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India Undergoes Spiritual Healing Renaissance

By M. Hanif Lakdawala

21/08/2003

Mumbai’s visual environment is saturated with signs of traditional spirituality

Are you feeling depressed? Is your high blood pressure, acidity or asthma affecting your quality of life? Stuck in a job you hate, wondering why you drag yourself there five days a week?

The simple solution would be to consult a physician or a psychiatrist. Recent studies, however, have revealed a trend where more and more people visit religious places and seek the aid of spirituality in curing a slew of ailments.

Mumbai, the commercial capital of India, is fast becoming a booming market for saviors of souls in distress, and a growing number of young new-agers are trying a wide array of spiritual treatments to cure themselves.

Mumbai’s visual environment is saturated with signs of traditional spirituality repacked for this burgeoning audience by a new class of pop gurus. Satsang, or religious discourses, have become a regular feature of Mumbai’s socio-cultural circuit. Community halls, public gardens and auditoriums are packed on weekends and holidays with spiritual seekers.

New Age Gurus with Professional Academic Backgrounds

Many new age gurus have a very different academic background

What is remarkable about these new age spiritual gurus is their academic  achievement besides their knowledge of human psychology. Most of them have high academic qualifications and could have secured a lucrative professional career.

The resume of Guruji Rishi Prabhakar shows his expertise in the fields of computers, aeronautical engineering and management. His range of activities include enlightening people on meditation, raising their consciousness and helping them lead healthy lives.

Well versed with both Eastern and Western philosophies, the guruji is a silent meditator having a large number of disciples. Rishi Prabhakar has chosen the route of social work. Currently involved with the development of certain villages in Karnataka, he has been successful in eliminating tobacco and alcohol addiction from these villages.

Rishi Prabhakar has also originated a Siddha Samadhi Yoga training programme (SSY): a 14-day programme with a three-hour session every day. The programme, which involves imparting a meditation technique, claims to have helped people overcome stress and improve their memory.

Dr. Jayant Balaji Athavale, founder of the Sanatan Bhartiya Sankruti, left his lucrative practice as a doctor and established the institution to create an awareness for India's rich spiritual heritage. His institution holds over 1000 weekly satsangs in its 600 centers in Maharashtra, Goa, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Haryana and Delhi.

The spiritual meetings held by the Sanastha are also aimed not only at the dissemination of spiritual knowledge, but also at providing explanations for the various rituals performed more often without knowledge of their meaning.

Guru Rajendra Garg, who has been holding Amritvani satsangs in Mumbai, is an engineering graduate from VJTI. He claims his education has helped him reach out to people from all backgrounds, young and old, educated and illiterate. "I try to speak to people in a language that they understand", he said.

Shri Mataji Nirmala Devi, a graduate of medicine and post graduate in psychology, developed and promoted a system of meditational practices called Sahaja Yoga. Rejecting religion as a confining mental construct, she describes Shaja Yoga as a self transformation technique designed to activate "the energy that Hindus call Kundalini shakti, Muslims call Ruh and Christians recognize as the presence of the Holy Ghost." Her meetings in Mumbai and other cities are reported to attract an attendance ranging between 50,000 and 1,00,000 people.

Religion Prolongs Life

Muslims gather for prayer at Shahi Jamaa Mosque

Research published recently from the National Institute of Health Care Research in the USA has established that the odds of survival of people who rated higher on measures of public and private religious involvement were 20 percent higher than those people who scored lower on such measures.

The analysis of 42 research studies investigating the role of religion in health in which 126,000 people were interviewed has also established that regular attendance at one's mosque, church, synagogue or Buddhist monastery is related to a significantly longer life.

Asfaque Memon, who suffers from mitral valve fibrillation (narrowing of the heart valve), has undergone open-heart surgery twice. On the third occasion, instead of surgery, he relied on meditation and prayers. "I offer Namaz (daily prayers) five times a day and recite the Noble Quran. This gives me peace of mind and keeps my heart stable," said Memon. "It is now four years since I was advised to undergo surgery for the third time. By the grace of the Almighty, today I am stable".

A recent study from the University of Texas confirmed that long-term survival after open-heart surgery was significantly linked to positively attaining comfort from your religion. The authors of the Texas study also suggest that religious-minded people perhaps suffer from less anxiety about death than the non-religious, thanks to a comforting belief in life after death, and this in itself could explain a better mortality.

Cancer Patients Resort to Spiritual Healing

Faith does heal, says a group of cancer survivors who continue to lead active and fruitful lives after battling advanced stages of the disease, not just with drugs alone, but with prayers and spirituality as well. The survivors, convinced of the role played by faith and a positive attitude in contributing to their healing process, have now set up a support group, 'Can Support', to help other patients overcome their fears and fight the disease.

Among these survivors, Priyanka developed Hodgkin's lymphoma when she was barely thirty-one. The cancer was detected at a fairly advanced stage, known in medical parlance as stage 4. "My first thoughts were for my daughter, then five years old. Gradually I started concentrating on God. From this stage I began a process where I became an active participant in my healing process. I then started curing my own thoughts and concentrating on the positive side of things," she said. After all, she claims, it is your thoughts that are eventually having a result on the final outcome of the cure.

"I saw that people at similar stages of the cancer deteriorated rapidly. The reactions of different people to chemotherapy are different. The reasons are mainly the thoughts that need to be channeled to discover your inner spiritual self and harmonize with it," She said.

In fact, even a premier medical institution such as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi is now convinced of the positive effects of spirituality in healing. The cancer center at AIIMS now regularly organizes 'Art of Living' courses for patients, as it feels these courses help its patients better cope with disease.

Professionals Agree

Many psychologists these days tend to be less dismissive of belief and faith. Interestingly, Mr. Ayyar, President of the Indian Psychiatric Society's Western Chapter says, "during a recent lecture, I found only one self-confessed skeptic in a gathering of 42 medical practitioners. The rest said they believed in some higher power.”

"My own personal experience with techniques like Vipassana has led me to a more lenient view of spirituality, compared to say, that of Freud or Marx who described religion as the opium of the masses," Dr. Ayyar adds. "It's all right as long as it does not harm and doesn't make patients dysfunctional," says the Mumbai based psychiatrist, Dr. R. M. Choktani. "In fact, general psychiatry tends to be quite liberal these days, using a variety of traditional and conventional interventions to help patients.”

Eminent physician and cardiologist Dr. Nadeem Rais concurs saying, "The urban style of living has led to stress induced ailments. Besides medication, I always advise my patients to offer regular prayers and meditate, as this has a soothing effect on the mind."

Donah Zohar, in her book, 'Spiritual Intelligence: The Ultimate Intelligence', writes, "Neurologists have identified a "God Spot" in our brain that triggers our need to search for meaning in life. And with the decline of conventional religion, we are seeking this meaning in our working life instead. No surprise, really, when most of us spend more than 40 hours a week there."

The British work guru Nick Williams in his book, 'The Work We Were Born to Do' writes, "As a society we have valued the logic of the head over that of the heart for a couple of hundred years, and people feel confused because they have everything that's supposed to make them happy and they aren't happy. They wonder, 'where else do I look?’”

Spirituality and the Life Force

Religious and spiritual interventions can help when all else has failed

Another recent study performed by the National Institute of Health Care Research in  America involving more that 21,000 representative American subjects found that those who never attended church or other religious places had almost twice the risk of death in the nine-year follow-up period, compared with those who attended more than once a week. This translated into a seven-year difference in life expectancy at the age of 20 between those who never attend and those who attend a religious ceremony of some sort more than once a week.

This is echoed by the cover story in ‘Psychology Today’. The author, David Relkin, a professor of psychology at Pepperdine University, argues that contemplation, meditation, prayer, rituals and other spiritual practices have the power to release the 'life force' at the deepest levels of the human psyche that secular interventions cannot reach.

Bloom, A. writes in ‘School for Prayer’, "Meditation and prayer may also be used in a variety of ways to facilitate therapeutic change. Meditation, for example, has been found to result in greater relaxation, disidentification, alertness, awareness, empathy, sensitivity, and openness to change."

Indeed, new evidence shows that religious and spiritual interventions can help when everything else has failed. The meaning to life that religions offer and the sense that all injustice will ultimately be corrected by God, seems to bring hope in the face of despair and thus in coping with psychological stress due to various ailments.

The Art of Living Foundation founder, Sri Ravi Shankar, says, "Every human being is good. If someone is not behaving well it is because of stress and ignorance." He added that every incident in life should be treated as a learning process, even if the experience was bad. You forget the incident but always keep the lessons alive," he said.

"When we don't pay attention to matters of the heart, we feel a vacuum in our lives, also because we are following the mind, which is constantly looking for and exploring something new," Ravi Shankar said.

Sources:

  • Healing Research Volumes I - IV.Daniel J. Benor, M.D

  • A. A. Sheikh, & K. S. Sheikh (Eds.), ‘Eastern and Western Approaches to Healing: Ancient Wisdom and Modern Knowledge’. New York: John Wiley & Sons.

  • Bloom, A. (1980). ‘School for Prayer’. London: Dartort, Longman & Todd. New York: Phoenix Press/Walker.

  • Byrd, R. C. (1988). ‘Positive Therapeutic Effects of Intercessory Prayer in a Coronary Care Unit Population’. Southern Medical Journal, 8I (7), 826-829.


M. Hanif Lakdawala is a freelance journalist based in Mumbai, India. He is the Creative and Research Director with CLEAR VISION, which is involved in producing programmes to create public awareness about different communities and social problems. He is also a visiting faculty member teaching journalism at Akber Peer Bhoy College, Mumbai. 

 
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