National Day of Doctors: Iran Cultural Counsellor hails doctors

The Iranian cultural counsellor in Uganda Muhammad Reza Ghezel Sofla has hailed Ugandan Doctors and scientists for the role they’re playing in the fight against the Corona Virus pandemic.

As Uganda is grappling with the Covid 19 pandemic and trying her best to support all scientist in a bid to get the medicine to curb it, the Iranian Cultural consulate in Kampala is in all support for that endeavor. This is especially so when Iran is celebrating the National Day of Doctors in the nation.

Ghezel Sofla said the Cultural Consulate of the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran. “We want to thank the Ugandan doctors, nurses and health practitioners for their tireless effort in fighting the global pandemic.”

He said In order for the nation to succeed Mohamad Reza Ghezelsofla believes that it has to have scientists and physicians who are able to find its medicine.

He therefore supports President Yoweri Museveni for calling upon scientists to have the national cures for the diseases that are ailing people.

Today as Iran marks the National Day of Avicenna, Ghezel Sofla called upon all scientist and doctors to emulate Ibn Sīnā known as Avicenna (980-1037) who is considered as the most influential philosopher and physician of the pre-modern era and one of the most significant astronomers, thinkers and writers of the Islamic Golden Age. He is also regarded as the father of early modern medicine.

“On behalf of the Cultural Consulate of the Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Kampala, we do congratulate all Doctors in Uganda and all over the world upon the National Doctors Day in Iran,” says Muhammad Reza.

Avicenna wrote the Kitāb al-shifāʾ (Book of the Cure), a comprehensive philosophical and scientific encyclopaedia, and Al-Qānūn fī al-ṭibb (The Canon of Medicine), which is among the most famous books in the history of medicine.

The canon of medicine became an instruction book to many medieval universities until 1650. Even today, some doctors and students still refer to it in their studies and practices.

“These books are used to show direction for other doctors and this makes their work easier,” he says

At the age of 10, Avicenna was taught the whole Qur’an and much of Arabic literature. When he was 18 years of age, Avicenna mastered logic, natural sciences, and mathematics. After wards, he turned to theology and studied Aristotle’s Metaphysics. It was also during that period Avicenna turned to medicine, a discipline over which he claimed “easy” mastery.

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