All I can say is I prayed to the Goddess, when I was dry and she sent me an 
emmisary with buds o purple and white fire. And Lo, when I saw her beauty I 
had to praise her verily with at least a few Bam and of course the emissary 
could relate given the glowing beauty of her puissance upon planet Earth. 
Om Bhu Devi Namaste. Ganga is like smoking the pubic hair of the Goddess. 
Which is why Shivittes smoke it. It's common is all Kali rites, less so in 
Shiva.  Okay, Purple Urkle Over. Weed is very very good for matrimonial 
conjugality. ;) Okay, feel sorry for yas who haven't see ya.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Robert Gimbel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2007 9:41 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] 'Spiritual Use of Cannabis'


Spiritual use of cannabis

This article is about cannabis used as a drug in a spiritual or
religious context.

Cannabis has an ancient history of ritual use and is found in
pharmacological cults around the world. Hemp seeds discovered by
archaeologists at Pazyryk suggest early ceremonial practices by the
Scythians occurred during the 5th to 2nd century BCE, confirming
previous historical reports by Herodotus. In India, it has been used
by wandering spiritual sadhus for centuries, and in modern times the
Rastafari movement has embraced it. Some historians and etymologists
have claimed that cannabis was used as a religious sacrament by
ancient Jews, early Christians and Muslims of the Sufi order.


Jewish and Christian use
According to some scholars, cannabis was an ingredient of holy
anointing oil mentioned in various sacred Hebrew texts. The herb of
interest is most commonly known as kanah-bosim (÷ÀðÅä-áÉùÆÒí) (the
singular form of which would be kaneh-bos[1]) which is mentioned
several times in the Old Testament as a bartering material, incense,
and an ingredient in holy anointing oil used by the high priest of
the temple. The Septuagint translates kaneh-bosm as calamus, and this
translation has been propagated unchanged to most later translations
of the old testament. However, Polish anthropologist Sula Benet
published etymological arguments that the Aramaic word for hemp can
be read as kannabos and appears to be a cognate to the modern
word 'cannabis',[2] with the root kan meaning "reed" or hemp and bosm
meaning "fragrant". Both cannabis and calamus are fragrant, reedlike
plants containing psychotropic compounds. While Benet's conclusion
regarding the psychoactive use of cannabis is not universally
accepted among Jewish scholars, there is general agreement that
cannabis is used in talmudic sources to refer to hemp fibers, as hemp
was a vital commodity before linen replaced it. [3]


Hindu use
Cannabis is believed to have been used in India as early as 1000
B.C.E. In mainstream, lay religious usage, it is usually taken in
liquid form as bhang and used during religious ceremonies such as
weddings, as well as the Hindu celebrations of Holi.[4][5]

Hashish, or charas, is widely smoked by Shaivite devotees, and
cannabis itself is seen as a gift of Shiva to aid in sadhana.
Wandering ascetic sadhus are often seen smoking charas with a chillum.

The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report[6] describes some traditional
Hindu spiritual uses of cannabis.

Connection of ganja with the worship of Shiva.


"435. It is chiefly in connection with the worship of Shiva, the
Mahadeo or great god of the Hindu trinity, that the hemp plant, and
more especially perhaps ganja, is associated. The hemp plant is
popularly believed to have been a great favourite of Shiva, and there
is a great deal of evidence before the Commission to show that the
drug in some form or other is now extensively used in the exercise of
the religious practices connected with this form of worship.
Reference to the almost universal use of hemp drugs by fakirs, jogis,
sanyasis, and ascetics of all classes, and more particularly of those
devoted to the worship of Shiva, will be found in the paragraphs of
this report dealing with the classes of the people who consume the
drugs. These religious ascetics, who are regarded with great
veneration by the people at large, believe that the hemp plant is a
special attribute of the god Shiva, and this belief is largely shared
by the people. Hence the of many fond epithets ascribing to ganja the
significance of a divine pro-party, and the common practice of
invoking the deity in terms of adoration before placing the chillum
or pipe of ganja to the lips. There is evidence to show that on
almost all occasions of the worship of this god, the hemp drugs in
some form or other are used by certain classes of the people it is
established by the evidence of Mahamabopadhya Mahesa Chandra
Nyayaratna and of other witnesses that siddhi is offered to the image
of Shiva at Benares, Baidynath, Tarakeswar, and elsewhere. At the
Shivratri festival, and on almost all occasions before the on which
this worship is practised, there is abundant evidence Commission
which shows not only that ganja is offered to the god and consumed by
these classes of the worshippers, but that these customs are so
intimately connected with their worship that they may be considered
to form in some sense an integral part of it"


Worship of the hemp plant


"449. The custom of worshipping the hemp plant, although not so
prevalent as that of offering hemp to Shiva and other deities of the
Hindus, would nevertheless appear from the statements of the
witnesses to exist to some extent in some provinces of India. The
reason why this fact is not generally known may perhaps be gathered
from such statements as that of Pandit Dharma Nand Joshi, who says
that such worship is performed in secret. There may be another cause
of the denial on the part of the large majority of Hindu witnesses of
any knowledge of the existence of a custom of worshipping the hemp
plant in that the educated Hindu will not admit that he worships the
material object of his adoration, but the deity as represented by it.
The custom of worshipping the hemp plant, though not confined to the
Himalayan districts or the northern portions of India alone, where
the use of the products of the hemp plant is more general among the
people, is less known as we go south. Still even far south, in some
of the hilly districts of the Madras Presidency and among the rural
population, the hemp plant is looked upon with some sort of
veneration. Mr. J. H. Merriman (witness No. 28, Madras) says: "I know
of no custom of worshipping the hemp plant, but believe it is held in
a certain sort of veneration by some classes." Mr. J. Sturrock, the
Collector of Coimbatore (witness No. 2, Madras), says: "In some few
localities there is a tradition of sanctity attached to the plant,
but no regular worship. "The Chairman of the Conjeveram Municipal
Board, Mr. E. Subramana Iyer (witness No. 143, Madras) says: "There
is no plant to be worshipped here, but it is generally used as
sacrifices to some of the minor Hindu deities. "There is a passage
quoted from Rudrayanmal Danakand and Karmakaud in the report on the
use of hemp drugs in the Baroda State, which also shows that the
worship of the bhang plant is enjoined in the Shastras. It is thus
stated: "The god Shiva says to Parvati-- 'Oh, goddess Parvati, hear
the benefits derived from bhang. The worship of bhang raises one to
my position. In Bhabishya Puran it is stated that "on the 13th moon
of Chaitra (March and April) one who wishes to see the number of his
sons and grandsons increased must worship Kama (Cupid) in the hemp
plant, etc.""


Muslim use
Generally in orthodox Islam, the use of cannabis is deemed to be
khamr, and therefore haraam (forbidden). As with most orthodoxies,
early practices differ in this.[citation needed] Some say that, as
hashish was introduced in post-Koranic times, the prohibition of
khamr (literally, "fermented grape") did not apply to it.[citation
needed] Others point to various hadith, which equate all intoxicants
with khamr, and declare them all haraam, "if much intoxicates, then
even a little is haraam".[citation needed]

Although cannabis use in Islamic society has been consistently
present, often but not exclusively in the lower classes,[citation
needed] its use explicitly for spiritual purposes is most noted among
the Sufi. An account of the origin of this:

According to one Arab legend, Haydar, the Persian founder of the
religious order of Sufi, came across the cannabis plant while
wandering in the Persian mountains. Usually a reserved and silent
man, when he returned to his monastery after eating some cannabis
leaves, his disciples were amazed at how talkative and animated (full
of spirit) he seemed. After cajoling Haydar into telling them what he
had done to make him feel so happy, his disciples went out into the
mountains and tried the cannabis for themselves. So it was, according
to the legend, the Sufis came to know the pleasures of hashish.
(Taken from the Introduction to A Comprehensive Guide to Cannabis
Literature by Ernest Abel.)

This story is most likely a myth or a simplification but an
interesting account nonetheless.

In addition, the warrior sect of the Hashashin were said to have
eaten hashish before their assassinations and were given the
name "Hashasin" accordingly. This notion, traditional in the West,
can be inferred from Marco Polo's account of his travels, though it
has been widely disputed.[7]


Sikh use
The Sikh religion developed in the Punjab in Mughal times. The common
use of bhang in religious festivals by Hindus carried over into Sikh
practice as well. Sikhs were required to observe Dasehra with bhang,
in commemoration of the founder of the Sikh religion, Guru Nanak.[8]

The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report[6] describes the traditional
use of cannabis in the Sikh religion.

"Among the Sikhs the use of bhang as a beverage appears to be common,
and to be associated with their religious practices. The witnesses
who refer to this use by the Sikhs appear to regard it as an
essential part of their religious rites having the authority of the
Granth or Sikh scripture. Witness Sodhi Iswar Singh, Extra Assistant
Commissioner, says :"As far as I know, bhang is pounded by the Sikhs
on the Dasehra day, and it is ordinarily binding upon every Sikh to
drink it as a sacred draught by mixing water with it. Legend--Guru
Gobind Singh, the tenth guru, the founder of the Sikh religion, was
on the gaddi of Baba Nanak in the time of Emperor Aurangzeb. When the
guru was at Anandpur, tahsil Una, Hoshiarpur district, engaged in
battle with the Hill Rajas of the Simla, Kangra, and the Hoshiarpur
districts, the Rains sent an elephant, who was trained in attacking
and slaying the forces of the enemy with a sword in his trunk and in
breaking open the gates of forts, to attack and capture the Lohgarh
fort near Anandpur. The guru gave one of his followers, Bachittar
Singh, some bhang and a little of opium to eat, and directed him to
face the said elephant. This brave man obeyed the word of command of
his leader and attacked the elephant, who was intoxicated and had
achieved victories in several battles before, with the result that
the animal was overpowered and the Hill Rajas defeated. The use of
bhang, therefore, on the Dasehra day is necessary as a sacred
draught. It is customary among the Sikhs generally to drink bhang, so
that Guru Gobind Singh has himself said the following poems in praise
of bhang: "Give me, O Saki (butler), a cup of green colour (bhang),
as it is required by me at the time of battle (vide 'Suraj Parkash,'
the Sikh religious book). "Bhang is also used on the Chandas day,
which is a festival of the god Sheoji Mahadeva. The Sikhs consider it
binding to use it on the Dasehra day-The quantity then taken is too
small to prove injurious." As Sikhs are absolutely prohibited by
their religion from smoking, the use of ganja and charas in this form
is not practised by them. of old Sikh times, is annually permitted to
collect without interference a boat load of bhang, which is
afterwards. distributed throughout the year to the sadhus and beggars
who are supported by the dharamsala."


Rastafari use
Members of the Rastafari movement use cannabis as a part of their
worship of Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, whom they see as the
returned Messiah, God incarnate. The movement was founded in the
1930's and while it is not known when Rastafarians first made
cannabis into something sacred it is clear that by the late 1940s
Rastafari was associated with cannabis smoking at the Pinnacle
community of Leonard Howell. Rastafarians see cannabis as a
sacramental and deeply beneficial plant that is the Tree of Life
mentioned in the Bible. Bob Marley, amongst many others, said, "the
herb ganja is the healing of the nations." The use of cannabis, and
particularly of large pipes called chalices, is an integral part of
what Rastafari call "reasoning sessions" where members join together
to discuss life according to the Rasta perspective. They see cannabis
as having the capacity to allow the user to penetrate the truth of
how things are much more clearly, as if the wool had been pulled from
one's eyes. Thus the Rastafari come together to smoke cannabis in
order to discuss the truth with each other, reasoning it all out
little by little through many sessions. They see the use of this
plant as bringing them closer to nature and even rub the ash into
their skin. In these ways Rastafari believe that cannabis brings the
user closer to Jah, ie Selassie I, and pipes of cannabis are always
dedicated to His Majesty before being smoked. While it is not
necessary to use cannabis to be a Rastafarian, some feel that they
must use it regularly as a part of their faith. "The herb is the key
to new understanding of the self, the universe, and God. It is the
vehicle to cosmic consciousness" according to Rastafari philosophy.
[1]


Other modern religious movements
Elders of the modern religious movement known as the Ethiopian Zion
Coptic Church consider cannabis to be the eucharist,[9] claiming it
as an oral tradition from Ethiopia dating back to the time of Christ.
[10]

Like the Rastafari, some modern Gnostic Christian sects have asserted
that cannabis is the Tree of Life.[11]

Other organized religions founded in the past century that treat
cannabis as a sacrement are the THC Ministry, the Way of Infinite
Harmony, Cantheism, the Cannabis Assembly and the Church of
cognizance. Many individuals also consider their use of cannabis to
be spiritual regardless of organized religion.





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