During
his 150th birth anniversary year, a look at the life of PS Varier,
the founder of the 117-year-old Arya Vaidya Sala
Photos: PS Varier; PK Warrier; Arya Vaidya Sala
By
Shevlin Sebastian
In
the late 1800s, in the Malabar region of Kerala, when people would
consult with Ayurveda physicians, the latter would write their
prescription on slips of paper. Thereafter, the patients and their
relatives had to get the ingredients. Some they could buy from a shop
while others like roots, herbs and leaves had to be plucked from the
place where they grew by people who knew of them. Then the
ingredients had to be mixed in the right proportion. Since these
medicines did not have any preservatives, it lasted only for a few
days. Following that, the entire process had to begin all over again.
As a result, only the wealthy could afford this type of treatment.
Many ordinary people began to take recourse to allopathic treatment,
in which mass-produced tablets were readily available.
This
lacuna regarding medicines was felt keenly by Ayurveda physician PS
Varier. He felt that like allopathy, medicines needed to be made
systematically with added preservatives. So, on Vijayadashami Day, in
October 1902, he started the Arya Vaidya Sala (AVS) in the village of
Kottakkal (47 km from Kozhikode).
It
was a success story from the very beginning. The AVS has gone from
strength to strength. Today, they have hospitals at Kottakkal, Kochi
and Delhi. There are three modern medicine manufacturing units along
with quality control labs. “These factories produce more than 550
classical and new-generation formulations which are made available to
patients through 26 branches and 1800 authorised dealers spread
across the country,” says PK Warrier, the managing trustee.
And
during the 150th birthday celebrations of Varier, on September 24, at
Kottakkal, Vice President Venkaiah Naidu rightly said, “PS Varier
was a representative of the Indian Renaissance. He was an effective
clinician with a unique healing touch, an academician-cum-educator, a
benevolent entrepreneur, a philanthropist, a man of letters, a
promoter of fine arts and an institution-builder.”
Yes,
indeed, Varier was an institution builder. Apart from the AVS, Varier
built an Ayurveda College, which is celebrating its centenary, a
Vishwambhara temple, a herbal garden as well as a Kathakali Academy.
In 1903, he also started an Ayurveda magazine called Dhanvanthari.
Today the AVS has a publication department which has brought more
than 200 books on Ayurveda. The Chief Editor is the well-known
academician Dr KG Paulose.
Early
life
Varier
was born in 1869, the same year as Mahatma Gandhi. He belonged to a
lower-middle-class family of Ayurveda physicians. Initially, Varier
had a Sanskrit education.
“It
was taught in the family,” says Paulose. “There were no schools
at that time. Every child was taught at home by the elders. But at
the age of 16, he was sent for Ayurveda education to Wadakancherry
(65 km from Kottakkal) by the elders of the family.”
He
studied under Kuttanchery Vasudevan Mooss, a Namboodiri who belonged
to one of the eight great families of Ayurvedic physicians in Kerala,
the ashtavaidyans. It was a gurukul system. “That meant he stayed
in the house of the guru and helped in the household works,” says
Paulose. “He stayed there for four years and studied the higher
branches of Ayurveda.”
He
also had the good fortune to learn the basics of allopathy from Dr V.
Varghese, who was the chief of the government hospital at Manjeri,
not far from Kottakkal. Varier had gone there to treat his eyes which
had been damaged from constant reading. Varghese took a liking for
Varier and invited him to stay and get an idea of Western medicine.
Varier accepted and spent three years. “He realised the
shortcomings of Ayurveda and the merits of allopathy,” says
Warrier. “So he set about bringing changes to Ayurveda.”
Varier,
a devout Hindu, was also a secularist. During the Moplah rebellion of
1921 (Muslims revolted against the British for a heavy-handed
crackdown by the latter on the Khilafat Movement, which was a
campaign in defence of the Ottoman Caliphate. However, in the latter
stages, it became a Hindu-Muslim conflict).
“During
that period every Hindu was an enemy of the Muslims and vice versa,”
says PK Warrier. “But Varier stood with the Muslims. When a peace
committee called the Bharati Seva Sangh came from Bombay, Varier told
them, the rehabilitation works and distribution of food should be
extended to the Muslims, too.”
The
committee members including their head GK Devadhar were shocked to
hear this. “It was the first time a Hindu was speaking on behalf of
Muslims,” says Warrier. “At that time, all the male Muslims were
either killed or had absconded or deported to the Andaman Islands.
There were only women and children left. And they were very
frightened.”
When
Devadhar asked Varier why he was supporting the Muslims, he said,
“Hunger is the same in the stomach of a Muslim as well as a
Hindu.”
In
his home, at Kailasamandiram, in the centre of the archway above the
main gate is an image of Lord Krishna. On either side, on two pillars
are a Christian cross and the Muslim crescent. In an adjacent temple,
which had an idol of Lord Vishvambharan, people of all castes were
allowed to pray.
As
Vice President Naidu said, Varier was indeed a Renaissance man.
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