Shri Ganeshshastri Joshi, Vaidya, tells me after reading my article on Nature
Cure in the Harijan of 3rd March, 1946, that in Ayurveda, too,
there is ample testimony to the efficacy of Ramanama as a cure for all disease.
Nature Cure occupies the place of honour and in it Ramanama is the most
important. When Charaka, Vagbhata and other giants of medicine in ancient India
wrote, the popular name for God was not Rama but Vishnu. I myself have been a
devotee of Tulsidas from my childhood and have, therefore, always worshipped God
as Rama. But I know that if beginning with Omkar, one goes through the
entire gamut of God's names current in all climes, all countries and all
languages, the result is the same. He and His Law are one. To observe His Law
is, therefore, the best form of worship. A man who becomes one with the Law does
not stand in need of vocal recitation of the name. In other words, an individual
with whom contemplation on God has become as natural as breathing is so filled
with God's spirit that knowledge or observance of the Law becomes second nature,
as it were, with him. Such an one needs no other treatment.
The question, then, arises as to why, in spite of having this prince of remedies at
hand, we know so little about it; and why even those who know, do not remember
Him or remember Him only by lip service, not from the heart. Parrot-like
repetition of God's name signifies failure to recognize Him as the panacea for
all ills.
How can they? This sovereign remedy is not administered by doctors, vaidyas, hakims
or any other medicinal practitioners. These have no faith in it. If they were to
admit that the spring of the Holy Ganges could be found in every home, their
very occupation or means of livelihood would go. Therefore, they must perforce
rely on their powders and potions as infallible remedies. Not only do these
provide bread for the doctor, but the patient, too, seems to feel immediate
relief. If a medical practitioner can get a few persons to say: "So and so gave
me a powder and I was cured," his business is established.
Nor, it must be borne in mind, would it really be of any use for doctors to prescribe
God's name to patients unless they themselves were conscious of its miraculous
powers. Ramanama is no copybook maxim. It is something, that has to be realized
through experience. One who has had personal experience alone can prescribe it,
not any other.
Th eVaidyaraj has copied out for me four verses. Out of these, Charaka's is the
simplest and most apt.
It means that if one were to obtain mastery over even one out of the thousand names of
Vishnu, all ailments would vanish: