Treating Disease Pre-Independence
Most
of the treatment in those pre-independence days for any disease, consisted of herbal medicines. There was a herbal
medicine vendor about a mile from our house, and as I travelled daily to school
in my rickshaw I would see him chopping leaves and roots and other vegetation
on a two-foot tree trunk he used as a chopping board. The medicines were vile
tasting.
The Vaidyan
(indigenous doctor) was always the first port of call for illness in the
family. Unless my father got involved, which he rarely did, because no one told
him about stomach pains or back pains. Doctors trained in Western medicine were
rarities in Thalassery in the thirties. We had one – Kunhikkannan doctor. My
father went to him, and he took me too for childhood ailments. For most things,
I remember, my aunt would go down to the compound and pick what looked like
weeds to me. But she knew which herb did what. She brewed them for many hours
and strained them; they worked. This is a knowledge that has now been lost.
After Ammamma, no one in our family knew anything about those herbs.
Ammamma prescribed a laxative for most
illnesses: Senna pods stewed and strained. Mani and I did not mention small aches
and pains to her for fear of that concoction. The alternative was cod liver oil
– not much to choose from.
We had one dentist; when my milk teeth started
coming loose, my father would take me to the dentist, to take the tooth out
gently with a steel instrument. If that didn’t happen, Ammamma would tie a knot
with thread round the tooth where it met the gum; the other end would be tied
to an open door. She would then slam the door suddenly and the tooth would come
off. She didn’t give me a sweet after the extraction like the dentist. It was a
question of who got there first – Achan or Ammamma
By the fifties we had two or three trained
doctors, all men, and in the sixties, we had our first lady doctor. During that
period, gradually, the faith in western medicine grew and the vaidyans lost ground.
Recently
clinics have sprung up all over Kerala, which offer Ayurvedic treatment or
Homeopathic treatment. Medical schools in India offer these options as
specialisms in the third and fourth years of a medical degree, and the take-up
is enthusiastic. When I am in India, I often spend a week at an Ayurvedic
Nursing home nearby. It is a kind of pampering unavailable with the NHS. The
oil massages are deeply soporific during and after the massage. The food is vegetarian
and oil-free; I find I lose half a stone of weight in one week. Meditation
events are included, and if you are determined, you can keep up the discipline
and continue to enjoy the benefits after returning home.
My Homeopathy doctor knows more about my body
and mind than I do; a great deal more than the fragmented me that the NHS sees. His
initial diagnostic meeting is always over an hour long. The treatment is
delivered through tiny pills as they are in England. Those pills have never
once let me down: they have no side effects, no stomach angst.
It took only ten days for the doctor to cure me
of three food allergies, food allergies that had plagued me for decades, and
the same amount of time to get rid of rashes picked up in the garden, talking
to my irritable Dieffenbachia, or by insect bites indoors. My children, who
have lived here in England from early childhood, do not trust either treatment.
They are amused that I go to these ‘quacks.’ They think it is my Indian origins
that give me faith in this kind of ‘superstition.’ The arrogance! I go by
proven efficacy of both Homeopathic and Ayurvedic treatments.
Having
experienced the disasters that the monsoon brings, I am wary of the monsoon
season even now, in my old age; I remember it as the time when most of the
deadly diseases like cholera and plague attacked our community. Now, when the
scourges of those years have been conquered, I still avoid going to India
during those monsoon months. Today there are new diseases to avoid: Dengue
fever and in some parts of India, Malaria. When I was a young child in
Thalassery, we didn’t need mosquito nets – indeed we didn’t have one in the
house. Now, even in the villages, where houses and people are not living in
close and unhealthy proximity, mosquitoes will not let you sleep without fans or
nets.
Though
the Southwest Monsoon brought disease and death, it was also exciting to all –
students, for possible days off from school, farmers for the reassurance they
brought of healthy rice crops, all households for relief from the summer
heat… Just as I did, my father liked
following the course of floods. When it had rained steadily for several days,
my father would sit on the very edge of the veranda, watching the water level
rise. He saw it as a contest between man and nature and waited to see who would
win. Visitors would discuss the rains endlessly as the weather is discussed in
England. The kitchen would be littered with pots and pans of all shapes to
catch the roof-leaks and a thin coir rope would be strung across, over the
stone fireplace, to dry our uniforms. The whole house would smell of mould.
When
it became clear that the rising floods had won, my father’s compassion and
sense of community would kick in. He would spring into action, insisting that I
gathered up my spare clothes to offer to families, which had lost all that they
owned.
I was
quite selfish and didn’t want to part with anything to donate to the people
washed up like flotsam on the banks of neighbourhood rivers. I didn’t have many
items of spare clothes, so my father’s instructions caused a great deal of
heart-searching. Was there anything I had outgrown, or torn beyond rescue? On
one occasion, when I did not co-operate quickly enough, he went to the rope in
the compound, where the day’s wash was drying, and pulled out a skirt and
blouse from it. I lost my favourite skirt and learned my lesson. When I
complained, Achan said, ‘You’ll survive.’
Schools always re-opened early
in June, after the fierce, humid heat of the summer months. Rains came generally
in the last week of June, petering out after a fair share of death and
destruction achieved, some time in early August. On the first day of the
monsoon, just before the skies opened, the frogs would announce the arrival of
the sight-and-sound show. The birds would fly hurriedly to their nests as the
sky darkened. The thunder, (my father said it was the Gods moving furniture in
the heavens,) would drive the frightened snakes deep into their holes in the
ground, but when the rains stopped, the petrichor would bring them out again,
to slither joyfully in the mud. That smell of new rain-washed mud must be one
of the delights of a tropical inheritance. Now it has been obliterated by
petrol and diesel fumes; one has to travel deep into the villages to experience
that heady smell again.
Rainy mornings in Thalassery had a
soporific quality – In my childhood I would sit on the floor of my veranda, and
watch the water-level rise in our yard, daring it to touch the cement floor; it
never did. I would do it for hours, with my thumb stuck into some hole in my
petticoat, which could, with a little imagination, pass for a frock.
I lived in those two-piece slips, all white,
put together quite casually by the local tailor (he didn't believe in straight lines) who plied his uncertain trade
in a corner of the little shop left of our gate. When my father realised I
spent most of my hours at home in those slips, he got the tailor to make me
four coloured slips, which I loved. Untold riches!
Those days, sticking my thumb into a tear in my
garment was my childhood equivalent of sucking my thumb – or meditation. The
cement on the veranda steps was cold and rough, cracked as they were. My bum
generally suffered, but the heavy raindrops falling on the puddles under the
eaves made a rare and pretty picture. Where the sun caught the bubbles in the
morning, light slanting through moving coconut fronds, split into rainbow hues.
I was child enough at six and seven years to believe that I could catch that
colour; I would stretch my palm out and the rainbow would settle on my hands.
Magic! Quite often I would be drenched as the winds drove the sheets of water
in many directions.
We lived near the railway lines later; indeed,
we could see the trains chugging along, on the other side of the Koduvally river, with their head of steam,
from our veranda. I thought of that railway line as mine because my beloved
maternal grandfather worked as a guard on the South India Railway.
On the road to the railway lines, which was one
of my father’s favourite morning walks, he would often point out the huts of
the poor, lean-tos put together with coconut fronds, sheets of corrugated iron,
cardboard and tarpaulin. They were never more than three metres long, and
narrow, to fit on the width of the raised banks of the Koduvally river.
Children, half-naked, played on the soggy surroundings of their homes and when
we walked by, almost another species, with our dry clothes and our certainties,
they stared at us as at another life-form. Everything, their clothes, their
faces, their bodies, their huts – all seemed to be the uniform dispiriting
colour of clay.
Indeed, the river was lined with houses on one
side, and the railway line on the other. The latrines of the houses flanking
the river were built precariously over the edge of the compounds, partly over
the river, on coconut trunks driven into the water. I once asked my father what
would happen if the folks in those houses fell into the river while defecating.
‘Then they wouldn’t need to wash after,’ he answered with scant mercy.
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