In the early 1960s, a classically trained homeopath named Norma Rowan Harman was running a mobile clinic in South Africa, offering free care to thousands of low-income patients. Classical homeopathy requires finding one precise remedy per person, a process that takes time and resources she simply did not have.
So in 1968, Norma and her fellow practitioner Ghiradhlal did something practical and ingenious. They began pre-mixing complementary homeopathic remedies, organ preparations, and nosodes into targeted blends that could be administered quickly, affordably, and effectively. These became the foundational Narayani combinations. The work spread through the 1970s and 1980s, reaching Mauritius and then India, where she later became known as Swami Narayani, the name the remedies now carry. In 1989, she received the Albert Schweitzer Award for Humanitarian Work in recognition of her decades of service.
Swami Narayani passed away in 1995. Her foundation preserved her notes and combinations, and the system has continued to grow. What began as a practical solution to a logistical problem is now one of the most comprehensive combination systems in homeopathic practice, with hundreds of combinations used by practitioners around the world.

