Marijuana. Photo: Culled from the internet |
NOTE: I use marijuana
and ganja interchangeably to mean ‘weed’ in this piece.
Apart from his family, I think nobody knew his real name. He was nicknamed Kilo, a man who served as a barber somewhere in Sunynai, the capital of the Bono Region.
In Kilo’s barbering
shop were about seven calico-cloth-made caps. They [caps] were usually temporary
gifts to his clients. Clients who were mainly outsiders who went to Kilo’s
salon to have a shave.
“Senior, for this
haircut I have just given you, I must give you one of my caps. You must return
it when your hair grows,” Kilo would say to his unsuspecting clients.
The man [Kilo] could
not separate his pleasure for smoking marijuana also known as ganja from his job
as a barber. So, getting him shave your hair meant giving you a ‘killer’
haircut. The story of Kilo and many others nationwide and probably across the
globe have demonized ganja. In the local parlance, the herb is even referred to
as ↄboronsam tawa – the devil’s herb.
Ganja, indeed, is so
powerful that it could let a sane wo/man act weirdly or at worse, go mad. In
Sunynai, at a marijuana base, a smoker in the company of his friends ‘lost’ his
left leg after puffing on the herb. Hearsay had it that the unnamed smoker stood
[upright] while he bent his left leg to touch a mango tree under which they
smoked. It was after the ‘madness’ had taken over his head that he told his
colleagues – who foolishly believed him – his left leg was missing!
Last week, the
Rastafarian Council of Ghana was in the news after the Ghana Police Service
thwarted their resolve to embark on a demonstration to get ganja decriminalized
in the country. This generated a buzz as to whether it is right we legalized
ganja or not. The issue has had the nation sharply divided on ‘yes’ and ‘no’
lines. For Professor Joseph Bediako Asare, a retired chief psychiatrist, his
answer to the debate on legalising the herb is a big NO! That, Ghana’s marijuana
is of high grade and that ligalising it will mean seeing many mad wo/men on our
streets.
Professor Asare’s
position was endorsed by Mr. Gabriel Bernaku being the National Chairman of the
Coalition of Non-Governmental Organizations in Health. The two granted
interviews to 3FM News.
Whereas I understand
their fears and concerns, I think it is about time we sat down to take a relook
at the herb gifted to mankind by God. The million question is, “Is ganja only
for smoking”?
“Most people think
cannabis [marijuana] is a plant you smoke. My point is, it is much more than
that,” says 88-year-old Professor Emeritus Raphael Mechoulam of the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem as reported by latimes.com
under the headline, ‘Israel is banking on
cannabis as its next big industry’. He is credited for being one of the
pioneers of researching into the medical use of marijuana in Israel – God’s
nation.
The report continued, “Experimenting
on his newly acquired stash, Mechoulam was able to isolate and identify
tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the main mind-altering component of cannabis, and
cannabidiol, or CBD, which has therapeutic properties but does not get the user
high. He was building on work by Roger Adams, an early 20th century
American chemist, who first identified certain chemical components of cannabis
in the 1940s but whose efforts were slammed shut by J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI.”
If Professor Mechoulam,
at his age, still spends sleepless nights researching into medical use of
marijuana, then it should tell you he is up to something spectacular.
“The ailments that
Mechoulam and his associates say are being treated effectively with
cannabis-based medicines include epilepsy, osteoporosis, obesity and all sorts
of pain,” latimes.com says.
It is the fool, the popular adage says, who does not
change his mind. So, in 2013, writing under the headline, “Why I changed my
mind on weed,” CNN’s Chief Medical Correspondent, Dr. Sanjay Gupta apologized
for previously kicking against prospects of ganja.
“Long before I began
this project [referring to a documentary], I had steadily reviewed the
scientific literature on medical marijuana from the United States and thought
it was fairly unimpressive. Reading these papers five years ago, it was hard to
make a case for medicinal marijuana. I even wrote about this in a TIME magazine
article, back in 2009, titled ‘Why I would Vote No on Pot’,” he said in his
apology article.
Last year, I chanced on Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s
documentary titled Weed on YouTube
and what I saw was revealing. In the said documentary, this is what Dr. Sanjay
Gupta shared on his findings: “In fact, sometimes marijuana is the only thing
that works. Take the case of Charlotte Figi who I met in Colorado [in the US].
She started having seizures soon after birth. By age 3, she was having 300 [seizures]
a week, despite being on seven different medications. Medical marijuana has
calmed her brain, limiting her seizures to 2 or 3 per month.”
Indeed, Dr. Sanjay
Gupta was right opining that they [Americans] have been terribly and
systematically misled for nearly 70 years in the United States. It is not only
Americans misled on marijuana. My people, Ghanaians, have had their own share. In
particular, churches – pastors for that matter – have for long demonized and
continue to paint the herb pitch black. They do so without making the effort to
research into the issue, only basing on hearsay.
Medical use of ganja is
but one of the many uses of the herb. Mention could be made of marijuana
playing an active role in the manufacturing of [some] creams, cloths and even
for fuel.
If you live in a
country where most citizens together with their government’s main concern is to
wake up every day, get some banku or fufu to eat and engage in partisan
politics of NDC-NPP gibberish without finding solutions to even the filth
killing them, it would be hard for such a group of people to buy into the idea
of decriminalizing ganja. No wonder that after many years of malaria killing our
active labour, it is the white man coming to us with a malaria vaccine in 2019.
Nothing concerns us!
But, I am here to make
my position known that we must decriminalize and legalised the herb. The Nana
Akufo Addo government and other subsequent governments must ensure we have a state-controlled-farm
of marijuana cultivation coupled with a team of scientists [researchers]
reviewing the claims by the Israeli weed industry and improve on such. This
could possibly stabilize our economy as Ghana would become medical tourism for
persons who would want a cure to their sickness the marijuana way.
Then, after the
decriminalization and legalization would come another hurdle to cross. Must we
allow people to smoke it [anyhow]? My response is no. Currently, in Israel where
marijuana is on top of the agenda, it is still illegal for people to smoke it.
Nonetheless, if we feel
that we have decriminalized it and would give persons who would want to smoke
it their right, then I have a suggestion. Marijuana joints – each – must be set
up in all our [military] barracks across the country. One lion’s den [barrack],
one marijuana joint. Here, you go to the proposed joint with your Ghana Card – also
proving you are above 18 years – and you have the chance to smoke the herb say once
a month. Remember that, we cannot entrust our corrupt police to handle this
task.
This suggestion
[marijuana joints] should tell you that although fire is good, it could be bad,
hence, the need for stringent measures in place. Did you know that when it
comes to gun crime in the world, Japan has one of the lowest rates? That, in
2014, there were just six gun deaths compared to 33,599 in the US? “What is the
secret?” asked the BBC in article titled “How Japan has almost eradicated gun
crime.”
“If you want to buy a
gun in Japan, you need patience and determination. You have to attend an
all-day class, take a written exam and pass a shooting-range test with a mark
of at least 95%.”
“There are also mental
health and drugs tests. Your criminal record is checked and police look for
links to extremist groups. Then, they check your relatives too - and even your
work colleagues. And as well as having the power to deny gun licenses, police
also have sweeping powers to search and seize weapons,” the BBC article says.
If you care to know, in
Japan, I learnt in that article that you can only buy fresh cartridges by
returning the spent cartridges you bought on your last visit.
This is how Ghana’s
laws must work. Guns are not illegal in Japan but the system will ‘frustrate’
you owing one since it could cause mayhem. We must wake up as a country and act
as responsible humans.
I do not follow what I
see or read blindly. Before you get my trust, it means I have painstakingly researched
into who you are and what you do. I have done an extensive search on the good
uses of marijuana and we cannot brush the herb under the carpet just because it
is getting people mad.
If we would let common
sense have its way, no single person will get mad out of legalising marijuana. When
you are done reading this piece, kindly go to YouTube, search for Kofi
Annan by Blakk Rasta. Listen to that song and send me your feedback
afterwards.
The
writer is a broadcast journalist with TV3/3FM. Views expressed here are solely
his and do not, in anyway, reflect the editorial policy of his organization.
Twitter: @aniwaba