Cliff Vint was diagnosed with urinary bladder
cancer in 2016. His oncologists said the illness was terminal,
predicting that the 75-year-old would see no more than a hundred days.
In search of hope, he went online and found the non-profit Great
Legalisation Movement, which helped him procure cannabis oil. Over a
year later, Vint is alive, and on the mend.
A thin, wiry man, Vint
sits surrounded by the blue walls of his house near the Bilikal forest,
75 kilometres south of Bengaluru, with only one message for the
government: “Allow it [cannabis] to be grown by anybody who has cancer.
They cannot do this [procure cannabis oil] on their own. The government
must see that this treatment is provided to patients who need it.”
Vint
is one of thousands of patients to whom Great Legalisation Movement has
recommended and delivered cannabis oil, says Viki Vaurora. A resident
of Bengaluru, Vaurora founded the group in November 2014. He took the
initiative after meeting Leela, a 37-year-old stage-four stomach cancer
patient, at his sister’s ayurvedic clinic in Nuggehalli, Karnataka. “I
told my sister, why not use bhang to help her as it [cannabis, which is
used to make bhang] is one of the first plants you learn about in
ayurveda, but she too had a mental block, and Leela was also reluctant
to try when she heard weed,” said Varoura of this first encounter. Leela
went through several rounds of chemotherapy, without much success. As
she grew sicker, her husband, remembering Vaurora’s advice, telephoned
the young man.
“Within three days of taking the oil, she was more
comfortable – she wasn’t vomiting constantly and she could eat,” said
Vaurora. “Within three months she finished her oil and called back and
asked for more.”
He asked Leela to undergo medical tests to see
whether the cannabis oil treatment was working. “She got her scans:
Leela had been declared cancer-free, they couldn’t find tumours
anywhere,” said Vaurora. Though it is unclear whether the results were a
result of the chemotherapy Leela had been getting, or the cannabis oil,
or luck, or simply a coincidence, the episode was Vaurora’s “wake-up
call” to the healing properties of the marijuana plant, says the
27-year-old pro-marijuana activist.
Shortly thereafter, the Great Legalisation Movement was formed.
Growing movement
The
core GLM group began with a handful of people. First through YouTube
and Facebook, and later through a dedicated website, they propagated
literature on marijuana and medical news. Attention and members followed
soon after.
GLM has been recruiting ambassadors in states across
India. The ambassadors, who volunteer through the non-profit’s website,
are responsible for the area where they live. “Ambassadors are basically
in charge of coordinating GLM members in their area,” said Mantra, an
actor and producer who owns the Mumbai-based Mantramugdh Productions.
Mantra
is GLM’s Mumbai ambassador. “If there’s a protest to be organised, or
if there is educational material to distribute or share with others who
have asked, or even something as simple as talking about its [cannabis’]
benefits among friends or spheres of influence, that is what
ambassadors do,” he said.
Photo credit: The Great Legalisation Movement India/Facebook. Vaurora,
who worked as a journalist in Bengaluru before founding GLM, funds the
group’s research and events. Others who work for the movement, such as
the ambassadors, do so without any remuneration, personally bearing the
costs of printing educational material on the benefits of marijuana.
GLM’s
Himachal Pradesh ambassador Haneesh Katnavar says meeting Vaurora and
hearing about the group’s work convinced him to become part of the
movement. “I used to smoke, okay, but that was some time ago,” said
Katnavar, who is also the group’s content writer and social media
manager. “Growing up in Himachal Pradesh, the problem with
criminalisation of cannabis is obvious. I know people – both young and
old – in jail for providing or selling a plant that literally grows
everywhere around them.
And many Himachali people do think of it [the
cannabis plant] as having healing properties.”
With over 27,000
followers on Facebook and more than 46,000 views on YouTube, GLM’s main
focus for now appears to be spreading awareness about the benefits of
industrially-grown marijuana. In December 2017, GLM organised the first
all-India march to legalise marijuana. A month later, the Delhi chapter
organised a protest at the Central Park in Connaught Place. “If the
government can allow sale of tobacco and alcohol, why not marijuana…,”
said Utsav Thapliyal, GLM’s Delhi ambassador, as he addressed the
gathering.
Photo credit: Nir Elias/Reuters The
movement has received support from renowned cardiologist, former Vice
Chancellor of Manipal University and Padma Shri recipient Dr BM Hedge.
Vaurora has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office explaining
the benefits of “legalising cannabis and hemp for medical use and
large-scale industrial cultivation”. A reply dated January 5 says the
prime minister’s office forwarded the information to the Drugs
Controller General. Though he hasn’t heard of any decision taken on his
letter thus far, Vaurora is optimistic. “I think it’s highly likely that
in the next month or two, something will open for…not just for GLM but
hope for many patients in this country.”
While medical marijuana
remains the movement’s “first priority”, says Vaurora, people do often
ask about the uses of cannabis for recreation. “We are open-minded about
its recreational uses as well, but the need of the hour is that of the
suffering patients,” he said. GLM says it doesn’t take any money from
the people to whom it provides cannabis oil for medical use. “It’s never
been about the money,” Vaurora said. “All our medications are for free.
In some instances, the people who have benefited choose to donate and
help out others in treatment.”
Global acceptance
India
has a 2,000-year-old history with cannabis. The first known mention of
marijuana can be found in the Atharva Veda, in which it is referred to
as one the five most sacred plants on Earth – a source of happiness or a
liberator. In Hinduism, the consumption of bhang, an edible preparation
with cannabis leaves, is central to festivals such as Holi.
It is so
commonly used in in Ayurveda that it has been called the “penicillin of
Ayurvedic medicine”. Cannabis was used in the Unani system of medicine
practiced by Muslims in medieval India, as a possible cure for diseases
of the nervous system and as an anti-spasmodic and anti-convulsive. Sikh
warriors too were known to use bhang during battles to numb their sense
of pain. The Nihang sect in Sikhism still consumes the narcotic as part
of their sacred rituals.
Photo credit: Deshakalyan Chowdhury/AFP The
ban on using and selling marijuana came into force in November 1985,
with the Parliament passing the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic
Substances Act. The law was meant to fulfill India’s obligations under
the US-backed international treaty for Single Convention on Narcotics,
which was drafted in 1961.
Over the last two years, cannabis has
caught attention worldwide as the medical community has come to accept
its healing properties. In November 2017, the World Health Organisation
released a report
in which an expert committee on drug dependence found that cannabidiol
“demonstrated as an effective treatment of epilepsy…and may be a useful
treatment for a number of other medical conditions”.
In June, the
United Kingdom renewed its research into cannabis’ potential as a
restorative drug after confiscating the oil from a mother who was using
it to help her 12-year-old epileptic son. The same month, the US Federal
Drug Administration approved its first cannabis-based drug for epilepsy
called
Epidiolex .
A US-based research firm the Brightfield Group has estimated the global
market for legalised marijuana to be worth $7.7 billion.
Cannabis
has also been in the news in India after the country issued its first
government licence to grow medical marijuana in August 2017. In July,
Uttarakhand became the first Indian state to allow industrial growth of
the cannabis plant. Several public figures, including Maneka Gandhi and
Shashi Tharoor, have spoken out about legalising medical marijuana.
Photo credit: The Great Legalisation Movement India/Facebook. Research
has found that cannabis oil contains two main chemicals that act on
specific receptors in the brain known as cannabinoid or CB1 receptors:
delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol. While THC can have a
psychoactive reaction in the brain, most cannabis oils contain a small
amount of the chemical – so a patient does not get high – and a high
amount of cannabidiol. For people suffering from a terminal illness or
on whom traditional medicines do not work, cannabis oil has been found
to be a more effective treatment.
Medical view
While
GLM and many movements like it across the world tout the healing
properties of marijuana, Indian doctors are constrained from using the
same due to lack of government approval. “It [marijuana] is used as a
pain reliever for cancer patients,” said Dr Shyam Aggarwal, an
oncologist and senior consultant at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi. “It
is also used in some psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia and
anxiety. A lot of pre-clinical studies do support the idea that cannabis
oil has anti-cancer properties.
The findings of such studies are
however limited to the lab and pre-clinical mice trial models. There
have not yet been any trials to test the efficacy of marijuana in
treating cancer in human beings, though the pre-clinical data that
exists…is sufficient to explore this with proper clinical trials.”
Till
such a time as the United States’ FDA or a similar government body
approves clinical trial on human beings, using cannabis to treat cancer
and other terminal diseases remains untested, unauthorised, and
potentially illegal. GLM is deeply aware that its work could land
members into trouble with the law. “Whatever we do is illegal right
now…procuring the Indica strain, making the oil, and giving it to
patients who want to use it – but helping them [the patients] is more
important to us,” said Vaurora.
In
October 2016, Dharam Vir Gandhi, a Member of Parliament from Patiala,
moved a private member’s bill in Lok Sabha to allow people to use
“non-lethal, conventional drugs such as marijuana and opium husk”.
Gandhi’s bill, listed as an A-category bill, is set to come up for
discussion in the winter session this year.
Gandhi believes that
the drug crisis in Punjab is due to “the banning of common man
substances [that] has led to an emergency, a humanitarian crisis as
people turned to synthesised drugs instead”. The law must allow for
“demarcations, common man substances should be kept separate from hard
drugs or chemicals,” he said. The bill aims to curb the black market
worth “thousands of crores, which is controlled by the mafia that
consists politicians, corrupt policemen, and affluent strata of society
which wanted to go rich very quickly”.
Photo credit: The Great Legalisation Movement India/Facebook. His
bill has the support of several political leaders. “I have talked to
TMC [Trinamool Congress], some Akali leaders, to BJP [Bharatiya Janata
Party] leaders, and even Shiv Sena leaders garnering support for the
cause of legalising marijuana.” Maneka Gandhi and Tathagathy Satpathy, a
Biju Janta Dal MP, are actively supporting his cause, he says.
Though
Gandhi and GLM have never met, each is aware of the other’s existence.
Katnavar says that the movement has plans to meet the parliamentarian
before the winter session. At present, though, they are focused on the
field because “cannabis season is about to finish,” says Katnavar, who
is also working on getting GLM a government licence to grow cannabis.
For now, as Vaurora admits, the group is obtaining the plant illegally.
“Everyone, including Commissioners of Police, know and don’t pull us up
because we are using it for medical treatment,” he added.
The
group has expanded into healing centres, one of which is being set up
in the Western Ghats. “I’m reluctant to disclose the exact location till
it is set up,” said Vaurora.
The centres teach patients with cancer and
other illnesses how to treat themselves using cannabis oil. It also
encourages them to follow GLM’s 10-step protocol that “is about basic
lifestyle changes, removing emotional blocks…[and] changing the way they
think and breathe,” said Vaurora.
“From different parts of India the call is rising to legalise natural substances that are part of our culture,” said Gandhi.
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