Bonesetters in Indian-occupied Kashmir: Healing power beyond modern medicine
SRINAGAR, Jammu and Kashmir (AA) – Mohammad Ayub was waiting in a long queue for his shoulder treatment, the second visit to a bonesetter after tripping in his home washroom.
The 49-year-old chemistry teacher in Srinagar, the capital of Indian-occupied Kashmir, had a good experience with a bonesetter because he took his son to the well-known Mohammad Ramzan Bangi and he was cured, which is why he returned to the same person for his injured shoulder.
Bangi, 58, sits at the corner of a famous Sufi shrine in the heart of Srinagar, clutching a bag containing bandages, plasters, medical tape rolls, cotton, and a small knife.
In Muslim-majority Kashmir, bonesetters are believed to have spiritual healing powers that transcend modern medicine.
The bonesetters are able to assess the injury by using a bone-related special art that they learned from their ancestors. They place their thumb on the broken bones and press, assessing the intensity of the fracture or injury solely through touch.
“It is a God-given ability for us, and by His grace alone, we are able to cure many patients who come to us,” Bangi, who was dressed in a traditional winter cloak known locally as a pheran.
He nodded to the next patient, Ayub. Bangi pressed his shoulder with his thumb and asked him if it still hurt, Ayub gestured, and the bonesetter slicked a medical tape roll with cotton.
“I feel much relieved from the pain and now I am able to move my shoulder,” Ayub shared with a visible smile on his face after 10 minutes of treatment. “I didn’t go to a hospital and came here, and by the grace of God, it was a good decision,” he added.
Many people in Kashmir, like Ayub, prefer to go to a bonesetter for bone treatments rather than an orthopedic surgeon or a general physician.
He has been sitting in the same corner of the Naqshband Sahab shrine where his father used to sit, and treating people with bone problems for the past 32 years.
Known as watangor in a local language, or the bonesetters, this group of indigenous people in the Kashmir region claim to cure different orthopedic injuries based on spiritual belief.
“I was a young boy when I used to accompany my father to this shrine,” Bangi said, recalling a large crowd of people waiting for his father to treat them.
His father, Ghulam Mohammad Bangi, was a traditional bonesetter for nearly 50 years and belonged to a family of bonesetters – a unique traditional practice in Kashmir that dates back decades before the advent of modern science.
“I think I would have been 17 years old when I started this practice as a profession after learning it from my father,” Bangi said, adding that he has devoted his life to this practice since 1981, and receives hundreds of patients every day.
He explained how years of practice and belief have enabled him to heal people’s broken hands, shoulders, feet, or any other bone without any formal medical training or scientific knowledge.
Health experts discard
However, medical practitioners in the region say many times they receive patients with additional complications after being treated by the bonesetters.
Dr. Naseer Ahmad Mir, a senior orthopedic surgeon, said that he has received many cases where patients were in a worse state of health after being treated by these traditional bonesetters.
“In some cases, we had to cut down limbs and operate on patients for dislocated bones and joints because bonesetters don’t understand anatomy,” Mir said.
For bone and joint issues, the impoverished Indian occupied Kashmir region is dependent on just a single healthcare facility, the Government Hospital for Bone and Joint, Barzulla, in Srinagar.