Tuesday, September 16, 2008

'Great Healer' a Mender of Broken Bones

Patients wait for their bones to mend under the thatch roof of "the Great Healer" in Kampong Speu province.
By Pin Sisovann, VOA Khmer
Original report from Kampong Speu
15 September 2008



The wails of a child drifted through the makeshift stalls of the bone mender. Fifteen patients sat in the stalls, where hammocks swung and relatives milled around 10 meters away from a cow shed where a fire was burning to keep away the flies.

The bone mender's name was Var Phom, and people had come from many kilometers away to find him in Baset district, Kampong Speu province, a man they call the Great Healer. They had come to him to heal deep wounds that they could not afford or where afraid to treat at a modern hospital.

Khin Tuch, whose thigh was broken when robbers knocked her off her motorbike, sat among the patients. This was her second trip to the Great Healer, and she said she was confident he would mend her leg in the same way he had treated her broken spine.

"When my spine was broken in three, the blood froze in my belly," she said in a recent interview. "The doctor couldn't help. I came to him. He reached in my belly, like removing a fetus, to remove the blood and made a bandage with traditional herbs."

She was healed at a fraction of the cost of a hospital, and, when she was able to walk again, Var Phom asked her for a voluntary fee, one she could afford and gladly paid.

"I am not afraid of surgery," she said, "but I am poor, so I have the traditional healer who charges cheaply."

Khin Tuch is not alone in her trust of traditional healers. In a country where confidence in the health sector is sorely lacking and many people continue to live below the poverty line, they can be the best option.

"I think to have traditional treatment to fix our broken bones is quick and effective," Khin Tuch said. "I've been to the hospital too, but it is good at curing wounds and injuries to internal organs. A Khmer traditional healer is effective fixing broken bones."

Nearby was Chan Lun, who had brought her dislocated wrist to Var Phom.

"He is really an effective traditional healer," she said. "He is extraordinary in curing broken bones. I've heard complaints from people who had problems with surgeries. I'm frightened by surgery, suffering, not about its cost."

Despite such faith in traditional methods, Dr. Veng Thai, head of Phnom Penh's health department, said there was a limit to their healing capabilities, including bone menders. The break must be simple, without complications to the flesh, veins or nerves, he said. Then, a mender can set the bone, allowing the body to heal itself properly.

A hospital can do the same, he said, and a fear of surgery among people can be unfounded.

"When one comes to the hospital, we would not undertake surgery if the break was simple," he said. "The doctors would only straighten and fix the bone."

He cautioned against avoiding surgeries when they are necessary, when the injury is complicated and blood can coagulate. In such cases, traditional healers can be dangerous. Herbal concoctions that are not sterile can cause a wound to deteriorate, or worse. In the case of a broken spine, the wrong procedure can lead to paralysis for life.

In the case of Khin Tuch, he said, he doubted her spine was actually broken. It may have been a lighter injury, or a dislocation.

"If the break is simple, no wound, no cuts, a patient can go to the Khmer traditional healer," he said. "But we should watch. If a problem occurs, we should go to the hospital quickly. We will not stop traditional healers, because they are well-known for fixing broken bones. They have warming herbs to get rid of swollen flesh and quickly cure broken bones."

Back at the Great Healer's, far from hospitals and their scanners, surgeries and the metal pins and screws doctors sometimes use to treat breaks, Grandma Seur, wife of Var Phom, sat chewing betel nut and mashing herbs in a mortar.

"For warming up bones that have been broken for awhile," she said.

Var Phom had been a healer for more than 50 years, she said. The thatch ward had at least ten patients at all times. Cured patients left, new patients came.

"I don't know how patients know and continue to come, more or less," she said. "One or two every day. Two patients leave, three come, or the other way around."

Behind her, one of those patients was Sam Ath, who sat swatting insects and scratching his thing. He had come nine days ago to have his leg mended, after the hospital told him it needed amputated. He would be home in a week, cured, he said.

"I heard of his well-known reputation from a far distance," he said of Var Phom. "I went to the hospital. They wanted to amputate my leg, at a coast of $300 or $400."

(In Phnom Penh, Veng Thai said a hospital would only decide to amputate if a broken leg when the arteries that supply blood to the limbs were pinched off, causing gangrene.)

As for the Great Healer, he said he inherited the secrets of bone mending from his father, using traditional herbs and magic from spirits that possess him. When patients show him an X-ray from the hospital, he says he needs no film to tell him where the breaks are.

"I learned it myself. I learned two courses from my father. Spirits possess me. As soon as I see a broken thigh, I know what to do," he said.

Pressed on how he really learned his craft, he said: "Healer from heaven, healer for vehicle." And then he said destiny had chosen his daughter, Phon Sitha, to be trained.

Most patients come out of hospitals, Phon Sitha said, and she never left a patient uncured. When patients are ready to leave, they pay a minimal fee, though they are not charged, as per the rules of spells spoken in the Pali language. Some pay as little as 10,000 riel, about $2.50, for treatment.

"It is not the herb alone that cures the bones, but Khmer traditional magic. Spells too," she said. "Now my dad leaves the work to me. I try step by step. He helps me some and I cure patients by myself."

It is not always easy. Traditional herbs are getting harder to find these days, she said. Some of them are sought by grazing cattle.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah Hun Sen can you build a hospital in Kampong Speu for crying out loud.

Anonymous said...

I don't believe all the KRou Khmers and the Khmer bone menders. They are pure cheaters and Chalartans.
They know nothing about the bone anatomy and often joined unstraightly the fractured bone, which physiologiqualy healed by themselves.
They are Ignorant men and Cheaters!

Anonymous said...

I've lived in Cambodia for a few years now and have heard stories of "Great Healers" like this man from my collegues and friends. They really do help mend brocken bones. A friend of mine fell of the stairs and broke her arm. She went to the hospital and they charged her about $400 to put the cast on. And they said it cld take months for the bones to heal. She decided not to pay for it and went to go to a traditional healer instead. The man wrapped some kinds of herbs and chanted something for a few minutes a day for the next 4 or 5 days. After about 5 day, no more aches...swolleness. Her arm is good a new now. She told me to tell everyone i met about the "Great Healer" who lives in Kien Sviay...about 40 minutes drive from Phnom Penh.

Anonymous said...

10:14am, how cld u possibly say they're cheaters? Cheater are those that CLAIM to heal u, but didn't and take your money and run. Give me a break. If they are cheaters, they wldn't be be living in the same places. They wld roam from town to town and try to scam everyone. This is Cambodia and these people are not dumb to have people cheat them off. They wld be coming back with a machete if someone tries to rip them off! All plus, these Cambodian are not dumb. They wld ask around first before they go to places like these. So if the bones physiologically healed by themselves....why do they take 4 or 5 days to heal??? How do u answer that? Bones don't heal by themselves that fast! Yeah, these ignorant men and women are the ones that heal YOUR ANCESTORS when medical doctors were not available! Don't make such assumption when u don't know a damn thing about it. Come to Cambodia and talk to those that have gone to these Great Healers. Go there yourself to watch. Most of these healers don't even ask for money. U give them out of your own GENEROSITY!

Anonymous said...

This is AH HUN SEN legacy after 30 years of war and dirt poor Cambodian people still live in war zone condition! Why dirt poor Cambodian person refuse to modernize and is it because of AH HUN SEN leadership? Hell yes!

Anonymous said...

Shut your F*cken mouth up asshole. Stop mocking your own race you f*cken idiot. U think you're better than everybody else cuz u live abroad? But you're nothing but a worthless piece of shit! Stop blaming Hun Sen for your ignorance. That's just like some of those African American blaming the Whites for their own poverty. Yeah, i'm dirt poor mother f*cker. I have 3 cleaners, a personal cook, a driver, a nice house,security guard, and don't forget..."MONEY TO SPEND!" YEah that's the life of some of the poor Cambodian who refuse to modernize!!! Get that in your screwed up head! Only people that has shit think they're better than everyone else!

Anonymous said...

Mr syupid above:

Nowaday in Cambodia medical Doctors are greedy and don't respect medical Ethic. But the Krou Khmer are also bad and dangeous for your life.

The bone menders are clever than you. You have only heard people telling of Great healer's tory, but you have never see them with own eyes or experienced their so called treatment.

Don't be stupid. Don't believe what you have been told. Many Krou Khmer in PPenh have made a lot of money through their dirty practice, And the patients who came at their home and were uncessfully healed have never said the truth because they are ashamed of being cheated by pure Charlatans.

I know many of those cheated people.

Take an example: "Lok Krou" Bunrith
What he know about medecine? Many patients are victim of his "medical Knowlelge" and keep quiet, because they are ashamed..

Let live in the 21 rst Century!

Anonymous said...

11:37 the stupid one is yourself. I've seen them with my own eyes. Did u read the comments above, stupid ass? A friend of mine went to the healer to mend her brocken arm! No, i didn't just HEAR stories....i've seen it with my freaken eyes....otherwise i wldn't be wasting my time trying to knock some sense into your head. Also my sister broke her shoulder during the Khmer Rouge era. She cldn't move her shoulder...it was swollen and she was crying like hell. The healer mend in about a week. I'm not talking about medicines here. I'm talking about "healing bones" fool. It does work. Yeah, there's a bunch of bogus people out there who claims to heal all sorts of shit....but all i'm saying that these healers do exist.... healing bones that is. I don't recommend people going to these Kroo for all their other medical reasons. Yeah, i'm living in the 21st century, but i never forget where i came from and who heal my ancestors!