Saturday, September 14, 2013

Yoga in Nepal

Some years back, I was in Lonavala, an idyllic location between Mumbai and Pune, participating in a ten days long retreat program for executives. The program included a daily morning schedule of yoga under the guidance of a sage like guru, long beard, et al. The exercises started at 5 AM sharp and lasted for about one and a half hours each day. Used as I am to more rigorous forms of exercise, martial arts and football for example, yoga seemed to me to be a comparatively easy form of work out. Downright benign, in fact. After every few minutes of bending and stretching and breathing deeply, we were told to drop dead. Literally. It was supposed to the sabh asana (corpse posture) and it required us to lie still with our eyes closed and with our limbs all limp and relaxed. I did wonder then about this when none of the exercises were in any way at all strenuous, where was the need to fall into this drop-dead posture every few minutes? Later on of course I began to realize that yoga is in fact a relaxed form of work out, one in which more emphasis is laid on proper posture, correct breathing and meditation rather than on vigorous movements requiring considerable stamina. In later years too, I did witness some yoga practitioners chew steel plates and glass bulbs and I also did see some who sucked in air in such a way as to make their stomachs virtually disappear. Oh yes, yoga now does seem to be a much more fascinating art than I had heretofore imagined.

The fascination was further reinforced by a visit to The Healing Hands Centre' in Maharajgunj. Rahul Bharati, the thirty something who says he earned a PhD in Physiotherapy from Switzerland when only 21 years of age, also claims to be have revived a technique known as Nuad-Bo-Rarn (in Sanskrit), or more understandably, Ancient Thai Massage. Supposedly based on yoga postures, this technique is, as Rahul puts it very succinctly, "Yoga for lazy people". This of course shouldn't be taken literally. Rather, Nuad-Bo-Rarn is for those people who, either due to old age or disability, cannot do yoga by themselves but need a helping hand to do so and in the process, gain the inherent benefits of the art. In fact, according to the young teacher, the centre was previously known as Himalayan Yogic Institute' in which he served as a teacher from 1989 to 1994. Later on, the name was changed to The Kathmandu Centre of Healing', and finally, is now called, The Healing Hands Centre'. Whatev er the reasons for changing names, one cannot doubt that yoga is the basis of all teaching here and this should give a good example of the wide extent of yogic practices. Ancient Thai Massage claims its roots to be in India and is said to be based on the concept of energy lines running throughout the body, in line with the yoga philosophy that life energy (prana) is absorbed with the air we breathe in and the food we eat. Again, in line with yogic practices, Ancient Thai Massage believes that in addition to the physical body, there is thus a second body comprised of many energy lines. In the case of Ancient Thai Massage, ten main lines are selected along which there are believed to be specially important pressure points.

Similarly, Arogya Ashram' in Tangal, under the auspices of the International School of Yoga System of Medicine and Hospital, describes itself as The Natural Health and Yoga Centre' and runs a clinic under Dr. Pramod Gautam's supervision who practices the art of naturopathy. Arogya Ashram, established some 35 years ago by Dr. Pramod's father, the late Yogacharya Dr. Kashi Raj Upadhyaya, believes in the credo, Prevention is better than Cure'. "We believe that chemical medicines are harmful and most of the treatment we practice is based on the concept that toxins are the major problems of all disease. So our goal is to detoxify the body," reveals the doctor. This is done, according to him, through various treatment regimes such as clay therapy, hydrotherapy, solar therapy etc. In fact, much of the therapy is derived from the philosophical aspect of Panchakarma', i.e. the five elements fire, air, earth, water and akash (vacuum) and the practice is said to be a yoga system of medicine.

"We believe that yoga is a discipline," says the doctor. "And yes, ultimately, besides the medicinal aspects, yoga develops personality." Dr. Gautam has 20 years experience to his credit so what he says should hold water. According to him, the centre conducts a regular yoga class everyday under the guidance of skilled practitioners. Besides this, and a major activity of the centre, is of course naturopathy the curing of diseases through the natural way'. "Naturopathy is efficacious for treating many gastro, osteo and neuro-related diseases as well as ENT problems," he asserts. "Also, for problems of obesity, diabetes, hypertension, depression, asthma and gout, naturopathy has proved to be a boon." He adds, "Our treatment is specially good for pain management." At the same time, the doctor reminds, "Our system of yogic medicine is actually geared towards changing bad habits and degenerative lifestyles." For those interested, treatment usually lasts for a month in most case s and costs Rs.200 for a two-hour session everyday. However, for more chronic problems, therapy can continue for upto six months. Early treatment is advised. The doctor also believes, "If only people are made more aware of good eating habits, it would revolutionize health." He concludes with, "Naturopathy is a sort of mother therapy' because it can be combined with any other form of treatment." Indeed, this yoga system of medicine is free from the much-dreaded side effects that are so prevalent through use of chemical drugs, and indeed, this yoga system of medicine is certain to transform habits, improve lifestyle and in fact, transform lives. Actually, all that yoga states its goal to be.

Both the above examples demonstrate the many different ways in which yoga philosophy is applied. Yoga, as such, is an ancient art with a 3000 year-old history. Its history has five broad divisions that include Vedic Yoga, Preclassical Yoga, Classical Yoga, Postclassical Yoga and Modern Yoga. Although the ancient Vedas contain the oldest known references to yoga, and so is called Vedic Yoga, the classic text of yoga is Patanjali's Yoga Sutras' (200BC-200AD) - Classical Yoga. In between the two, around 500 BC, the Bhagavad Gita was created and is therefore it is the oldest yoga scripture. This was Preclassical Yoga. The Gita talked about bhakti (loving devotion), jnana (knowledge or contemplation) and karma (selfless actions). However, it was Patanjali, around the second century, who really tried to define Classical Yoga. The four systems of yoga were classified as jnana yoga, karma yoga, raja yoga and bhakthi yoga. Patanjali's Yoga Sutra' comprises of 195 aphorisms or sutra s that expound on the raja yoga and its basic principle: the Eightfold Path of Yoga. These include yama, meaning ethics, niyama, implying personal observance of purity, tolerance and study; asanas, or physical exercises; pranayama breath control; pratyahara, signifying sense withdrawal to prepare for meditation; dharana concentration; dhayana meditation and samadhi, denoting ecstasy. During the 6th Century, Buddha started his teachings which laid heavy emphasis on meditation and physical postures he could be said to be the first Buddhist to have studied yoga. Later, in the Postclassical period, yoga gurus started to explore unknown potentials of the human body and began to think of new yogic practices, such as Hatha Yoga which is very popular today, that would revitalize the body and lengthen life. Hatha Yoga's goal is to facilitate concentration and meditation through asanas and pranayama, thus preparing the practitioner for achievement of samadhi.

Swami Viveknanda introduced yoga to the west during the Parliament of Religions held in Chicago in 1893. Around 1920, Paramhansa Yogananda, author of Autobiography of a Yogi', established his self-realization fellowship in Los Angeles. In the early 1930's, J. Krishnamurthy and his expositions on jnana yoga became popular in the west. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, famed for his famous disciples, The Beatles, entered the picture in the 1960's and introduced Transcendental Meditation. Around the same time another famous yoga guru, Swami Sivananda who is credited with modernizing yoga, opened ashrams in America and Europe. He propagated his modified Five Principles of Yoga that consisted of savasana or proper relaxation; asanas or proper exercise; pranayama or proper breathing; proper diet, and dhayana or positive thinking/meditation. He was blessed with some outstanding disciples. Disciples like Swami Satchinanda who initiated yoga chanting during Woodstock, Swami Sivananda Radha wh o investigated the relationship between psychology and yoga, and Yogi Bhajan who, in the 1970's, introduced Kundalini Yoga. Another famous disciple, Swami Vishnudevananada wrote the book, Complete Illustrated Book of Yoga'. In 1965, Shrila Prabhupada founded the International Society of Krishna Consciousness (ISKON) in the US and popularized Bhakti Yoga (yoga of devotion). In the 1970's, Osho Rajneesh became one of the most illustrious yoga gurus the world over. Sathya Sai Baba too is said to be one of the best-known living yoga gurus today. Another is of course, Swami Baba Ramdev, who is certainly the one most in the limelight at the moment.

Coming back to Nepal, according to Swami Badri Bishal, founder of Bishal Ayurveda Ausadhalaya and Yoga Centre in Anamnagar, Kathmandu, there are probably around 25 to 30 proficient yoga gurus in Kathmandu. Among these, Dr. Yogi Vikashanand of Ananda Yoga Centre, Satungal, Kathmandu, is probably the best known, thanks to his frequent appearances in the media. This, no doubt must be credited to his high degree of expertise in this most ancient of arts. One must also mention Acharya Swami Anand Arun of Osho Tapoban in Nagarjun, who teaches the path of self realization as revealed by Osho Rajneesh. Speaking of centres of learning, it is interesting to note that the Jain Mandir in Gyaneswar, Kathmandu, imparts yoga lessons free of cost every day to the almost one hundred students who practice yoga there. And speaking again of Badri Bishal, although he is a long time disciple of Satya Guru Bhakta Sanka of Lamjung and is a guru himself, he reveals that he has enrolled in the Balm iki Vidyapeeth in order to learn still more about yoga. He teaches Patanjali Yoga and believes that for a serious student to attain the necessary expertise, at least three years of continued practice is needed. His training schedule includes about ten minutes of jogging with emphasis on balanced breathing followed by a period of Om dhoni (humming the Om sound). In fact, it is only after a beginner has gained some proficiency in the above that he is allowed to proceed further, i.e. to the asanas, then to pranayana and dhyan.

Undoubtedly, every teacher has his own individual approach to the teaching of yoga, and it is a fact that there are many systems of yoga practiced today, as it has been through the ages, but whatever the method or the system or the path taken by various gurus, yoga's ultimate purpose is to transform a person through the transcendence of ego. "Yoga is a spiritual discipline," declares Dr. Pramod Gautam. And self-enlightenment is yoga's avowed goal. In recent days, with the visit of that new messiah of yoga, Swami Ramdev, to Kathmandu, the ancient art has attained added popularity and one can safely say that yoga is here to stay.





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