India Holds Inaugural Medical Marijuana Conference

On Sunday in India, the first designated Medical Cannabis Conference was held in the nation’s southern city of Bengaluru—commonly referred to as Bangalore—in which both the myriad benefits of medical marijuana were touted along with advocacy of open research into medi-pot’s efficacy in curing cancer and treating other maladies.

The conference’s most prominent speaker was Canadian caregiver Rick Simpson, who has been treating cancer patients with non-psychoactive CBD oil for the past dozen years.

Intending to inspire the audience to further activism, Simpson noted that over 20 U.S. states have now legalized medical pot, “but India, which has a history of using the herb, has restrictions.”

Simpson was referring to ganja actually being legal in India as recently as 1986. Also, the yearly spring Hindu holiday of Holi involves the consumption of Bhang, a beverage containing cannabis leaves and flowers.

Conference organizer Viki Vaurora suggested the modern medical pot movement is faithful to ancient Hindu religious text The Atharva-Veda, which proclaimed cannabis to be a “sacred plant.”

The Medical Cannabis Conference will continue throughout the month, scheduled to be held over the next three weekends in May in the Indian cities of Pune, Mumbai and Delhi.

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts
Total
0
Share