|
Restoring
faded knowledge:
Tony Ramirez, the Medicine Man
By
Tom Moore
Tony
Ramirez has been immersed in the use and study of plants
and herbs for medicinal purposes since childhood. One
could say that it is in his blood, a legacy of folk
knowledge that has been passed from one generation to
another. In recent decades that legacy has diminished,
but it has recently been experiencing a renaissance
as interest in alternative medicine continues to grow.
Ramirez has spent the last 25 years in the field of
collecting and cataloging the knowledge of medicinal
plants and herbal lore of the South Texas and northern
Mexico region. "My interest has always been the
medicinal value of plants, the possibility that all
plants are medicinal to one extant or another,"
he said.
Describing himself as "essentially self taught,"
Ramirez originally intended to pursue a degree in the
field of ethnobotany but found there was no place to
study it. He also discovered the lack of information
on such knowledge. "What was available in South
Texas was very little," he said. "What I thought
was going to be an easy task, wasn't. I've been working
on this ever since." This area of study is known
as pharmacognosy, a science dealing with the composition,
production, use, and history of drugs of plant and animal
origin.
Ramirez began his research in 1975, but the Laredo native
has been familiar with medicinal plants since he was
a child. He cited his paternal grandmother, Paula Garza
Ramirez, and his maternal grandfather, Manuel Vela Saenz,
with his lifelong interest in herbal knowledge. "Those
were the two who had the most lasting influence on me.
It was how I got into this," he said. "It
was fate, destiny."
Garza Ramirez was a medicinal healer. She lived in the
monte, Ramirez said, and learned herbal lore from her
mother. "She was very knowledgeable in practical
things," Ramirez said of his grandmother. "It
was how you survived. I was always taken to my grandmother
first before going to the doctor."
Saenz formulated patent medicines -- cough medicines,
liniments, etc., -- "stuff that was popular at
the time," Ramirez said, "all based on herbs."
Saenz had a lab with wooden barrels of herbs, racks
and tables, and bottles, Ramirez said. He traveled throughout
South Texas plying his trade. His route included the
little towns in the area, and he supplied pharmacies,
stores, and tienditas, doing business in trade and barter,
more with plants and food than money. Ramirez said that
Saenz' sons did not go into the family business.
Ramirez' own experience in herbal and plant knowledge
has ironically coincided with a growing movement in
a return to alternative healing. "Back in 1975
I had wanted to pursue a degree in ethnobotany, but
there was no place to go study it," he said. "Now
there are many universities that offer these forms of
studies, and alternative facilities that offer specialized
courses in ethnobotany or pharmacognosy.
"Pharmacognosy was eliminated from pharmacy school
in the late 50s, early 60s," Ramirez continued.
"That information was lost. The knowledge became
more and more distant. Physicians were taught to prescribe
medication that was provided by the pharmaceutical industry.
"Medicine's come full circle," Ramirez said,
"to the point now that medical schools are providing
that education and schools of pharmacy are teaching
that. We're getting back in line with the way it was.
Over the last 25 to 30 years, people have been looking
for alternative medicine, complementary medicine. It
has many names. About 75 percent of US medical schools
now offer courses in alternative medicine. It's a real
exciting time that we're in, as long as we continue
to have the freedom to use this."
Ramirez recently participated in the Mostrario de Medicina
Tradicional, a traditional medicine health fair hosted
by the Mexican government in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas
(see this month's Medicine Man column on p. 52 for the
story).
"Mexico is very advanced in working with traditional
healers," he said. "Since Mexico has a very
large indigenous population in remote areas, the only
medical treatment available is traditional. The Mexican
government pays attention to traditional medicine, to
learn about and preserve it. It tries to help traditional
healers. I've been involved with that for the last few
years."
Ramirez works with the University of Texas at San Antonio
Health Science Center's STEER (South Texas Environmental
Education and Research) program. He teaches one segment
of STEER's 30-part month-long environmental medicine/border
health elective. "He does a presentation on herbs
used for medicinal purposes," said Roger Perales,
one of STEER's two environmental health coordinators.
The course is open to anyone in medical studies -- medical
residents, nursing students at the undergraduate and
graduate level, Ph.D. students -- according to Perales.
He said that students from all over the country take
the elective, some especially for Ramirez' presentation.
"Tony is one of the most popular," Perales
said. "He's a wealth of information. There's not
a lot written on South Texas herbs, and Tony is an expert
on that."
Ramirez continues to work on research, attending conferences,
working with universities in the US, Mexico, Central
America, and Asia. "There's always been an exchange
of information," he said. "It's very interesting.
You never stop learning."
|