Larko links to the website of Dr. Dragan Dabic, still online as I write:
Dr. Dragan “David” Dabic was born some six decades ago in a small Serbian village of Kovaci, near Kraljevo. As a young boy he liked to explore nearby forests and mountains, spending a lot of time on Kopaonik mountain where he tended to pick the omnipresent, natural and potent medicinal herbs that grew at those green pastures. As a young man he moved to Belgrade, and then on to Moscow where he graduated with a Doctor of Medicine degree (spec. in Psychiatry) at the Moscow State University (Lomonosov). After Russia, Dr. Dabic travelled around India and Japan, after which he settled in China where he specialized in alternative medicine, with a special emphasis on the mind-body control, meditation, Yoga, spiritual cleansing, as well as Chinese herbs. In mid-1990s Dr. Dabic returned back to mother Serbia for good, and ever since then emerged as one of the most prominent experts in the field of alternative medicine, bioenergy, and macrobiotic diet in the whole of the Balkans, and is frequent contributor to the regional alternative health magazines, and guest expert with numerous TV appearances and on many public forums, seminars and symposiums (Belgrade, Novi Sad, Pancevo, Sombor, Smederevo, Kikinda…) dedicated to these issues and topics.
Dr. Dragan Dabic currently resides on Yury Gagarin street in New Belgrade, but for public forum invitations, television appearances or private consultations he can be reached directly at the following contact:
healingwounds @ dragandabic . com
At least it isn’t machine translation. Why am I always so suspicious of alternative medicine? I like ‘he tended to pick the omnipresent…herbs’.
Another website is given in one of the links in the Law and Magic blog (of which more anon).
LATER NOTE: apparently the website is fake – at all events, it went online after 22 July 2008. See BILDblog. Actually, for a fake website it’s very nicely done, not too exaggerated.
For the life of me I can’t find anything of Radovan Karad
It’s actually Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, with a bit more hair stuck on.
Traditional medicine nouns dictionary
The traditional Chinese medicine, Japanese medicine and Korean medicine etc. are called
Buy traditional Jamaican medicine now!