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Interview Portuguese Spanish    
Year 9 - N° 443 - December 6, 2015
ORSON PETER CARRARA
orsonpeter92@gmail.com
Matão, SP (Brasil)
 
Translation
Leonardo Rocha - l.rocha1989@gmail.com

 
João Madeira Neto: 

“Doctors must look at
patients as a whole” 

One of the founders of the Medical Spiritist Association
of Cascavel, in southern Brazil, talks about the
aims of the organisation and its plans 

João Madeira Neto (photo), a medical doctor and researcher of the Spiritist Teachings, lives in the southern Brazilian city of Cascavel, in the state of Paraná. He is the coordinator of two Spiritist Groups in the area – Caminhos da Evolução and Jesus Modelo e Guia. He is a Spirist speaker and one  o  the  founders  of  the  Medical  Spiritist

Association of Cascavel, known as AME Cascavel. 

How do you see the link between Medicine and Spiritism? 

It is Medicine with Jesus. Doctors cannot make of Medicine a profitable trade and they make take a wholesome approach to it. It is not possible to treat the parts. We need to treat the whole human being. As Emmanuel described, health is “the perfect harmony of the soul”.

Knowledge of Spiritism can play a big part, especially in cases for which earthly Medicine has no answer. That is the case of many mental problems.

As we know, there is not such a thing as illnesses. What we have are ill people. With scientific research and Spiritism we will be able to put the soul into Medicine, as Dr Marlene Nobre used to say. 

When was AME Cascavel founded and what was it like in its early days? 

 I had been working with AME São Paulo. When I returned to Paraná em September 2008 I felt great internal peace. I was like floating. Then one day I told my wife: we must found AME Cascavel! That is when I began, along with fellow doctors, working on the project. We were not sure if the Spiritist Movement would take us in and what issues we would be focusing on. We talked to Dr Laércio Furlan, president of AME Paraná, and with the late Dr Marlene Nobre, who was at the time president of AME Brazil. The year after we already organising AME Cascavel’s 1st Seminar of Medicine and Spirituality. 

What can you say about the work of the organisation in the city? 

We are often invited to advise and express our views on issues like abortion, spirituality and mental problems. Our mission, assigned to us by Christ, is to console the souls, enlighten the consciences and encourage renovation in ourselves and our brothers and sisters who accompany us in this journey. AME Cascavel is part of the Spiritist Movement, taking a scientific approach of Spiritism to other people through study groups and seminars. We also carry out charity work by helping people overcome substance abuse and addiction. We provide religious support to patients admitted to the hospitals of the city. And we have an academic department, which introduces the medical-Spiritist approach to medical students with weekly classes and research. 

How relevant was the experience and influence of Dr Marlene Nobre for the whole AME movement in Brazil? 

Dr Marlene Nobre, who return to the Spirit World on January 5th 2015, is undoubtedly our “spiritual mother,” in the words of the current president of AME Brasil, Dr Gilson Luis Roberto. She was a symbol of hard work, dedication and love to the cause of Jesus. She was faithful to the very end. 

What are AME Cascavel’s projects and plans for the next few years? 

We have two projects, which are going ahead very well. One of them is, as I explained before, the Spiritist Chaplaincy, which operates in two hospitals of the city. We are aiming to extend it to a third hospital, where we intend to work specifically at the chemical dependency and addiction wing.

The second project, known as Fraternal Assistance, deals with people who suffer from chemical dependency and addiction. We help them overcome this problem through Spiritism.

Our long term plan is to set up a team to attend prisoners at the local penitentiary.  



 


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