Perhaps this can help:
http://ngin.tripod.com/111202d.htm
also, this seems to be right on point:
NEW DELHI SEPT. 19. To popularise naturopathy, volunteers of the Delhi-based Surya Foundation are on "Bharat Jagao Satyagrah'' at Raj Ghat in the Capital. The sit-in will continue till Gandhi Jayanti Day, October 2, when they will take a pledge to take this simple and cheap system of medication to villages.
According to the Foundation's chairman, Jaiprakash, who also heads the International Naturopathy Organisation (INO), he along with 40 young volunteers has been fasting on water for the past three days with a great many supporters joining them during their "Satyagrah'' in different parts of the country.Appealing to the people to support the "Satyagrah'', Mr. Jaiprakash said the time had come to arouse all citizens and make them aware that the country had immense potential and what was needed was sincere and dedicated efforts to take India on the path of progress and prosperity.
The Foundation's head said the motive behind the move was to revive the tradition of "satyagrah'' which Mahatma Gandhi used to unite people and rejuvenate their love for the country. It also marked Mahatma Gandhi's "Do or Die Satyagrah'' of 1942, he added.
Informing that the Surya Foundation had been doing various welfare activities across the country by adopting villages, supporting NGOs and organising camps, Mr. Jaiprakash said they had also formed a team of "think tanks'' who discuss different problems facing the nation and formulate strategies how to tackle them.
Regarding the ILO and his organisation's efforts to popularise naturopathy, Mr. Jaiprakash said poor villagers in India were unable to afford the allopathic system of medicine so they had decided to use naturopathy system of treatment for benefit of poor and villagers which was simple and cheap.
2006-09-11 08:21:33
·
answer #2
·
answered by Miranda 3
·
0⤊
0⤋