What is Ayurveda ?
Ayurveda is the 'Knowledge or Science of Life'. According to
Charaka, the ancient physician-sage, life is a unified state
of the physical body, the cognitive organs, the mind and the
soul, thus signifying a living being.
Ayurveda
deals with the maintenance of health and relief from disease.
Susruta, another physician-sage of early times, defines the
healthy state thus: 'A person whose somatic and psychic humours
are in equilibrium, digestion is uniformly healthy, with normal
functioning of the fundamental tissues of the body and body
wastes, accompanied by the processes of the soul, cognitive
organs and the mind, is said to be a healthy person'.
The primary position given to humoral
equilibrium indicates its importance in maintaining health.
Any disequilibrium is considered to lead to disease. Health
is the physiological maintenance of all the functions of the
living being, while disease is the disturbance in the physiology.
The contemporary practice of Ayurveda
is based on the several hundred volumes of Classical treatises
and on the official Formulary and Pharmacopoeia.
Revival of Ayurveda
During the 500 years of foreign domination of India, Ayurveda
was held in ridicule, and it withered. But the invincible
spirit of this life science survived and thrived. Today, Ayurveda
has caught the attention of the people the world over - both
laymen and professionals.
The major credit for reviving and spreading
the message of Ayurveda in the 20th century goes to the Kottakkal
Arya Vaidya Sala and its founder Vaidyaratnam P. S. Varier.
Called the 'Saviour of Ayurveda in the South', he was the
first man in South India to organise the treatment of patients
under the Ayurvedic system. He pioneered the production of
Ayurvedic medicines on modern lines, and ensured that Ayurveda
occupied its rightful place among the country's major medical
systems.
Inspired by the zeal, vision and human
compassion of its great founder, Kottakkal Arya Vaidya Sala
carried on with its noble mission. It sailed smoothly through
two World Wars, the Great Depression of the thirties and several
natural calamities and political upheavals. Today, it has
grown into a mighty organisation unparalleled in South India.
The services of The Arya Vaidya Sala
reach its patients through a nation-wide network of 14 branches
and more than 1000 retail distributors that market its 500-odd
formulations.
Thousands of patients visit Kottakkal
every year, seeking succour at the healing hands of Arya Vaidya
Sala. Ailing people from the West European, Arabian, American
and Far East countries also approach the institution. |