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"The reward for work well done is the opportunity to do more": Patayat Sahu, from Kalahandi spent his entire life making an astonishing garden of 3000 medicinal plants and catalogued them in two illustrated volumes, this year’s recipient of Padma Shri
BHAWANIPATNA: In the small village of Nandol in Kalahandi, Patayat Sahu’s house stands out for its green canopy. The garden developed by the 65-year-old villager boasts a wide range of 3,000 medicinal plants and Sahu has grown all of it over only 1.5 acres of land behind his house.
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Juggling between the roles of a farmer and a traditional healer, Sahu has been taking extra care to grow these plants. “All I use is organic manure to nourish them. No chemical fertiliser has ever been used in my garden”, he says.
Sahu began learning about traditional medicine as a hobby at a young age. He developed the medicinal garden behind his house 40 years back and kept on adding new species of plants to it over the years. “My grandfather was a Vaidya (traditional healer). After completing my education, I learned traditional healing practices from him.
Besides, I got access to many manuscripts on traditional healing practices and medicinal plants”, says Sahu, who is a farmer by day and Vaidya by night. But he does not demand a fee for treating people and accepts whatever they offer. The medicines are primarily prepared from the plants and herbs in his garden.
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Of the 3,000 species in his garden, he has collected 500 species from different parts of India during his exposure visits facilitated by the Odisha Medicinal Plant Board.
The rest have been collected from different forests of Kalahandi. His garden boasts rare species of plants like Ashoka, Lodhra, Bidanga, Sambarsingha, Rasnajadi, Tihudi, Bhin Kakharu, Maeda, Sarpagandha, and Shatavari. Besides, he has five varieties of Bhringraj, Pengu, Panikusuma, Rajapatha, Nagavel, Debanasan, Jaladimbiri, and Jyotismati.
Sahu has also grown all the Dasamoola species which are used in many Ayurvedic medicines.
“The Dasamoola herbs are also used to treat the Trinity during the Anasara period”, claims Sahu, who is a Prakruti Bandhu awardee. He has also been distributing saplings from his garden to villagers in Nandol and nearby areas.
He says documentation of many species of medicinal plants and herbs is the need of the hour.
“Denudation of forests and unscientific harvesting of herbal plants by traders and their agents is threatening many plant species. There should be a sustainable harvesting protocol and conservation of the species by the Forest department with help of villagers who know the plants”, he says.
Sahu himself has documented several medicinal plants and written two volumes of illustrated books on them. He, however, does not have the funds to publish them.
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Prime Minister praises Odisha man for planting medicinal plants on 1.5 acres
Prime Minister Narendra Modi praised Patayat Sahu, who has planted medicinal plants on 1.5 acres of land and documented them.
In his monthly 'Mann Ki Baat' radio program, PM Modi said there has been an increase in curiosity and awareness about healthcare and wellness in the time of the Covid-19 pandemic.
"Traditionally natural products which are beneficial for wellness and health are available in abundance in our country. Patayat Sahu ji, who lives in Nandol, Kalahandi, Odisha, has been doing unique work in this area for years.
"He has planted medicinal plants on one-and-a-half acres of land. Not only this, Sahu ji has also carried out documentation of these medicinal plants," he said.
The Prime Minister also praised the linking of agriculture with the field of health, saying it "is an example in itself”.
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