Living better should come to you as easily as breathing,” says Dr. Isaac Mathai who talks about his attitude to healthcare and his new book on holistic healing.
The Soukya International Holistic Health Centre has, for
over a dozen years now, been a classic example of how integrated
holistic healing can also be a million-dollar business.
The man behind the place and the concept, Dr. Issac Mathai, is clear
that the holistic way is the only way to live. Excerpts from an
interview
Willy-nilly, an elitist tag has come to
be associated with Soukya, the place where the Windsor royals, Bishop
Desmond Tutu, Sting, Madonna, Rajnikanth and other celebs come to heal.
What do you have to say about that?
And elitist
equals expensive. Is that what you mean? Well, that is the purpose.
Homeopathy has an image of being too low-key at best, cheap at its
worst. I am out to change that perception. I want the technique involved
in this discipline to be valued as highly as the medicines, their
healing powers, themselves.
So yes, I will say it:
Soukya is one of the most expensive holistic healing places in the
world… as also the most successful healthcare business in the world.
But, you see, I deliver the goods.
I charge what I
charge only because I know the quality and efficacy of what I offer. I
don’t charge to make money, and my patients know that. I do my charity
work quietly; I started my first charity clinic as far back as 1991, I
have a chain of rural health centres, all run as efficiently as Soukya
is.
What is Soukya’s USP?
The seamless integration of a holistic way of life in the most efficient manner possible.
Once
you get on to this path, it should become a part of your life. Living
better should come to you as easily as breathing. Soukya helps you with
that integration.
Is the average Indian any closer to a holistic attitude to life in this frantic age?
This
is a cliché but times really are changing. Today there is a return to
tradition, helped in a large way by our Prime Minister’s call to promote
yoga and meditation.
It is a period of transition. I
was there before the holistic method became fashionable, and I will be
there when people realise it is the only way of living.
There
seems to be a strong religious connect between holistic healing and
religion in the book. You talk often of prayer; there is a strong accent
on spirituality. What of the non-believer patient?
My emphasis is on spirituality. My brand of healing is more spiritual in nature than religious.
You
don’t believe in God, fine. I direct your attention to a belief in some
form of energy, like say, sunlight. You don’t wish to connect with God
or pray, then connect with nature, tap into your spiritual self, be at
peace.
Yoga was rejected in some parts of the U.S. for its perceived link to the Hindu religion. Your take on this?
Yoga’s
origins lie in Hinduism. There is no escaping that fact, no running
away from it. But to reject something so vital to lifestyle management
for its link with a culture or religion is a display of ignorance. It
works to the detriment of those who would scoff or reject.
Are you comfortable with the right-wing appropriation of holistic healing and yoga?
I
just don’t see any right-wing agenda being promoted. I see our national
assets like yoga and meditation being promoted. And I’m thankful for
that.
At every talk I give, I point out that it is
essential to promote our living heritage from the ground up. Schools
should have yoga classes. Medical students should be given some training
in holistics. Not to practice it as a professional if they don’t care
to do so; just to stop the ridicule, which generally stems from
ignorance and misconceptions.
Allopathy should be the alternate form of medicine. I’m all for promoting traditional therapies.
What are your plans for the near future?
I keep getting enquiries to open Soukya centres in different parts of the world. I need to think seriously about that.
My
Sahaya centre is a 30-bed place now; I need to upgrade it to at least
200 beds. We grow our own vegetables and fruit; even have small- sized
patches of vineyard as well as apiaries. We have to now look at having a
full-fledged organic farm.
Then there are more books
on the anvil: holistic health for men, for children, a holistic
cookbook. The future looks happily busy!
for current tariff go to http://www.soukya.com/tariffs.php
http://www.thehindu.com/features/magazine/wholesome-healing-back-to-tradition/article6796827.ece
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