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Writing slows me down to listen, revisit my beliefs, and learn across languages and borders. It’s how I turn what I’m learning now into something that can help someone next. Writing helps me bring together passion, empathy, culture, and medicine. Below are the excerpts of my books and publications.

Author: Paarth Mathur (Published 2025)
Book: Available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble and all major publishers (Click here)

I have always been fascinated by the human body, healing, and histories that often go untold. Peru offered me that chance.

My travels to Peru were not one-time visits. I returned again and again, each time peeling back another layer of its mystery and humanity. I visited rural clinics where traditional healers and Western doctors shared space, and spoke with locals about living in a country shaped by history and spirituality. Every encounter added color to what I’d read before arriving.

This book is an effort to honor those colors. Peru: The Cultural Gem of South America is more than a title; it is a metaphor for the journey rising from deep tradition to shared understanding. As you read, I hope you don’t just learn about Peru, I hope you feel it, and finish with more questions than answers, because that’s how true learning begins. I sought to bridge ancient and modern, the scientific and the spiritual. You’ll find chapters on Machu Picchu, the Inca Roads, Andean textiles, and medicinal wisdom. More importantly, this is about the people who have preserved these traditions despite colonization, globalization, and climate change. Peru is not just a museum of the past; it is a living classroom, and I was lucky to be one of its students.

Writing this book taught me humility. The deeper I went, the more I realized how much remains unknown or misunderstood. I wrestled with the responsibility of being an outsider, but was always met with spiritual hospitality by the people of Peru. With their invitation came the responsibility to represent their stories with care, to center their voices, and to honor their wisdom.

This book would not have been possible without many people—my grandparents, parents, friends, and teachers—and above all, the people of Peru, whose patience and pride allowed me to glimpse their soul.

To my fellow young people: never believe you’re too young to contribute to global conversations. The world waits for your sincerity. And to those who think science and spirituality can’t mix, I invite you to Peru, where a stone is both an engineering marvel and a sacred presence. In Peru, the sacred and the scientific don’t collide, they dance.

This is not just a preface to a book; it is an invitation. Let’s begin the journey.


Please read my book review by Rick Vecchio Peruvian Times Contributing Editor. Rick Vecchio is also director of marketing and development for Fertur Peru Travel, which is owned by his wife, Siduith Ferrer, and is a commercial sponsor of Andean Air Mail & PERUVIAN TIMES. You can read more of his articles on the Peruvian Travel Trends blog.

Travel Book Review: Peru Seen Clearly By Young Eyes

Author: Paarth Mathur (Published 2024)
Book: Available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble and all major publishers (Click here)

The term “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” is a Sanskrit phrase that translates to “the world is one family” in English. It is a philosophical concept often cited to express the idea of the interconnectedness of all living beings and the importance of treating the world as a global family reaching across geographical, cultural, and religious boundaries.

While working at YMCA International Refugee Services, I found myself truly inspired by “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam.” This principle shaped my approach, reminding me to see every refugee and volunteer as part of one global family. It encouraged me to extend compassion and empathy, not just across language and culture, but with a sense of genuine connectedness breaking boundaries and building meaningful relationships.

My book “Voices: Linguistic and Cultural Dynamics of the Refugee Population in the United States” beautifully captures the reciprocal nature of community engagement, where the initial goal of providing assistance transforms into a shared journey of learning, understanding, and personal development.

Working within the spirit of “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam,” I learned that in helping others, we discover not only the stories of those we serve, but also new perspectives and strengths within ourselves.

Author: Paarth Mathur (Published 2023)
Book: Available at Amazon, Barnes and Noble and all major publishers (Click here)

I’ve always believed that knowledge only becomes powerful when it’s self-applied. It’s easy to read facts or hear advice but real change comes through self-discipline and living the message. That belief became personal when I found myself at the brink of childhood diabetes. I decided to take control. I started a weight loss journey not to impress anyone, but to prove to myself that change is possible. Since then, I’ve become a bit of a fitness geek, and I’ve channeled my journey into something bigger: I wrote a book on Childhood Diabetes, sharing what I learned with kids and families who need support. I even applied for an official Childhood Diabetes Awareness Day proclamation in my city. My mission has always been to lead by example because when people see your transformation, they believe in the possibility of their own. Knowledge, discipline, and a relatable story that’s the formula I stand by.

Peru’s Linguistic Heritage: The Survival of Quechua

Peru’s Linguistic Heritage: The Survival of Quechua is an article I wrote for Peruvian Times to help revive the Indigenous Quechua language. During my travels in Peru, I had the opportunity to meet a medical shaman who spoke only Quechua. Initially, I struggled to communicate, as there was no one available to translate for me. On my next visit, determined to bridge this gap, I learned some basic sentences in Quechua, and the shaman was able to understand. I was fortunate to record his ceremony and conversation, gaining insight into a worldview and understanding of health and humanity that is profoundly different from modern medicine.

This experience made me realize how much our society is losing precious Indigenous wisdom as these languages fade. Since then, I have continued to study Quechua and am now collaborating with a professor to create a digital library for the language. My article was published in Peruvian Times to highlight the resilience of Quechua and the strength of Indigenous people in preserving their heritage through hardship and change.

One day, I hope to have this article translated into Quechua itself. If I have learned anything from the language, it’s that there is no word for “goodbye”, only a phrase that means “until we meet again.” This spirit of continual connection and hope is what I carry forward from my journey.  Read More

Inca Neurosurgery: Challenging Western Medical Narratives

While Europe’s 19th-century surgeons struggled with a 50% survival rate for skull surgeries, the ancient Incas had been quietly achieving 90% success with similar procedures for thousands of years—a medical achievement systematically erased by colonial bias.

The Inca civilization, widely celebrated for its architectural marvels and sophisticated societal structures, also demonstrated remarkable expertise in medicine and surgery, a fact often overlooked in mainstream historical narratives. Among their most significant achievements was trepanation, the surgical practice of removing a section of the skull, which was used to treat head trauma, neurological conditions, and possibly spiritual ailments. Read More