The Local
An Italian court acquitted a man found with 58 grams of cannabis in
his possession because, as a Rastafarian, he was using the ‘sacred herb’
to meditate.
The 30-year-old was arrested in May 2016 after police found eight grams of cannabis in his pocket and a further 50 grams during a search of his home.
The man said that he had set up a meditation room at home, where listened to Rasta music on a record player while smoking weed.
A prosecutor had called for up to four months in prison but his lawyer, Luca Bruno, argued that marijuana is regarded as a sacred herb within the Rastafari ‘religion’.
Indeed, Rastafarians believe that the marijuana plant has holy powers, and use it during meditation sessions to enhance a sense of unity and spirituality. A short prayer is usually recited before it is smoked.
Although it lacks legal recognition, Rastafari, which originated in Jamaica in the 1930s, is classified as both a new religious movement and a social movement.
Despite cannabis use being illegal in Italy, some three million kilos of the drug are consumed in the country each year.
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