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Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Islamic medicine is on the rise in South-east Asia


A 47-year-old housewife who recently started using Islamic medicine emerged tearfully from an exorcism, speaking of newfound tranquility after a turbulent period. Also, her abdominal pains are finally easing. -- PHOTO: AP
JAKARTA (AP) - A 47-year-old housewife who recently started using Islamic medicine emerged tearfully from an exorcism, speaking of newfound tranquility after a turbulent period. Also, her abdominal pains are finally easing.
Ms Suratmi, who suffers from an ovarian cyst, has been taking a mix of herbal medicine harking back to the dawn of Islam, as well as undergoing exorcisms at a clinic in Jakarta.

She is among a growing number of Muslims in South-east Asia turning away from Western medical care in favour of al-Tibb al-Nawabi, or Medicine of the Prophet, a loosely defined discipline based on the Quran and other Islamic texts and traditional herbal remedies.
'I heard that so many people have been healed, so I hope Allah can help me. I followed His path here,' said Ms Suratmi, who like many Indonesians goes by one name.

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