Khaleej Times

Forbidden by faith, but many have a penchant for hashish

- AFP

peshawar — Niaz Ali is a deeply religious man: He prays five times a day and visits the mosque as frequently as possible. But he also loves to smoke hashish — lots of it.

Despite it being forbidden by his faith, the 50 year-old estimates he spends about 30 per cent of his earnings as a cab driver on the habit.

His love affair with cannabis began as an occasional puff with friends when he was a teenager, but has since morphed into a fullblown addiction for the father-ofnine.

“It is a sacred plant. A sacred intoxicati­on,” says Ali, who asked to use a pseudonym, after taking a fresh rip off a hookah packed with pungent hash in Peshawar.

“It’s like a second wife, this addiction,” he sighs.

While Ali freely acknowledg­es using hash runs counter to the tenets of Islam, he insists it has its advantages.

“We know that it is haram but it’s an intoxicati­on that doesn’t harm anyone else,” he explains.

In Pakistan, an Islamic republic, the consumptio­n of alcohol is strictly forbidden for Muslims. Any semblance of a sybaritic nightlife takes place at home behind closed doors, where the country’s elite have been known to quaff alcohol.

But many Pakistanis are surprising­ly open to using cannabis, with the spongy, black hash made from marijuana grown in the country’s tribal belt and neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n the preferred variant of the drug.

Whereas alcohol is explicitly forbidden in Islam, hash seemingly straddles a theologica­l gray zone, which could explain its popularity in the country.

Even if most observant Muslims in Pakistan scoff at the idea of drinking, a prod into their feelings on marijuana often triggers a wry smile followed by a trite maxim about how good it makes food taste or how restful sleep can be after a toke.

People have been smoking hash on the subcontine­nt for centuries.

It predates the arrival of Islam in the region, with reference to cannabis appearing in the sacred Hindu Atharva Veda text describing its medicinal and ritual uses.

According to a 2013 UN survey, cannabis was the most widely consumed drug in Pakistan with around four million users, representi­ng 3.6 per cent of the population — a figure that has drawn scepticism in a country where reliable data can be hard to come by.

“It’s an underestim­ation,” says Dr Parveen Azam Khan, president of the Dost Welfare Foundation, a nonprofit that treats drug addicts in Peshawar.

Despite its widespread consumptio­n, not all are happy about hash’s prevalence in the so-called ‘Land of the Pure’.

“There is no compromise with hashish,” says Maulana Mohammed Tayyab Qureshi, the imam of the main Peshawar mosque.

According to Qureshi, anything that causes intoxicati­on or bodily harm is strictly forbidden in the faith. He chalks up marijuana’s popularity in Pakistan as a law enforcemen­t issue.

Public health experts also warn the ubiquitous availabili­ty of cheap hash in Pakistan’s northwest has been especially harmful to impoverish­ed children, who increasing­ly use the drug to deal with the hardships of poverty and trauma from years of militant violence.

“For children, it’s the drug of choice,” says Dr Khan, blaming the vicious nexus between the region’s narco-funded insurgenci­es and widespread drug use for the scourge.

Pakistan also remains wholly unequipped to handle the problem, with the UN survey saying a dearth of treatment clinics and prohibitiv­e costs keeps users from seeking help.

But in Islamic shrines salted across the country others see cannabis as more benign.

At the Bari Badshah shrine in the heart of Peshawar, followers of the Sufi sect of Islam gather in a small courtyard nightly, where they smoke copious amounts of hash and listen to devotional music while draining tea by the kettle.

Conversati­ons are fluid, only to be interrupte­d by hard drags off hash pipes with the occasional song performed by one of the devotees.

“The basic work of hash... it wakes up new corners in your mind,” says Mohammed Amin, 50.

According to Sayeed Asjid, 27, such shrines are welcome to members of any faith and in Peshawar are frequented by high-level bureaucrat­s, police officers and members of security agencies.

“It’s a deep relaxation,” says Asjid of the cannabis high as he exhales clouds of marijuana smoke.

But Sufi shrines have been the frequent target over the years by Taleban militants and sectarian extremists like Daesh, who abhor the mystical sect. “That was only to spread fear and havoc,” says Asjid of the attacks, while expressing his faith in the power of the shrine to protect. —

 ?? AFP ?? A man smoking hashish near a shrine in Peshawar. —
AFP A man smoking hashish near a shrine in Peshawar. —
 ?? AFP ?? Maulana Mohammed Tayyab Qureshi speaking during the interview in Peshawar. —
AFP Maulana Mohammed Tayyab Qureshi speaking during the interview in Peshawar. —
 ?? AFP ?? A woman smoking a hashish cigarette in Peshawar. —
AFP A woman smoking a hashish cigarette in Peshawar. —

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