Dr PK Warrier, who popularised Ayurveda dies at the age of 100

By Lokmat English Desk | Published: July 10, 2021 05:30 PM2021-07-10T17:30:57+5:302021-07-10T17:31:01+5:30

Dr PK Warrier who essayed a key role, in popularising Kerala’s traditional mode of treatment across the world, passed ...

Dr PK Warrier, who popularised Ayurveda dies at the age of 100 | Dr PK Warrier, who popularised Ayurveda dies at the age of 100

Dr PK Warrier, who popularised Ayurveda dies at the age of 100

Dr PK Warrier who essayed a key role, in popularising Kerala’s traditional mode of treatment across the world, passed away at the age of 100 at his home in Kottakkal. He was the chief physician and managing trustee of the Kottakkal Arya Vaidya Sala, one of the leading Ayurvedic healthcare chains in the country. He was a recipient of the Padma Shri in 1999 and the Padma Bhushan in 2010.The youngest of six siblings, Warrier was born in 1921. He joined the freedom movement while he was still in college. He dropped out to join the Quit India movement on Mahatma Gandhi’s call in the 1940s. Warrier later grew closer to the Communist movement before quitting politics to take care of the family business. He became a trustee of the Aryavaidya Sala, founded by his uncle in 1902, at 24. He was the in-charge of its medicine-making unit and later became the managing trustee of the group after his elder brother, P M Warrier, died in an air crash in 1953.P K Warrier, who is survived by his two children, treated patients till the Covid-19 pandemic struck. He was also infected and later recovered from Covid-19, his family said.

Warrier is known to have been instrumental in modernising the packaging of Ayurveda medicines, which were earlier available in the forms of kashayam (concoction) and choornam (herbal powder). He helped develop its tablet and tonic forms. An authority on medicinal plants and herbs, he also set up an R&D unit in the 1960s to help modernise the traditional form of medicine. When he took over, the firm’s turnover was ₹9 lakh. It is now over ₹500 crore, and the firm has branches in almost all major cities of the country. The firm runs five major hospitals, an R&D centre, two medicine factories, 1500 retail outlets and two herbal gardens. The firm was instrumental in making rejuvenation therapy famous and attracted many film stars and leaders to Kottakal, which has become synonymous with Ayurveda. Dr Warrier’s mortal remains have been kept at the Kailasa Mandiram in Kottakkal for the public to pay homage. He will be cremated Saturday evening at the family crematorium in Kottakkal. He won the Kerala Sahitya Akademi award for biography and autobiography in 2008 for his work ‘Smriti Parvam’.

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