
The Source of Siwa Murti
Bali is widely known for its healers and healing traditions. Often called the Island of the Gods, the sacred is not separate from daily life. Ritual, ceremony, and devotion are woven into ordinary moments and the divine is presenced through offerings, prayer, and relationship with the unseen. Within this cultural landscape, healing is not an exception or specialty; it is a natural expression of life itself.​
Siwa Murti arises from this wellspring of ancient Balinese wisdom. It is an expression of the sacred intelligence that moves through the island and its people. The work carries the depth of traditional ritual and spiritual knowing, while also meeting the present moment.


Honoring the Lineage
Siwa Murti was originated by Ratu Nabe, a master healer and high priest within Balinese Hinduism. While the tools and rituals of Siwa Murti are rooted in ancestral wisdom, the system he developed allows this work to be transmitted as a clear, teachable, and learnable practice, without losing its spiritual integrity or potency.​​​
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​Alongside his ceremonial and priestly responsibilities, Ratu Nabe runs a thriving healing clinic in Bali, where this work is practiced in service of the community. His ongoing engagement with both ritual life and hands-on healing ensures that Siwa Murti remains a living tradition.
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The Siwa Murti Training Program relies on Ratu Nabe's continued guidance and direct transmission to maintain the integrity of the modality and its teachings.
A Living Healing Modality
Through the use of potent energy work, performed either hands-on or remotely, Siwa Murti can be used to support a wide range of physical and emotional concerns. The work engages areas of energetic restriction that are experienced as pain, tension, limited mobility, or emotional holding. In this way, it functions similarly to how an acupuncture needle is used - to open specific points within the system and restore flow - though the method of application is different.
Though energy healing modalities are commonly practiced in Bali, Siwa Murti may sit outside of what a Western perspective considers possible. Experiencing the work firsthand often opens a broader understanding of healing. A perspective that includes, rather than separates, the physical and energetic body.
