Joint Conference in Jerusalem Next Week

Wilbur

New Member
At a time when Palestinians and Israelis appears on the brink of a new cycle of violence one group has found a way to have the two come together for a whole new purpose - the legalization of marijuana.

Aleh Yarok, Israel's branch of the Green Leaf Party, has organized the first ever conference for Palestinians and Israelis to discuss marijuana legalization.

Scheduled to take place October 25 at the Hebrew University, the day-long event will see speakers from both populations discuss ways in which they can mutually advance their causes.

"There are so many reasons this is important to us, but first and foremost we want to see peace in the region and peace begins with a shared interest to advance certain goals," said Ohad Shem-Tov, the head of Aleh Yarok.

While Israel has emerged as one of the worldwide leaders in the practical application of medical marijuana - last year, a group of doctors at the Sheba Medical Center published findings which suggested that marijuana might be one of the most effective tools in combating head trauma - the issue remains on the fringes of Palestinian society, said Shem-Tov.

"Arab Israeli families are facing more and more problems with drug addictions in the family. They are beginning to feel that changing the laws might make the situation better," said Shem-Tov. "For many reasons this issue is not talked about as much, and there is no party that resembles Aleh Yarok in any Arab country. We feel that by bringing this to Arab individuals we are putting it on the map."

Among the dozen speakers scheduled to address the conference is Harvard Professor Dr. Lester Grinspoon, often referred to as the founder of the medical marijuana movement due to his research in the field during the early 1970s.

"He has somewhat of a cult following," said Michelle Levine, the head of the Aleh Yarok environmental division. Levine invited Grinspoon to address the conference after discovering that the Jewish professor had never visited Israel because he had never been invited to speak at a conference here.

According to Levine, the idea for the conference came after the group first tried to send a letter directly to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas.

"We wrote the letter, but the day before we could send it Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit was kidnapped and we felt that with all the chaos going on it was not likely that our letter would get read," said Levine.

Source: Jerusalem Post (Israel)
Pubdate: Sun, 15 Oct 2006
Author: Sheera Claire Frenkel
Copyright: 2006 The Jerusalem Post
Contact: https://info.jpost.com/C002/Services/...k/editors.html
Website: Jerusalem Post | Breaking News from Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish World
 
It's good to see that marijuana can help bridge gaps across cultural boundaries, even those as extreme as seen in the middle east.

The real reason I posted was because the title said "Joint Conference" and I thought that somebody should point that out.

^_^ What can ya say?
 
i think we knew, but yeah... honestly it would be nice for peace in the middle east... props to em
 
^^ just legalizing the growing of hemp could help out alot. solving some of our energy needs would stop alot of this shit.
 
honestly they dont want to solve the energy needs, they want to drain us of our hard earned money (and in reality whats the point of money anyways, i personally think we should use a mix of money and the barter system... but that will probably never happen again)
 
user said:
^^ just legalizing the growing of hemp could help out alot. solving some of our energy needs would stop alot of this shit.

Boy you got that right!!!

RE-legalizing hemp is such a good idea. We gotta fight the big $$ synthetic industry & big pharma. They would loose a lot of $! But we would have a safer enviomentally sound base (hemp) for production of so many things. Any one who has not read Jack Herer's "The Emperor Wears No Clothes" needs to get that book yesterday. For a real good time get the DVD "Grass" narated by the Wood Man, Woody Harrilson. It is great!

A side Q: I thouhgt Frank Z was drug free. Am I mistaken? Saw him in Phoenix back in the 60s. They were so good.
Boy howdy!! They were good!

medMUser
 
medMUser said:
I thouhgt Frank Z was drug free. Am I mistaken? Saw him in Phoenix back in the 60s. They were so good.
Boy howdy!! They were good!
To the best of my knowlege (a very low bar) yes zappa was drug free. Probably a good thing. He was out there just about as far as you wanna go without any help. I saw him about 1980 at the santa monica civic. It will always be one of my favorite concerts.:smokin:
 
MDMA/PTSD Study Preparations Continue in Israel; Doblin to Speak at Joint Arab-Israeli Conference Dr. Moshe Kotler's MAPS-sponsored government-approved MDMA-assisted psychotherapy study in Israel is preparing for initiation. This study will enroll subjects with war- and terrorism-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). MAPS President Rick Doblin, Ph.D., Clinical Research Associate Valerie Mojeiko, and volunteer clinical research expert Amy Emerson will visit in late October, to help researchers prepare the study to fit the strict guidelines necessary for the data generated to be eligible for consideration by the FDA and the European Medicines Agency.
On October 25, Doblin and Lester Grinspoon, M.D., will join Israeli and Palestinian drug policy experts in Jerusalem to talk at the first Arab-Israeli Joint Conference on Peace and Drug Policy, sponsored by the Ale-Yarok ("Green-Leaf") Party. The conference will focus on issues related to the cultural impacts of marijuana, its regulation, and its medical uses and research.
 
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