Guest guest Posted March 29, 2008 Report Share Posted March 29, 2008 dear Dr Muzumdar, Please accept my apologies for the delay in my answer - I thought I sent this some time ago. Perhaps you wouldn't mind providing a brief recent history of Ayurveda in India. From what I have been able to piece together there was a significant decline in Ayurveda during the colonial period, with many physicians losing the patronage they had previously enjoyed. Also, with the rising influence of Western medicine, the status of Ayurveda had been undermined even further. Even as recently as 1997 I observed that Western medicine was growing apace in India - it seems to me maybe the pendulum has begun to swing back to Ayurveda in India very recently, as the West is also beginning to make that shift with more earnestness. Having has the good fortune to have traveled throughout most of India, it is has been my general observation that the south has faired much better when it comes to the preservation of traditional knowledge, simply because it has been insulated from foreign influences to a relatively greater degree than the north. Of course the south also has its distinct differences as well, and so I am not suggesting that it is entirely representative of Ayurveda across the subcontinent - indeed, my thesis all along is that the principles of Ayurveda are adapted to place and custom. Regardless of all the tourism hype, Kerala has been a center for Ayurveda for a very long time, since the Ashta Vaidyan tradition was established in the line of Vagbhata. This tradition has been preserved and maintained for perhaps the longest time, without foreign interruption. Although it could be rightly argued that the Kerala vaidyas are the inheritors of Ayurvedic knowledge from the north, and that the knowledge isn't necessarily _indigenous_ to Kerala, they have been holding the torch for a very long time now. Is it not true that that even today many Ayurvedic physicians outside of Kerala go there specifically to study PK practices and the various Keraliya specialties? From what I have observed in the north, what is called PK is more a modified form of out-patient therapy, and thus many might not be following the shastras with complete precision. I believe that a doctor wrote in awhile back highlighting his experience in this regard, discussing the benefits of implementing authentic in-patient PK treatment, which seems to be most advanced in Kerala. best regards... Todd Caldecott best... Todd Caldecott Caldecott, Dip. Cl.H, RH(AHG) Ayurvedic practitioner, Medical Herbalist web: http//:www.toddcaldecott.com _____________ > I would definitely like to point out that Panchkarma is being > extensively practised in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan also > besides Kerala.AND there is nothing much difference from Kerala > variety except language and names of procedures and herbs...... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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