By New Age Islam Staff Writer 27 September 2023 Use Of Music As A Therapy Finds Mention Since The 18th Century, But Chinese And Other Cultures Claim Its Use In Antiquity, From The Time Of Confucius Main Points: 1. Muslim physicians and scientists contributed greatly to the development of music therapy in the middle ages. 2. Music is approved by some Sufi orders. 3. The Quran is silent over the use of music. 4. Maulana Rumi and Shams Tabrez used music to enhance spiritual ecstasy. ------ File Photo ---- Music has always enchanted and spellbound human beings. Even animals respond to good music. The camel riders in Arab deserts sang Hudi that is said to energise camels. The Prophet David is believed to have sung the Psalms in accompaniment to the lyre. In Vedas, the musical instrument Veena is mentioned as an accompaniment to devotional songs. Therefore, serene music has always been used as a means to enhance spiritual experience among the devotees. Islam does not discourage the use of music, though the Quran does not mention music. However, it discourages law al hadith (vain entertainment) which includes the kind of music that creates vulgar emotions and passion. Some Sufi orders have approved of music as a means of spiritual enhancement. Maulana Rumi and Shams Tabrez used music during Samaa (devotional music sessions). In the modern era, music is being used as a therapy or a means of curing physical and mental illnesses. Music therapy has become a branch of medical science. It aims to provide physical and mental benefit. Benefits of music therapy include improved heart rate, reduced anxiety, stimulation of the brain and improved learning. Music therapists use their techniques to help their patients in many areas, ranging from stress relief before and after surgeries to neuropathologies such as Alzheimer's disease. Studies on patients diagnosed with mental health disorders such as anxiety, depression and schizophrenia have shown some improvements in mental health after going through music therapy. The American Music Therapy Association's website says about the earliest mention of music therapy in the west says: "The earliest known reference to music therapy appeared in 1789 in an unsigned article in Columbian Magazine titled "Music Physically Considered." In the early 1800s, writings on the therapeutic value of music appeared in two medical dissertations, the first published by Edwin Atlee (1804) and the second by Samuel Mathews (1806). Atlee and Mathews were both students of Dr. Benjamin Rush, a physician and psychiatrist who was a strong proponent of using music to treat medical diseases. The 1800s also saw the first recorded music therapy intervention in an institutional setting (Blackwell’s Island in New York) as well as the first recorded systematic experiment in music therapy (Corning’s use of music to alter dream states during psychotherapy)." Music Therapy is of two kinds. One is receptive and the other is active. In the former, the patient only listens to a particular kind of music to cure certain mental illness while in active music therpy, the patient is involved in creating music. Music therapy is also found to be useful in curing insomnia or less sleep. But the use of music as a therapy was developed by the Muslim scientists of the 9th and 10th century and by the 18th century, the West adopted music therapy as a branch of medical science. The Muslim scientist Al Kindi (9th century) first produced the idea that music could be used to cure physical and mental illnesses. He can be considered the father of music therapy. Another Muslim scientists Al Razi (854-932), Al Farabi (870-950) and Ibn Sina (980-1037) also developed music therapy. During Abbasid period, hospitals used music therapy. Pinar Somakci in her article "Music Therapy in Islamic culture" writes : "Although the first serious music therapy was practiced during the Ottoman period, various healing attempts were undertaken in pre-Anatolian central Asia by shaman musicians known as Baksi. Even today, there are Baksis among the central Asian Turks who continue there activities. Ibn Sina, in a hospital established in Damascus by a Seljuk Turk engaged in the healing of mental disorders with music. The influence of Ibn Sina continued into the Ottoman period. The Ottoman palace doctor, Musa bin Hamun used musical therapeutic means in the healing of the tooth diseases and children's psychological disorders. Hekimbasi Gevrekzade Hsan Effendi was the student of Tokati Mustafa Effendi (18th century) who translated Ibn Sina 's famous work Al Kanun fit Tibbi. In his own work, he said that he drew heavily upon Ibn Sina's work". Therefore, Muslim scientists presented the idea of music therapy to the world and developed it as a medical science. They wrote books on music therapy and prescribed various kinds of music and pitches for different illnesses. They also prescribed times of day and night for playing music for particular illnesses. The modern music therapy borrows from the knowledge of the Muslim scientists of the middle ages. In some hospitals in Islamic countries, the recitation of particular Surahs of the Quran have also been included in the treatment protocol in the hospital. But some researchers say that music therapy is not the idea of the Muslim scientists. The ancient Egyptians, Chinese, Romans and the Greek scientists used music therapy. Prophet David treated Saul with music for a mental illness. Confucius believed that music could heal eyesight, hearing and blood circulation disorders. Greek poet Homer also believed that music could stop bleeding. Nevertheless, it is a fact that Muslims developed the Music therapy in the modern era and formulated methods for treatment with music. They even wrote books on the subject. However, the larger section of Islamic scholars or ulema are still undecided on the justification of music as a therapy and there is no consensus on the issue. Prof. Dr Ibrahim B. Syed in his article "Music Therapy" writes on the issue: "Currently there is an aversion to music by some of the ulema (religious scholars) in the Islamic world. The paper analyses the Islamic perspective on music and singing. It concludes that utilisation of music as a therapeutic agent in medicine is not haram or forbidden. There is documentary evidence that shows the power of music can be tapped to heal the body, strengthen the mind and unlock the creative spirit. Published papers nd journal articles after dramatic accounts of how doctors, musicians nd health care professionals use music to deal with everything from anxiety to cancer, high blood pressure, chronic pain, dyslexia, even mental illness. During childbirth, music can relieve expectant mothers' anxiety and help release endorphins the body 's natural pain killers, dramatically reducing the need for anaesthesia. Exposure to sound, music and other acoustical vibrations can have a life long effect on health, learning and behaviour. They stimulate learning and memory, strengthen listening abilities. Music has been used as a treatment or cure from migraine to substance abuse." Therefore, it can be rightly said that the Muslim physicians and scientists have contributed greatly to the development of music therapy in the middle ages. The world today acknowledges the benefits of music therapy. URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-culture/music-therapy-west-treatment-cure-neurological-eclipse-ottoman /d/130767 New Age Islam, Islam Online, Islamic Website, African Muslim News, Arab World News, South Asia News, Indian Muslim News, World Muslim News, Women in Islam, Islamic Feminism, Arab Women, Women In Arab, Islamophobia in America, Muslim Women in West, Islam Women and Feminism
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