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G2: Health: The Mind Instructor: Hratch Ogali

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  • G2: Health: The Mind Instructor: Hratch Ogali

    G2: Health: The Mind Instructor: The tabloids have feted his 'miracle'
    cures for paralysis and spinal injuries but the medical establishment
    has dismissed Hratch Ogali as a quack. Tanya Gold sits in on a surgery
    and asks whether healing really works

    The Guardian - United Kingdom
    Nov 30, 2004

    TANYA GOLD


    Last week I received an email from Euan MacDonald, a 30-year-old
    former City worker who has motor neurone disease. The email was about
    Hratch Ogali - the "Mind Instructor" - a healer feted by the tabloids
    for his "miracle" cures for spinal injuries and paralysis but
    ostracised by the medical establishment. MacDonald has been his
    patient for a year. "As this is a progressive condition, results are
    difficult to measure," MacDonald wrote. "Who knows if I would be
    better, worse or the same had I not gone to see Hratch? What I can say
    with certainty is that with Hratch's help I am living without fear."

    In Ogali's gleaming yellow studio in Marylebone, just off Harley
    Street, Alessia is sitting on a bed, wearing a faded Juicy Couture
    tracksuit. The room is crowded with equipment for physical and
    motivational therapy: a multi-gym, a climbing frame and a miniature
    jungle of plants. Diagrams of the skeletal system and the muscular
    system frown down. Ogali is massaging Alessia's legs, looking, he
    says, "for active nerves. There is always an active nerve somewhere."
    He taps her foot with a metal rod and squints. "They start
    responding." He carries her to a vibrating power plate. "You're
    getting heavier," he smiles.

    "No," Alessia replies.

    "Get up and walk," he shouts. But Alessia can't; she was paralysed
    when the private jet in which she was flying crashed.

    "I moved to London because of Hratch," Alessia says. "My family would
    fly any doctor in the world to Rome to see me. Doctors came from all
    over Italy, from Cuba and from Germany. My father is a brain
    surgeon. So after the accident I knew. I didn't need to be told. If
    you break your spinal cord you don't walk." Hratch grunts, without
    looking up, "You will walk again."

    Ogali used to be a jeweller. Then, he says, "life presented me with a
    different task". He was born in Syria to Armenian parents but he grew
    up in Jordan. He came to London in 1962 and met his wife, Tracey, who
    persuaded him to become a healer. "My experiences were unique in
    life," he says. "Unusual. I can't identify the first person I healed
    because people always came to me; always talked about a difficulty of
    some kind and I always had the advice. Wherever I went this was the
    case."

    He places a walking frame by the bed and tells Alessia to stand. "Go -
    go - go!" he commands. "Come on! On your toes. Push! Push! Hold
    tight. Hold tight." She stands. After four weeks of daily treatment,
    Ogali says, "Alessia is improving. It will all get repaired and these
    feet will start feeling and we will get you up and walking. How's
    that? Is that a good plan?"

    I watch Ogali "mind instruct" a man with Parkinson's disease. "Back to
    normal; back to normal," he says as the man struggles to his
    feet. "Let it be active; let it be alive. Don't let yourself
    disappear. Think; think." Ogali pauses his incantation, strokes his
    moustache and stares violently at his patient. "Breathe into your
    brain through your nose and let it go down your spinal cord. Tell
    yourself, "I want my life back - not tomorrow, not after lunch, but
    now!" Fight! Fight! Fight! Don't feel sorry for yourself and don't
    make yourself weak." Eventually the patient stands, touching Ogali's
    little finger and they breathe, simultaneously, with triumph. The
    patient's wife turns to me. "He has a positive attitude and a will
    now," she says. "Before he met Hratch, he couldn't care less."

    The next patient is Florence. She came to England from Nigeria in 1964
    to work as a social worker and was diagnosed with the virus GBS in
    2000. "It began wi th weak fingers at half past eight in the morning,"
    she tells me, struggling to enunciate; the virus gifted her with a
    speech impediment. "By midnight I had lost all feeling."

    Ogali's flirtatious incarnation has emerged. He skips out of the
    consulting room, hugs Florence and demands, "You must get well because
    I haven't had any proper Nigerian food in this country and you must
    make it for me." She purses her lips, moodily, at him. "Don't behave
    like an old woman," he chides and wheels her over to the adapted
    exercise bike. "Faster! Faster!' he commands. Florence sweats, gasps,
    and mentions a hip problem. "This stuff with hips; don't make it up,"
    he spits. "You don't need a hip replacement. You haven't done any
    exercise for four years; that is all that is wrong with your hip. Next
    week you will stand."

    I ask Florence if Ogali's therapies are helpful. "My legs are
    stronger," she says. "I'm now able to stand. I'm happier and more
    enthusiastic." What, I ask her, is this mysterious 'mind control'?
    "'Mind control' is just focusing on what I'm doing. In my sessions
    with Hratch (which cost pounds 100 an hour), I just say to myself,
    'I'm going to do it. I'm going to do it.' I imagine I am running a
    marathon and I am heading for the finishing line. I'm going to stand
    up. I'm going to walk." I watch her eyes. She believes it.

    After the last patient has been kissed goodbye, I ask Ogali how he
    learnt 'mind instruction'. "First I investigated psychics, mediums,
    and the telepathic world," he says, rolling a cigarette and watching
    his small son bicycle across the consulting room. "Then I taught
    myself conventional medicine. I opened myself up so I can understand
    it all. My questions always took me directly to where I could get the
    answers from. When I see my patients, I move through my mind so I
    understand exactly what they feel. I enter their energy and I bring
    myself into such focus that I feel their ailment myself. I use their
    instinctive memory, of walking and of health. I resolve the
    difficulties from the depth of the unconscious mind."

    Ogali is writing a series of books on disease and remedy. His literary
    agency, he tells me, used to represent Sigmund Freud. Ogali insists
    that his methods can be taught and, if his principles are eventually
    accepted by the medical establishment and the government, a small army
    of mind instructors will march out from his mews.

    For now, this is unlikely. Ogali's campaign for recognition by the NHS
    has failed; his letters to the Department of Health are unanswered. In
    neurological circles, he is dismissed as a quack who prescribes
    nothing more powerful than counterfeit hope.

    Edzard Ernst, professor of complementary medicine at the Peninsular
    Medical School in Exeter explains the medical establishment's mistrust
    of "alternative" healers and "miracle" cures. "It is impossible to
    make judgments with anecdotal evidence," he tells me. "Anecdotes are
    meaningless. It is only through proper research that our knowledge
    advances. Hratch Ogali should provide proper evidence with clinical
    trials. If he is potent then everyone should benefit from him. I am
    not saying he is a crook - it is possible he has a power - but if he
    wants recognition he shouldn't go through the media. He should go
    through science."

    Then why, I ask Ernst, do Ogali's patients' testify to recovery? My
    desk is covered with letters from them, exalting his
    methods. "Motivational healing like Ogali's raises patient
    expectation," Ernst says. "Their belief in the possibility of recovery
    is increased by the healer's intervention and this belief can move
    mountains. But it is wrong," he adds, "to make patients believe that
    there is a supernatural power that can heal." He then explains the
    placebo effect. "When there is residual function," he says, "and if
    you are told incessantly that you will be better then you will be
    better. But it is unreliable and it is not unique to Ogali."

    Ernst tells me the story of the Spiritual Healer experiment, which
    took place in Exeter five years ago. "We teamed five spiritual healers
    with five actors pretending to be spiritual healers," he says. "After
    they had learnt to be spiritual healers the actors had the same effect
    on the patients as the healers." He clears his throat. "If anything,
    they were a little better."

    But Ogali's belief in his ability to heal is absolute; his patients
    are his evidence. "If you focus," he says, "you learn that you possess
    all sorts of powers that are natural. Psychic power is
    natural. Telepathic power is natural. We all possess this strength
    but the will and the concentration and the determination to overcome
    must be absolute." He blows cigarette smoke to the roof of his
    consulting room. "It is within us."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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