DHARAMSALA:-
A small village near Dharamsala was recently transformed into
a cosmopolitan mix. Himachal’s shepherd community—the Gaddis,
Nepalese, Tibetans, Austrians—including the Austrian
ambassador, and Germans joined a few saffron-clad, long-haired
babas in Sidhbari—10 km east of Dharamsala—to celebrate the
10th anniversary of a clinic.
The clinic is run by Nishtha—a rural health,
Image by Ulf
education
and environment centre headed by Dr Barbara Nath-Wiser, an
Austrian doctor who has been quietly changing the face of this
village since 1984.
Her life reads like the script of a Hindi film. In the late
1970s, Barabara then a medical student, was on a visit to
Dharamsala. Her quest to learn Indian music brought her in
touch with Krishna Nath—a traditional Nath baba —who lived in
a temple. The music lessons ended in their wedding after which
they left for Austria. In the early 1980s they returned to
India. After her husband’s death, Barbara decided to continue
living in Sidhbari. She initially worked for a local clinic
before setting up her own.
The main strength of Nishta remains the polyclinic which
Barbara runs. Approximately 50 patients from the village and
neighbouring areas visit the clinic every day. The clinic
provides allopathic, ayurvedic, homeopathic and acupuncture.
Medicines are given at subsidised rates and free of charge to
the poor. ‘‘The treatment is holistic,’’ says Barbara.
The 5,000-strong Sidhbari village consists mainly of shepherds
and labourers. The health problems are many—contaminated
drinking water and harsh working conditions result in many
cases of infectious and degenerative diseases. Tuberculosis
and hepatitis are common.
Earlier the villagers drank water straight from the
snow-streams which were often contaminated up-stream.
‘‘It was a diarrohea-mela here during monsoons,’’ says Dr
Kishwar-Ahmed Shirali who is a part of the team. In a bid to
combat water borne disease Nishta has made filtered drinking
water available at the clinic.
‘‘Regular health awareness workshops, seminars, awareness
raising fetes and camps are held to ensure that people know
important facts about their bodies, prevalent diseases and how
to increase their ability to manage family crises,’’ says
Kishwar.
The Seven Spiritual Laws Of
Success
If you observe nature at work, you will see
that least effort is expended. Grass does not try to grow, it
just grows. Fish don't try to swim, they just swim. Flowers
don't try to bloom, they bloom. Birds don't try to fly; they
fly. This is their intrinsic nature. The earth doesn't try to
spin on its own axis; it is the nature of the earth to spin
with dizzying speed and to hurtle through space.Read
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Flower Like a lotus, Know Your
Chakras:-
At
the root centre, Muladhara is associated with the element earth,
the quality being cohesiveness and inertia. At this level, you may
remain content, experiencing no desire to change or to expand into
any other state
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Regular meditation can change the inner
working and circuitry of the brain, scientists have found. Marc
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Brain
research is beginning to produce concrete evidence for
something that Buddhist practitioners of meditation have
maintained for centuries: mental discipline and meditative
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