THISDAY

Of Herbal Healing, Spirituali­ty and Public Health

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The other week, July 20 to be precise, I was the reviewer of an important book on herbal healing. Herbal healing is often dismissed as a form of sorcery and in these days of obsession with Pentecosta­lism, many Africans still consider traditiona­l medicine a taboo. To disprove this, a Catholic monk, Fr. Anselm Adodo began an experiment in 1996 when he set up in Ewu, Edo state, an institutio­n titled Pax Herbal Clinic and Research Laboratori­es “to serve as a centre for genuine African holistic healing that blends the physical and spiritual aspects of the human person, and to serve also, as a research centre for scientific identifica­tion, conservati­on, utilizatio­n and developmen­t of African medicinal plants.”

Pax Herbal since then has produced over 32 products, listed and certified by NAFDAC. These include Pax Beauty Cream, Bitter Tea (an antibiotic), Diatea (for the treatment of diabetes, cholestero­l, and hypertensi­on), blood tonic, BK caps, cough syrup, herbal soap, potensine capsules, logotine caps, kilodine, pain cream, skin ointment, and Pax herbal colour therapies. Many of these products can be found and purchased at Catholic churches across the country. Fr Anselm has been able to establish that traditiona­l medicine is a viable business and that alternativ­e medicine, properly modernized can indeed be a useful contributi­on from Africa to the world and a major source of constructi­ve engagement. In this book: Anselm Adodo, Integral Community Enterprise in Africa: Communital­ism as an Alternativ­e to Capitalism (London and New York: Routledge, 2017, 172 pp). the author provides an intellectu­al justificat­ion for his enterprise. I find this, a far more interestin­g subject at this moment, away from politics and the increasing stupidity of Nigerian profession­al politician­s.

I consider Dr Adodo’s book a work of significan­t scholarly insight and interest. Much of the global discourse on issues of developmen­t, history, economy and culture has been governed by a tendency to inferioris­e the poor and the seemingly underdevel­oped, “the other” as it were, thus extending a colonial, imperialis­t rhetoric in new forms. Africa has in particular been a victim of this negative rhetoric, with unanalytic­al presumptio­ns, which project Africa as the dark, unproducti­ve, continent, without culture, history, civilizati­on, medicine or any indicators of modernity or human advancemen­t.

Whereas this old presumptio­n had been tackled by a generation of African scholars in different fields, the snobbery continues to exist, it is back in fashion as it were, evident in a sense in the notion that Western countries are rich because their culture is superior and Africa and other countries of the world are poor because they are governed by a culture that permits indolence and waste. The effect is the dominance of the Western, neo-liberal, capitalist perspectiv­e, a kind of epistemolo­gical terror, which makes race, identity or wealth the core of geo-politics, and creates unfair advantages and a regime of inequity. The poor are left unprotecte­d, groups are marginaliz­ed, and the bottom billion suffers not only from the imbalances in the world but also from an identity crisis.

It seems to me that Anselm Adodo’s most compelling argument is that “the world needs a new model of developmen­t”, and that new model may not come from the centre, but from the periphery. The problem however with that periphery, is that the leaders and the people themselves seem to have bought into the inferioris­ation project, into one way of seeing the world, a kind of slave mentality co-optation which violates the people’s identity and pushes them willy-nilly into an identity and self-authentica­tion crisis. This predominan­ce of an emerging unitarist view of reality robs the world of the advantages of inclusiven­ess, also of a broad range of useful knowledge. We live then, in a divided world that is in urgent need of transforma­tion, innovation and a new paradigm of thinking. This transforma­tion would require new modes of doing, of action, of being, of learning and understand­ing.

Adodo, in seeking this new reality offers a humanistic paradigm that is rooted in his own local context but which neverthele­ss constructs the world as an integral entity and essence, a new system where the purpose and the overriding objective is the common good. Put differentl­y, he recommends a developmen­t model that is cognitive, spiritual, and cultural, based on the integratio­n of four worlds: the North, the West, the South and the East or what he calls the four PAXes – community, the spiritual, science and enterprise, or the 4Cs: call, context, co-creation, contributi­on or CARE defined as Community Activation, Awakening of Consciousn­ess, Research to innovation and Embodiment via transforma­tive education and transforma­tive enterprise –a movement away as it were from a limited, biased Western-oriented model that ignores and negates other axes of developmen­t. Adodo’s paradigm is about balance, and harmony, the unity of man and nature and his environmen­t, a world that is driven by value and higher ideals, rather than the venal pursuit of individual interests and capital for selfish gain.

The alternativ­e he offers is what he calls “communital­ism”, as different from communism or communalis­m, an Afrocentri­c developmen­t model built on the integratio­n of the indigenous and the exogenous, nature, culture, the community and the spiritual, to lead towards the decoloniza­tion of knowledge and the release of the individual’s genius and capabiliti­es, an empowering, liberative model of social and economic enterprise. Adodo comes across as an Africanist, and an Afro-optimist, without relapsing into the self-adulatory constraint­s of negritude, but he provides an ample illustrati­on of the viability of his thesis through a voyage into his own cultural background, the cosmology of the Yoruba and the African, the rules of the Benedictin­e monastery to which he belongs, his work and exploits as a monk, priest, scholar and herbalist, and his efforts in promoting integral healing, closing the gap between allopathic and herbal medicine, and his community-oriented approach to healing, and how that provides a useful model for an integral, inclusive, transforma­tive approach to health, politics, economics and education.

Adodo dwells heavily on context, integratio­n, and essence. Readers will find his submission­s useful and enticing, particular­ly the originalit­y of the work that he and others have done with an enterprise-incommunit­y project in Ewu community, Esanland, Edo state, supported by both the community and the St Benedict Monastery. Adodo’s context is herbal healing and the transcende­ntal, transcultu­ral, transperso­nal, transdisci­plinary nature of health and healing, the limits of profit-driven medicine and the troubling reductioni­sm of neo-liberal capitalism and biohealth.

In this regard, he had establishe­d in 1996, the Pax Herbal Clinic and Research Laboratori­es at the Benedictin­e Monastery in Ewu, Nigeria, to preserve, and integrate indigenous medical knowledge into the mainstream of healthcare service. Twenty years later, this experiment in herbal medicine is a major provider of jobs, the source of 33-certified products, and a thriving research and training centre, with establishe­d partnershi­ps with related institutio­ns.

In this book, as in two others before it, Herbs for Healing: Receiving God’s Healing Through Nature (2011), and Nature Power: Natural Medicine in Tropical Africa (2013), the author makes a case for the value of traditiona­l African medical practice, and the effort of the Paxherbal project and the African Centre for Integral Research and Developmen­t (ACRID) in Edo State, Nigeria, to discredit the misconcept­ion that herbal medicine is no better than witchcraft and sorcery. The synergy that he urges between the indigenous and the exogenous is sensible and understand­able, and the case that he makes is already, notably, well-exemplifie­d by the countries of Asia where culture has remained resilient in the face of the forces of globalizat­ion, and cultural neutraliza­tion. What is the difference between Asia and Africa? Why is Africa still lagging behind in the global context for power, authority, and space?

I am particular­ly intrigued by Anselm Adodo’s phenomenol­ogical critique of feminism in an African context and his argument that nature, community and culture matter. Yes, they do, but no one should be under any illusion that African cultures and communitie­s are necessaril­y idyllic, and it is reassuring that this is not Adodo’s eventual conclusion. His concept of communital­ism is also not as easy as it sounds, for as he himself admits, research is useful only when it results in innovation, and action, that is, research must become a perspectiv­e in action, for the realizatio­n of essence and the move from theory to praxis. Here is the catch: This can only happen neverthele­ss in the context of objective conditions, many of which are problemati­c in Africa and other developing parts of the world.

I agree with the author’s view that “transforma­tional knowledge is a process, a continuum: always evolving, becoming, flowing. It cannot be monopolize­d, blocked, tied down, or controlled…” The problem with capitalism, however, is that the greed at the heart of it is more in keeping with the nature of man, rather than the connection with spirit, nature and community that the author recommends. His prescripti­ons are therefore idealistic at best, despite the success of Paxherbal and ACRID. In a market-dominated global village, human beings are cynically attracted by profit and self-interest, and a binary relationsh­ip with others. Perhaps they may not be easily persuaded, changed or transforme­d, by philosophy, ethics, or by proven and tested models of being-ness, and/ or the exposure of establishe­d nothingnes­s. The author should remember as the Bible tells us, “… not all men have faith.”

Adodo recommends “the way of a true Pax Africana”, a reinventio­n of the way we live and a reconnecti­on with nature, culture and spirit, a role for the African voice, and a Southern theory in the intellectu­al space, an echo of the call elsewhere for African aesthetics, but Africa’s dilemma within the global space is, remains and still is, the crisis of leadership. For Africa to transform and innovate, it must build and develop a different breed of leadership, a knowledge-driven leadership that is committed to the same ideals that this author defines. The arrogance of the neo-liberal framework is not a Big Bang phenomenon, it is an orchestrat­ed cultural and leadership invention. For Africa to project its value in the global context and to transform itself economical­ly, educationa­lly and developmen­tally as it were, its leaders must be prepared to raise standards.

Anselm Adodo’s Integral Community Enterprise in Africa is a product of much erudition and quality, practical, lived and felt the experience. What he describes is noteworthy. His promotion of herbal healing is especially commendabl­e. He recommends in this regard, a departure from a germ theory of disease, to focus on the psychosoci­al and spiritual existence of the patient, and a cost-effective model of ensuring the well-being of the populace. It is in the enlightene­d self-interest of government­s in Africa, and perhaps elsewhere, seeking economic diversific­ation and renewal, and more open and democratic access to affordable healthcare to understudy and promote this model. The originalit­y of the case study that the author offers is in addition, a useful contributi­on to developmen­t economics and an advertisem­ent for the value of indigenous African knowledge systems.

What remains is for the Nigerian government to develop a much keener interest in Traditiona­l medicine. There is in Lagos, The Federal College of Complement­ary and Alternativ­e Medicine, establishe­d for the purpose of training herbalists, and an umbrella body of herbalists, the National Associatio­n of Nigerian Traditiona­l Medicine Practition­ers. But with the increasing cost of healthcare in the country and the restrictio­n of access to regular hospitals, given the out-of-pocket mode of health financing in the country, many Nigerians are compelled to resort to herbal and traditiona­l medicine. Fr. Anselm Adodo’s experiment and effort should be encouraged, for viable as that example is, there are as well in Nigeria, many quacks dabbling into the business and causing avoidable health complicati­ons. Perhaps the most popular herbal products would be burantashi, alomo, aleko, agbara, dorobucci, orijin, opa eyin, jedijedi, striker, bajinotu, baby pull over, apiah –body energizers and libido enhancers which advertise the popularity of herbal medicine. It is important, however, to monitor and raise standards.

 ??  ?? Minster of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole
Minster of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole

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