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Malay Herbal Medicine
| Article
# : |
15971 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1989 |
4,871 Words |
| Author
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David J. Banks Anthropologist David J. Banks presently teaches at the State
University of New York at Buffalo. |
In the three decades since Malaysia's independence, Kuala Lumpur has become a major emporium for the sale of herbal medicines, remedies that reflect the rich cultural heritage of Malaya and of the wider region. There are said to be one hundred or more Malay manufacturers of herbal medicines selling products in this rapidly industrializing city, and there are also numerous distributors who import similar products from nearby Indonesia.
These medical products consist of a wide array of local roots, barks, dried leaves, and oils derived from animals, all of which are sold in a number of forms. The Malay word akar kayu, referring to the plant ingredients in these medicines, is rather unspecific and covers plant substances compounded from everything from roots to vines. Malay herbal medicines are used to treat a wide range of illnesses and to improve general vigor of body and mind.
A visitor to this Asian capital cannot help being aware of herbal medicines as he travels about, but he rarely understands what he sees. This is because the business is conducted almost completely in Malay, and packages that attempt English translations do so with sufficient clumsiness to inspire distrust in many potential buyers from the West. The claims are also confusing, but nonetheless, increasing numbers of Western travelers purchase Malay herbal remedies. Some make the journey solely for that purpose.
Malay herbal medicines are found in virtually every area of Kuala Lumpur. They are most easily purchased where there are high concentrations of Malay residents and in the downtown area, just as Chinese residential neighborhoods and in the Petaling Street
... (1993 of 29604 Characters)
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