Pubdate: Sat, 30 Nov 2002
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2002, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

DUTCH CELEBRATE 30 YEARS OF LEGAL POT

HAARLEM, Netherlands (AP) -- The water pipe stood two metres tall, 
encircled by people puffing on its 64 mouthpieces. Elsewhere in the room, a 
new machine rolled out 300 marijuana joints in minutes. Free hash was 
passed around.

It was the start of a three-day Hash and Weed Festival on Friday evening. 
The aging pioneers of the Dutch marijuana culture, watched by hundreds of 
young aficionados, gathered in a sports gymnasium to mark the 30th 
anniversary of the first "coffee shop" that openly sold reefers like cups 
of coffee.

"This celebration honours the world's most successful marijuana experiment: 
the Dutch coffee shop system," said Pete Brady, an organizer and writer for 
Cannabis Culture Magazine.

The seeds of Dutch drug tolerance were planted in 1969 when two 
entrepreneurs with a taste for marijuana started selling cannabis plants 
from a houseboat, calling themselves the Lowlands Weed company.

In 1972, Wernard Bruining opened Mellow Yellow -- then called a "tea house" 
- -- on the Amstel River in Amsterdam, the Dutch capital that is now a Mecca 
for marijuana smokers.

The weekend festival was a tribute to three decades of progressive drug 
policies in the Netherlands and to the men, like Bruining, who founded a 
culture.

Another of the pioneers at Friday's celebration was [Old Ed] Holloway, now 
86, a cannabis cultivator who moved to the Netherlands in the 1970s from 
California. Mr. Holloway taught Dutch marijuana growers how to use genetic 
plant breeding techniques that increased the potency and yield of their crops.

Representing marijuana's big-business establishment was Henk de Vries, who 
in 1975 opened the first smoke parlour called a "coffee shop" in a former 
brothel in Amsterdam's notorious Red Light district. Mr. de Vries owns the 
Bulldog chain of coffee shops, now a multinational business of cafes with 
its own clothing line. Last year, he said, he had about seven million 
customers.

While Old Ed and Mr. de Vries were being honoured, an aging henna-haired 
Dutchman known as Armand strummed a guitar and sang his songs that had been 
the background themes in the coffee houses of the '70s.

Along the sides of the sports hall, stands displayed the latest in smoking 
paraphernalia and the high-technology vapourizers that are replacing hash 
pipes with the younger crowd. Joints were free for the tasting.

Nol van Schaik, founder of the Global Hemp Museum and owner of the Willie 
Wortel coffee shop chain, said the marijuana industry has grown so large, 
"we have become a full-fledged branch of Dutch business."

Holland now has more than 800 coffee shops, found in 105 of the country's 
500 cities and towns.

"We have lasted 30 years, despite criticism from around the world, 
particularly the United States, Sweden and France," said Mr. van Schaik, 
author of The Dutch Experience, a book on the marijuana movement that was 
released in conjunction with the 30th anniversary.

The Dutch government passed groundbreaking legislation in 1976 that 
distinguished cannabis-based soft drugs from "hard drugs" such as heroin or 
cocaine. Cannabis was still officially illegal but the possession of up to 
30 grams was no longer to be prosecuted as a criminal offence.

Today, coffee shops sell marijuana and hash in five-gram bags without fear 
of penalty. Menus offer a vast selection, ranging from potent high-grade 
White Widow or Skunk varieties, grown in greenhouses, to milder outdoor 
strains such as Orange Bud.

The liberal Dutch approach laid the foundation for a multibillion-dollar 
economy, attracting millions of visitors each year and generating 
substantial tax income for the Dutch government.

Contrary to claims soft drugs open the way toward hard-drug addiction, 
Dutch advocates said coffee shops are a safe place for experimentation that 
keep potential users away from criminal pushers. The government insists 
while it tolerates soft drugs, it is tough on hard-drug dealers.

A 2002 report from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug 
Addiction, said so-called "problem drug use" in the Netherlands is the 
lowest among countries in the European Union and candidate states.
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