the hospital is located in the interior of Sumpurnanand Sanskrit University, so people hesitate to visit. Although the hospital has all the required equipment and adequate staff for healthcare but it suffers due to poor infrastructure. Moreover, sanitation and cleanliness of the hospital is also in bad. The hospital welcomes its patients with a huge heap of stinking garbage at the entrance. Toilets also need proper cleaning and maintenance.

The principal said that till 1981, the college was a part of SSU but later it came under the state government. "We are making all efforts to re-establish the hospital. We have created all required facilities. We have also demanded specialists like radiologist, pathologist and a surgeon for better healthcare," he said. A new building is ready to accommodate the college and hospital outside the SSU campus.

Thursday, March 27, 2014


5th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON AYURVEDA - WHERE SCIENCE MEETS CONSCIOUSNESS: EXPLORING INTERCONNECTEDNESS WITH NATURE
December 11-18, 2015
Vaidyagrama Healing Village, Coimbatore, India

Exploring holism or interconnectedness in the context of the nine grahas (planets) and their influence on all aspects of life and living, as understood by Ayurveda and allied knowledge systems, will be the theme of the Fifth International Conference on “Ayurveda – Where Science Meets Consciousness.”

Ayurveda declares unambiguously that every cell in a living being is representative of the entire universe, and that every aspect of the external universe can be seen in each cell of the living being. When we increase our understanding of this relationship between the microcosm and the macrocosm, we can apply this knowledge to clinical and daily practice, and enhance positive results for our patients, for us, for the earth, and beyond.

During the seven days of this conference, scholars, physicians, astrologers, students and preceptors from around the globe, will deliberate and discuss the qualities and movements of the navagrahas (nine “planets”), the twelve constellations of the rashis (zodiac), and other celestial influences impact human physiology and experience, how we might detect those their influences, and how to improve our relationship with them.

Venue for the conference is at Vaidyagrama Ayurveda Healing Village in the outskirts (30 kilometers) of Coimbatore - a tranquil, pollution-free setting amongst small villages engaged in agriculture at the foothills of the Nilgiri mountain ranges.

Presenters include Mother Maya (Bri Maya Tiwari) , Dr. Vasanth Lad, dr. Robert Svoboda, Dr. N. Gopalakrishnan, Myra Lewin, Dr. Claudia Welch, Shri V. Vasudevan, Shakta Kaur, and Rose Baudin.

Further information is available online at www.AyurvedaConference.com

AYURVEDIC REJUVENATION WEEKEND: APRIL 3rd-5th in BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA
The Mountain Times
March 27, 2014

The Art of Living Retreat Center (otherwise known as the Art of Living’s International Center for Meditation & Well-Being) invites those looking for an informative and empowering total health experience to join the inaugural Ayurvedic Rejuvenation Weekend April 3 to 5.

“With the majestic backdrop of the Blue Ridge Mountains and the serene, self-rejuvenating haven offered by the Art of Living Retreat Center, the immersive weekend will guide attendees as they start their journey to wholeness and balance,” an Art of Living spokesperson said.Lectures, evaluations and treatments will all focus on the ancient Indian health practices of Ayurveda, healing and prolonging life through diet, exercise, meditation and spa bodywork.The weekend will be led by Dr. Thomas Mitchell, D.C., a Raleigh-based chiropractor who specializes in holistic and Ayurvedic treatments.

With nearly 20 years of experience practicing Ayurveda, Mitchell is also a trained instructor for Art of Living Foundation meditation courses and one of the leading experts in Ayurvedic pulse assessments in both the United States and India.

Pulse diagnosis, the cornerstone diagnostic tool for Ayurvedic practices, includes monitoring an individual’s pulse to notice imbalances and early stages of various diseases. Mitchell will conduct these assessments and provide each attendee with personalized recommendations to “eat well, feel well and be well,” based on their own unique needs.“Ayurveda is the oldest and most relevant system of natural medicine,” Mitchell said. “Pulse assessments provide incredible insight into the body and help identify the best treatments and lifestyle choices to directly improve and prolong life. Together, with the Art of Living Retreat Center and its Blue Heaven Spa, we will help Ayurvedic Rejuvenation Weekend guests achieve their best possible health.”Each retreat attendee will receive three transformative spa treatments during their stay courtesy of Blue Heaven Spa at the Art of Living Retreat Center, one of the only Ayurvedic spas in North Carolina.

Treatments involve massages customized for the individual based specifically on the findings from pulse diagnoses with Mitchell.The three-day event will also include morning, afternoon and evening meditation sessions, yoga, Ayurvedic health lectures and a take-home Ayurvedic self-care kit. The Art of Living Retreat Center will provide a two-night stay in its spa suites, as well as Ayurvedic meals, incorporating fresh seasonal taste and texture to satisfy the five senses and promote a calm body and mind. “Our vision is to become the North American spiritual epicenter for inner peace, personal transformation and service to humanity,” said Neil Srivastava, managing director of the Art of Living Retreat Center. “As part of that vision, we are thrilled to host the Ayurvedic Rejuvenation Weekend, the first of its kind at the Art of Living Retreat Center. Attendees with gain an incredible amount of self-awareness, empowering them to achieve balance and lead their best lives.”

The Art of Living Retreat Center opened in 2011, when the Art of Living Foundation purchased a 381-acre property in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. The foundation, a global humanitarian organization founded by international spiritual leader Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, then restored the property and developed it into its first and only retreat center in the United States. Today, with its wide range of housing facilities, holistic spa, wholesome vegetarian cuisine, panoramic mountain views, serene meditation halls and retreat offerings, the Art of Living Retreat Center is considered a refuge of self-renewal for its many visitors from around the world.

For more information or to reserve a spot, call (828) 264-8382, email (info@blueheavenresortandspa.com) or visit www.meditationcenterusa.org.