Crowds of protesters, many dressed in Jamaican colors, made their way through the streets of the French capital from Place de la République to Bastille on Saturday and called for the legalization of recreational marijuana use.
“What do we want? Legalization,” chanted the crowd, wreathed in clouds of hashish smoke and gathered behind a banner reading “Another drug policy is possible” and placards calling for “Ganga for all.”
Some, like 16-year-old Julien, came because they wanted to “smoke in peace.”
“Legalization would mean less trafficking, better products and perhaps less crime,” Julien explained, between puffs.
Better life
But for others, the Global Marijuana March—which also held events in Brazil, Greece, Costa Rica, the United States, Germany and South Africa, among others this month—was about calling for a better life for the terminally ill.
Beatrice, 52, has acquired immune deficiency syndrome and a disorder of the nervous system that confined her to a wheelchair 20 years ago. “But since I started smoking marijuana, I have felt better,” she said. “I am walking again, it helps my therapy and it helps me to eat.”
For 15 years she has consumed between 0.8 and one gram of cannabis per day. Encouraged by her doctor, she now grows it in her garden. “I try to be discreet,” she said.
‘Demonization’
“It’s proven that consumption tumbles, violence tumbles, if it is legalized,” she said, adding that thousands of jobs would be created if the “oppressive” laws prohibiting cannabis were scrapped.
Use of cannabis has been illegal in France since 1970, punishable by one year in prison and the equivalent of a $4,200 (P189,000) fine. In practice, imprisonment is rare, although fines continue to be meted out.
For Alain, a supporter of recreational marijuana use in his 50s, the “demonization” of cannabis has been supported by the pharmaceutical industry as “cannabis could be an affordable antidepressant.”
According to Sen. Esther Benbassa, who was behind a bill proposing the state-controlled sale and use of cannabis that was shot down in April, most objections boil down to morality.
New legislation
“There is still the idea that the cannabis smoker is on the wrong track. He smokes every day, it’s an addiction,” she said, calling for fresh legislation on what she sees as a “public health problem.”
A young transvestite member of the militant LGBT group the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, who was wearing a colored religious outfit, said smoking marijuana could be a “vital” lifeline for severely ill people.
Rejecting the cliché that only “old hippies” smoke weed, he said cannabis “is the only thing that allows some epileptic children to live.”
“You don’t make them smoke joints, but give it to them in milk, biscuits or in capsules,” he said. “That way they can go to school, they don’t become vegetables like with other medications.”