Medicine was religion. Religion was society. Society was medicine. Even economics were mixed up in there somewhere {you had to have or borrow enough money to buy a pig, or even a cow, in case someone got sick and a sacrifice was required}, and so was music {if you didn't have a qeej player at your funeral, your soul wouldn't be guided on its posthumous travels, and it couldn't be reborn, and it might make your relatives sick}. In fact, the Hmong view of health care seemed to me to be precisely the opposite of the prevailing American one, in which the practice of medicine has fissioned into smaller and smaller subspecialties, with less and less truck between bailiwicks. The Hmong carried holism to its ultima Thule. As my web of cross-references grew more and more thickly interlaced, I concluded that the Hmong preoccupation with medical issues was nothing less than a preocupation with life. {And death. And life after death}.
( Anne Fadiman )
[ The Spirit Catches You and You ]
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