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Katare decided to come
to the Kabir Baugh Yoga Institute, Pune, for ten days with her
daughter and try some alternative treatment. "This is my last
day here. Earlier I would get severe pain in my right hand. After
ten days of therapy here, I feel that it has reduced by 50 per cent.
It's remarkable," says Katare. She is not alone. Many others
suffering from a host of problems have come here and achieved some
remarkable results.
Even in the sweltering heat of the afternoon, the Kabir Baugh
Yoga Institute radiates a sense of serene calm. There are enough
shady trees here to impart a welcome coolness, so different from the
hot sun outside. The people who come here regularly do so either for
therapeutic reasons, to reduce stress or simply because they wish to
align the mind and body into a more natural, self healing state. At
first glance all seems quiet. But there is a lot of subdued activity
going on. From the morning batches which are just getting over, a
kids camp, a boys hostel whose inmates are busy preparing for exams,
resident patients and even patients awaiting an X-ray or a health
check-up, Kabir Baugh is a community in itself.
Here
you will find patients who are now yoga teachers themselves. Dressed
in the lemon yellow and maroon uniform, they are volunteers who have
offered to stay on and help other patients get better through the use
of different yoga techniques. Most of the exercises are based on yoga
techniques, others have been devised by the institute's doctors. At
an early morning batch of older people, one finds different exercises
in every part of a hall like room. The equipment is different too. From
wooden benches to various straps which are also based on some premises
of physiotherapy, pieces are fashioned according to a patient's needs
and judged by the compulsory health check up that patients undergo at
the institute.
Kabir Baugh dates back to May 27, 1729 when the ruling Peshwa gifted
the ashram land to Kabir Gosavi. Since then the place has been used
for the spiritual and physical development of mankind. The institute
also has a small school for nursery kids and a hostel for rural students.
In 1988, Dr Karandikar started yoga therapy here. Anil Bhide, was a
heart patient who was given a month to live by doctors. He started yoga
therapy under Dr Karandikar's guidance and went on to live for seven
more years. Bhide who expired recently was instrumental in building
the present institute and his wife Anagha Bhide is also one of the trustees.
Says Dr S V Karandikar, who has studied yoga under Yogacharya
B K S Iyengar, "As we grow older, our body shrinks and the
spaces between the body tissues and skeletal joints decrease. This
results in physiological dysfunction which results in pathological
changes. The regular practice of yoga helps bring back to normal
the physiological functioning of the different anatomical systems,
which enables nature to re-arrange and repair the diseased parts of
the body the natural way." Dr Karandikar also feels that
imparting this knowledge to others is necessary for society. Which
is why 150 teachers are being trained at various levels and
the institute is also offering its first diploma course to
prospective students. The Diploma in Therapeutic and Restorative
Yoga is a Post Graduate course aimed at BSc students. It will be
based on the gurukul system of instruction and will require
students to stay inside the institute's premises. Read more about
the course in our career section.
"Teaching here, is based on modern methods of instruction.
The use of computers and video equipment facilitates better
understanding," says Dr Nivedita Pingle who teaches at the
institute and has also recently set up her own clinic in Kothrud.
Pingale also feels that a lot of small yoga centres have mushroomed
in the city recently. "But most of these are by untrained
people who often do more harm than good. After all, yoga exercises
mean that you are working your body. If the methods are wrong,
serious injury could result. Unfortunately, legal help and laws are
sorely lacking," says Pingale. Her time is divided between the
separate batches the institute has for children, adults and senior
citizens. There are separate classes for people and children
suffering from various disorders and diseases like cerebral palsy,
Ischemic heart disease, lumbar and cervical spondylosis, diabetes,
asthma, hypertension, osteoarthritis and paralysis.
A patient who comes to the institute for the first time needs to pay
a one-time registration and consultation fee of Rs 100 each and Rs
250 per month for three days a week. There are also intensive
programmes for people who come from outside the city. These people
can reside in the premises itself and attend classes twice daily.
Most try this treatment when conventional methods have failed.
Others do so because they wish to get in touch with their inner
self. Ultimately as with any other form of treatment, it is the
benefits which count. So far the patients and people who come to the
institute seem very satisfied. They are also motivated and some are
now training to take this science to the areas they come from. They
helped themselves first, now they are trying to help others.

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