Welcome back to AyurVijnana!
This spring issue has largely drawn its inspiration from the scholars, researchers and practitioners of Tibetan medicine whom your editor was fortunate to meet and interact with at the International Congress of Tibetan Medicine in Washington DC, November 7-9, 1998. At the Congress, she, on behalf of ITTM, was invited to present a paper on “Problems in Creating and Translating Tibetan medical Terminology” along with an outline of the medical glossary and bibliography database projects carried out at ITTM in Kalimpong.
The first research papers in this issue which throw new light on little known aspects of Tibetan medicine, have been presented by two outstanding Buryat scholars and Tibetologists, Dr. Natalia Bolsokhoeva and Dr. Dandar B. Dashiyev from Ulan-Ude. We are particularly thankful to Dr. Bolsokhoeva for agreeing to be the co-editor of AyurVijnana and for spending one spring month at ITTM in Kalimpong when we worked together on translations of original Tibetan medical texts. The careful editing these papers finally received made their publication possible. We welcome her as an invaluable and esteemed member of our Editorial Team and look forward to a lengthy and mutually rewarding relationship for our future publications.
While contributions on the history of Tibetan medicine have been largely emphasized in this issue, we have not lost sight of the reality in the teaching, training and practice of Tibetan medicine around the world today.
Dr. Eric Jacobson, a medical anthropologist from Harvard University and one of our Editorial Advisors shares his candid views on the effectiveness of new emerging training courses on Tibetan medicine for Westerners. We trust, his opinions will provide the substance for thoughtful reflection on the part of our readers on this difficult and sensitive subject.
Interviews with two Tibetan physicians with similar educational backgrounds, Dr. Sonan Koldaev and Dr. Keyzom Bhutti, who are establishing their practices in totally divergent socio-cultural environments reflect, among other things, differences in patient expectations.
Although most of the contributions in this issue relate to Tibetan medicine, we have not lost sight of another equally ancient medical tradition of Asia, which has a remarkable affinity to Ayurveda and Tibetan medicine. The article, “A comparative introduction of the Unani and Tibetan medical traditions”, by the preeminent researcher, on Unani medicine in India, Prof. S.H. Afaq, is a step towards publishing comparative studies of allied traditions of Indo-Tibetan medicines.
Following the lead of our last issue, we also intend to continue publishing articles on biodynamic cultivation of medicinal plants. This area of study, incidentally, has become a major field of research activity at ITTM.
We welcome contributions from our readers and especially research papers on any relevant topic related to traditional medicine of India, Tibet and the Himalayan regions for publication in the forthcoming autumn issue of AyurVijnana.
We thank all whose contribution in one form or
the other made this spring issue a reality. Our complimentary circulation
will continue among those individuals and institutions who are corresponding
with, and supporting us, in creating an international forum for authors
to share their research and experiences on the prospects and promotion
of traditional medicine of Indo-Tibetan and allied origins.
We feel the articles in this edition are particularly
rich in content and relevance. We now expectantly look forward to your
critical response.