CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
The use of herbs to cure illness is as
old as man. This is because the
existence of man is not without one form of ill health or the other. The
evolution of man through pre historic, Neolithic, medieval and colonial and
postcolonial times has been attached to one form of medical facility or the
other.
In Africa,
plants and herbs play major roles in addressing health challenges before the
advent of the Arabs, Europeans, Christian missionaries and the eventual
colonialization of the continent. The case of malaria, which saw to the death
of many European visitors to Africa, did
little harm to the people of Africa. The
coming of quinine as drug for malaria was in actual sense not the first break
through in addressing malaria. For example, dogoyaro, paw-paw leaf, lemon grass
are used in preparing drugs for malaria before the discovery of quinine.
Unfortunately, the coming of
colonialism altered people’s health practices. The colonialist in their racial
superiority created the impression that presented orthodox medicine as superior
to African medicinal sciences. During the colonial period, missionaries and
colonial authorities worked hand-in-hands in the introduction of medical
treatment e.g the construction of lyienu
Hospital Ogidi, Mile 4
Hospital Abakaliki and RCM
Hospital in Afikpo. This
development provided a platform for people to seek medical attention in western
built hospitals.
Inspite of the efforts to establish western medical care, no genuine effort was put in place to develop traditional medicine alongside the modern hospital. For example, Elizabeth Isichei captured the feelings of an Igbo native doctor turned Christian as follow:
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE: A HISTORICAL SURVEY OF TRADITIONAL BONE SETTING IN ENUGU STATE (1975-2015)