Hakim Abdul Aziz


Abdul Aziz was a prominent Unani physician in British India.

Biography

Hakim Abdul Aziz was born into a family of Kashmiri migrants, and is regarded as the founder of the Lucknow tradition in Unani medicine.
He started practising medicine in 1877. In 1902, he founded the Takmil al Tibb School at Lucknow for research and excellence in Unani Medicine.
The earliest biographical work on Hakim Abdul Aziz and his philosophical approach in Unani medicine was written by Hakim Syed Zillur Rahman. He wrote memoirs and life history of 'Azizi Family', prescriptions and formulations of Hakim Abdul Waheed, Unani formularies used by Azizi Family of Lucknow.

Epistemology

Abdul Aziz’s approach with regards to Unani medicine was that of a puritan and hence, significantly different from other notable practitioners like Hakim Ajmal Khan who advocated incorporation of concepts from alternative medical systems. Consequently, the Delhi and Lucknow schools of Unani medicine evolved in different directions.
Hakim Abdul Aziz wished to systematise Unani instruction at the Lucknow Madrasa around the texts of Ibn Sìnà, supplemented by practical instruction in surgery and anatomy.

Impact

Hakim's fame was so widespread that students and practitioners of Unani medicine used to come to study from him, from as far and wide as the Punjab, Afghanistan, Balochistan, Bukhara and the Hejaz. The Takmil al Tibb School established by him at Lucknow, was instrumental in combating the widespread plague of 1902–03.
In 1910, coming to terms with the singular promotion of colonialism to allopathic medicine, Hakim Abdul Aziz, along with Hakim Ajmal Khan and Pandit Madan Mohan Malviya formed the All India Ayurvedic and Unani Tibb Conference to defend traditional forms of healing. In 1904, recognizing the Hakim's stringent attitude towards adulteration in medicine, British India invited him to serve on the board of the Committee for Regulation of Medical Formulations.
Hakim Abdul Aziz did not charge from visiting patients. Though, it is recorded that he solicited fees of Rupees 16 for visits within the city, Rupees 500 for visits outside the city and Rupees 1000 for visits outside the state. Among his royal patients were Shahjahan Begum of Bhopal and the son of Sayajirao Gaekwad III of Baroda

Legacy

In 1910, shortly after returning from Hajj, the Hakim fell ill and died. His death was widely mourned by poets, journalists and commoners. After his death, his two eldest sons took over the maintenance of Takmil al Tibb. A road in Lucknow is named after him, and the college is now maintained by the government. The Azizi family is still involved in practice of Unani medicine.
The Azizi Family also played a significant role in the Indian independence movement.
Hakim Syed Zillur Rahman published his Tazkirah Khandan Azizi in 1978. The work was
widely received and reviewed.
Similarly, his earlier Bayaz Wahidi and Matab Murtaish were also reviewed in many Urdu journals.

Literature