WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
With a mixed bunch of royalty and celebrities on their client list, the
Ali brothers have established their Integrated Medical Centers in India and abroad
as a viable medical option that offers aromatherapy, ayurveda, acupuncture and
other alternative therapiesall under one roof.
You painfully shuffle downstairs to meet yet another doctor, careful not
to jerk your stiff neck. You open the door, prepared for the familiar
odor of formaldehyde. Instead, a refreshing fragrance of incense and essential
oils tingles your nose. The marble-floored reception is spotlessly clean,
and a sense of relaxation floods your being. You are in the Integrated
Medical Center, which opened in New Delhi, India, last year as part of
a chain managed by five of the Ali brothers.
The ambience is a far cry from regular hospitals. Says Imran Ali, the
youngest of the brothers: "The fragrance of various aromatherapy
oils relaxes a patient, making him more receptive to therapy." As Imran Ali
leads me to his cabin, I notice a painting outside the door. At first,
it seems like a collage with colors arranged in a circular pattern from
light to dark. Then I begin to detect patternshuman faces, elephants,
birds, trees. Imran Ali explains that this computerized painting is custom-made
from Switzerland, and contains relaxation symbols. By simply standing
in front of it for a few minutes, a person's stress levels can drastically
reduce.
Seated in his cabin, surprisingly devoid of a nameplate or degrees, Imran
Ali talks about the center with its 10 practitioners and 14 therapies.
From 3,000-year old methods to the most modern ones, these therapies include
acupuncture,
aromatherapy, marma
massage, neurotherapy and osteopathy,
reflexology,
shiatsu, Unani, and even palmistry!
Since when did palmistry become therapeutic, I ask. Imran Ali explains with
a laugh that palmistry, in this case, stands for the ancient Indian practice
of diagnosing an ailment after studying the palm of the hand. "Fingernails,
eyes and pulse all determine what's wrong with a patient. We do something
similar."
The main feature of this center is Integrated Physical Therapy, a system
developed by the Ali brothers themselves, one that has made them internationally
famous. Also known as Ali's therapy, it is a combination of several traditional
curative systems. Believing that illness results from blockages in the
streams of energy that run through the body, the Alis base their system
on the principle of balancing energies. All blockages, except those caused
by external factors, such as cuts, burns or accidents, can be cured through
integrated physical therapy. Imran Ali explains: "There are five nerve points
between the thumb and forefinger that are connected to the heart, brain,
stomach, kidney and other organs. We can figure out the problem simply
by pressing these specific points."
Depending on the nature of complaint, the combinations vary from patient
to patient. Since psychology
plays an important part, the treatment is decided after ascertaining what
is most comfortable for the patient. "Since all the therapies are under
one roof, we can easily personalize them," Imran Ali points out. But, he
emphasizes, they respect all forms of medicine, including allopathy, and
also arrange for any form of treatment they cannot provide.
The Integrated Medical Center believes in permanent cures, continuing
with the treatment long after the symptoms disappear, to ensure that the
root cause of the disease is eliminated. Unfortunately, however, people
turn to the center only after being disillusioned by conventional systems.
"It is such a pity," frets Imran Ali, "that they come to us only when
the problem has become so aggravated that it makes our job much tougher.
People come to us on the rebound, so it takes longer for them to be cured,
and because word goes round that it takes long, they don't initially come
to us. It is a typical catch-22 situation."
Ann Kumar and her family, however, wouldn't dream of going anywhere else.
Ann, who has been coming to the Ali brothers off and on for 15 years,
says: "I can feel the difference within 45 minutes. People don't understand
the body-mind concept of balancing energies and are distrustful. But I
feel completely safe, even letting them handle my children."
Another convert is Bijayan Kumar, a student, who was suffering from chronic
back pain.
He consulted all kinds of doctors and specialists at great personal expense,
but to no avail. "Then a friend of mine, who was recovering from body
paralysis, recommended Imran Ali. I was amazed when the doctor told
me I would require only 14 sittings with him," he recalls. Within four
days Bijayan experienced almost 50 per cent relief.
"Stress
is the main cause of ill health," says Dr Firdaus Ali. "It weakens the
body's immunity system and makes it susceptible to imbalance." Exercise
and diet form an important part of the regimen.
The Integrated Medical Centers also organizes periodic health holidays,
15-day breaks from the hustle and bustle of daily life in order to rejuvenate
the body. The venue is carefully chosen in secluded areas. The first of
these retreats, in 1989-90, was conducted at Dr Karan Singh's (Indian
philosopher and scholar) Taragarh Fort in the Himalayas with 15 people.
Venues change, but the routine remains constant, starting with a two-hour
walk in the morning, followed by breakfast, sessions of yoga, deep tissue
massage and meditation. The meals are light and organic. The list of celebrities
who have attended these healing holidays in India is impressive: super
models Kate Moss and Sarah Miles, Prince Charles' girlfriend Camilla Parker-Bowles
and singer Mick Jagger.
The moving force behind the Integrated Medical Center is the eldest of
the five brothers, Dr Mosaraf Ali. Based in London for the past decade,
he is the only one with a conventional medical degree. His interest in
alternative medicine, especially acupuncture and acupressure, goes back
to his days in Russia where he was doing his MD.
The idea of integrated medicine first came to him while attending a seminar
on acupuncture. India's former Prime Minister I.K. Gujral, then ambassador
to Russia, did much to encourage him. "So, I did a postgraduate course
in integrated medicine followed by diplomas in fasting therapy, psychotherapy
and hypnosis,"
says Dr Mosaraf Ali. Gujral's advice turned out to be a goldmine for him.
Convinced of its potential, Dr Mosaraf Ali returned to India and started a clinic.
As his practice grew, he turned to his brothers for help. Since there
was little time to pursue a medical degree, the brothers opted for shorter
specialist courses in acupuncture from Hong Kong. Today, apart from the
medical center in New Delhi, they have clinics all over the world, including
London, Hong Kong, Singapore, Kenya, and Oman.
Dr Mosaraf Ali's treatments are legendary. London's Daily Mail
carried an article on a new therapy he devised for women wanting to get
pregnant. It includes a weird combination of yoga, pomegranates and massages,
and bans coffee and vinegar. But the essential part of this therapy is
to get women to relax so they can conceive. The doctor explains that though
conventional fertility treatments increase ovulation, stress can make
the uterus taut, making it difficult for the fertilized ovum to get implanted
there. Hence, the importance of yoga,
massages, meditation
and other relaxation techniques. "We simply show women how to give nature
a chance," he says.
Another of his success stories was the late Lady Tryon, a member of the
British royal family. Dr Mosaraf Ali cured her of terminal uterine cancer
using shark's cartilage and oil. The treatment is simplea completely
organic diet, no alcohol, coffee or cigarettes and high doses of vitamin
C to go with the shark's cartilage. Unbelievable, isn't it, when you think
of all the injections and chemotherapy that cancer specialists recommend?
But undoubtedly, there is a rationale to the methodas Dr Mosaraf
Ali's elite clientele round the world will tell you. He has been hailed
by the press and public as Rasputin to spiritual guru, but his international
patients' list reads like a veritable who's who. Industrialists, models,
sportsmen, movie stars, and even royal families all over the world believe
in him and his brothers. From India, cricketers Kapil Dev and Sunil Gavaskar,
politician T.N. Seshan and actor Kamal Haasan are just a few of his famous
clients. Indeed, Prince Charles even inaugurated the London Integrated
Medical Center in 1997.
Though thousands of miles apart, the brothers regularly keep in touch
with new developments. "I was recently in Dubai," says Dr Firdaus Ali,
"on the request of His Royal Highness the crown prince Sheikh Mohammad.
While treating the Prime Minister's seven-year-old niece for migraine
with a massage, she suddenly developed an allergy to the baby oil I was
using, possibly because it contained strong chemicals. So I replaced it
with mustard oil and she recovered completely."
This information was duly sent to his brother in London, where the Integrated
Medical Center has a research wing monitoring, developing and striving
to improve their existing therapies. It is interesting how the Alis have
blended the traditional with the modern, adding a whole new dimension
to the concept of holistic healing. Though it is difficult at this point
to predict whether such pioneering efforts will bring about a sea change
in medical history, if we count the successes of the Ali brothers' alternative
system, the next millennium may well belong to integrated medicine.