Spiritual
Medicine in the History of Islamic Medicine
The articles of faith in Islam are:
(1) Tawhid or belief in
the Oneness of Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa)
(2) Salaat or contactual prayer
(3) Siyam or Fasting
during the month of Ramadan
(4) Zakaah or charity
(5) Hajj or pilgrimage to
Mecca.
History has recorded that Babur, Mughal Emperor of India,
prayed for his son, Humayun's health who was seriously ill or almost near
death. Hence Babur asked Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa) to spare his son’s life and take his (Babur's) life in lieu thereof.
Recent scientific research indicates that affirming belief
in God or Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa) makes a critical contribution to our physical health.
When people call upon faith, they activate neurologic pathways for
self-healing.
The Muslim prayer consists of contact prayer (salaat), Zikr
(Dhikr) or remembrance of Allah and recitation of the Qur'an. These elicit the
physiologic relaxation response. The Prophetic saying is "Worship in the
congregation is more excellent than Worship alone, by twenty seven
degrees." Hajj and congregational Prayers serve to buffer the adverse effects of stress and
anger, perhaps via psychoneuroimmunologic pathways. It is speculated that congregational
prayers may trigger a multifactorial sequence of biological processes leading
to better health. Studies have shown higher degrees of social connection
(through family and friends or congregational prayers in the Masjid)
consistently relate to decreased mortality.
Zakah is altruism and in sharing the wealth, apart from the
socio-economic benefits, the Muslims also garner better health. Doing good to
others is also Zakah and those who volunteer their work find marked improvement
in their health.
Several studies have already documented the health benefits
of fasting during the month of Ramadan.
The National Institute of Health, in Bethesda, Maryland, a
few years ago opened an Office of Alternative Therapies, which encourages
Homeopathy, Ayurveda, Aromatherapy, and other “alternative” therapies.
Recently there is a tremendous surge in interest and
publications in the field of spiritual medicine in the United States. An
abundance of articles (1-8), books, and conferences in recent years have
addressed the impact of spirituality on patient, physician, and health care.
For example Dr. James S. Gordon, MD who is the founder and Director of the
Center for Mind-Body Medicine at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
published “MANIFESTO FOR A NEW MEDICINE: Your guide to healing partnerships and
the wise use of alternative therapies (Addison-Wesley, 1996). Dr. Gordon wrote
that medical education is long on technical mastery but short on issues of
personal and spiritual growth. Dr. Gregory Plotnikoff, MD who is the medical
director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Spiritual Care and Healing
advocates care for the body and the soul (9). “
Timeless Healing: The Power and
Biology of Belief,” by Herbert Benson, M.D. (Scribner, 1996) draws on Benson’s work
at Harvard’s Mind/Body Medical Institute. Benson’s prescription for doctors and
patients contains three ingredients:
1) identifies each other’s important
beliefs and motivations,
2) discuss and act on those beliefs, and
3) let go and
believe. Religious belief and faith are the vehicles for his
prescription.
Dr. David Larson, MD who is the president of the National
Institute for Healthcare Research (NIHR), Rockville, Maryland awarded five
$10,000 grants in 1996 to Medical Schools to incorporate classes on Religion
and medicine into their Curricula. He is the author of the 1995 book, “The
Neglected Factor.” Dr. Ornish, MD has documented the reversal of coronary
artery occlusion by diet and meditation.
This message-that health care has a spiritual component-flies
in the face of modern Western health care culture, which holds to a biomedical
model for healing and recovery.
Spiritual Medicine has two components: Distant Healing and
Self-care (that is healing by patient’s own efforts). Distant healing is defined
as any purely mental effort undertaken by one person with the intention of
improving physical or emotional well being in another. In clinical practice,
healing may involve a mental effort in or out of the healer’s presence, with or
without his or her awareness, and with or without touch. This broad definition
would also include petitionary prayer or Du’a in which the practitioner
generates a mental request for a particular outcome or that God’s “will be
done.”
WHAT IS SPIRITUALITY
An individual has biologic, psychologic, and social
dimensions and yet there is a spiritual dimension, which connects to all of
these and contributes to an individual’s sense of wholeness and wellness.
Experiences such as joy, love, forgiveness and acceptance are manifestations of
spiritual well being. Imbalance in one of the several dimensions led to disease
and exacerbating illness. It is known that the spiritual elements also play an
important role in the recovery process from acute or chronic sickness. Spiritual
healing techniques frequently can support or complement conventional health
care modality (3).
Spirituality is often defined as the experience of meaning
and purpose in our lives-a sense of connectedness with the people and things in
the world around us. For many, this connectedness encompasses a relationship
with God or a higher power. For many American, spirituality is experience and
expressed through religiousness. The terms “religiousness” and “spirituality”
often are used interchangeably. Religiousness is adherence to the beliefs and
practices of an organized place of worship or religious institutions.
Spirituality provides a sense of coherence that offers meaning to one’s
existence as a human being. Sometimes a patient may experience states of
consciousness that have profound spiritual and transformative impact, including
near-death experiences, mystical states, and delirious states associated with
alterations of brain chemistry. These events may have a positive impact on the
individual or they may lead to distress. Reassurance and legitimization of the
experience by a health care provider can be very therapeutic (10). Physicians
are helping patients look beyond the physical dimension to find comfort,
answers, and cures. The vast majority of Americans believe that spirituality
influences their recovery from illness, injury, or disease, says one recent
poll. Two thirds of the respondents indicated they would like physicians to
talk with them about spirituality as it relates to their health or even to pray
with them.
RELIGION AND HEALTH
Religiousness may contribute to the enhancement of well being
in a number of ways.
THE RELAXATION RESPONSE:
A bodily claim that all of us can evoke and that has the
opposite effect of the well-known fight-or-flight response. That is called the
"relaxation response" by Benson. In this state the blood pressure is lowered,
and heart rate, breathing rate, and metabolic rate are decreased. The
relaxation response yields many long-term benefits in both health and well
being and can be brought on with Salaat, Zikr and recitation of the Qur'an which
are related lead to very simple mental focusing. These lead to the power of
self-care, the healthy things that individuals can do for themselves. Our
bodies are wired to benefit from exercising our beliefs, values, thoughts, and
feelings.
Patients who suffer from anxiety and panic after surgery or from a
terminal illness have documented that they experience the wonderful physical
solace after making Du'a (supplication) to Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa). This experience is the
opposite effect of the edgy, adrenaline rush we experience in the stress-induced
fight-or-flight response. Through Du'a patients have gained both emotional and
spiritual balm. This tender comfort and soothing gained everyday makes one to
regain confidence both in body and one's ability to face the twists and turns
of life. Salat, Du'a elicit the relaxation response in patients resulting in
mental equilibrium and help them to ward off disease by doing something to calm
the body and the fears.
It has been known for centuries, that the "placebo
effect" is substantial and has positive influence over the body. What is
less known is that an individual's belief empowers the placebo. The fact that
the patient, caregiver, or both of them believe in the treatment contributes to
better outcomes. Sometimes affirmative beliefs are all we really need to heal
us. Other times there is a need for the collective force of our beliefs and
appropriate medical interventions.
Every individual has the power to care for
and cure him- or herself. Physicians are now paying special attention to the
self-care that is on the inner development of beliefs that promote healing. The
placebo effect was found to have a substantial impact on the commonly reported
symptoms-chest pain, fatigue, dizziness, headache, back and abdominal pain,
numbness, impotence, weight loss, cough, and constipation. In 1992 an Ohio
State University study of patients with congestive heart failure, it was
demonstrated that placebo treatment may also help more serious conditions. It
has been shown that belief in or expectation of a good outcome can have
formidable restorative power, whether the positive expectations are on the part
of the patient, the physician or a caregiver or both. In a study pregnant with
belief alone cured themselves of persistent nausea and vomiting during
pregnancy. The women were given a drug and were told that it would cure the
problem, but in fact were given the opposite-syrup of ipecac-a substance that
causes vomiting. When patients believed in therapies that
were fervently recommended by their physicians, this fervor worked to alleviate
a variety of medical conditions including angina, asthma, herpes simplex cold
sores, and duodenal ulcers. Good doctor-patient relationship is known to
accelerate the healing. Two thirds of the patients got better after hearing the
good news from their doctors even if the prescription is vitamins. Hence the
bedside manner does matter. Studies show that surgical recovery is more quick
if the patient's surgeon is upbeat, confident and kind.
In "psychosomatic" disease episodes of anger and
hostility can translate into stomach ulcers and heart attacks. Our thoughts are
intimately related to our bodies. The success the medical profession achieves
is attributable to the inherent healing power within individuals. A patient's
positive frame of mind can be exceedingly therapeutic.
Benson describes a renal cancer patient who could elicit
relaxation response through per beliefs and prayer, refrained from pain
medicine inspite of her great deal of pain, and was relieved of the terrible
distress she had suffered before. When she died she was at peace, drawing upon
this internal physiologic succor and the power of her beliefs during the final
weeks of her life.
When the relaxation response is activated it provides a calm
state in the mind-opposite of the fight-or-flight response-whenever the mind is
focused for sometime through Salat or Zikr. In other words, when the mind
quiets down, the body follows suit.
Recent scientific research indicates that affirming belief
in God or Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa) makes a critical contribution to our physical health.
When people call upon faith, they activate neurologic pathways for
self-healing.
The Muslim prayer consists of contact prayer (salat), Zikr
(Dhikr) or remembrance of Allah (SubhaanaHuu Wa Ta'aalaa) and recitation of the Qur'an. These elicit the
physiologic relaxation response.
SPIRITUAL MEDICINE IN ISLAM
In Islam Spiritual medicine can
be used to mean two different things, although both are allied and sometimes
confused. One refers to the belief in a spiritual or ethical or psychological
cure for diseases that may have physical or spiritual (or psychic). Thus, a
physical illness may be cured, for example by recitation of the Qur'an or other
prayers (Du'a). Most medical men of Islam even in the scientific tradition of
medicine recognized this belief to an extent.
Ibn Sina is credited with psychic cures. Muslim physicians
practiced various forms of psychotherapy such as shock or shame-therapy in the
treatment of mental illnesses and this treatment was original. A famous Persian
work titled The
Four Essays (Chahaar Maqala), written about 1155 AD for the
ruler of Samarkand by his court-poet, Nizami-Ye ‘Aruzi discusses
administrators, astronomers, poets and physicians. Each chapter gives
definitions of an ideal person in each category followed by ten illustrative
anecdote (11). Ibn Abi Usaibi’a narrates about the treatment by Jibra’il
ibn Bakhtishu’ of a beloved slave-girl of the caliph Harun al-Rashid through shock-treatment (12).
Part of spiritual medicine in Islam is devoted to ethical well
being, but from a practical point of view. Thus Abu Bakr al-Razi wrote al-Tibb al-Ruhani (Spiritual
Medicine) which has been translated into English as The Spiritual Physick of
Rhazes. (13).
In this work, al-Razi describes in detail the moral diseases
and discusses with acute perception how these affect human behavior.
The Moghul emperor Jehangir once suffered from some illness,
which his doctors were unable to cure. Frustrated, he repaired to the tomb of
the Saint Mu'in al-Din Chishti at Ajmer and was cured. Ever since then he wore
earrings in the name of the saint as a token of being his follower (14).
Volumes of spiritual prescriptions for cures exist. Most
prayers and amulets contain verses from the Qur'an, to which high curative
powers were ascribed. Very frequently, the recommendation is made that the
patient shall write down certain Qur'anic verses on a piece of paper or on a
glass (ceramic plate) and after soaking these writings in water drink the
water. In south-east Asian countries, sick people stand outside the mosques and
the believers who are coming out of the mosques after performing the salat,
recite certain Qur'anic Surahs and blow air on the sick people.
Khawass
al-Quran (Miraculous Properties of the Qur'an):
The
"miraculous properties" of practically each passage of the Qur'an are
discussed including their curative properties for various diseases. It is said
that when Surah 38 (Saad) is recited on a sleeping person it cures breathing
problems; when written down and read during a patient's waking hours, it cures
illness. A person who continuously recites it will be immune from all troubles
at night (15).
Sufi Shaikhs or pir are said to cure
(16):
* Sickness
* Infertility
* Problems with one's job
* Alleviate fear of failure in an exam
- Demonic
possession (mental illness)
Al-Dhahabi (d.1348 AD) (17) says the benefits of the Islamic
ritual prayers (salaat), which involve certain changing physical postures, are
fourfold: spiritual, psychological, physical, and moral. He further says:
* Prayers cause recovery from pain of the heart,
Stomach, and intestines.
* Prayers produce happiness and contentment in the mind;
they suppress anxiety and extinguish the fire of anger. They increase love for
truth and humility before people; they soften the heart, create love and
forgiveness and dislike for the vice of vengeance. Besides, often-sound
judgment occurs to the mind (due to concentration about difficult matters) and
one finds correct answers (to problems). One also remembers forgotten things.
One can discover the ways to solve matters worldly and spiritual. And one can
effectively examine oneself-particularly when one strenuously exercises oneself
in prayers.
* Salaat is a divinely commanded form of worship
* Psychological benefit: prayers divert the mind from the
pain and reduce its feeling.
* Besides the concentration of the mind, salaat is Exercise of the body: postures of standing Upright, genuflexion, prostration, relaxation, And concentration; where bodily movements
Occur and most bodily organs relax.
Al-Muwaffaq 'Abd al-Latif narrates in his book Kitab al-Arba'in that
a number of people who led lazy lives because of their wealth, who nevertheless
had preserved good health. The reason is they were given to frequent prayer and
also regular tahajjud (midnight
prayer)(18).
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11. IBN SINA: Psychic cures. Chahar Maqala (Tehran,
1970), p.120
12. IBN ABI USAIBI’A, Uyun al-Anba, p.
188. Cited in Health and Medicine in the Islamic Tradition by Fazlur Rahman
(Crossroad, NY 1987)
13. AL-RAZI: al-Tibb al-Ruhani or The Spiritual
Physick of Rhazes, (London, 1950)
14. ALI KAUTHAR CHANDPURI, Atibba-i ‘Ahd-i-Mughliya
(Doctors of Moghul Period), Karachi, 1960, p. 129
15. AL-HAKIM AL-TAMIMI: Khawass al-Qur’an (Miraculous
Properties of Qur’an). Cited in Health
and Medicine in the Islamic Tradition by Fazlur Rahman (Crossroad, NY 1987)
16. EWING K, Pirs and Sufis in
Pakistan (Ph.D. diss. Univ. of Chicago, 1980, pp. 74-75.
17. AL-DHAHABI, al-Tibb al-Nabawi (Cairo, 1961), pp. 140.
18. AL-DHAHABI, al-Tibb al-Nabawi (Cairo, 1961), pp.139-140
Extract from: http://www.irfi.org/articles/articles_1_50/spiritual_medicine_in_the_histor.htm
With thanks from
Mr. Ibrahim B. Syed, Ph. D. President,
Islamic Research
Foundation International,
God
bless the entire humanity
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