Dalai Lama Supports Medical Marijuana But Not "Crazy" Use
Dalai Lama Supports Medical Marijuana But Not "Crazy"
Use
Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand -- The Dalai
Lama said he supports the use of
medical marijuana, but
if a person smokes the plant to get "a crazy
mind, that's
not good."
Tenzin Gyatso, the self-exiled Tibetan Buddhist
leader, made the
remarks in Mexico in response to a
question during an event hosted by
former Mexican
president Vicente Fox.
When asked if he favors
legalization of marijuana, the Dalai Lama
replied that
"the exception" would be for medical purposes,
according
to Agence France-Presse.
"But otherwise, if
it's just an issue of somebody [using the drug to
have] a
crazy mind, that's not good," he said on Tuesday (Oct. 15)
at
the outdoor event in Guanajuato state.
Fox "laughed when the question was asked to the Dalai Lama," AFP reported.
The former president is a vocal supporter of
marijuana's legalization
to cut "a major revenue stream
for ultra-violent drug cartels,"
according to AFP.
The Dalai Lama, 78, is not known to use marijuana for any illness.
In 2008, he underwent laparoscopic surgery to
have a gallstone
removed, his spokesman Chhime R.
Chhoekyapa said at the time.
The Dalai Lama actively
supports modern medical treatments, and also
Tibet's
2,000-year-old traditional medicine.
After fleeing Tibet
in 1959 during the Chinese invasion, the Dalai
Lama has
resided in northern India's Himalayan mountain town
of
Dharamsala, where in 1961 he established a Tibetan
Medical and Astro
Institute, known as Men-Tsee-Khang in
Tibetan language.
The previous Dalai Lama set up the
institute in 1916 in Tibet to
promote the Tibetan system
of medicine, astronomy and astrology,
according to its
website.
http://www.men-tsee-khang.org
"Men-Tsee-Khang
is a charitable, cultural and educational institution
of
H. H. [His Holiness] the Dalai Lama," it said.
Today, the
institution provides free and subsidized health care
to
Tibetan refugees and their families in India, teaches
Tibetan doctors
and astrologers, and produces Tibetan
medicine, including "Precious
Pills."
The "precious
black pill of cold compound," for example, contains
140
ingredients including "calcinated powder of precious
stones and metals
like gold, silver, copper, iron,
sapphire, diamond, emerald, turquoise
etc., as well as
herbal and non-herbal ingredients like saffron,
nutmeg,
Indian pokeberry, chebulic myrobalan etc.," according to
the
institute.
The black pill is to treat "stomach
problems," "blood in the liver,"
"bloody diarrhea or
vomiting of rancid blood," "poisoning,"
"leprosy,
malignant tumor, diphtheria" and other
diseases.
All "precious pills" are "enriched by spiritual
blessing," and some
include "purified and detoxified
mercury powder with a sulphur base."
The Dalai Lama's
surprise support for medical marijuana attracted
interest
among Buddhists and others in various countries who
posted
comments on several websites.
"Why wouldn't
compassionate-minded Buddhists support the use of
a
healing, natural, herbal, non-addictive medicine such
as marijuana to
treat symptoms of medical conditions?"
asked James Ure, a Zen Buddhist
who publishes The
Buddhist Blog.
"It helps relieve my chronic depression to
the point of saving me from
suicide a few times. In
addition, medical marijuana blunts the aches
and pains of
my bursitis to enable my body to meditate properly,"
Ure
said.
The Dalai Lama's support for marijuana
appeared on a Huffington Post
website alongside the names
of other famous people who enjoyed the
drug including
Sarah Palin, Lady Gaga, Michael Bloomberg,
George
Clooney, George W. Bush and Barack
Obama.
"Having the Dalai Lama support for medical use is a
great step in the
right direction. Just like with CNN's
Sanjay Gupta, it allows the
uninformed non-smoker to stop
thinking of Marijuana as an Evil Drug
and as a positive
natural resource," commented one marijuana advocate.
Steve
Elliott, a Hemp News reporter in a pro-cannabis group,
Hemp.Org,
said, "Somebody really needs to educate His
Holiness," after noting
that the Dalai Lama perceived
recreational use as "not good" because
it causes a "crazy
mind."
*****
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based
journalist from San Francisco,
California, reporting news
from Asia since 1978, and recipient of
Columbia
University's Foreign Correspondent's Award. He is a
co-author
of three non-fiction books about Thailand,
including "Hello My Big Big
Honey!" Love Letters to
Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing
Interviews; 60
Stories of Royal Lineage; and Chronicle of
Thailand:
Headline News Since 1946. Mr. Ehrlich also
contributed to the final
chapter, Ceremonies and Regalia,
in a new book titled King Bhumibol
Adulyadej, A Life's
Work: Thailand's Monarchy in Perspective.
His websites are
http://asia-correspondent.tumblr.com
http://www.flickr.com/photos/animists/sets
https://gumroad.com/l/RHwa
(Copyright 2013 Richard S Ehrlich)