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'Not Essential': Kenyan Court Denies Rastafarians' Right to Smoke Weed

Rastafarians have been pushing Kenyan courts since 2021 to allow them to use the herb under the constitutional right to freedom of religion.

'Not Essential': Kenyan Court Denies Rastafarians' Right to Smoke Weed
Rastafarians often use marijuana as part of religious meditation (Representational)
  • Rastafarians were denied the right to use marijuana for religious purposes in Kenya
  • The High Court ruled marijuana is not essential to Rastafarian religious practice
  • Possession of marijuana is punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a heavy fine

A Kenyan court refused to grant Rastafarians the right to smoke weed on religious grounds in a long-awaited ruling on Wednesday, which some members of the community saw as an attack on "African spirituality".

Rastafarians, who often use marijuana as part of their religious meditation, have been pushing Kenyan courts since 2021 to allow them to use the herb under the constitutional right to freedom of religion.

But the High Court ruled the community had failed to show that marijuana was a necessary part of their practise, and so did not give them the right to bypass the country's drug laws, under which possession is punishable by up to 10 years' imprisonment and a substantial fine.

While all witnesses "agreed that cannabis is used as a sacrament, they could not agree on whether its use is essential or merely preferred," the judge said in his ruling.

One of the petitioners, Ras Dimo, 40, told AFP the judgement reflected "the laws of oppression, colonial laws that want to put African spirituality down".

"Rastaman just wants to burn this holy plant so that the incense can rise to the Almighty," he added.

The community's lawyer said they would appeal the decision.

Rastafarianism emphasises mysticism, Pan-Africanism, and vegetarianism, and is thought to be growing in Kenya, especially among young people.

Despite ruling against the community, the judge said the widespread recreational use of cannabis in Kenya suggested the current law was too harsh.

"It is beyond dispute that use of cannabis in this country has become ubiquitous and has arguably been so for many decades," he said, even quoting from Peter Tosh's seminal reggae song, "Legalise It", including the lyrics: "judges smoke it, even lawyers do".

The "status quo appears untenable", the judge said, and there should be "a full and frank conversation on cannabis and which direction we should take".

The community has a special bond to Kenyan history because of their tradition of wearing dreadlocks. They were also worn by many Mau Mau, Kenya's independence fighters who fought against British colonial rule in the 1950s and 1960s.

But Rastafarians say the country's drug law is regularly used by police to harass them.

The east African country effectively recognised the movement in 2019 when a court ruled that expelling a school pupil because of her dreadlocks had violated her religious rights.

Although the Rastafari religion was formed in Jamaica in the 1930s, it has ties to east Africa, particularly since its members see former Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie, who was crowned during the same period, as a second Jesus Christ come to save black people.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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