Sunday Times

Come to Bongalong ... don’t forget now

- Visit www.bongalong.co.za/cannabis-walk/ Ufrieda Ho

Sartorial porn for Johannes “Smokie Jo” Berkhout looks like a fine-cut navy blue suit made entirely of hemp. It’s the dream outfit he wants to wear to the Bongalong events this year that take place on May 5 in Cape Town and Joburg. The mass gatherings are peaceful protests calling for the recognitio­n that cannabis culture is a way of life and a choice for thousands of South Africans. Berkhout says wearing a sharp hemp suit to the event will be his way of smashing the stigma of dagga use. He says: “For this year’s Bongalongs we are asking people to wear their work clothes or whatever they wear every day because users are not all stoners — they are also the every person — the doctors, teachers, cleaners, lawyers and the person at the bank.

“People are still being labelled and still being punished, from being stigmatise­d to getting fired,” says Berkhout, who is the event organiser and owner of the business Bongalong.

He swapped his industrial design job to run a business making bespoke bongs and other marijuana-use parapherna­lia. He now employs four people and has been in operation for over four years.

Even his personal business growth speaks to a ballooning demand and a societal shift in thinking about legalising weed in South Africa, he believes. It’s a new phase for the prolegisla­tion movement, he says, adding that managed properly a cannabis industry could create jobs, redirect police resources and push for better research and developmen­t of the medical benefits of cannabis.

The Bongalong walk in Johannesbu­rg begins with a gathering at Mary Fitzgerald Square while the Cape Town event will be a gathering outside parliament with music, speakers and other festivitie­s. The gathering in Cape Town has in the past attracted almost 10 000 people and about 5 000 in Johannesbu­rg.

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