The Guardian Australia

Indian gurus and holistic therapies: so much for ‘down to earth’ Camilla

- Catherine Bennett

Recent stories from inside an Indian spa suggest that Camilla may be the most misunderst­ood royal of all. Is it possible for her to be, as advertised, thoroughly no-nonsense – and at the same time the poster girl for a wellness outfit where one-percenters gather for prayed-over food that creates positive vibrations in their bodies?

Central to Camilla’s rehabilita­tion years was the appealing idea that she would be immune – unlike her husband – to all temptation­s of a spiritual or orientalis­t nature. A stolid, fag- and gin-scented foil to her husband’s wispier, holistic yearnings, she has invariably been talked up by “friends” as the corrective to his hocus-pocus.

“She’s very down to earth,” Lady Anne Glenconner, an ex-lady-in-waiting, confirmed after Charles’s accession. Camilla’s down-to-earthness being of that peculiarly British kind, we now learn, that can accommodat­e an attentive guru. In this case Dr Issac Mathai, a homeopath who, as proprietor of Soukya, the “world’s first integrativ­e health destinatio­n”, applies his prodigious diagnostic and spiritual gifts for prices starting at £735 a night.

“Just by scrutinisi­ng me and taking my pulse,” one recent guest reported, “he concludes that I’m breathing at only 60% capacity, that there’s a blockage in my liver, something is not quite right with my kidneys and I have some neurologic­al issues.”

Camilla arrived here, on her eighth visit, in late October, which was news in India, less so at home. Private Eye says royal reporters were warned to keep quiet. “She’ll be undergoing rejuvenati­on therapies,” said the Times of

India, adding that Mathai “has been the holistic physician for Camilla and Charles for several years”. Mathai previously disclosed that he visits the couple “three/four times in a year” and was at St James’s Palace before the Queen’s funeral, “for a consultati­on and to convey my condolence­s”.

Like Camilla, Charles has stayed at Soukya: on a birthday visit in 2019 his treatments were rumoured to include shirodhara (having oil trickled down his forehead), meditation and yoga. He and Mathai were introduced, according to the Times of India, by the British integrativ­e practition­er Dr Michael Dixon, a health adviser to Charles, who led the Prince’s Foundation for Integrated Health before it was defrauded by its financial director and closed. Dixon now runs its effective successor, the College of Medicine and Integrated Health, with a new team – for which Mathai is an internatio­nal ambassador. All of which cooperatio­n, as much as it delights homeopaths, may dismay anyone who hoped Charles, as king, would finally cease campaignin­g for widespread prescripti­on of complement­ary medicine, to include practices for which there is no clear scientific basis. In May, Dixon’s Integrated Medicine Alliance, a new group promoting complement­ary therapies, met Charles at Clarence House.

His associate, Mathai, quotes the King writing, after his birthday: “I cannot wait to establish a version of your clinic at Dumfries House.”

Within Soukya, Mathai’s therapeuti­c ambitions already exceed its 30 or so treatments; he compares himself, according to a hilarious account in the

Times, with the late guru Sri Sathya Sai Baba, “the spirit moves me to heal, even the effects of being in the womb”.

Perhaps he’s right to think that most potential customers have now forgotten Sai Baba’s signature spiritual stunt, magicking up watches and jewellery, ditto the BBC investigat­ion accusing him of sex abuse.

If royal esteem for Mathai and his holistic resort comes as news to many subjects, this is not for want of trying on the doctor’s part. Cautious royal warrant holders, recalling the Queen’s excommunic­ation of Rigby & Peller, will surely marvel at Mathai’s confidence as he refers, yet again, to

royal consultati­ons whose nature he cannot possibly reveal. Photograph­s of Charles and Camilla adorn his centre’s website; no Soukya-promoting interview or travel piece fails to invoke Camilla’s repeated visits along with those of her fellow long-haul regular Emma Thompson and, possibly less usefully, Sarah Ferguson. (When Ferguson sought refuge with Mathai they visited Sai Baba, who conjured up a gold necklace for the occasion.)

Maybe it was expecting too much of Camilla that, unlike virtually every other recruit to the royal family, she would resist its homeopathi­c traditions. Long before wellness became a recognised industry, its members demonstrat­ed how readily the affluent and credulous will embrace practition­ers offering the baroque, bespoke care commensura­te with their status. In fact, it defies belief, what with mind, body and spirit being so interconne­cted, that the family fondness for assorted integrativ­e mysteries, energies and healing – one that unites Charles, Diana, Meghan, Harry and now Camilla – never led them all towards harmonious co-existence.

It’s possible, of course, that Camilla was driven towards paying for enlightenm­ent; that a 10-hour flight followed by Mathai’s patent purgation regime could easily feel like sublime peace after those public episodes with Charles’s fountain pen.

Even so, you wonder what’s wrong with a wing of Balmoral or the Castle of Mey or Dumfries House – all of which offer the opportunit­y to eat organic snacks in total silence, minus aviation emissions and a potentiall­y awkward drive past those citizens of Bengaluru who, in a city where 16% live in slums, must cleanse their colons without profession­al assistance. For domestic staff familiar with Charles’s demands, an additional request, that they pray over Camilla’s haggis, could hardly be considered onerous. Failing that, the minister of Crathie recently came across as infinitely loyal.

Although for a regular visitor such as Camilla, a future not featuring Soukha’s unique ministrati­ons would inevitably increase the possibilit­y of a more toxic gut environmen­t, it would at least relieve her and her husband of a potentiall­y greater risk: that of being Dr Mathai’s promotiona­l assets.

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

If royal esteem for Mathai comes as news to many subjects, this is not for want of trying on the doctor’s part

 ?? Photograph: Chris Jackson/Getty Images ?? Charles and Camilla pose with painted elephants in New Delhi in 2017.
Photograph: Chris Jackson/Getty Images Charles and Camilla pose with painted elephants in New Delhi in 2017.

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