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One Life Touching Another
Something
remarkable is happening in Tamil Nadu. With a population of over 62
million, it suffers from disease and a struggling economy. Clare Dakin
and Martha Hammond find out how this southern Indian state is being
supported to strengthen and redevelop itself from the roots up.
Action for Rural Rejuvenation, or ARR, is the
creation of Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev, the realised Yogi and social
pioneer. His organisation, the Isha Foundation, has been tirelessly
working to improve the health and quality of life for India's rural
poor. Set up as both non-political and nonreligious, it was specifically
designed to support the emergence of a spiritually awake and fully
responsible humanity that nurtures the divine relationship between all
things. The word Isha means the formless primordial source of creation.
Sadhguru's plan is to help rejuvenate India. He sees
rural communities as core components of the Indian economy and of its
national identity. Health, he believes, is an integral key to the
country's spiritual wellbeing. Economic growth is widening the gap
between wealthy and poor, allowing the majority to flounder in relative
increased poverty and disillusionment. In response, Sadghuru is
mobilising a massive volunteer force, aiming to reverse the trend and
anchor the tools for recovery, inspiring collective responsibility.
Ultimately the project is working towards a sustainable future for
villages throughout Tamil Nadu.
How then, do you transform such struggling rural
villages into motivated and thriving centres of creativity and personal
responsibility? According to Sadhguru, you start by bringing joy and a
sense of community back into the heart of the people. This is achieved
through games, especially volleyball, which has brought housewives out
of their homes and broken down the cultural barriers of caste.
Inter-village tournaments have been held, linking together neighbouring
communities and strengthening each villages' collective identity and
esteem, re-introducing confidence, laughter and local pride.
Once a village's spirit is ignited, it brings a
renewed sense of hope. This supports the use of transformative tools,
including yogic science, as well as lessons in preventative health care
and sanitation. Within ARR health is viewed holistically. Many elements
of the project work together in the creation of healthier environments
and healthful ways of living which target the mind, body and spirit.
Practical steps being taken include establishing
mobile health clinics and distributing medicines free of charge. The
Isha volunteers couple orthodox medicinal approaches with yoga for
wellbeing sessions which, like most of the project's activities, are
simple to implement, do not require any particular kind of expertise and
can be improvised easily to suit local conditions. ARR yoga programmes
are non-religious, non-sectarian and straightforward. They work easily
in many social and spiritual situations.
Another strategy is to encourage the planting of
community gardens. These provide food, as well as herbs for many
cost-effective homeopathic remedies. The Isha foundation gives classes
on reintroducing the use of home cures to help villages get the most
from their gardens. The pleasant environments created by these green
spaces, reinforce the work of Project Green Hands a
newly launched environmental awareness scheme, through which Isha aims
to plant 114 million trees during the next 10 years, thereby reducing
the growing desertification in Tamil Nadu.
By enhancing existing development schemes, which
support traditional models of health, illness prevention and community
governance, and by modernising traditional skills, Action for Rural
Rejuvenation is raising the spirits of India's rural people. The modules
of learning used by Isha have been designed to minimalise dependency;
they encourage people to utilise what they have effectively and lead
people to self-care without direct economic handouts.
The project was launched in 2003 under the aegis of
Isha Foundation. It aims to benefit 70 million rural people in 54,000
villages in Tamil Nadu and is set to be implemented in two phases over
the course of 15 years. Thereafter, it is planned that local communities
will sustain the activities independently, using teams of local
volunteers.
It is envisioned that the project will set up local
village committees to manage rural development centres. These centres
will include a health clinic, pharmacy, yogashala, herb shop, computer
room and a library among other facilities, and will drive other
community welfare activities. In addition the project will set up craft
training schemes and production units helping to make these centres
financially self sustaining.
Contact: Isha Foundation, 15, Govindasamy Naidu Layout Singanallur,
Coimbatore – 641005
Tel: +91 422 2319654
Website:
www.ruralrejuvenation.org
Photos: © ARR
By Martha Hammond
First published in Living Lightly Issue 38
This is one of many stories available from Positive News newspaper. For more stories like this please visit:
www.positivenews.org.uk
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