The Jerusalem Post

The straight dope

A new exhibit in New York is all about Jews and weed

- • By ANDREW SILOW-CARROLL

Not to be a buzz kill, but I’ve never been much of a pot smoker and don’t intend to start.

But I do love Jewish material culture and learning about unexplored byways of Jewish history, which is why I am excited about a new exhibit at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research dedicated to Jews and cannabis. Am Yisrael High (see what they did there?) displays texts and artifacts tracing the connection­s – some speculativ­e and most very real – between Jews and weed, and how an often taboo subject and substance has intersecte­d with religion, politics, crime and science.

Last week, I spoke with the curator, Eddy Portnoy, who is the academic advisor for YIVO’s Max Weinreich Center and its exhibition curator. Portnoy also maintains one of my favorite Twitter feeds, in which he shares unusual and sometimes wacky artifacts from YIVO’s archives – which, like the weed exhibit, never fail to remind viewers like me of the strange, unexplored possibilit­ies of being Jewish.

The exhibit opens May 5 at the Center for Jewish History, 15 West 16th St., Manhattan.

We should get this out of the way first: Is weed kosher? What is the traditiona­l Jewish attitude towards intoxicati­on and psychoacti­ve substances?

It depends on whom you speak to, but in the main, at least as far as Orthodox Judaism is concerned, recreation­al use of cannabis is not acceptable. However, medicinal use is. This goes along with cigarettes in that smoking is bad for you, and you’re not supposed to harm your body. But because legalizati­on is a relatively new phenomenon, that ultimately changes things. The principle is dina d’malchuta dina – obedience to the civil law of the country is religiousl­y mandated. So some rabbis will say, if this is legal to do, this is acceptable.

So it is more about health than an aversion to altered states?

Scholars believe that certain Kabbalists in Morocco, in North Africa, did use hashish because it was considered to have elevated their consciousn­ess in some way. But it was for a religious purpose. It wasn’t for recreation.

What got you started on this? And by this I mean, an exhibit devoted to Jews and weed.

I smoked a lot of pot in college, but stopped after I had kids. I didn’t think it was responsibl­e to be high around little kids.

About two years ago, I stumbled across a glass bong in the shape of a menorah. It’s like a sculpture. Obviously, you would never really think of smoking eight bowls, but I thought to myself, I work at a historical research institute, and YIVO has been collecting Jewish material culture for almost 100 years. And this object brings together both Jewish religious culture and contempora­ry cannabis culture in a way that I had never really seen before. So I contacted GRAV, the company that makes it. And once it was in my office, I asked myself, is this just a kitsch item or is there a real history behind Jews and cannabis?

So let’s go back in history with a term featured in the exhibit. What is

kaneh bosem? It appears in Exodus [as an ingredient in the sacred anointing oil], it appears in a number of different traditiona­l texts and rabbinic literature. It is typically translated as fragrant reed or aromatic cane, and sometimes as calamus. In the Mishneh Torah, the medieval sage Rambam translates kaneh bosem as Indian hemp, which is cannabis. Kaneh bosem even sounds like cannabis. There’s a scholar who claims that the word comes from the Scythian word for cannabis, and the Scythians were known to have used cannabis in their religious rituals, as did multiple ethnic groups throughout the Middle East for thousands of years.

About two years ago, Israeli archaeolog­ists found and excavated third-century BCE synagogue sites at Tel Arad. They found two altars that had the burned residue of certain material, which they took for chemical analysis and carbon dating. They found on one altar the burn residue of frankincen­se and on the other the burned residue of cannabis.

And that would have been about the same time as the first Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

Nachmanide­s, in his commentari­es on Exodus, appears to say that kaneh bosem is cannabis and that it was one of the ingredient­s in ketoret, the incense offering in the Temple.

To skip ahead a bit, you display a purchase order for pot found in the Cairo Geniza, the synagogue storehouse that dates to the 12th or 13th century.

There are a number of documents from the collection of the Cairo Geniza that reference hashish. This one is a note in Judeo-Arabic that confirms that an esteemed elder received two carats of ingot silver, to be used to “obtain hashish for me with them.” It’s the 13th-century version of someone Venmoing someone and saying, “Please get me some weed,” indicating that Jews were using hashish, for whatever reason – recreation or medicine.

For the exhibit I realized I had to go where cannabis was part of the general culture, and that meant the Middle East and North Africa. One Israeli scholar of Moroccan Jewry told me that it was a tradition for Moroccan Jews to sprinkle hashish in the couscous at wedding parties.

You also have artifacts from Ashkenazi culture, like a Yiddish-language book called

Hashish.

That is a 1911 translatio­n of an 1879 German novel, a kind of One Thousand and One Nights Orientalis­t fantasy. It was translated by Rudolf Rocker, a well-known anarchist who wasn’t Jewish, but learned Yiddish so he could, you know, do kiruv [recruiting] among Jews for anarchism.

But the reality is, in Yiddish culture and Eastern European Jewry, pre-World War II there’s not much connected to cannabis use. Moyshe Nadir, the well-known Yiddish satirist [1885–1943], has a short story called “Hashish” in which he visits a Jewish artist in Greenwich Village who smokes hashish. Occasional­ly in the Polish Yiddish press and in the American press, you’ll find an article about a drug bust in which Jews are involved.

There is one guy [Yoseph Leib Ibn Mardachya] who wrote a book called Cannabis Chassidis. One of the arguments that he makes is that all the early Hasidic masters smoked pipes and their acolytes all wrote that when they smoke their pipes, they went into ecstasy. I don’t know how much evidence there is to prove that. Vladimir Jabotinsky wrote an ode to hashish in 1901 when he was a student in Vienna. It’s an anomaly, but it is in the exhibit.

But the Jewish connection is really strong starting in the 1960s, when marijuana became deeply tied up with the countercul­ture.

One of the items we have in the exhibit from the 1960s is a press release from an organizati­on called LeMar, which stands for Legalizati­on of Marijuana, an organizati­on that was co-founded by poet Allen Ginsberg, who was really a central figure in both cannabis advocacy and the legalizati­on movement. LeMar was the first legalizati­on organizati­on created in America. Ginsberg participat­ed in legalizati­on rallies in 1964, long before anyone did this.

Jews seem to play an outsized role in the countercul­ture. The Yippies were founded by five Jews: Abbie Hoffman, his wife Anita Hoffman, Nancy Kurshan, Jerry Rubin and Paul Krasner. I had no idea what a central issue marijuana legalizati­on was for them. In virtually every issue of The Yipster Times, their newspaper from the 1970s, there are articles about cannabis. Their official flag is a black flag with a red star that has a marijuana leaf embossed on it. It’s not clear that there was any Jewish content in that regard, religious or cultural, but Jews were at the forefront of this counter-cultural movement and this is one of the things they promoted.

You also deal with the serious side of cannabis, specifical­ly the medicinal side, and the Israeli researcher­s who are at the forefront of the science.

Raphael Mechoulam is an Israeli chemist who was the first scientist to isolate THC as the component that produces

euphoria, and CBD, as well. This was in the early 1960s. He’s worked on cannabis his entire life, and in the 1990s he and his colleagues discovered the endocannab­inoid system, which regulates homeostasi­s – a significan­t discovery how the human body deals with cannabinoi­ds. I read an interview with him where he says that because he was in a small country, he would have to find a niche that other people weren’t working in.

Lester Greenspoon was a Harvard University psychiatry professor who in the late 1960s set out to do research on cannabis when there was a significan­t taboo on doing research in this area – it was the Reefer Madness era. And yet, Greenspoon decided to do research to determine whether cannabis was detrimenta­l or beneficial. And his research indicated that it was

not only not detrimenta­l, but it could have medicinal benefits. He produced a book in 1971 called Marihuana Reconsider­ed and it was published by Harvard University Press.

I have to add that to a certain degree Greenspoon was influenced to both work on cannabis and also to try it by his close friend, the Jewish astrophysi­cist Carl Sagan, who was a huge pot smoker. Both Carl Sagan and his wife Ann Druyan were very much advocates for cannabis. Sagan wrote the introducti­on to Marijuana Reconsider­ed, although under the name Mr. X.

YIVO is associated with preserving the culture of Eastern European Jews and rememberin­g what was lost in the Holocaust. At any point did your bosses say, “This exhibit is just not who we are?”

No one said that... exactly.

But when I described the idea and explained that it would be contextual­ized historical­ly, they thought that this would be an acceptable way to present this. I mean, it’s legal – not in all states, but that seems to be the trajectory. It’s a multi-billion dollar industry. It’s becoming part of the general culture. The focus is really on Jews in a particular industry. It could be the film industry or the comic book industry. If an exhibit is contextual­ized adequately, you could do virtually anything.

The opening of “Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis,” will feature a panel discussion, in person and via Zoom, moderated by Eddy Portnoy and featuring Ed Rosenthal, Adriana Kertzer, Rabbi Dr. Yosef Glassman and Madison Margolin. Thursday May 5.

(New York Jewish Week/JTA)

on 65 “It’s c-c-cold”

 ?? (YIVO) ?? A GLASS BONG in the shape of a menorah is featured in ‘Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis.’
(YIVO) A GLASS BONG in the shape of a menorah is featured in ‘Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis.’
 ?? (YIVO) ?? A ROLLING tray from ‘Tokin’ Jew,’ which borrows its design from the Seder plate, is featured in YIVO’s latest exhibit, ‘Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis.’
(YIVO) A ROLLING tray from ‘Tokin’ Jew,’ which borrows its design from the Seder plate, is featured in YIVO’s latest exhibit, ‘Am Yisrael High: The Story of Jews and Cannabis.’

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