JAIPUR: Driven by a desire to explore what she calls “something new and exciting,” Ethel Nyoni from Zambia moved to Rajasthan in 2021 to study to become an Ayurveda practitioner. Arrived at the state capital.
In two years, she will complete her degree at the National Institute of Ayurveda in Jaipur and become the southern African country’s first registered practitioner in India’s ancient healing system.
Ethel is one of many foreigners who aspire to become Ayurvedic ambassadors. Young people from Trinidad and Tobago, Afghanistan, Iran, the Netherlands, Brazil, Ghana and many other countries are excited as traditional Indian medicine combines with yoga and classical arts to form a triumvirate beyond the usual exotics. We are gathering at the Jaipur Institute with this in mind. To ride the wave.
Before enrolling in the Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery degree program, most students had earned degrees in other fields, such as engineering or conventional medicine.
“Once they graduate, they will be pioneers of Ayurveda in their home countries. This fits in with our plan to establish Ayurveda as a foreign medical discipline,” said Vice-Chancellor Sanjeev Sharma. Stated.
Originally from the Caribbean island nation of Trinidad and Tobago, Dr. Avinish Narine holds a PhD in Ayurveda after completing his BAMS and MD from the same institute. Before coming to Jaipur, he completed his bachelor’s degree in Information Technology.
“I learned about Ayurveda at a seminar at the University of the West Indies in 2010. I was very interested, so I applied and was selected,” said Narine, who worked for several years at the Ministry of Education in Trinidad and Tobago. . Before Ayurveda became his calling.
Dr. Fatemeh Moazami Peiro, originally from Iran, landed in Jaipur in 2016 after previously studying psychology and business administration. “I am the first qualified practitioner of Ayurveda in my country, but Ayurveda is not yet recognized as a medical system in this country. I hope this situation changes,” she says. Told.
So, what made her choose this unprecedented path? “My life coach called me and said, ‘You always love helping people. Now I’m going to send you to wonderful India to learn Ayurveda.’ I came here to learn to free people from physical, mental, emotional and spiritual suffering and pain.”
Komivi Ajah, originally from Togo and the first person in this country to study Ayurveda, was a mathematics student at the University of Lomé when he was awarded the AYUSH scholarship.
In two years, she will complete her degree at the National Institute of Ayurveda in Jaipur and become the southern African country’s first registered practitioner in India’s ancient healing system.
Ethel is one of many foreigners who aspire to become Ayurvedic ambassadors. Young people from Trinidad and Tobago, Afghanistan, Iran, the Netherlands, Brazil, Ghana and many other countries are excited as traditional Indian medicine combines with yoga and classical arts to form a triumvirate beyond the usual exotics. We are gathering at the Jaipur Institute with this in mind. To ride the wave.
Before enrolling in the Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery degree program, most students had earned degrees in other fields, such as engineering or conventional medicine.
“Once they graduate, they will be pioneers of Ayurveda in their home countries. This fits in with our plan to establish Ayurveda as a foreign medical discipline,” said Vice-Chancellor Sanjeev Sharma. Stated.
Originally from the Caribbean island nation of Trinidad and Tobago, Dr. Avinish Narine holds a PhD in Ayurveda after completing his BAMS and MD from the same institute. Before coming to Jaipur, he completed his bachelor’s degree in Information Technology.
“I learned about Ayurveda at a seminar at the University of the West Indies in 2010. I was very interested, so I applied and was selected,” said Narine, who worked for several years at the Ministry of Education in Trinidad and Tobago. . Before Ayurveda became his calling.
Expanding
So, what made her choose this unprecedented path? “My life coach called me and said, ‘You always love helping people. Now I’m going to send you to wonderful India to learn Ayurveda.’ I came here to learn to free people from physical, mental, emotional and spiritual suffering and pain.”
Komivi Ajah, originally from Togo and the first person in this country to study Ayurveda, was a mathematics student at the University of Lomé when he was awarded the AYUSH scholarship.
