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- Date: Mon, 13 Dec 1993 22:13:02 -0600 (CST)
- From: Steven VanderStaay <vandesl@OKRA.MILLSAPS.EDU>
- Subject: return of the herb
- Sender: Drug Abuse Education Information and Research <DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01H6FZ9DA7R691W1RB@YMIR.Claremont.Edu>
-
- The NEW YORKER (11/22) featured an interesting sketch of Ansley Hamid,
- who teaches anthropology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Hamid, who
- studies drug use in Harlem, has recently noted an increase in marijuana use--an
- increase he is pleased with. The piece caught my eye as the teenage
- crack-dealers I'm now studying smoke marijuana as an alternative to cocaine--an
- alternative that pleases me ("Coke makes you trigger happy," they tell me, "The
- weed eases your mind." They've been doing this for years, but the piece about
- Hamid made me wonder if the trend is a larger one and if, in fact, it does bode
- well for our inner cities. If bringing more marijuana into such areas could, as
- Hamid argues, reduce crack usage and provide a soothing effect on the
- community, a new twist could be added to the legalization argument.
-
- excerpts from the sketch:
-
- Ansley Hamid, a gray-haired, forty-nine-yar old professor, is something
- of a celebrity in Harlem. On the crowded corenr of 132nd and frederick Douglass
- , and in any number of the gutted tenements that line Adam Clayton Powell
- bouldevard, he is welcomed with backslaps and expressive hellos...
- Since the early eighties, Professor Hamid has appeared in the area at
- irregular yet not unpredictable intervals: with the emergence of each new
- innercity trend in drug consumption comes the Professor, notebook in hand, to
- monitor the drug's arrival, its flourishing, and its fading away. In 1984, for
- instance,he was one of the first to note and document the growing use of the
- cocaine derivative crack...
- Visiting his old haunts...early last summer, Professor H began sniffing
- that acrid smell which said to him that the smoking of marijuana, long a Harlem
- fixture, was on the rise. And this fall he has discovered twelve undergound,
- over-the-counter pot stores in West Harlem...
- P. Hamid is not at all worried about the development [marijuana]...he
- spoke of marijuana's offering a third way between crack and sobriety..."Crack
- takes all your chances away, he said. "That drug makes you think only of that
- drug. But marijuana--it reminds you of everything, and it can give the whole
- world back."
- Later, as he headed downtown, toward home, he returned to the topic of
- marijuana, and how happy he was to have it back. "In the sixties, black men
- went off and got stoned and came back wanting to open crafts stores--a threat
- neither to themselves nor to others," he said. "It was a time of progress."
-
- Steven VanderStaay
- Millsaps College
- Jackson, Mississippi
-