
Article from The Indian Express: "Easy
Healer"
Sudipta Basu in conversation with Dr. Umesh C. Rai (left),
MBBS, MD, FIMSA, Director of the International Sahaja Yoga Research
and Health Center, Mumbai
Doctors in Madrid had given up on her condition of Polyarteritis
Nodosa. And Emilia Moreno lived in a state of semi-paralysis for 20
years - she could barely walk or use her hands. And yet, after
spending a couple of months at a health centre in Navi Mumbai, she
wrote in her farewell note stating : "I was not able to balance and
my eyesight was poor. Today I can walk and write and paint ... ."
And there are
others like her. There is 48-year-old Shirley Ellerbee from New York
who has been here for the past two months and thinks she has been
cured of her condition of breathlessness. "The doctors in New York
suggested operation for my weak heart. But I am rather cynical about
modern medecine and chose to come here for cure.I used to be
breathless even while living in suburban New York. But after about a
couple of months here I actually feel much better," says she. It isn't as if these people have been treated with a magic
potion, but thanks to Sahaj, their physical ailments have been taken
care of, as it were. Sahaj Yoga is practiced in 65 countries all
over the world. The International Sahaj Yoga Research and Health
centre at Navi Mumbai is also guiding and coordinating research
activities of Sahaj Yoga research centers in London, Paris, Vienna,
Moscow, Kiev, Toronto and Sydney.
Sahaj Yoga as rediscovered by Mataji Nirmala Devi aims at
achieving holistic health care for people. The science focuses on
awakening the dormant primordial energy (the Kundalini), whereby a
flow of subtle cool cosmic vibrations in the body is achieved which
nourishes and rejuvenates each and every cell of the body. Says Dr
Umesh Rai, director of International Sahaj Yoga Research and Health
Centre, "As a result of meditation, which is the basic aim of Sahaj,
the body manufactures certain fluids which have curative powers,
which help in overcoming the most severest of ailments."
Another case in point is that of Nilima and Sunil Mane. The
couple were seeped in the agony of childlessness even 14 years after
their marriage. Thereafter, they sought solace in this holistic
science. Says Nilima, now the mother of a 10-year-old : "It is our
firm belief that it was only after a course in Sahaj that it was
possible for us to have a child."
Dr Rai has researched at the Lady Hardinge Medical College and
Associated Hospitals, New Delhi, on the role of Sahaj Yoga in the
treatment of psychosomatic diseases.
He maintains that while with the advancement of the medical
sciences, infectious diseases have been wiped out and heart and
kidney transplants are quite successful, scientists have yet to find
an answer for the treatment of psychosomatic diseases which are on
the increase in the developed as well as the developing countries.
Some such diseases are hypertension, migraine, bronchial asthma,
epilepsy and others.
"The doctor of today practicing modern allopathic medecine has
entered a stage of superspeciality whereby they appoint separate
parts of the body to be treated by a specialist. Due to this
approach doctors are not able to view disease as a disturbance to
the whole organism. They treat a particular part of the body without
taking into consideration the psychological and social aspects of
the patients illness", says Rai. " One could be physically fit, but
emotional problems or social isolation could make a person very
sick."
He advises recourse to the ancient Indian sciptures like the
Patanjali's Yoga Sutra, that mentioned yoga as the most essential
technique to keep the body and mind healthy. This is true even today
but there is a need for integration that is not merely inner but
covers external life as well. "For yoga to be more relevant today,
it needs to touch both the physical and mental aspects of health,
which is encapsulated in the Sahaj Yoga. This science borders on all
that which one is born with," says he.
It is based on our subtle nervous system. The dormant primordial
energy is present in every individual in three and a half coils in
the triangular bone called "sacrum"- The Kundalini, at the base of
the spine. When this gets activated on doing Sahaj Yoga, it ascends
and activates one's six subtle chakaras and piercing through
Brahmarandhra, it unites with the all pervading cosmic energy."And
with this actualisation in the limbic area of the brain, subtle cool
vibrations start flowing from both palms and the top of the head. In
this vibratory awareness, while one can feel what chakaras are
blocked, on the other side one can work out the correction of these
chakaras to cure different diseases.
To verify some of the claims of Sahaj Yoga, a systematic research
study was organised in the physiology and medecine department of
Lady Hardinge Medical College and Associated Hospitals in New Delhi.
The research projects studied were psychological effects of
Kundalini awakening by Sahaj Yoga and the effect of Sahaj practise
on psychosomatic diseases like hypertension and bronchial asthma.
Says Ellerbee, the most important aspect of this science is to
achieve a state of thoughtlessness. "Which is the most difficult of
things to achieve. But once you get your mind free, you gradually
begin to feel a calm stillness within," says she.
But couldn't the cure here for ailments like hypertension etc. be
attributed to the fact that getting here in the health centre itself
is a get-away of sorts for the patients ?
"Getting away from regular duties help concentrate on Sahaj but
it is imperative that one should continue to keep at it. The cure
though is lasting," says she.
An alternative to the traditional medical sciences ? Now that's a
tough one, isn't it ?
THE INDIAN EXPRESS, 23 july 1996. Sahaja Yoga hospital featured in The Times of India (New
Bombay Plus) Many foreigners taking to Sahaj yoga BELAPUR (March17, 1999)

An increasing number of foreigners are getting attracted to the
International Sahaj Yoga centre at CBC Belapur. At present, members
from twenty-eight countries have joined this centre. What's
impressive is that within three years of starting its operations.
The Centre has, besides Indians, more than 170 people from United
States, UK, Switzerland, Belgium, Austria, New Zealand and
Australia. They were admitted in the research and health section.
Founded and started by Shree Mataji Nirmala Devi three years ago,
today this centre has more international visitors than Indians.
Situated in sylvan green environs, the International Centre for
Sahaj Yoga Research and Health Centre is an unique centre of its
kind in the world, where treatment is done by vibratory awareness,
developed by Sahaj yoga meditation.
In February 1996, Shree Mataji Nirmala Devi, a renowned spiritual
scientist of the world, founded and threw open this sprawling
centre. Dr. U C Rai, former head physiology department Jawaharlal
Institute of Post graduate Medical Education and Research,
Pondicherry, and professor in various medical colleges of Delhi,
heads the Centre at Belapur, as its director. Recently, he was
conferred with the Vladimir Verniczky Honoured doctor award
in Moscow, for his research on Sahaj yoga at the centre.
The highlight of this centre is the free treatment provided.
Speaking to New Bombay Plus, Dr. Rai said, "Through Sahaja Yoga, the
results in the medical field have been fantastic, especially in
areas where doctors' efforts had been futile."
Narrating about a rare recovery of a patient, S S Agarwal from
Delhi he said, "His was a case of chronic renal failure, for which
doctors had ruled out all treatment, except ongoing dialysis. By
applying Sahaj yoga, we aroused his Kundalini energy (which is a
dormant energy at the base of the spine) and directed it towards the
kidney to clear his blocked chakras." Today, Agarwal's medical
reports indicate near normalcy.
Etienne Loyson, a 62 year old architect from Belgium, is just
spell-bound, "Earlier I had high blood pressure. Doctors abroad had
suggested taking several tablets ongoingly as the only treatment
method. But today, with Sahaj yoga treatment and the blessing of
Shree Mataji Nirmala Devi, I am full of energy. I have stopped all
medicines and I feel I am just 30 years old."
Katherine Reid from England (who suffered from irritable bowels
syndrome) is a happy woman today, in contrast to her life previously
when she had to take several medicines prior to her arrival in Navi
Mumbai. "I feel much better having stopped my medication completely.
My health has improved by about eighty per cent." Anna Kargaity, a
Canadian who suffered from depressive psychosis is full of smiles
today. "I now have a positive outlook towards life, being able to
develop my own personality and express my feelings", she says.
Similar benefits were highlighted by Belinda from Australia, Kumar
from Canada, Bryan from USA and others.
On being asked as to why so many foreigners are coming to India,
when advanced medicines are available with doctors of modern
medicine all over the world, Dr. Rai added, "The doctors abroad
don't have a treatment for the psyche of human being, except giving
tranquillizers, sedatives and anti-depressant drugs. These are not
only harmful, but also habit-forming. In view of this, Sahaj yoga,
which can control the psyche of human being by meditation, has
become very popular to the treatment and prevention of psychosomatic
diseases like bronchial asthma, migraine, irritable bowel syndrome,
infertility, multiple scierosis and spondylitis, to name a few. It
is all due to the blessings of Shree Mataji Nirmala Devi, who
founded Sahaj Yoga centre, and has enlightened thousands of people
all over the world."
We do charge them for their stay and for the food provided by us,
he adds, but not for the treatment. "Anyone can heal themselves
using Sahaja Yoga as this energy is present within every individual.
Why should we charge anyone?" comments doctor Rai.
With over fifty foreigners having already taken treatment from
the centre, between January 1 - February 14, 1999, a record number
of international visitors are likely to arrive during the coming
year.
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Srinivas Iyer

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