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Benefits of Cow by Sadhvi Pragya Thakur

Gau doodh
Gau mutra
Gobar
Dahi

Likh lo yeh recipe

@PakSword @MUSTAKSHAF
Inn sab ka mixture bana ke munh pe lagane se insaan gora hojata hai.. munh ke andar lagane se munh ke chhaalay duur hojatay hain.. pichwaray main laganay se piles theek hojatay hain.. An Indian told me once that a lot of Indians use this special cream...
 
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https://www.thequint.com/lifestyle/this-hospital-claims-to-cure-cancer-with-the-help-of-cows

This Hospital Claims to Cure Cancer With the Help of Cows

RUNA MUKHERJEE PARIKHUPDATED: 12.12.15

Here’s a cow story you haven’t heard yet.

While the country has just started to move on from a very lengthy and futile debate on cows and how they fare vis a vis people of various communities, a hospital in Gujarat has done something pretty incredible.

It has gone ahead and discovered invaluable use of the cow’s urine, milk and other substances in the treatment of cancer!

thequint%2F2015-12%2F6ac41b61-1893-4631-a83e-ede5501639e7%2FIMG_3101.JPG

A hospital in Gujarat has discovered invaluable use of the cow’s urine, milk and other substances in the treatment of cancer! (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
That’s right – cowpathy (a newly-coined term) and ‘panchgavya’, the medicine that is prepared using five substances obtained from cows – is being practised and administered respectively, at the Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital at Valsad.

The novel practice has seen a steady increase in the number of patients over the years – and why ever not? Treatments here are priced at as low as Re 1 a day!


Where it all Began
Started under the aegis of Prabhav Hem Kamdhenu GiriVihar Trust, the unique hospital runs entirely on donations of Jain business families.

In fact, a Jain monk – Acharya Sri Vijay Hemprabha Surishwar Ji – guided the trust to first establish a gaushala, a panjrapole (animal shelter that houses 1500 rescued animals) and a modern hospital in Palitana (one of the biggest pilgrimages of Jainism).

thequint%2F2015-12%2F30a997bb-6388-4c79-9a64-9764e6d424f5%2FDSC_0474.jpg

This hospital treats patients for as little as Re 1 a day. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
Later, when the milk from the cows in the gaushala started serving close to 1000 temples around Palitana itself, the trust brought in Ayurveda experts to study and research the medicinal value of the substances obtained from a cow – namely its milk, urine, dung, curd and ghee. That is how the panchgavya, which is a combination of all five things, came into existence.

The trust built the hospital in Valsad and dedicated itself to treating cancer using panchgavya on patients. The medicine is applied as a paste on patients.

thequint%2F2015-12%2Fedd9629e-d780-4cf5-89f5-cc34cabfcddb%2FDSC_0468.jpg

The unique hospital runs entirely on donations of Jain business families. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
How Does the ‘Cow Medicine’ Work?
How does this work though? The hospital explains:

Cancer cells don’t multiply because panchgavya is an eco-friendly substance. It helps flush out the cancerous toxins through motions.

Senior staff member, Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital

There are many who have survived cancer through cowpathy.

Vidya Patel, a 50-year-old woman from Uttar Pradesh, came with stage 1 mouth cancer, caused by her gutkha habit.

I tried this line of treatment because, unlike chemotherapy, this has no side effects. Fortunately, the entire routine at the hospital not only helped me survive cancer but strengthened me mentally as a person. Now I am better prepared to battle any disease.
Vidya Patel, cancer survivor
thequint%2F2015-12%2F107cc78a-3c61-45eb-b165-2e9d2999fb38%2FIMG_3055.JPG

There are many who have survived cancer through cowpathy. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
The 600 cows from the gaushala, providing the said medicines aren’t Jersey cows or of the Shankara type; they are sturdy desis, who are fed a healthy diet along with ayurvedic herbs like ashwagandha.

“These are no ordinary cows, they are helping treat millions. That is why feeding them good food is imperative,” announces Vighn Prabh Vijay ji Maharaj, a Jain monk who visits the hospital frequently to share spiritual discourses with patients.

How is the Cancer Actually Treated?
The therapy is simple;

  • Any patient, who checks in, is kept for 11 days, during which no meat is given and no tobacco, gutkha or addictions are allowed.
  • The panchgavya is given in regulated doses by the doctors.
  • Daily walks, healthy vegetarian breakfast, lunch and dinner along with spiritual discourse or meditation are part of the patient’s routine.
thequint%2F2015-12%2F018c1a43-6844-48fe-8b6c-a80f4cbb961e%2FIMG_3090.JPG

“The treatment worked and I have recovered from cancer,” Manitesh Sharma, cancer survivor. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
Manitesh Sharma vouches for the treatment.

When he developed sores all over his body, nobody in his home town in Uttar Pradesh had a cure to the malady. He was finally taken to Madras, where he was given chemotherapy. Soon, the 25-year-old recovered and returned home. But later, he caught a cold that refused to heal. After another round of tests, it was declared that he had cancer.


Struck by the misfortune, the family was ready to try anything to save him – when they came across this hospital.

I had come with very little expectations. But the treatment worked. I have recovered from cancer but to prevent a relapse, I now live an addiction-free life. - Manitesh Sharma, cancer survivor

thequint%2F2015-12%2F1f8420a1-516f-448f-bbc4-87ef9a1781e5%2FIMG_3092.JPG

For medicine, food and accommodation, a patient is charged Re 1 a day. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
All For Re 1
The hospital is extremely pocket-friendly – especially for those who are not so privileged. For medicine, food and accommodation, a patient is charged Re 1 a day.

The person who accompanies the patient has to pay Re1 for each meal though.

The place gets 2,400 to 3,600 patients a year and spends close to Rs 5 crore annually. Everything is done through donations.

Cancer is a disease that alters a person psychologically as well as physically. Our line of treatment not only reduces the pain but also frees the mind of stress regarding the disease. Half the job is done by the peaceful routine and surroundings itself.

Senior staff member, Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital

Perhaps the most important detail?

People of all communities are welcome at the health centre, adds the staff member.

(Runa Mukherjee Parikh has written on women, culture, social issues, education and animals, with The Times of India, India Today and IBN Live. When not hounding for stories, she can be found petting dogs, watching sitcoms or travelling. A big believer in ‘animals come before humans’, she is currently struggling to make sense of her Bengali-Gujarati lifestyle in Ahmedabad.)
 
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Why ? so that they can expose your narrow minded Bigotry that sneer at Indian medicine while applying for Medical Visa in India ? Typical muslim.

https://www.mansworldindia.com/features/the-man-who-used-a-cow-to-cure-his-terminal-cancer/

me-and-sakshi-e1438080113320.jpg


Four years ago, 37-year old Amit Vaidya, an LA-based entertainment industry honcho with a PhD in economics, was given six months to live, on account of his terminal stomach cancer. He travelled back to India to die, but accidentally discovered the properties of cow therapy – drinking cow urine and raw milk, fresh gobar baths – and intense self-discipline, a combination that helped him cure his cancer completely. The fascinating story is detailed in his new autobiography Holy Cancer, How a Cow Saved My Life. Here’s an account of that journey, by a childhood friend.



Amit Vaidya and I went to high school together. This was at the American Embassy School in New Delhi, way back in 1994. We were drama geeks, involved in all our high school plays, musicals, drama conventions and talent shows. He was a kurta-wearing, chubby kid, one year my junior,with a larger-than-life personality, an operatic singing voice and an infectious laugh.

My most vivid memory of him from this time is one he has no recollection of. We’d just finished a rehearsal and walked out into the sunny school courtyard, and for some reason, I asked to look at his palm (I fancied myself a budding mystic at the time). I was shocked by what I saw. It was covered in what seemed like thousands of tiny criss-cross lines. “Amit, do you worry a lot?” I asked, in complete surprise. My boisterous, always ready for a laugh friend suddenly became serious, seeming much older than his age. “Yes.”




Amit’s most vivid recollection of me from these years is one that I, in turn, have absolutely no memory of. We were on a flight back from Karachi, where we’d travelled for a drama convention. We were sitting next to each other in the middle of a cramped row of other classmates. Amit says that he was overcome by a dark feeling, as though life was hopeless, and he turned to me and said as much. He remembers that I responded, “Hey, come on now, it’ll be OK.” To me, hearing this all these years later, this hardly sounds like life-changing stuff. But to Amit, it was. He says it made him feel instantly better, as though he wasn’t alone, as though somebody cared.

Of course, we lost touch. I eventually landed up in New York in advertising, and then moved back to Delhi. Amit, I heard through the grapevine, was in LA, doing exceptionally well in the entertainment industry. He had also excelled academically, garnering a PhD in economics, no less. Years passed and when we connected again, we were in our thirties and both of us were about to embark on a new chapter in our lives.

IMG_8897-200x300.jpg


I had married recently, living in my in-laws’ house in Delhi, waiting for my British visa to come through so that I could join my husband in London. Amit had recently come to Delhi after years in New York, where he had taken care of his mother through the last stages of her brain cancer, after having fought his own cancer battle.

The years had been full of ups and downs for my high school friend. His father had passed away unexpectedly during a routine bypass surgery. Amit moved to New York with his mother and all too soon was diagnosed with stomach cancer. His career took a back seat, and his mother nursed him back to health, only to find out she had a late-stage brain tumour. Amit put his life on hold to be her sole care-taker, using up most of his savings in doing so. She passed away a year later, and that was when Amit was given yet another devastating blow. His stomach cancer had returned and spread further to his liver, lungs and spine, and he was given only six months to live. He returned to Delhi to re-connect with the only family he knew, and as he put it, “to find a place to die.”
We spent that month in Delhi reminiscing about the past, but also trying to figure out what Amit should do with the few remaining months he had left. His extended family turned their back on him when they realised that his visit was not a brief reunion, but rather one of real need. Nobody wanted to take on the additional responsibility or burden of his death. “What I miss,” I remember Amit saying to me one afternoon, “is having someone who really cares for me. There is nobody left. And now I have nothing to lose.”

My visa came through shortly after, and when I said goodbye to Amit, I thought it would be the last time I would see him. But three years later, the two of us found ourselves back in my in-laws’ house, sitting on the same sofa, sipping tea. My one-year-old daughter toddled around us, my husband was sleeping in the next room, and I told Amit about the daily dilemmas of mommy-hood and marriage. He sat quietly, listening to it all.

village-kids-225x300.jpg


The Amit sitting near me was a new incarnation of the Amit I had known since we were kids. It was him, but a thinner, quieter, calmer Amit. Physically, he looked like an entirely different person… but even his presence had changed. And when he asked me to read his memoir about the journey that began at a cow hospital in Gujarat that claimed to cure cancer for Re 1, then took him to a small village where he lived amidst pomegranate trees and large stretches of empty land, a journey that cleansed and healed him of fear and disease and disappointment… I was left in awe and humbled.

Holy Cancer starts cinematically enough, at just about the time I headed off to London. What transpires once he leaves our familiar world behind is a fascinating look at the road less travelled. It’s an honest, isolating yet liberating tale of the depths to which Amit went to heal. While he repeatedly voices that his concern was for palliative care, he actually finds the path to his own cure.

This starts in Gujarat, where he spends almost two months at a hospital specialising in cancer care through cow therapy. The treatments are all derived through desi cows. With drinking Panchgavya (desi cow milk, ghee, dahi, urine and dung mixed together) and taking hour long baths covered in gobar, Amit officially bids adieu to his luxurious penthouse-living days of New York and Hollywood parties, for a simple farm life in rural India.



The hospital is seemingly just the opening act, as he relocates to rural Karnataka and spends the next year and a half continuing the treatment alongside various other alternative therapies.

In what he details as `letting go’ and `adjusting’, he begins each morning like clockwork at 4:30 AM. From an hour-long meditation on the terrace of the farm to 45 minutes of yoga to a long 20-km walk across the property and beyond to the neighbouring villages, his morning routine becomes a disciplined way of life.

This life comprises long hours of isolation, many times without electricity, left alone with the cows and his thoughts. Amit’s connection to the animals goes from simply a form of medicine to combat his cancer into a way of life, becoming one with nature and permitting him to be there for the cows in the same way they were there for him.

He speaks lovingly about the joy of spending time with the cows, naming them and drawing out their personalities. From reaching the Gaushala in the early hours of the morning to collect their first urine to drink, milking them and consuming their warm milk raw, to collecting fresh dung for his daily gobar bath, and finally seeking their blessings by feeding and massaging them, and they in turn licking his palm (extending his life) – the healing that began in a systemised order within the confines of a hospital is now an everyday affair.



Over time, his routine became stricter, longer and faster. Following his rigid, medically-spiked diet of the hospital, Amit continues to treat food as medicine, spending ample time preparing his food fresh and getting down to basics. Rather than taking an herb or plant in a pill or juice form, Amit opts for the most potent and organic method of consumption – by simply taking the leaves and eating them raw. From tulsi to neem to turmeric to ginger – he finds himself deeply rooted within the land.

It’s an incredible accomplishment to see him let go of the many strings that attach him to his previous life, and finding purpose within a community that appreciates him regardless of the time he has left leaves Amit in peace. The more he seems to get from the land, its animals, the village and its villagers, the more he’s able to give back and feel part of something. As it turns out, this gets confirmed, as each scan he gets shows the cancer shrinking and every subsequent report shows marked improvement.

His 20 km-daily walks become jogs that in turn become runs. Amit manages to take every obstacle and finds a way to turn it into a positive. This spirit keeps him going and we understand how it is actually possible to heal oneself. It’s not easy, there are no guarantees, but this sheer tenacity to endure, accept and appreciate life makes the journey worthwhile. By the end of the book, Amit is exploring returning to his old life, only to find that he no longer matches his surroundings. It’s perhaps his greatest test and ultimate challenge, to rid himself of the ‘cancer’ he feels he carried for too long.



The book ends where the writing of the book began and we met again. Today, almost a year later, Amit manages a NGO, Healing Vaidya, advancing the work he didn’t even realise he had started on the journey that he chronicles in the book. It’s one thing to find inspiration in a book, but to understand where that inspiration came from – that’s truly worth sharing.

When Amit finished detailing his journey to me, something his book so beautifully captures, all I could say was, “What now? What’s next?” His answer was simple. “I was saved by the kindness of strangers, who gave to me freely, with no thought of what they would get in return. This is my second life. And in this life there is no normalcy, only service. It is my turn to give back.”

You can contact the author at live4todayamit@gmail.com, www.live4todayamit.com and follow him at @live4todayamit. Holy Cancer, How a Cow Saved My Life is published by Healing Vaidya & Aditya Prakashan.
 
. . . . .
https://www.thequint.com/lifestyle/this-hospital-claims-to-cure-cancer-with-the-help-of-cows

This Hospital Claims to Cure Cancer With the Help of Cows

RUNA MUKHERJEE PARIKHUPDATED: 12.12.15

Here’s a cow story you haven’t heard yet.

While the country has just started to move on from a very lengthy and futile debate on cows and how they fare vis a vis people of various communities, a hospital in Gujarat has done something pretty incredible.

It has gone ahead and discovered invaluable use of the cow’s urine, milk and other substances in the treatment of cancer!

thequint%2F2015-12%2F6ac41b61-1893-4631-a83e-ede5501639e7%2FIMG_3101.JPG

A hospital in Gujarat has discovered invaluable use of the cow’s urine, milk and other substances in the treatment of cancer! (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
That’s right – cowpathy (a newly-coined term) and ‘panchgavya’, the medicine that is prepared using five substances obtained from cows – is being practised and administered respectively, at the Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital at Valsad.

The novel practice has seen a steady increase in the number of patients over the years – and why ever not? Treatments here are priced at as low as Re 1 a day!


Where it all Began
Started under the aegis of Prabhav Hem Kamdhenu GiriVihar Trust, the unique hospital runs entirely on donations of Jain business families.

In fact, a Jain monk – Acharya Sri Vijay Hemprabha Surishwar Ji – guided the trust to first establish a gaushala, a panjrapole (animal shelter that houses 1500 rescued animals) and a modern hospital in Palitana (one of the biggest pilgrimages of Jainism).

thequint%2F2015-12%2F30a997bb-6388-4c79-9a64-9764e6d424f5%2FDSC_0474.jpg

This hospital treats patients for as little as Re 1 a day. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
Later, when the milk from the cows in the gaushala started serving close to 1000 temples around Palitana itself, the trust brought in Ayurveda experts to study and research the medicinal value of the substances obtained from a cow – namely its milk, urine, dung, curd and ghee. That is how the panchgavya, which is a combination of all five things, came into existence.

The trust built the hospital in Valsad and dedicated itself to treating cancer using panchgavya on patients. The medicine is applied as a paste on patients.

thequint%2F2015-12%2Fedd9629e-d780-4cf5-89f5-cc34cabfcddb%2FDSC_0468.jpg

The unique hospital runs entirely on donations of Jain business families. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
How Does the ‘Cow Medicine’ Work?
How does this work though? The hospital explains:

Cancer cells don’t multiply because panchgavya is an eco-friendly substance. It helps flush out the cancerous toxins through motions.

Senior staff member, Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital

There are many who have survived cancer through cowpathy.

Vidya Patel, a 50-year-old woman from Uttar Pradesh, came with stage 1 mouth cancer, caused by her gutkha habit.

I tried this line of treatment because, unlike chemotherapy, this has no side effects. Fortunately, the entire routine at the hospital not only helped me survive cancer but strengthened me mentally as a person. Now I am better prepared to battle any disease.
Vidya Patel, cancer survivor
thequint%2F2015-12%2F107cc78a-3c61-45eb-b165-2e9d2999fb38%2FIMG_3055.JPG

There are many who have survived cancer through cowpathy. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
The 600 cows from the gaushala, providing the said medicines aren’t Jersey cows or of the Shankara type; they are sturdy desis, who are fed a healthy diet along with ayurvedic herbs like ashwagandha.

“These are no ordinary cows, they are helping treat millions. That is why feeding them good food is imperative,” announces Vighn Prabh Vijay ji Maharaj, a Jain monk who visits the hospital frequently to share spiritual discourses with patients.

How is the Cancer Actually Treated?
The therapy is simple;

  • Any patient, who checks in, is kept for 11 days, during which no meat is given and no tobacco, gutkha or addictions are allowed.
  • The panchgavya is given in regulated doses by the doctors.
  • Daily walks, healthy vegetarian breakfast, lunch and dinner along with spiritual discourse or meditation are part of the patient’s routine.
thequint%2F2015-12%2F018c1a43-6844-48fe-8b6c-a80f4cbb961e%2FIMG_3090.JPG

“The treatment worked and I have recovered from cancer,” Manitesh Sharma, cancer survivor. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
Manitesh Sharma vouches for the treatment.

When he developed sores all over his body, nobody in his home town in Uttar Pradesh had a cure to the malady. He was finally taken to Madras, where he was given chemotherapy. Soon, the 25-year-old recovered and returned home. But later, he caught a cold that refused to heal. After another round of tests, it was declared that he had cancer.


Struck by the misfortune, the family was ready to try anything to save him – when they came across this hospital.

I had come with very little expectations. But the treatment worked. I have recovered from cancer but to prevent a relapse, I now live an addiction-free life. - Manitesh Sharma, cancer survivor

thequint%2F2015-12%2F1f8420a1-516f-448f-bbc4-87ef9a1781e5%2FIMG_3092.JPG

For medicine, food and accommodation, a patient is charged Re 1 a day. (Photo Courtesy: Girivihar Trust)
All For Re 1
The hospital is extremely pocket-friendly – especially for those who are not so privileged. For medicine, food and accommodation, a patient is charged Re 1 a day.

The person who accompanies the patient has to pay Re1 for each meal though.

The place gets 2,400 to 3,600 patients a year and spends close to Rs 5 crore annually. Everything is done through donations.

Cancer is a disease that alters a person psychologically as well as physically. Our line of treatment not only reduces the pain but also frees the mind of stress regarding the disease. Half the job is done by the peaceful routine and surroundings itself.

Senior staff member, Sheth RM Dhariwal Cancer Hospital

Perhaps the most important detail?

People of all communities are welcome at the health centre, adds the staff member.

(Runa Mukherjee Parikh has written on women, culture, social issues, education and animals, with The Times of India, India Today and IBN Live. When not hounding for stories, she can be found petting dogs, watching sitcoms or travelling. A big believer in ‘animals come before humans’, she is currently struggling to make sense of her Bengali-Gujarati lifestyle in Ahmedabad.)
Believe me even cow meat cures a dangerous disease that's called "hunger".. just try a burger or a nihari once and you will feel the difference immediately.
 
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Believe me even cow meat cures a dangerous disease that's called "hunger".. just try a burger or a nihari once and you will feel the difference immediately.

Why should I believe you ? :cheesy:
 
. . . .
I have tried it myself... Ask others here they will tell you the same...

@Areesh

lol. So you are saying that the world should trust what the pakistanis are saying.

Especially when you say there was no Osama bin laden or Dawood Ibrahim in pakistan ? Sounds Legit.

Ha, you must me new to the internet.
You people are obsessed with us and our land.

I thought it was the other way around.
 
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hindu boys drinkk urine to purify from inside! idiots dont realize if urine was good for body why woukd their be need to dishcarge it from body why not keep it inside.
 
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lol. So you are saying that the world should trust what the pakistanis are saying.

Especially when you say there was no Osama bin laden or Dawood Ibrahim in pakistan ? Sounds Legit.



I thought it was the other way around.

haha, says the guy who is on PDF!

How many Paksitanis on Indian forums?

Here is an experiment for you.
Go to any Aljazeera video that talks about India. Count how many Pakistanis post there (not including replies)

Now go to any Aljazeera videos on Paksitan. Count how many Indians post there (Again, not counting replies)


Even reddit has start to notice Indian obsession with Pakistan.
 
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