زندگی خدا کی نعمت ہے
اس کائنات رنگ و بو میں جہاں نظر دوڑائیں اُس منعم حقیقی کی عطا کردہ نعمتوں کی فراوانی ہی فراوانی ہے۔ کہیں کھیت وکھلیان کشت ِزعفران کا نمونہ پیش کر رہے ہیں، کہیں گلستان و نخلستان جشنِ بہاراں کی آمد کی نوید جانفراسُنارہے ہیں ، کہیں دریا اور نہر یں جوئے نغمہ خواں کی صورت میں موجود ہیں، کہیں کوہستانی علاقوں میں موجود فلک بوس پہاڑ اور جبال شامخہ ناظرین کو ورطۂ حیرت میں ڈال رہے ہیں۔ یہ سب اللہ تعالیٰ کی نعمتیں ہیں جو مختلف شکلوں میں موجود ہیں۔ لیکن ان سب سے بڑھ کر جواللہ تعالیٰ کی عظیم نعمت ہے وہ زیست ہے، وہ حیات ہے، وہ زندگی ہے۔
زندگی ہے تو سب نعمتیں رعنائیاں بکھیرتی ہوئی نظر آتی ہیں، زندگی کے حیات بخش قطروں سے سیراب شخص ہی جملہ انعاماتِ ربّانی سے متمتع ہوسکتا ہے، زندہ شخص ہی بادِنسیم کے مسحور کن جھونکوں سے مسرور ہوسکتا ہے، زندگی ہی گلہائے گلستان ونخلستان کی حسن و زیبائش کا احساس دلاسکتی ہے، زندگی سے حرکت ہے، زندگی سے برکت ہے، زندگی سے عبادت ہے، زندگی سے عیادت ہے۔ انسان کا وجود، قوم کا وجود ، معاشرے کا وجود ملک و ملت کا وجود زندگی کا ہی مرہونِ منت ہے۔
زندگی کی حقیقی رعنائیوں سے فائدہ اٹھانے والے ذی فہم فراست لوگ آسمان علم و دانش پر آفتاب و ماہتاب بن کر چمکتے ہیں، وہ اس حقیقت کو بھی فراموش نہیں کرتے کہ یہ زندگی ہمارے پاس اللہ تعالیٰ کی دی ہوئی امانت ہے، ہم نے اس میں خیانت نہیں کرنی ہے، ہم نے اپنی زندگی کو اُسی راستے پر گامزن کرنا ہے جہاں خالق حقیقی کی منشاء و مراد ہے۔
قرآنِ پاک میں ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ ہے کہ ’’ ہم نے انسان کو اور جن کو صرف اس لیے پیدا کیا...
Herbal medicines, complementary or alternative medicines is a wide term for the therapies that are not part of standard care but it has many theories regarding efficacy based on personal experiences, history and common knowledge. It has long been used since ancient times since the beginning of human civilization. Its use had caught much attention in the early 1800s, with the development in the science of chemistry, a new era in pharmacotherapeutics and the use of active chemical ingredients in plants which were known to produce favorable therapeutic effects, were explored, active compounds were extracted, purified and their structure was revealed. This advancement paved the way towards modern pharmaceutical therapy. The modern drugs are based on these herbal medicines, after extracting the active and pure chemical compounds. Pharmacokinetics and physicochemical properties of the active ingredients was explored. It lead to the better understanding of efficacy and safety profile of these drugs and first choice for treatment of various diseases. At the same time, the herbal medicines were considered as secondarily important. After approximately two centuries, the use of herbal medicines have seen a revival globally both in developing as well as developed countries. In the past few years, the practice of using herbal medicines as an alternative and complementary health medicine has gained more importance. Herbal medicines are common for treatment of various ailments including cancer, digestive disorders, pain related disorders, neuropathic ailments and cardiac arrhythmias etc. Even it has been used by pregnant females and mostly perceived as safe. Its use has gained more attraction due to its ‘natural’ approach and lesser side effects. Their use if often overlooked but physicians should pay attention to these medicines. There is lack of familiarity, standardization of the drug components, unproven therapeutic effects in various diseases, unexplored toxicology, pharmacokinetics, drug-drug interactions, and compatibility in patients with varying medical, genetic and demographic history. There are serious concerns regarding the safety, efficacy and quality of herbal products and nutraceuticals. Accidental contamination and deliberate adulteration are assumed to be the main cause of the side effects. Much of the herbal medical knowledge is scattered in different regions of the world and mostly available at family, community and local level and mostly in any native languages. There is need of coherent sources, knowledge, and exploration of these medicines across the world. The herbal medicine has varying diversity in different geological regions and they should be investigated. There should be a regional or national body to control and approve the herbal medicines. Proper documentations on these medicines and food supplements should also be done.
Cultivation of cotton is very old (Kohel and Lewis, 1984). The time when cotton fibre was first used by human is not known. However, it is known that civilizations on both Eastern and Western Hemispheres of the world cultivated cotton. The first written record of cotton is found in the Hindu Rig Veda, written during the 15th century B.C. During this period cotton spinning and weaving was well known. During 800 B.C. Manu ordained that the sacred thread which every Brahmin had to wear must be made of cotton. The first cotton fabric date back to approximately as early as 3200 B.C., as revealed by fragments of cloth found at the Mohenjo-Daro archaeological site on the banks of the River Indus in Pakistan. Peruvian archaeological excavations found cotton specimens that had been fabricated into textiles as far back as 2500 B.C. The latest attempt to trace the history of cotton growing and art of spinning was made by Silow (1944) and Stephens (1947). There are wild species of cotton in all the continents except Europe. The old world cotton probably originated somewhere in the Southern half of Africa and spread Eastwards. The new world cotton is supposed to have originated in Peru, Ecuador, and Columbia region and hence its use in this region considered to be very ancient.