Overview
The Punjab Province in 19th century India under British rule consisted of parts of modern-day Pakistan, as well as states neighbouring modern Punjab such as Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir. The districts covered by the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission of 1894-95 as a part of its report in 19th century Punjab were - Rawalpindi, Lahore, Simla, Jullundar, Sialkot, Gurdaspur, Dera Ghazi Khan, Delhi, Bannu, Gurgaon, Shahpur, Amritsar, Hoshiarpur, Sirsa, Rawal Pindi, Gujranwala, Jhang, Karnal, Multan, Ferozepore, Umballa, Peshawar, Musaffargarh, Dharamsala, Kangra, Kulu, Palampur, Dera Ismail Khan, Ladakh.
This region was part of the Indus Valley Civilization dating back from about 3500 years ago. The Indus Valley Civilization, a contemporary of the Egyptian Civilization, had settled here for more than 2000 years, before migrating to other regions, including the North-East and the Southern Peninsula as a serious of droughts swept the Indus Valley. A number of mysteries surround the Indus Valley Civilization, including its writing. Could this Civilization have been extensive users of cannabis, the result of which was the lush cannabis growth that was widespread around this region? I wonder...
Bhang and charas as main form of cannabis consumption
The population of the Punjab Province in 19th century India consisted of Sikhs, Muhammedans and Hindus. One of the striking features of the Punjab Province, when it came to cannabis, was that a large percentage of the population drank cannabis as the beverage bhang. The Muhammedans and Sikhs adopted this form of consumption as they said that their scriptures forbade smoking. In this matter, these communities were similar to the upper caste Hindus of the Vaishnavite and Vedic religions. Charas was also used, but mostly by Hindu sadhus and Muhammedan fakirs, besides the working classes and the poorer sections of society. In this manner, there was a separation of cannabis users based on classes and castes, the upper classes and castes - including the religious orthodoxy of Sikhism, Islam and Hindu religions - consuming cannabis as the beverage bhang, and the lower classes and castes among these religions smoking cannabis as charas.
The use of bhang was probably more widespread in the Punjab Province than in any other region of 19th century India. In most other places, we see ganja and bhang dominate, with the former being used by large majorities of the population who consisted of the spiritual mendicants, lower castes, working classes and indigenous communities, and the latter being used by the upper classes and castes of all religions. Mr. T.G. Walker, the Excise Commissioner, says in the Punjab Memorandum that 'Another fact that may be noted is that the districts of Ferozepore, Ludhiana, Lahore, and Amritsar, which come after Mooltan and Dera Ghazi Khan in this matter of consumption of bhang, are those in which the Sikh element is strongest. The Sikh population of the province being 1,389,934, these four districts contribute 781,439 towards this total. It seems likely that the prohibition amongst the Sikhs of tobacco-smoking has a good deal to do with their preference for the drug in a liquid state. ' Arjan Singh, Sikh, Extra Assistant Commissioner, Dera Ghazi Khan, in response to the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission of 1894-95, says 'In the Dera Ghazi Khan district about sixty per cent. of the adult male population drink bhang either occasionally or regularly.' Fakir Sayed Jamaluddin, Honorary Extra Assistant Commissioner, Lahore, says 'The consumption of bhang is very common. I should think 50 or 60 per cent. addicted to it.' It was not just the Sikhs in the Punjab Province who consumed cannabis as the beverage bhang, but also the Muslim population. As alcohol, like smoking, was viewed as against the religious scriptures of the Muslims, many preferred bhang over alcohol. Mr. Walker, the Excise Commissioner, states in his memorandum that 'The Muhammadan population of the south-western districts (Mooltan, Muzaffargarh, and Dera Ghazi Khan), who are prohibited by their religion from the use of spirits, are to a very large extent addicted to drinking an infusion of bhang as an intoxicant. It will be observed that the consumption in the two districts of Mooltan and Dera Ghazi Khan is between one-fourth and one-fifth of that of the whole province. In these districts bhang is undoubtedly a substitute with the Muhammadan population for the spirits which their creed forbids them to take.' The drinking of cannabis flower as a beverage was fueled by the fact that it enabled people in North India to escape the summer heat. The Commission reports that 'The use as a summer drink seems to be much more common in the northern parts of India, which are characterized by intense dry heat, than in the southern. The dividing line might be drawn with fair accuracy from the Runn of Cutch to Darjeeling.'
Charas was also consumed in significant quantities, especially by the lower classes and castes, and the holy men of Hindu and Muslim religions. The consumption of charas in the Punjab Province can be regarded as among the highest in India, along with the North Western Province since these provinces were the gateway for imported charas flowing in from places like Yarkand and Bokhara. Besides this, there was the extraction of charas in small quantities by the agricultural and working classes as a result of interacting with the cultivated or spontaneous cannabis growth, as it happened through out India wherever cannabis was cultivated. Lieutenant-Colonel J. A. L. Montgomery, Deputy Commissioner, Sialkot, says 'Hindu sadhus and jogis are said to be very generous smokers of charas. A small proportion of other fakirs (both Hindu and Musalman) and also prostitutes are also said to smoke it. So also Purbiahs in cantonments, of the syce and dhobi class, and of the khidmatgar class.' The consumption of charas was 'most prevalent in the Ludhiana district, and to a somewhat less degree in the Himalayan districts, and in and about the cities of Delhi, Umballa, Amritsar, Lahore, and Peshawar', according to the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission. The rate of consumption of charas in Ludhiana district was said to have been twice as much as that in Bengal. Reporting on individual consumption of charas, the Commission states that 'In the North-Western Provinces Mr. Stoker estimated the individual consumption of charas at half a sér per annum. In the Punjab a somewhat higher rate might be adopted because the drug is cheaper, the price to consumers ranging from Rs. 4 to Rs. 15 per sér in this province, while in the North-Western Provinces it was Rs.7 1/2 to Rs.25. If the number of consumers be taken at 60 instead of 80 to the maund, the total number for a total consumption of 1,200 maunds will be 72,000. The divisions of Delhi, Jullundur, and Lahore consume five times as much as Rawalpindi, Peshawar, and the Derajat, and there must therefore be 60,000 consumers in the former to 12,000 in the latter.' The Excise Commissioner, T.G. Walker, says in the Punjab Memorandum that 'It will be seen from these figures that the consumption of this form of drug [charas] is heaviest in the Delhi and Jullundur Divisions...'
Sources of bhang in the Punjab Province
The fact that the people of Punjab consumed the cannabis plant as bhang meant that there was no specific import of ganja from anywhere. Most of the bhang consumed was locally available in the abundant spontaneous growth, within easy access of the people. The Commission reports that 'The mass of the bhang consumed is collected within the province mostly from the wild growth. There is a considerable import from over the Kashmir frontier which, the Excise Commissioner remarks, may be regarded as local production, for the plant is collected at no great distance from the border.'
Regarding the spontaneous and wild growth of the cannabis plant in the Punjab Province in the 19th century, the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission of 1894-05 reports that 'Its prevalence seems to be most notorious in the districts of Hoshiarpur, Gurdaspur, and Jullundur, because the bhang contractors draw their supplies from, these districts; but witnesses, many of them of high authority, such as the Commissioner of Rawalpindi, speak to its existence in greater or less profusion throughout the submontane districts from Peshawar to Umballa. Contradiction may occasionally be found regarding the density and abundance of the growth, but about its frequent occurrence in this stretch of country there can be no doubt.' The spontaneous growth in urban areas, where it was reported to be quite widespread, was fueled by the consumption of cannabis as bhang by the followers of the Sikh religion.
The use was to such a great extent that not just the holy city of the Sikhs, Amritsar, but even the way that led to it were said to be adorned with cannabis plants that had sprouted through the casual dispersal of cannabis seeds by those consuming bhang. The Commission reports that 'Amritsar is not only the great market for bhang as well as charas, but it is the head-quarters of the Sikh religion, and the former drug is largely consumed by the followers of that faith. It seems to be a regular drink or refreshment with the visitors to the Golden Temple. When members of the Commission visited the city, a dense growth of bhang flourished over a large area in the outlying parts of the public gardens and countless plants in the hedgerows surrounding the city. The seeds discarded from the large quantity of bhang that is daily consumed in the city sufficiently account for this growth, and it is probable that the ways leading to Amritsar from the country round are sown with hemp in the same way.'
Mr. Denzil Ibbetson, Deputy commissioner, Jalandhar, says 'I am writing in the centre of a tract where many thousands of acres have bhang at the present moment springing up all over them. It is the tract where the choks, or shallow hill-streams from the Sivaliks, tail out over the country. The seed is brought down in the first instance by the water from the hills; but as it flowers and seeds in this district, much of it is locally self-sown. It is most plentiful where the first flood has not been strong enough to carry away all the seed from the surface, where the water has collected or been obstructed, and has dried up, leaving the seed on the surface, where the flood has deposited fertilising loam, and where last year's weeding was badly done, so as to leave many plants to shed seed....A field of good soil will, if favourably situated, and not cultivated, become covered in two or three years with a thick growth of bhang which it is exceedingly difficult to eradicate.' Punjab was heaven for the cannabis plant. So much effort must have gone into eradicating it. He further says 'It grows more plentifully in the Hoshiarpur district (through which the choks come to us); and the bhang of Ambala, in the Una tahsil, is especially famous - "Bhang jo piwe Ambota ki, Sudh na rahe langote ki"..."He who drinks Ambota bhang forgets to tie his loin cloth."'
We see that the bulk of the cannabis required to meet the needs of the people is obtained from this spontaneous growth of the plant from discarded seeds. So, it appears that the whole process is self-sustaining, where through the usage the people keep the plant available in abundance without having to resort to dedicated cultivation of it. The Hemp Commission reports that 'The desultory cultivation of a few plants seems to be a wide-spread practice; but the total amount of bhang produced by it cannot be important— must, in fact, be trifling compared with what the wild growth yields.' This is despite there being no restriction or legal prohibition on the cultivation of cannabis. The Commission states that 'There is no legal prohibition to the growth of hemp, but it is probable that it is discouraged and restricted by the fact that the sale of the produce is under regulation.' Individuals and households grew a few plants in their gardens or along with other crops to meet their personal needs.
Cultivation appears to have been done in both the kharif and rabi seasons. The Commission reports that 'A memorandum by Hari Chand, Assistant to the Commissioner of Excise, states that "people grow it in both harvests in the months of March and November. They cut plants for use in February and June."'
Regarding the widespread practice of home growing cannabis, Mr. Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi stated, in response to questions in the Financial Commissioner's Circular No. 13 of 1880, that 'Almost every house has a small patch near it, a long strip beside a hedge or a small bed, a few square yards in area. Some of the patches were such that no accurate idea could be formed of the area;'. He says 'for instance in Lahoul, the only use to which it is put is to make twine for the snow or straw shoes so generally worn here.'
Sources of charas in the Punjab Province
Charas was mostly imported from neighbouring regions though individual households sometimes made their own charas from the cannabis plants they grew. This was essentially for personal consumption and not for commercial purposes. The Commission reports that 'They came from Lahoul, Spiti, Bokhara, Yarkand, Dera Ghazi Khan, and Kashmir.' The charas from Yarkand and Bokhara, in particular, was in high demand and the Commission's report details the method of manufacture of charas from Yarkand.
The Punjab Province was the chief importer of charas in India in the 19th century since it was consumed in copious amounts. Most of the charas came from Central Asia i.e. Turkmenstan, Bokhara and Yarkand. The Russians appear to have already started causing trouble by restricting charas trade within their territories. The finest charas is reported to be from Bokhara which was in high demand towards the west, so it was mostly charas from Yarkand that was imported into India. License-holders for charas sales in the Punjab Province appear to have had a stranglehold on the trade, dictating the prices at which traders from Central Asia brought the charas, since once it reached Leh - the place where charas changed hands between them - the charas traders preferred to sell the product rather than carry it back after the long journey. Despite the price control by the license-holding charas contractors from Punjab, it is said that good prices were obtained due to the high demand for the article. The Commission reports that 'The charas having arrived at Leh, and having apparently passed into the hands of Indian traders, is taken to the Punjab by two routes, via Kashmir and viá Kulu. The ganja, gard bhang, or chura charas manufactured in Kashmir is all consumed locally; none is exported to the Punjab (Kashmir Governor's Memorandum). The Kashmir authorities take precautions to see that the Yarkand charas passes through with bulk unbroken, and they levy duty on any that may be sold in Srinagar. The import by this route may be roughly stated at 500 maunds. Six or seven times as much is imported direct through Kulu to Hoshiarpur, and during the last three years the amount has grown considerably.' The bulk of the imported charas appears to be consumed by the Punjab Province and the North-Western Province.
Regarding the process followed for the import and transport of charas into the Punjab Province, the Commission states that 'The traders who bring charas from Yarkand are not licensed, but they have to obtain a pass from the Joint Commissioner at Leh or from the Deputy Commissioner of the district where they enter the Punjab, and take it for countersignature to the Deputy Commissioner or Collector of every district in the Punjab or the North-Western Provinces which they may enter with the charas. The consignment may be opened at any head-quarters station or tahsil while on its way to its destination, and a portion of its contents may be sold to the farmer of excise for drugs, the fact being recorded on the pass and the package resealed. When a consignment is conveyed by rail, the provision requiring it to be taken to the Deputy Commissioner or Collector of every district through which it passes is dispensed with.'
Mr. Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi says 'Charas arrives in the Punjab in September and October, and remains good during the cold weather. But heat and moisture cause it to deteriorate very rapidly; but it is said in the second winter probably mixed with some quantity of the new crops, and cheaper. In the third year it has lost almost all of its intoxicating effects, and is sold very cheap. Charas retains its effects longer the drier it is kept.'
Even though the bulk of the charas required to meet the demand in the Punjab Province was imported, there was a small but significant amount of local production, especially on a small scale, mostly to meet individual consumption needs. Regarding the local preparation of charas, Mr. Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi says 'The leaves of the wild plant are principally used, scarcely ever those of the cultivated plant. One plan used to extract the narcotic principle is to rub in the hands the green leaves, especially such as are in their natural state, glutinous to the touch. Thet are more or less glutinous in years of little rainfall; rain is said to wash off the viscous substance in which the drug mostly exists, hence the large production of charas in Yarkand and Ladakh, countries of minimum rainfall. The leaves are rubbed for a long time in the hands which are allowed to dry, and then with a knife whatever remains on the palms is scraped off, and is used in the hukka as is charas. A man can make in one day from Kulu bhang only enough for two smokes. The effect of the charas made in this way is not, it is said, quite equal to that of Yarkand or Ladakh charas but I have also been told that it has much more effect, from its being pure, which imported charas is not.'
In the Report on the External Land Trade of the Punjab for the year 1891-92, it says '"The trade with Ladakh is in the hands of four classes:—(1) The merchants of Hoshiarpur, Amritsar, and Sultanpur.—Many of the latter are Lahulis, who deal chiefly in wool. The Indian merchants send up piece-goods or tea in the spring and bring down Yarkand and Ladakh produce, chiefly charas, in the autumn. They use mules for carriage. Latterly the more wealthy muleteers have commenced to trade on their own account. (2) The Yarkandis.— These men generally dispose of their goods at Leh, but some of them come on to India with charas, carpets, and numdahs. Many also, after selling their goods at Leh, bring on for sale in India the horses upon which these goods were laden. Having disposed of their means of carriage, they generally return empty-handed. (3) The Baltis of Baltistan, who visit Simla in the cold weather in search of employment as road coolies and the like.—They are often erroneously called Ladakhis. They do not visit India for the sake of trade, but they take the opportunity of bringing with them dried apricots, which accounts for the entry 'fruits' under the head of imports, returning to their own country with as much as they can carry of brass, copper, and iron vessels. Some of them also carry back with them China cups and saucers, which are in demand in a tea-drinking country. (4) Bhotis, which term includes the Mongolian races inhabiting Ladakh, Zanskar, Chinese Thibet, and Lahul.—The wool and pashm imported by the Bhotis are laden chiefly on the backs of sheep and goats. These sheep and goats figure in the returns of imports. On being discharged of their burdens at Sultanpur they are sold to butchers from Simla. Beyond the various food-grains which are in demand in their desolate, sparsely cultivated country the Bhotis carry little back with them from India. The amount of grain which they can take with them is not much, as they have disposed of their means of carriage."'
The religious and social association of cannabis
As in the rest of the country, cannabis was associated with a number of religious occasions across religions in the Punjab Province. The Hemp Commission goes to the extent of stating that cannabis as bhang was part of the sacred traditions of the Sikhs, endorsed by the Sikh scripture Guru Granth Sahib and the Sikh Guru , Guru Gobind Singh. The Hemp Commission says, 'Among the Sikhs the use of bhang as a beverage appears to be common, and to be associated with their religious practices. The witnesses who refer to this use by the Sikhs appear to regard it as an essential part of their religious rites having the authority of the Granth or Sikh scripture. It is customary among the Sikhs generally to drink bhang, so that Guru Gobind Singh has himself said the following poems in praise of bhang: "Give me, O Saki (butler), a cup of green colour (bhang), as it is required by me at the time of battle'"(vide 'Suraj Parkash,' the Sikh religious book).' Witness Sodhi Iswar Singh, Extra Assistant Commissioner, says, 'As far as I know, bhang is pounded by the Sikhs on the Dasehra day, and it is ordinarily binding upon every Sikh to drink it as a sacred draught by mixing water with it.'
We see in Punjab the practice of distributing cannabis to the poorest sections of society - the spiritual mendicants and beggars - at religious institutions. This practice continued for a long time even as the administration tightened its hold on the cannabis culture. The Commission reports that 'A unique custom of dispensing bhang at a religious charitable institution is that mentioned by witness Baba Kirpa Singh. The institution, as a relic of old Sikh times, is annually permitted to collect without interference a boat load of bhang, which is afterwards distributed throughout the year to the sadhus and beggars who are supported by the dharamsala.' Mr. Coldstream, Deputy Commissioner, Simla says ' it [bhang] is used by the akalis at Anandpur Mahkhowal, by Sikhs at the Posi dharamsala (Garhshankar tahsil), and I believe at Derah Baba Nanak (Gurdaspur district). There is a Sikh dharamsala near the Ravi, for the use of which I have heard that Sir Donald MacLeod, as an exceptional case, permitted a boat load of charas to be transported annually, free of duty, down the river from the submontane tract. where the plant grows.' Assistant Surgeon Sahib Ditta, in medical charge of Hospital, Multan, says 'As regards bhang I know there are places, such as Baba Atal in Amritsar city, Sultansahib village in Khasa in the Amritsar district and Apchala Nagar, in Hyderabad Dukkan, and several other places which are the head-quarters of the Jogi fakirs, where bhang drink in large quantity is prepared at fixed hours regularly and distributed among all present at the time; and in the case of Apchala Nagar, which the 10th Sikh Gooroo Gobind Singh's place, its distribution is regarded as religious and no one present is supposed to refuse it when offered.' Rai Bahadur Thakur Das, Assistant Surgeon, Ferozepore, says 'It is said that during Ranjit Singh' time it was distributed gratis as "suda burat" both by the Government and certain other chiefs, and was used by most of the chiefs and sirdars themselves, and their example was followed by others.' He says "Bhang in Sikh and Hindu temples is used by about 90 per cent, Hindu fakirs about 40 percent, Muhammedan fakirs about 60 per cent.' In this practice of free cannabis distribution in the Hindu and Sikh temples to the poor and the needy, we see commonalities with the mutts and dargahs in South India where cannabis was distributed to the spiritual mendicants and beggars.
Mr. J. R. Drummond, Deputy Commissioner, Gurgaon says that 'The Jat nation throughout the province (whether Hindus or Sikhs, claim the local representatives for their religious pale) is devoted very largely to bhang. In the social economy of a Jat village, in the Palwal Tahsil of the Gurgaon district, or on the borders of the Ludhiana and Ferozepur districts, the bowl of hemp infusion is an essential feature in the place that serves as the council room and guest-house of the community.'
The use of cannabis by the Sikh armed forces
The Sikh armies have always been known for the valour and fighting abilities. They are known to strike terror in the hearts of their opponents, much like the Vikings and Huns. Stories of small numbers of Sikh warriors routing larger armies abound in the history of Sikh warfare. In modern India'a armed forces, they are unmatched warrior clans along with the Gurkha regiments. It is said that a Sikh is born with a sickle in one hand and a sword in the other. Bhang was a quintessential part of the Sikh armed forces even until the 19th century. Mr. J. P. Warburton, District Superintendent of Police, states in response to the Hemp Commission that, 'In Guru Govind Singh's times, I think the permission to use bhang instead of alcohol was given, and this was carried on in the Sikh nation and was the origin of the use in the Sikh army.' Mr. Coldstream, Deputy Commissioner, Simla says 'The connection of bhang with the national life of the Sikhs in their fighting days is worth mentioning. The Sikh religious warfare (for the worship of cold steel was part of the religion of the Sikhs), such as nihangs, were much given to the use of bhang. One great band or confederacy from this habit obtained the name of the Bhangi Misl; and no doubt much of its prowess was due to the fanatic ardour inspired by the droughts of hemp. The misl had a famous cannon of vast calibre used by Ranjit Singh at the siege of Multan, called 'the bhangi top". It is still to be seen in Lahore, and (like Mons Meg in Edinburgh) is one of the popular sights of the place.'
By the time of the Hemp Commission, the use of bhang had dropped drastically in the Sikh regiments. The senior officers of British origin viewed cannabis in general with suspicion and gradually suppressed its use within the armed forces, encouraging the use of alcohol instead. The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission says in its report that 'Armed Forces. Extent of use reported. 410. There are regiments in all three presidencies and in the Native States in which the hemp drugs in one form or other are shown to be used by 5 per cent. of the men and followers. Forty-nine out of the 274 corps come under this category, and the number evidently falls far short of the truth. In some corps the number of consumers is far higher than 5 per cent. In some corps the use, if the reports are to be taken literally, does not exist, or is quite infinitesimal, or is practically confined to the followers. The consumption in these corps is no doubt trifling in most cases, but it is difficult to accept it as fact as regards any regiment that the drugs are not used at all, especially in regiments of Sikhs, who are extremely partial to bhang;'. Army witness No. 44 says '41. No, not as a rule, unless taken after violent exercise, a long or cold march, etc. 42. I think it would be better if they were not taken at all. If once taken to it becomes a regular habit, and would in the end probably act injuriously. Sikhs drink a little bhang after a long march, etc., and are benefited by it temporarily.' Army witness No. 47 says '41. As before stated, the use of ganja and charas are looked on as baneful, but bhang is regarded as beneficial in the hot weather, when it is principally used. 42. I am unable to say of my own knowledge. I have seen cases of sepoys invalided on account of excessive indulgence in drugs, but am unable to say whether the drugs were opium, charas, ganja or bhang. The Jats and Sikhs, who principally consume bhang, are as fine men as are to be found in the native army. It seems therefore reasonable to suppose that the moderate use of bhang at any rate is harmless.'
One of the facts that is not spoken about much is that the desire to repress cannabis by the administration was also probably driven by the fear that cannabis use would promote free thinking and rebellion. I believe the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857 was initiated by cannabis users. We see some instances of this in a few witness accounts in the Punjab Province. Mr. J. P. Warburton, District Superintendent of Police, states that 'The Kukas who went from Ludhiana to Maler Kotla in January 1872 and killed a number of people in the Maland and Maler Kotla State services were said to have taken bhang. The Kukas take bhang, and these were habitual bhang takers; and in all probability they took a good deal them, as they had met together. I certainly do not think that but for the bhang they would not have made their onslaught. The movement was a political one; and this was their first act of rebellion.'
Other uses of cannabis in the Punjab Provinces
We see in the Punjab Province, like in the North Western Province, that cannabis was used for other purposes such as food, rope, and footwear.
Mr. Coldstream, Deputy Commissioner, Simla says 'In the Simla district (as generally in the Punjab submontane) hemp is commonly grown for its fibre, which is made into ropes for ordinary uses.'
Speaking about the use of cannabis seeds as food, Mr. Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi says 'So far as I can ascertain the only part of the cultivated plant used in Kulu as a drug is the seed called bhangolu. The seed is parched and mixed with some kind of parched grain, generally wheat, and the mixture is eaten in a dry state. It is said that bhangolu produces considerable warmth of body and even affects the eyes as does charas. The seed of the wild plant is much smaller than that of the cultivated plant and is not used parched with grain. Bhangolu seems to be eaten in considerable quantities by zamindars and others, to ward of the effect of extreme cold. It is found in the largest quantity in Rupi and Seeraj, and in Kulu principally in the Kethis on the Sarvari, where also the hemp plant grows wild. The Seorajis sell or exchange bhangolu for wool with the Lahoulis who eat it and also sow it, as in Lahoul of the cold weather commences very early, the plant does not seed.' Mr. Coldstream, Deputy Commissioner, Simla says 'Villagers in the hills in the cold season occasionally roast its seeds and mix them with parched wheat or hathu, or with rice....In Bashahr its seeds, parched and crushed, yield an oil (bhang ka tel). In some villages of Bashahr the ripe seed is mixed with spirit to make the latter more intoxicating.'
Regulatory process for cannabis in the Punjab Province
The Punjab Province was governed by the same Excise Act XXII of 1881 that regulated the North Western Provinces. As we saw in the case of the North Western Provinces, there was no regulation whatsoever on the cultivation of cannabis. The only regulation was that the cultivated cannabis, if sold, had to be sold to a licensed vendor.
During the time of the Hemp Commission's report there was no concept of separate wholesale licenses from retail licenses for vendors of opium and cannabis in the Punjab Province. This meant that holding one license gave access to both wholesale and retail of cannabis gave immense power to the license holder. Powerful and wealthy drug contractors could corner not just charas but also opium both of which gave much more revenue than bhang, the term here including the cannabis flower or ganja. There was clearly incentive for the drug contractors to sell more opium as this earned a greater slice of revenue than duty on the imported charas. There was absolutely no incentive in taxing bhang (inclusive of the ganja flower) because most of the bhang was locally sourced from the spontaneous growth in the region. The preference of selling opium by the drug contractors over charas can be viewed as the early signs of the heroin crisis that now envelops Punjab and Lahore. The Excise Commissioner of Punjab clearly expresses the desire to impose duty on imported charas as well as suggests taxing bhang which had so far escaped taxation. The Commission states that 'In the report for 1893 the Excise Commissioner says: "Taking Rs. 1,70,854 to be approximately the real value of the licenses for the sale of hemp drugs, it represents the total taxation now levied on a consumption of upwards of 1,000 maunds of charas and of nearly 4,000 maunds of bhang." This is "the weakest part of our excise system in the Punjab. It is hoped that we are now within measurable distance of arrangements which will give us complete control over the import trade in charas, and enable us to impose a duty which can be gradually raised. Owing to the fact that the plant grows wild in so many districts, and is to be had for the gathering, while charas comes in by a few well recognised routes and can scarcely escape us, it is much more difficult to deal with the trade in bhang efficiently. But I am in hopes that the Government will agree before very long to the introduction of some measures for the direct taxation of bhang too."' Along with the increasing preference of the upper classes to alcohol, it is quite certain that the increasing prices of cannabis pushed more people, especially the upper classes, towards opium as well. Apparently, the Punjab government was hesitant to impose tax on bhang at that time, given the social and religious significance of it to the Sikhs. The Commission states that 'The opinion of the Punjab Government on this question is that "in regard to matters of this sort, which involve an interference with ancient and firmly rooted habits of large masses of the people, it is desirable to proceed cautiously, doing one thing at a time."' This, however, did not stop the government from eventually completely prohibiting all cannabis - charas, ganja and bhang - a prohibition that lasts to this day, supported even by governments of the Akalis, and all other political groups, since in essence Indian politics today is completely controlled by the same upper classes and castes that worked with the British to ban cannabis and introduce alcohol and opium, their preferred drugs.
Widespread opposition to the prohibition of cannabis
In terms of those in favor of prohibition of charas and/or bhang, we see a total of 18 witnesses out of 95 supporting prohibition, about 20%. These essentially comprised British officers and missionaries, local zamindars, a government pleader, a newspaper editor and a couple of prohibition advocacy groups that advocated prohibition of all intoxicants. It is interesting to see that many of these persons cite inadequate knowledge on the subject but still express their opinion on the subject. Some of them acknowledge that prohibition will lead to increased opium and alcohol use but still insist on prohibition of cannabis.
In terms of those opposing prohibition of cannabis we see, much like in the rest of India, that higher ranked officials, senior medical experts and persons of high social standing firm in their opposition to cannabis prohibition. The Commission reports that '1) Prohibition [of charas in the Punjab] impossible or unnecessary, or could not be enforced without a large preventive establishment. - [Evidence of](1) Mr. Rivaz, First Financial Commissioner. (3) Mr. Thorburn, Commissioner. (6) Mr. Ibbetson, Deputy Commissioner. (8) Mr. Maconachie, Deputy Commissioner. (13) Mr. Drummond, Deputy Commissioner. (66) Kazi Syad Ahmad, retired Government servant. (2) Prohibition [of charas in the Punjab] would be strongly resented by religious mendicants, or would be regarded as an interference with religion, or would be likely to become a political danger. - - [Evidence of] (3) Mr. Thorburn, Commissioner. (6) Mr. Ibbetson, Deputy Commissioner. (10) Mr. A. Anderson, Deputy Commissioner. (8) Mr. Maconachie, Deputy Commissioner. (13) Mr. Drummond, Deputy Commissioner. (29) Mr. Brown, Officiating Deputy Inspector-General of Police. (39) Thakur Das, Rai Bahadur, Assistant Surgeon. (36) Bhagwan Dass, Assistant Surgeon. (25) Muhammad Ikramulla Khan, Khan Bahadur, Honorary Extra Assistant Commissioner. (27) Muhammad Barkat Ali Khan, Khan Bahadur, retired Extra Assistant Commissioner. (61) Bahram Khan, Honorary Magistrate. (93) Gujar Mal, Trader. (94) Jawala Bhagat, Trader. (3) Prohibition might lead to use of dhatura or other intoxicants worse than charas. - [Evidence of] (76) Babu P. C. Chatterji, Judge, Chief Court. (10) Mr. A. Anderson, Deputy Commissioner. (18) Rai Bahadur Bhagwan Dass, Extra Assistant Commissioner. (39) Thakur Das, Rai Bahadur, Assistant Surgeon. (27) Muhammad Barkat Ali Khan, Khan Bahadur, retired Extra Assistant Commissioner. (86) Lachman Dass, Merchant.'
Regarding prohibition of bhang and charas, Mr. C. M. Rivaz, Officiation First Financial Commissioner, says in his evidence to the Commission that 'But I think a very strong case would have to be made to justify prohibition. I mean this from general principles, apart from the very great practical difficulties of prohibition. You could prohibit charas without much practical difficulty, as it is an imported drug; though some charas would certainly find its way into India. It is in regard to bhang that there would be the great practical difficulty, as it grows wild in so many parts of the country. I do not consider that such a strong case as would justify prohibition can be made out in regard to either charas or bhang, certainly not in the Punjab'. Lt. Colonel J.B. Hutchinson of Lahore states that 'In regard to bhang, I think the difficulties of restriction owing to the wild growth are so great that any attempt to restrict would lead to greater evils than the drug itself. There would be such a plague of locusts in the shape of excise officers, spies and informers, that the evils would be worse than result from consumption.' Mr. Denzil Ibbetson, Deputy commissioner, Jalandhar, says 'I do not think there would be any difficulty (answer 7) in prohibiting the cultivation of bhang. There would only be the risk of a patwai or policeman making a false charge of cultivating. But this, of course, would not be possible in districts where it does not grow wild. The only district, which I know where the wild plant is found only occasionally and not abundantly, is Karnal, where the stuff grows only on Government land by the banks of canals. The seeds come from the hills. It either spreads luxuriantly as a wild plant, or the seed is carried as by canals. I doubt whether people could be held responsible to exterminate the plant on their own lands. Take my district Jullundar. No one would dream of compelling a man to be responsible for the plants on his fields in the north of the district, where it grows in profusion as a weed. And I do not see how you could draw a line and say: north of this a man is responsible for the plants on his land; south of it he is not. My position is that the holding of a man responsible for plants on his own land is inexpedient, because it is either where the plant grows wild and the order is impossible or where it does not grow wild and the order is unnecessary. Besides the order would lead to laying down hard-and-fast lines, which would appear to the people unjust. There is no rule against cultivation that I know. So long as a man does not pluck and "possess" more than a quarter of a seer at a time you cannot reach him.'
Evidence of the alcohol problem as early as the 19th century
Today we see the modern state of Punjab in the midst of a severe alcohol crisis, in addition to an opium crisis. The early inroads that alcohol was making into Punjabi society was evident in the 19th century itself. Many of the upper classes in the Punjab Province had already adopted the stance that upper classes drank bhang and lower classes smoked charas. This desire to be part of the upper classes was one of the primary drivers for embracing both cannabis flower as a beverage, in the first place, and then subsequently alcohol when it was found that this is what the British rulers and upper classes consumed. The Commission reports that 'On the contrary, there is evidence that the better classes are giving up bhang for liquor—a change of habit which has been noticed in other provinces.' Mr. C. M. Rivaz, Officiation First Financial Commissioner, says in his evidence to the Commission that 'I should say certainly that liquor has come more prominently to my notice than these other drugs [cannabis and opium] in its effect on the health and well-being of the people.' He further says. 'I am not aware of any worse intoxicants in the Punjab than opium drugs and liquor.' Lt. Colonel J.B. Hutchinson of Lahore states that 'I have had lots of cases where rows and fights, in which the results have been serious, have occurred after liquor; but not with hemp drugs. That is, it has never been brought before me as a Magistrate that the crime was due to hemp drugs; but it has been brought before me that it was due to drink.' Honorary Surgeon Rahim Khan, Khan Bahadur, Superintendent, Medical School, Lahore, says 'Yes; alcohol is now being , to a great extent, substituted for bhang and charas. The causes for this change are:- 1st. - That alcohol, both in the form of English spirits and country spirits, since the introduction of the village distillery system, has been placed within easy reach of the people. 2nd. - Because the effects of alcohol are instantaneous and more hilarious than those of charas or bhang. 3rd.- Because alcohol is obtained ready made, whereas consumption of charas and bhang entails a great deal of trouble in preparing them before they can be consumed. 4th. - The educated young men of the present generation use alcohol in preference to either bhang or charas, because they consider spirit drinking a refined and fashionable custom, and the other ungentlemanlike and boorish. Almost every village and private residence afford ample proofs of the above statement; for the people can be seen, in quick succession, who have given up the use or consider the use of the hemp plant ungentlemanlike and have become devotees to Bacchus.' In his oral evidence, he says 'In this answer by the "village distillery system" I mean the system by which liquor can be made in almost any large village. Rather, I mean that there are liquor shops in almost every village. This system, I believe, was introduced some 20 years ago. I believe that the number of shops gores on increasing every year. I speak in this answer principally of the city of Lahore and its suburbs and the adjacent villages....I regard the substitution of alcohol for bhang and charas as a matter of regret.' Hakim Ghulam Nabi, Medical Practitioner, Lahore, says 'The use of liquor has now reached to such a degree, and is still on the increase, that if the Government does not adopt measures to check it, it will be impossible to remedy the pecuniary and physical injuries done by it to the people.' P. C. Chatterji, Pleader, Chief Court, Lahore, says 'I attribute this to the spread of English education and ideas. English-knowing people are apt to look down upon the use of hemp drugs or intoxicants, and prefer to use liquor.' Salig Ram, Kayasth, Drug Contractor, Delhi, says 'If charas and bhang-consumers become rich, they drink liquor. If has been twice noticed that in the famine, drunkards consumed charas and bhang and kept their senses. It was also seen that if a consumer's child took the company of charas-consumers, then with the object of stopping him he is told if he is accustomed to intoxicants to take liquor instead of charas. The proof is evident. Charas is taken by those who are not able to drink liquor'. Lieutenant-Colonel J. A. L. Montgomery, Deputy Commissioner, Sialkot, says 'Bhang is still cheaper than alcohol. It is said that the richer people who used to take bhang are now more inclined to take alcohol.' Mr Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi says 'There has been a greater sale of cheap Indi-European liquors and of cheap French (?) brandy than before. It is said by people generally that English spirits are being much more largely used, and natives of position have assured me that this is the case.'
The Hemp Commission says: Use of hemp drugs with alcohol. 425. The hemp drugs are sometimes used to doctor alcoholic drinks. In the Punjab the name lutki is given to a concoction of this kind. In Baluchistan there is also said to be a drink called mudra, which is compounded of dhatura, bhang, alcohol, and opium. The drink is also known in the Punjab. In other quarters the hemp drugs are said to be smoked after drinking liquor to add to the intoxication. The evidence of the association of the hemp drugs with alcohol in these ways is fortunately scanty. The practice is probably rare, for it implies a recklessness in in temperance which is foreign to the Indian character.' Reporting on the proliferation of alcohol even among the traditionally bhang-drinking Sikh armed forces, the Commission says '413. The Sikhs drink bhang and do not smoke; but it is reported of more than one Sikh regiment that the men do not use any of the drugs. In one regiment they have given up bhang for the good rum which the canteen supplies.'
The ever-increasing presence of opium
Today, we see the modern state of Punjab in the grip of a heroin-fueled opium crisis. The close proximity to Pakistan and Afghanistan has meant that the state is flooded with heroin and addiction is one of the key public health concerns in the state. The state of Punjab also serves as one of the gateways of the flow of heroin both into India and out of it as a part of the Far East - Middle East heroin pathway. The push by the British administration and the Indian upper castes and classes to replace cannabis with opium is reaping deadly harvests today. Fakir Sayed Jamaluddin, Honorary Extra Assistant Commissioner, Lahore, says 'Opium generally serves as the substitute for every other intoxicant. A drunkard or consumer of bhang takes opium if he gives up the use of liquor or bhang.'
The total confusion regarding ganja and bhang
In the Punjab Province, the smoking of cannabis flower as ganja was relatively unknown and so the only term used to describe the cannabis flower was bhang. The term ganja was, thus, also relatively unknown in the Punjab Province. In South India, where the drinking of cannabis flower as a beverage was relatively unknown, i.e. cannabis flower was smoked, the term bhang is almost unknown. In South India, people only knew the term ganja.
The statement that we often see is that cannabis was cultivated in the Punjab Province only for bhang, never for ganja. What this statement hides is the fact that the term bhang is used socially and culturally in this context for the mode of consumption of cannabis. The use of the terms bhang, ganja and charas for the leaves, flowers and resin, as used by some witnesses across India led to the utter confusion that we find the country in today regarding ganja and bhang. The Hemp Commission states that 'In the Punjab the use of ganja disappears, the indications of its existence being found only in the statements of occasional witnesses. It has no place in the excise arrangements. Charas and bhang are used to a greater or less extent in all parts of the province.' Quoting a memorandum by Hari Chand, Assistant to the Commissioner of Excise, the Hemp Commission reports that 'No distinction is made between male and female plants. The whole is cut and dried together, and the leaves, flowers, and small twigs are then shaken out and form bhang. The outturn is eight to ten maunds a bigha. A little charas is sometimes made by beating the flowering twigs over a piece of cloth laid on the ground. A greyish white powder falls on the cloth which is collected and dried.' So, we see here that all parts of the cannabis plant, including the flowers that are called ganja in some contexts, are used to make bhang. We see in the statement of Mr. Coldstream, Deputy Commissioner, Simla 'Bhang is the dried leaves of the hemp plant.' This is completely contrary to what the people regarded as bhang, which was the entire plant - leaves, flowers, resin and all. These sort of statements helped perpetrate the myth that bhang is essentially the leaves which are safe whereas the flowers, i.e. ganja, is harmful. The same witness further states, elsewhere, that 'Near Kasauli, bhalang is the name given to the male flower, while the female flower is called bhang.'
If we go by what is commonly considered the meaning of bhang, charas and ganja, i.e. the leaves, resin and flowers, then we see that the Sikhs do consume ganja, i.e. the flowers, only they drink it as a beverage and not smoke it. In fact, the Sikhs preferred the flowering tops or ganja of the cannabis plant to make bhang. The Commission reports that ' Mr. Drummond (13) says that the flowering tops are preferred.' So, the statement that the Sikhs do not consume ganja is inherently false. A more accurate statement would be that the Sikhs do not smoke ganja, they drink it.
Again, in the section Existing Systems Described, we see the Hemp Commission making the statement that 'Ganja is practically unknown in the Punjab.' Such a statement increases the deception that the Sikhs never used ganja but the fact is that they drank it as beverage instead of smoking it. What is being said here is that the smoking of the dried cannabis flower is practically unknown in the province but the drinking of the cannabis flower as bhang is widely followed. Like the upper classes and castes of the Vaishnavite and Vedic religions, the Sikhs drank ganja because apparently their scriptures prohibited smoking ganja. All these distortions around the word ganja led to its being banned and looked at as an evil drug through the propaganda of the upper classes and castes of all religions including Sikhism. Gradually, this took on the form that bhang only consisted of the leaves of the cannabis plant, excluding the flower, and that bhang drinking was healthy because of this. The same suppression of the lower castes and classes because they smoked cannabis rather than drank it led to discrimination against these sections of society, and finally, ironically, against the cannabis flower itself that the upper castes and classes had been enjoying all this while as a beverage in the name of religious sanction. Did persons from the upper classes who practiced the Sikh religion view Sikhs from the lower classes who smoked charas as low castes and outcasts? If so, then it means that the Sikh religion too was casteist in nature when it came to cannabis usage.
The general myth that the Sikhs do not consume ganja appears to be part of the attempts at distorting reality aimed at completely illogically labeling the act of smoking the cannabis flower as evil whereas the drinking of it as good. This myth seems to have been created with the specific desire of targeting and discriminating against the poorest classes or castes everywhere, including in the Punjab, who would have been the ones most likely to smoke cannabis, be it as ganja or charas, because they could not afford to make bhang (with its additional - often expensive - ingredients like milk, dry fruits and nuts).
Charas is the cannabis resin obtained from mainly the flowers and is generally consumed by smoking. If we go by the method of consumption, then it appears that the Sikhs drank bhang and smoked charas. Yes, they do not appear to have smoked the flowers exclusively, i.e. smoked ganja. They do appear to have smoked charas, despite the apparent religious sanctions against smoking that prevents them from smoking. The Commission reports that 'Though some witnesses make mention of the smoking of bhang leaves, there is no evidence of the preparation of the flower head either of the uncultivated or cultivated plant for use as ganja. The smoking of the produce of the plant in any form except charas is evidently extremely rare. According to witness (59), "the word 'ganja' is sometimes applied to charas."'
The bias towards bhang and against charas
The Punjab region was possibly one of the few regions in India where charas smoking was associated with the lower classes and castes, unlike other places like Bengal where it was associated with the upper castes and classes. This is possibly because of the abundance of charas, either imported from places like Yarkand, or locally prepared in small quantities by the working classes through the rubbing of the cannabis flowers with the hands to extract the resin. This fact, that charas was more widely used by the lower classes of society and also was an imported product, led the administration to unhesitatingly push for the increase of taxes on it. This was further strengthened by the bias against charas since it was associated with Muhammedans, because it was a 'foreign product' imported from Islamic nations. and also by the ignorance of the upper classes and castes that bhang and charas were the same cannabis plant. Arjan Singh, Sikh, Extra Assistant Commissioner, Dera Ghazi Khan, says 'Charas, however, is generally consumed by fakirs and bad characters in an atmosphere of immorality and vice.' Sheikh Din Mohamed Khan, Extra Assistant Commissioner, Sirsa, says ' Re[garding] bhang, those who use it consider it no disgrace, but those who do not, consider it a disgrace. Re[garding] charas, everyone looks upon its use as a disgrace. In fact, people say - "He is a charas smoker, and therefore of no account." True Muhammedans look upon the use of both bhang and charas as a sin.' It is very likely that Sheikh Dn Mohamed Khan considered himself a true Muhammedan, i.e., one of the religious orthodoxy. Mr. Alexander Anderson, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi says 'A charsi is considered a low worthless fellow, and the custom of smoking charas is generally considered reprehensible. I am not sure whether this opinion is based on the observed evil effects of the drug in certain cases, or merely on the fact that it is only the poorer classes that indulge in the habit. There is certainly not the same feeling in regard to bhang.' Mr. J. R. Drummond, Deputy Commissioner, Gurgaon, says that 'Nagas, gosains, bairagis and jogis, both Hindus and Muhammedan jogis are commonly given over to charas-smoking...Besides these classes the bulk of the charas smokers in this province are probably found in cantonments, large stations, and great centres, where there is an appreciable admixture of people from the lower provinces (Purbias). Grooms, sweepers, native valets, and other menial or domestic servants who hail largely from Pudh, Behar, and the districts bordering on the province of Loewe Bengal, and belong to the skinner (chamar), weaver (Julaba kori), and water carrier and beaer (kabar) castes, or analogous subdivisions, and also washermen (dhobi) from the same country, are often and excessively at times addicted to the charas habit.' The ignorance of even the local upper classes and castes with regard to bhang and charas, and their impression that these are two different drugs can be seen from the statements of witnesses like Sardar Bahadur Lachmi Sahai, Extra Assistant Commissioner, Amritsar, when he says 'Charas is not beneficial for alleviating fatigue and hard labour; but the moderate use of bhang does alleviate fatigue.' A number of witnesses even claim that opium is much safer than charas. By the time of the Hemp Commission's report, the Punjab administration had decided to impose import duty on charas and to build golas or warehouses to tax and regulate its movement through the province.
From the evidence provided by medical witnesses, we see a mixed response as to how and what forms of cannabis are harmful. Many of the senior or upper-class medical witnesses show their bias towards bhang by stating that smoking charas is harmful but drinking bhang is not. One of the few medical witnesses who appear unbiased is Hakim Ghulam Nabi, of Lahore (witness No. 54), of twenty years' experience. According to the Commission he states that "I have not found even a single person during the last twenty years who complained of these drugs. There are more takias outside the Mochi Gate, Lahore, than in any other parts of the city which are reserved for the consumption of such drugs; and as the resorters to these takias generally come to me for treatment, and as none of them has during the last twenty years complained to me of having suffered from any disease in consequence of using bhang or charas, it shows that the moderate use of these drugs is harmless."
Even the fact that charas smokers are lean and look emaciated as compared to bhang drinkers is used as justification that charas is harmful. The fact that the charas user comes from a background of poverty and hard physical work and that the upper class bhang-drinker gets plenty of nourishment from his wealth and the luxurious ingredients that he adds to his bhang seems to have escaped the notice of these supposed observers. To add to the ignorance and discrimination of the Indian upper castes and classes and the British administration, we have xo-called medical experts like the English missionary. Dr. H. M. Clark, Medical Missionary, Amritsar, who propagated anti-charas myths by saying 'At the same time the symptoms of charas are so marked that they can be detected at a glance. I have never watched the career of a consumer of the drug, for they are a floating section of the population. I should say that three years was enough to kill any consumer of the drug; for I have seen men who could not live more than three months who have, in answer to my questions, told me that they began the habit about three years before.' Dr. H. M. Clark, Medical Missionary, Amritsar further says 'The symptoms of the use of charas are: you find a man prematurely old, with haggard and broken-down appearance, emaciated so that all the joints and bones stand out, hollow-cheeked, a very peculiar glassy appearance, tremulous muscles, very blunted muscular sense, anesthesia of skin, disordered digestion, voracious appetite usually, dilated pupils, dulling of most of the senses, enfeebled heart and circulation, peculiar asthmatic cough, short and very harassing. He suffers from numberless pains and aches which come and go, and frequently has what has been called the salaaming mania, which is salaaming frequently without reason; wild fits of exaltation. alternating with a condition which borders on catalepsy; a gentle, pleasant delirium, a curious confusion of the mind as to his own identity and surroundings; various illusions and delusions; memory and will power are much enfeebled, and the whole morale greatly deteriorated, and there is constant craving for the drug and frequent recourse to it. His sleep is never dreamless. These are the drug symptoms.' It appears that Dr. H. M. Clark has not been exposed to poverty before, in addition to not being exposed to charas.
As I stated previously in this article and elsewhere, bhang, as it was consumed by the upper classes and castes, involved the use of sugar, milk, almonds, black pepper, poppy seeds, melon seeds, cucumber and pumpkin seeds, cardamom, rose petals, etc. These were ingredients that the lower classes could scarcely afford and so, they resorted to smoking charas as a cheaper alternative, possibly extracted locally and occasionally purchased. The upper classes and castes used this difference in method of consumption to discriminate against charas and the lower classes, and to favour the use of bhang adding other arguments to reinforce their discrimination such as: bhang is sanctioned by the scriptures, smoking charas is not; charas is harmful, bhang is medicinal; charas users are criminals, bad characters and good-for-nothings, etc. The Commission reports that 'Bhang is so cheap, 3 or 4 annas a sér, as to give very wide latitude for individual indulgence. On the other hand, a great share of the consumers, perhaps the majority, are above the class of the very poor, and the drug is to a great extent used with ingredients which are more or less expensive.'
The cannabis prohibition advocacy groups of the upper classes and castes and their media publications went a step further and even stated that bhang itself was harmful, in fact all intoxicants were harmful and must be banned. The Arya Samaj, Dera Ismail Khan say' That the Samaj is of the opinion that the sale of the hemp drugs should be restricted to the medical profession for medical purposes, and the preparation be so restricted as to meet the said wants only.' The Secretary, Anjuman Islamia, Dera Ismail Khan, says 'Taking all matters into consideration, I am of the opinion that the total prohibition of hemp drugs, provided that it is accompanied with prohibition of opium drugs, will in the end prove a great boon to the people;' Devi Dayal, Editor of "Kaistha Mitra", Lahore, says 'The correspondent conscientiously days that bhang is in reality a very bad thing; it spoils the body, heart and brain of a person, it vitiates one's moral character; telling a think and making a promise, the bhang drinker forgets it, and exaggerates thigs and tells lies and gets taunted and pointed out.' Regarding charas, he says 'By smoking charas people very often become insane, and this is the result of bad company...Under the influence of charas, the commission of crime is possible, and necessarily a charsi is selfish; consequently, there is a common saying - "Who could a charsi be friend of? He would have a smoke and run away."' Regarding prohibition, he says 'All have been found pleased to say that if Government were to stop the use of charas tomorrow, they might stop it today: "We shall have no complaint; and when we shall not get the charas, the bad habit will go by itself." The correspondent has seen several cases. On account of charas, many people have been destroyed and ruined, and did not remain capable of moving in the society of good men, and the public lost their confidence in them.'
The impact of the caste system on the cannabis culture of the Punjab Province
It is often said that the Sikh, Muslim, Buddhist and Christian religions are free from the evils of the caste system. In fact, this is projected as one of the most attractive features of these religions that draw oppressed low caste Hindus to convert to these religions, in the hope of escaping the chains of the caste system. But if we examine the matter more closely, we will find that even though the founders of these religions believed and preached a casteless society where all beings are the divine eternal spirit in material form, the religions that they founded soon degenerated into replicas of the Hindu caste system, with persons from the upper classes and the religious orthodoxy claiming superiority over the working classes and the poor. This eventually led to the current state of affairs where, irrespective of the religion followed, all persons from the lower classes, the working classes, the indigenous communities and the homeless are considered inferior and are exploited by the upper classes, castes and religious orthodoxy to further their own pursuits of material wealth and power.
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar wrote about the caste system among the non-Hindus in his book, Annihilation of Caste in 1930. He stated that the caste system was not as rigid and oppressive among the non-Hindus because they strongly believed and practiced brotherhood and community living or sangathan. He stated that the strength and the fearlessness of Muslims and Sikhs came from this belief in their brotherhood and community. In this regard, he wrote 'The idea underlying sangathan is to remove from the mind of the Hindu that timidity and cowardice are so painfully mark him off from the Mohamedan and the Sikh, and which have led him to adopt the low ways of treachery and cunning for protecting himself. The question naturally arises: From where does the Sikh or the Mahomedan derive his strength, which makes him brave and fearless? I am sure it is not due to the relative superiority of physical strength, diet or drill. It is due to the strength arising out of the feeling that all Sikhs will come to the rescue of a Sikh when he is in danger, and that all Mahomedans will rush to save a Muslim if he is attacked.' Dr. Ambedkar said that it was impossible for a Hindu to have this fearlessness because the caste system had already dissected the Hindu community completely. He said 'The Hindu can derive no such strength. He cannot feel assured that his fellows will come to his help. Being one and fated to be alone, he remains powerless, develops timidity and cowardice, and in a fight surrenders or runs away. The Sikh as well as the Muslim stands fearless and gives battle, because he knows that though one he will not be alone. The presence of this belief in the one, and the absence of it in the other makes him to give way.' Speaking about the strength and power that a strongly bonded society and community derives, he said 'If you pursue this matter further and ask what is it that enables the Sikh and the Mahomedan to feel so assured, and why is the Hindu filled with such despair in the matter of help and assistance, you will find that the reasons for this difference lie in the difference in their associated mode of living. The associated mode of life practiced by the Sikhs and the Mahomedans produce fellow-feeling. The associated mode of life of the Hindus does not. Among Sikhs and Muslims there is a social cement which makes them 'bhais'. Among the Hindus there is no such cement, and one Hindu does not regard another Hindu as his bhai. This explains why a Sikh says and feels that one Sikh, or one Khalsa, is equal to 'sava lakh' men. This explains why one Mahomedan is equal to a crowd of Hindus. The difference is undoubtedly a difference due to caste. So long as caste remains, there will be no sangathan, and so long as there is no sangathan the Hindu will remain weak and meek.' Dr. Ambedkar said that the reasons for the strong bonds within the non-Hindu religions was because there were many things that bonded the members of these communities into strong societies. He called these "organic filaments" quoting Carlyle. Dr. Ambedkar said that the more the organic filaments present in a society, i.e. the more means of social interaction and communion present, the stronger the society became. He said, 'If we apply these considerations to caste among Mahomedans, Sikhs and Christians, on the one hand, and to castes among Hindus, on the other, you will find that caste among non-Hindus is fundamentally different from caste among Hindus. First, the ties which consciously make the Hindus hold together are non-existent, while among non-Hindus there are many that hold them together. The strength of a society depends on the presence of points of contact, possibilities of interaction, between different groups which exist in it. These are what Carlyle calls "organic filaments" - i.e. the elastic threads which help to bring the disintegrating elements together and to re-unite them. There is no integrating force among the Hindus to counteract the disintegration caused by caste. While among the non-Hindus there are plenty of these "organic filaments" which bind them together.' Dr. Ambedkar felt that even though castes existed among the non-Hindus, it was not as rigid and oppressive as among the Hindus. He said 'Again it must be borne in mind that although there are castes among non-Hindus, as there are among Hindus, caste has not the same social significance for non-Hindus as it has for Hindus. Ask a Mahomedan or a Sikh who he is. He tells you that he is a Mahomedan or a Sikh, as the case may be. He does not tell you his caste although he has one, and you are satisfied with his answer. When he tells you that he is a Muslim, you do not proceed to ask him whether he is a Shia or a Sunni; Sheikh or Sayyad; Khatik or Pinjari. When he tells you he is a Sikh, you do not ask him whether he is Jat or Roda; Mazbi or Ramdasi. But you are not satisfied if a person tells you that he is a Hindu. You feel bound to inquire into his caste. Why? Because so essential is caste in the case of a Hindu that without knowing it you do not feel sure what sort of being he is.' The biggest difference between the caste system of the Hindus and that of the non-Hindu religions, Dr. Ambedkar said, was the excommunication of a person if he broke caste rules among the Hindus and the absence of this extreme punishment among the non-Hindus. He said 'That caste has not the same social significance among non-Hindus as it has among Hindus is clear, if you take into consideration the consequences which follow breach of caste. There may be castes among Sikhs or Mahomedans, but the Sikhs and the Mahomedans will not outcast a Sikh or a Mahomedan if he broke his caste. Indeed, the very idea of excommunication is foreign to the Sikh and the Mahomedan. But with the Hindus the case is entirely different. A Hindu is sure to be outcasted if he broke caste. This shows the social significance of caste to Hindus and non-Hindus.'
What we see as time has gone by is that today these differences between the caste system of the Hindus and the caste systems of the non-Hindus have blurred so much that it is now practically impossible to distinguish between the two. Christians and Muslims get excommunicated by the religious orthodoxy for going against the established power structure. Muslims, Sikhs and Christians belonging to certain caste will kill a man from another caste of the same religion if he attempts to marry into their castes. Very often, this is compounded by the fact that the victim is also from the lower class and the perpetrator from the upper class. The fusing of caste and class in non-Hindu religions have now dissected communities of these religions also along the same lines as the Hindu caste system. This is not a phenomenon local to India but can be seen all over the world where it is the upper caste and upper class combination that oppresses and exploits the lower class and lower caste combinations that make up the majority of communities in the world. Dr. Ambedkar did touch upon this gradual degradation of the non-Hindu religions in his Annihilation of Castes written around 1930. He said 'Caste is no doubt primarily the breath of the Hindus. But the Hindus have fouled the air all over, and everything is infected - Sikh, Muslim and Christian.'
If one wants to study how the caste system has played out among the non-Hindu religions, one needs to only study the social behavior of the people of the Punjab Province in the 19th century with regard to cannabis consumption. Dr. Ambedkar said that social revolution must precede political revolutions. Spiritual revolutions must precede even social revolutions. The spiritual founders of all religions first created a spiritual revolution that then became a social revolution and finally a political revolution. The mind has to be transformed first before social behavior is transformed and finally political behavior is. Dr. Ambedkar said in Annihilation of Caste that 'The political revolution of the Sikhs was preceded by the religious and social revolution led by Guru Nanak'. Cannabis was a part of the spiritual revolution of the Sikhs. It was also part of the social revolution of the Sikhs and subsequently part of the political revolution of the Sikhs. Cannabis was one of the strongest "organic filaments" that bound the Sikh community together spiritually, socially and politically. However, with the increased influences of the British and the Hindu caste-based religions of Vaishnavism and Vedism, the Sikh community also started developing fissures that eventually became cracks and rigid barriers. Cannabis - the organic filament binding the Sikhs - which had been used in this region for thousands of years, most likely dating back to the period of the Indus Valley Civilization, was gradually broken down. The mode of consumption of cannabis was used as a way to create rifts in Sikh society as in Islam, and previously in Hinduism, especially among the Shaivites and indigenous nature-worshiping communities. The practitioners of the Hindu caste system, i.e. the followers of Vaishnavism and Vedism, were able to create the delusion that those who drank cannabis as the beverage bhang were living according to the religious scriptures while those who smoked it as charas or ganja were in violation of religion and hence low castes or outcastes.
Two factors - class and caste - enabled the development of these schisms in the organic filament of the cannabis culture in the Punjab, as it did elsewhere. The class factor was that the people who drank cannabis as the beverage bhang were invariably from the upper classes who were wealthy enough to have it with its expensive ingredients whereas the people who smoked charas were from the poorer classes of society who could only afford to make their own charas locally or buy the imported charas as it was cheaper finally then the overall cost of making bhang. The caste factor was that the people who drank bhang were invariably part of the king-priest-businessman class of the dominant religion in those parts whereas the charas or ganja smoker was from a minority or non-dominant religion in those parts, this being Muslims and Hindus in the Punjab Province where Sikhism dominated and Hindus and Sikhs in the places where Muslims dominated.
The society of the Sikhs that was so tightly bonded gradually fell prey to the machinations of the anti-cannabis British and Hindu upper castes. Charas usage was increasingly frowned upon and made more difficult through taxation. Bhang was spared for the time being, until it was also gradually removed. In place of cannabis, opium and alcohol were introduced. So, that is where we are today, the Sikh and Muslim societies of the pre-19th century Punjab Province are now firmly in the control of the upper classes and castes of these religions who, along with the Hindu upper castes and classes, allowed the cannabis plant to be taken away, and still continue to turn a blind eye even as opium and alcohol rip apart these societies.
The current scenario in the modern Punjab State
Today, we can see in the Punjab, the long-term impact of the measures taken by the British administration in a region where cannabis was intrinsic to the social and religious way of life. The measures taken by the British administration was in complete disregard to the needs of the people. It focused on one and only one thing - additional revenue for the state. What happened between 1894 and 2025 is not known to me, but I can guess. The new Excise rules proposed in the Punjab Memorandum probably took effect. Import duty was probably imposed on charas making it even more expensive and unaffordable for the poorer classes. Bhang was also taxed eventually. Suddenly the spontaneous wild bhang that grew throughout the Punjab Province was commoditized. The government probably destroyed most of the wild cannabis which was the source of bhang for the people. The people were probably forced to buy their bhang from the retail vendors at a price, where earlier it was completely free for all practical purposes. The introduction of wholesale licenses led to further monopoly by the drug contractors on supply and prices. The drug contractors worked with the police and targeted individuals cultivating bhang so that this practice was stopped out of fear, despite the Excise Act not prohibiting cultivation of cannabis. The scarcity and increasing prices of charas and bhang forced the people to turn to opium and alcohol - the dangerous drugs introduced by the government in order to replace cannabis and earn more revenue for the state.
Instead of the lush green areas of wild and spontaneous cannabis growth that benefited humans, animals, birds, insects and the land, today we have needles and syringes and empty broken alcohol bottles dotting the land. For the people of Punjab, it is not just opium that is a problem, it is alcohol also. For the Muslim populations of the Punjab Province alcohol was prohibited and so did not take hold of society to the extent that it did in Punjab, but opium did. Today, Punjab is one of the main regions in India suffering from a heroin crisis of epidemic proportions as is Lahore and Punjab in Pakistan. The association with the British made the upper classes of Punjab into opium addicts and they in turn made the lower classes opium addicts. Heroin flows in freely into India through the Punjab borders with Pakistan that contain the regions of Lahore, etc. that was part of the Punjab Province in the 19th century. The British not only introduced their opium but also taught the people to cultivate it and become addicted to it.
India's rapid urbanization, driven by the emphasis of the state towards economic development through unsustainable industries, coupled with the degradation of land for agriculture due to climate change and diminishing rural opportunities, has forced mass migrations from rural areas into cities. The city is where exposure to synthetic drugs, alcohol and opium increases to a great extent. UNODC reported in its World Drug Report 2020 that 'A study conducted in India in the Chandigarh area, that city being the capital of the two neighbouring States of Punjab and Haryana, also suggested there are higher levels of drug use in urban slum areas than in rural areas. If this information were to be validated across all countries, the rapid urbanization of the past decade could be an element that explains, at least partially, the growth in the global drug market. In this context, urbanization becomes a crucial element when considering future dynamics in drug markets, in particular in developing countries, where growth in urbanization is more pronounced than in other countries.' In rural areas, there is still a reasonably strong inclination to ganja and charas. The balance needed in society is a flourishing rural landscape with agriculture - including the cultivation of ganja and charas - as the backbone, providing jobs, sustainable industries and income for the rural population, thus, reducing their need to face the harsh conditions of urban life which itself is a key factor for driving a person to drugs. The large-scale cultivation of ganja and charas in rural areas will ensure that the city get its intoxicant, medicine and cannabis for industrial purposes enabling public health improvement and greater climate resilience, besides robust, sustainable economic development.
An MP from Patiala tried to introduce a ganja legalization bill in Punjab. Scroll Magazine reported that '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 synthesized 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”.' For the ruling politicians, a significant number of whom have amassed their wealth through the black market for drugs and thus been able to secure their positions as lawmakers, such a bill appears to have been disagreeable since that is the last I heard of it, and Punjab still grapples with the menace of heroin and alcohol. GQ India also had an article on a private bill in Punjab which may be about the same bill by Dharam Vir Gandhi. It reported that 'The private member’s bill suggests some changes to the NDPS Act. One of these is to separate of the clubbing of ‘soft’ intoxicants from artificial ‘hard’ drugs like cocaine, heroin and smack. This petition is also supported by Romesh Bhattacharji, former Commissioner of the Central Bureau of Narcotics. In an interview with News18, he revealed that more than half the people who were put behind bars in Punjab between 2001 and 2011 under the NDPS Act were merely poor people in the possession of soft drugs.'
Not only is there an infinite number of petty issues that India's politicians get permanently embroiled in, casting the welfare of the people to the winds, there are even misdirected efforts to make the harmful substitutes for ganja - opium, alcohol, tobacco, and prescription synthetic pharmaceutical medications - more accessible to the public. The Hindu reported that 'A day after Cabinet Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu came out in support of legalising cultivation, sale and consumption of opium, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Monday said there was need for a national drug policy to fight the drug menace. “A comprehensive formula was needed at the Central level to effectively check drug abuse,” said Capt. Amarinder, while welcoming the fact that the issue had taken centre stage due to the growing demand for opium cultivation by certain States.' Amarinder and Sidhu seem to have progressive thoughts on drug policy. But the plant that needs to be legalized nationally and internationally is cannabis not opium. The worldwide legalization wave of cannabis is in one way trying to negate the huge harm done through opium and its derivative drugs such as heroin and pharmaceutical opioids. Opium is not heroin but it is the raw material for heroin. When politicians in the Punjab today, if they really wish for the welfare of the people and the state, should be bringing back the cannabis that was such an inherent part of the Punjab culture, they are focused only on their own upper class and upper caste well being, much like in the 19th century when they let the British strangle Punjab's cannabis culture. As I stated earlier, this is a problem across the board, be it the Congress, BJP, AAP, Akalis, etc. None of these political parties have moved in the direction of taking the step of legalizing cannabis completely and correcting the massive historic wrong on the people.
Punjab is the heartland of wheat cultivation in India. The increasing promotion of this unsustainable crop by the government has meant that farmers find themselves entrapped in a vicious cycle of loans, debts, chemical pesticides and fertilizers, high energy and water costs and the problem of crop stubble burning which has contributed to turning the national capital, Delhi, into the most polluted city in the world. The unsustainable reliance on wheat has meant that farmers are under tremendous pressure to get the land ready for the next season, and the quickest way that they have adopted is to burn the stubble of the crops harvested in the previous season. What a significant impact the cultivation of cannabis as an additional crop would make for the state. Cannabis can be grown in two seasons. Cannabis cultivation biomass residues can be used for animal feed and other industries. The cultivated cannabis can be used for food, textiles, intoxication and medicine. The requirements for water are tremendously reduced, as is the need for chemical pesticides and fertilizers. The degraded soil from overuse of chemicals can be restored. The farmers from the Punjab region would do far better to push for cannabis legalization, instead of pushing for unsustainable wheat, so that their spiritual herb can once again be cultivated and consumed. This will not only heal the land and the people, it will tremendously boost the economy of the Punjab region and the environment at large.
Kashmir and Ladakh, the two local sources of charas in 19th century, are now under Central government control. After the bifurcation of Jammu and Kashmir into two Union Territories under central control, the ruling BJP opened up the state for land-ownership by non-Kashmiris and firmly established the army in the new union territories, citing security risks from Pakistan, China and homegrown terrorists. Despite repeated nudging from the Supreme Court, the central administration has not restored the statehood of Kashmir. The painting of a rosy picture of normalcy to the world continues, even as various infrastructure projects are fast tracked and tourists, including religious tourists to Hindu places of pilgrimage are promoted, and the army remains firmly stationed in Kashmir since the abrogation. Recently a purported terror attack took place at Pahalgam where 28 tourists were killed after it was ascertained that they were Hindus. Allegations and counter allegations fly between India and Pakistan, and the entire nation is of the opinion that a war with Pakistan is justified. Who the real culprits are behind this attack is anybody's guess. The Indian central government look like the ones most likely to benefit the most from this, enabling the center, through the armed forces, to tighten its hold on the state and give it reasons for delaying restoration of statehood for Kashmir. The securing of the flow of opium and its derivatives surely plays a critical role in all this game of smoke and mirrors, as we can see in not just Kashmir, but also in Ladakh, Punjab, Manipur and Assam as well. We see a wave of anti-Muslim and anti-Pakistan sentiment sweeping across the country, with politicians playing no small role in stoking this sentiment. What we see played out here is the general fomentation of hatred against the Muslim and other minority religions, as well as against the indigenous communities of the country, by the ruling upper classes and castes of the country. It is this hatred that is at the root of ganja and charas prohibition in India, with the perception of the upper castes and classes that ganja and charas are used by these sections of society, much like beef, and so must be banned, forgetting or deliberately trying to suppress the fact that ganja and charas are universal to all religions and a means of uniting all peoples in brotherhood, peace and harmony.
To restore cannabis in the state of Punjab will be to restore the glue that held Sikh society together. The viewing of charas as something inferior and evil as compared to bhang appears completely absurd in today's world where science has shown that there is no real difference between bhang, ganja and charas, all three containing the same cannabinoids, albeit in differing concentrations which are factored in by the consumer when the quantity to be consumed is determined. In places around the world where cannabis has been legalized for medical and adult recreational purposes, cannabis resin or charas is as much sought after, if not more than cannabis flower or ganja. This, in fact is the case, even where cannabis is prohibited. The labeling of sections of society as low caste or low caste because of charas consumption continues to show the discriminations that continue to exist in Punjab, and India as a whole. Cannabis must be restored in all its forms in the Punjab to end a great historical harm to the people of the state, especially the poorest sections irrespective of religion. The reintroduction of bhang will go a long way in addressing the menace of opium and alcohol that plagues the state of Punjab today, especially the upper classes who so readily discarded their divine-ordained bhang to take up the preferred poisons of the British.
In the following sections, I have extracted content specific to the Punjab Province from the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report of 1894-95. This includes:
- the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission's findings
- the Punjab Memorandum submitted to the Commission
- reports from the lunatic asylums of Punjab
- notes from experts
- list of Punjab witnesses who deposed before the Hemp Commission
- individual witness statements of the witnesses from Punjab.
The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission's findings
THE EXISTENCE, PREVALENCE AND CHARACTER OF SPONTANEOUS GROWTH
46. The growth decreases in frequency very rapidly as the Himalayas are left behind. It appears, however, from the evidence to maintain its hold in the Amritsar, Lahore, Karnal, and Shahpur districts further south than in others. As regards three of these districts, special reasons for this persistence may be suggested. Shahpur is watered by the Jhelum, which appears to carry an exceptionally heavy growth on the banks of its upper reaches. Amritsar is not only the great market for bhang as well as charas, but it is the head-quarters of the Sikh religion, and the former drug is largely consumed by the followers of that faith. It seems to be a regular drink or refreshment with the visitors to the Golden Temple. When members of the Commission visited the city, a dense growth of bhang flourished over a large area in the outlying parts of the public gardens and countless plants in the hedgerows surrounding the city. The seeds discarded from the large quantity of bhang that is daily consumed in the city sufficiently account for this growth, and it is probable that the ways leading to Amritsar from the country round are sown with hemp in the same way. The plant is probably propagated in the same manner, but to a less degree, around Lahore, the capital town of the province, and the head-quarters of the Administration. East of Umballa and Karnal the bhang-bearing belt appears to widen out, and its southern boundary would probably pass across the Karnal district.
EXTENT OF CULTIVATION AND ITS TENDENCY TO INCREASE OR DECREASE
112. In the south-west angle of the province there is a small amount of systematic cultivation for the production of bhang. The Excise Commissioner reports that this does not exceed 100 acres. The evidence gives figures for some districts. Thus witness (68) estimates the produce of the Muzaffargarh district at 100 maunds, which would require some 10 or 12 acres of crop. Witness (24) states that the area in the Jhang district in 1893 was only 20 kanals. In Dera Ghazi Khan the area seems to be about 30 acres. Five acres are said to be cultivated in Shahpur. Several witnesses talk in general terms of cultivation for bhang being practised. Some describe the cultivation as consisting of the rearing of a few plants in yards and gardens by fakirs and other consumers. Witness (39) states that cultivation is carried on in every district more or less, "but more so in Hoshiarpur, Derajat, and other frontier districts." All this cultivation is stated to be for the production of bhang. Ganja is not smoked in the Punjab. The cultivation of the more systematic kind is probably not understated at 100 acres. The desultory cultivation of a few plants seems to be a wide-spread practice; but the total amount of bhang produced by it cannot be important— must, in fact, be trifling compared with what the wild growth yields.
113. The evidence and other papers do not show that the cultivation is other than stationary. There is no legal prohibition to the growth of hemp, but it is probable that it is discouraged and restricted by the fact that the sale of the produce is under regulation.
114. There does not appear to be any artificial restriction in any Punjab State on the cultivation of hemp, not even in Nabha, where the use of ganja and charas is said to be prohibited. Bahawalpur is, however, the only State of those furnishing information in which cultivation for the narcotic is admitted to exist. It is not confined to any special locality. Farmers grow small patches with other crops, generally near wells. It yields bhang, only in sufficient quantity for local consumption, and seeds which are used for food as well as for fresh sowing. It is stationary in extent. Chamba reports that the drugs are not produced, but it is probable that cultivation for fibre and seeds exists in this State as in the rest of the Himalayan region. There is no reason to suppose that the cultivation, which is habitual at certain elevations in the Himalayas, i.e., from about 4,000 to 8,000 feet, is not practised by the Native States. Mr. Coldstream refers to cultivation in Bashahr and near Kasauli, and says that in the former tract the plant produces resin. But it certainly appears from Mr. Anderson's report regarding Kulu, the evidence of witness (71), and the fact that the evidence about the preparation of charas is wanting in certainty and definiteness, that charas is not looked upon as a regular bye-produce of hemp cultivation to the same extent that it is in Garhwal further east. It would appear that towards Kashmir the wild plant becomes more extensively used for the preparation of drugs.
METHODS OF CULTIVATION AND MATTERS CONCERNED THEREWITH
PREPARATION OF THE RAW DRUGS FROM THE CULTIVATED AND WILD PLANT
TRADE AND MOVEMENT OF THE HEMP DRUGS
EXTENT OF USE AND THE MANNER AND FORMS IN WHICH THE HEMP DRUGS ARE CONSUMED
SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS CUSTOMS
"Legend—Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth guru, the founder of the Sikh religion, was on the gaddi of Baba Nanak in the time of Emperor Aurangzeb. When the guru was at Anandpur, tahsil Una, Hoshiarpur district, engaged in battle with the Hill Rajas of the Simla, Kangra, and the Hoshiarpur districts, the Rajas sent an elephant, who was trained in attacking and slaying the forces of the enemy with a sword in his trunk and in breaking open the gates of forts, to attack and capture the Lohgarh fort near Anandpur. The guru gave one of his followers, Bachittar Singh, some bhang and a little of opium to eat, and directed him to face the said elephant. This brave man obeyed the word of command of his leader and attacked the elephant, who was intoxicated and had achieved victories in several battles before, with the result that the animal was overpowered and the Hill Rajas defeated. The use of bhang, therefore, on the Dasehrad ayi s necessary as a sacred draught. It is customary among the Sikhs generally to drink bhang, so that Guru Gobind Singh has himself said the following poems in praise of bhang: 'Give me, O Saki (butler), a cup of green colour (bhang), as it is required by me at the time of battle' (vide 'Suraj Parkash,' the Sikh religious book). "Bhang is also used on the Chandas day, which is a festival of the god Sheoji Mahadeva. The Sikhs consider it binding to use it on the Dasehra day. The quantity then taken is too small to prove injurious." As Sikhs are absolutely prohibited by their religion from smoking, the use of ganja and charas in this form is not practised by them. A unique custom of dispensing bhang at a religious charitable institution is that mentioned by witness Baba Kirpa Singh. The institution, as a relic of old Sikh times, is annually permitted to collect without interference a boat load of bhang, which is afterwards distributed throughout the year to the sadhus and beggars who are supported by the dharamsala.
EFFECTS - PHYSICAL
Of the assistant surgeon and qualified private practitioner class eight were examined. Witness No. 48 is an L.M.S. and a private practitioner. He stated that "charas and ganja always bring on bronchitis and asthma if very large quantities are smoked. It brings on dysentery also." A perusal of this evidence indicates that the witness has mixed up the effects induced by moderate and excessive use of the drugs. Assistant Surgeon Jai Singh (witness No. 47) considers that the use of the drugs does not seem to cause bronchitis, asthma, or dysentery, but rather cures them. Witness No. 39, also an assistant surgeon, stated that the use of bhang is probably quite free from noxious effects, but abuse of charas brings on bronchitis and asthma. Assistant Surgeon Rahim Khan (witness No. 37) is Superintendent, Medical School, Lahore, and has had 33 years' residence in the Punjab, and has been connected with the out-patient department, Medical College Hospital, for that period. He stated: "There are no bad after effects from bhang, but even the moderate use of charas brings on chest affections." Cross-examined as to the meaning the witness attached to moderate, he replied: "I call ten or twelve chillums, costing one or two annas, in the 24 hours moderate use. I know of no more moderate use than that. I know of no case of a man using only one or two chillums a day. I would call a man taking one or two annas' worth a day a 'charasi'." It is clear that this witness knows nothing of the moderate use. Assistant Surgeon Mehr Chand (witness No. 40) stated that the moderate use of bhang produces no noxious effects, while charas, if even used moderately, brings on bronchitis and asthma, general irritation of the respiratory organs, indigestion, and dysentery. On cross-examination the witness said: "As to dysentery, I saw a case of a man who said he was a charas smoker, and took an excessive dose, and it brought on dysentery. I had doubt as to this being the cause. But I think charas may injure the digestion and predispose to diarrhœa or dysentery. I have not enough of cases to be able to say that the drug really produces dysentery. I am not certain. But I have had one or two allegations as to this being the cause, and I had no other cause. I ought to say rather 'it may produce' than 'it does produce dysentery.'" Assistant Surgeon Bhagwan Dass (witness No. 36) is Civil Surgeon of Jhang, and has nearly 25 1/2 years' service. He stated that charas or ganja smoking caused indigestion and diarrhœa and chronic bronchitis. On oral examination the witness stated: "My personal experience of the effects of the drugs is based on my dispensary practice alone. In my social or domestic life I have no knowledge of moderate or excessive consumers I have seen five or six cases of chronic bronchitis in people addicted to hemp drugs. I cannot say that it was due to hemp drugs solely. I have also seen several (say about twenty) cases of indigestion and diarrhœa. But here again I cannot say that they were solely due to hemp drugs, but simply that the patients were consumers. These are all the diseases I have seen attributable to hemp drugs. I have never seen a case of dysentery or asthma which I attributed to hemp drugs, though I have seen both in consumers. My reason for not attributing these diseases to hemp was that other people also suffer from these diseases equally." Witness No. 41 did not ascribe any ill effects to bhang, but stated that bronchitis and asthma are often met with in consumers of charas. Witness No. 38 does not discriminate between the moderate and excessive use.
Three hospital assistants were examined. Witness No. 42 considers that charas smoking causes asthma. Witness No. 43 considers that noxious effects are induced by moderate use of the drugs. Hospital Assistant Karm Elahi (witness No. 44), of 25 years' service, considers that moderate use of the drugs to some extent produces noxious effects; and added: "I have not seen a single case of dysentery caused by the practice: of course cases of cough and asthma."
Seven native practitioners were examined, of whom three failed to discriminate between moderate and excessive use. Witness No. 51 stated that charas causes asthma and bronchitis, but not dysentery. Witness No. 52 stated that "charas, of course, causes loss of appetite and bronchitis and asthma." Witness No. 53 merely stated: "The mischief is done by charas and ganja." Hakim Ghulam Nabi, of Lahore (witness No. 54), of twenty years' experience, stated: "I have not found even a single person during the last twenty years who complained of these drugs. There are more takias outside the Mochi Gate, Lahore, than in any other parts of the city which are reserved for the consumption of such drugs; and as the resorters to these takias generally come to me for treatment, and as none of them has during the last twenty years complained to me of having suffered from any disease in consequence of using bhang or charas, it shows that the moderate use of these drugs is harmless."
THE POLICY OF HEMP DRUG ADMINISTRATION
EXISTING SYSTEMS DESCRIBED
SYSTEMS OF NATIVE STATES
Memorandum on hemp drugs in the Punjab, by Mr. T. G. Walker, Commissioner of Excise, Vol 3, Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission, 1894-1895.
The system of excise administration in respect of intoxicating (hemp) drugs in the Punjab has been receiving a great deal of attention during the last five or six years; and it so happens that, as the outcome of much inquiry and discussion, we are now on the eve of the introduction of a new set of rules which will alter and improve that system in many respects. It will, I think, be convenient if I explain how matters stand at present. The correspondence on the subject is voluminous, and there is certainly no dearth of information.
As regards charas, what is shown as coming from Kashmir is from the same source (Yarkand) as that shown from Ladakh. Most of the Yarkand charas takes the ordinary route through Leh to Sultanpur (Kulu); but a certain quantity of it passes westward through Kashmir territory. This was pointed out by Captain Ramsay, Joint-Commissioner, Leh, in his letter which will be found at page 7 of the printed Proceedings quoted at the commencement of paragraph 3. In paragraph 5 Captain Ramsay says "charas will grow, though not well, in Kashmir; but as a matter of fact it is not grown in Kashmir, and in Ladakh it of course could not be grown. The charas shown under the two heads Kashmir and Ladakh consists of Yarkand charas imported (1) viâ Ladakh and Kashmir to the Panjab, (2) viâ Ladakh direct to the Punjab through Kulu." These trade returns are obviously defective in some respects. They show no drug as coming across the western frontier (from Sewestan) or the north-western (from Bajaur), except that from Kabul, while there is undoubtedly a certain amount of import trade into the Derajat and Hazara. This probably appears under other heads in the trade returns. But the figures given are useful as showing that there is a very large import of charas from Yarkand, and that the import of this drug from other quarters and of other drugs from all sources is unimportant in comparison with this.
The figures of imports given above are the totals of the district details, and the same consignments have undoubtedly been shown in many cases twice over. No systematic attempt has been made to obtain correct statistics of the quantity brought across the frontier; and it is one of the incidental advantages which we expect to derive from the proposed new arrangements that we shall be able to register the import trade efficiently and acquire a proper control over it. There has been a great development of the trade in charas during the last three years. The quantity coming into Hoshiarpur by the Kulu route rose from 2,201 maunds in 1890-91 to 3,242 maunds in 1891-92 and to 3,932 maunds in 1892-93. In the last of these years the Kangra district returns give the quantity as 3,765 maunds. These figures are taken from the register of excise passes, and may be relied on as fairly accurate. Allowing for what went by the Kashmir and other routes, it seems probable that the imports in 1892-93 (which was an exceptional year) fell little short of 5,000 maunds. In an ordinary year they have averaged between 3,000 and 4,000 maunds, the trade being subject to great fluctuations. The figures of consumption given above show the quantity retailed by the licensees and are fairly accurate. The licensees are required to keep accounts and furnish returns of their dealings.
There is a certain quantity consumed without passing through the hands of licensed vendors; but this is probably not very great, because the people of the parts in which the plant grows wild are not addicted to its use, while the retail price (three or four annas a seer) is so small that it is not worth while for a consumer to attempt to obtain a supply elsewhere than from the nearest licensed shop.
It will be seen from these figures that the consumption of this form of drug is heaviest in the Delhi and Jullundur Divisions, while in the Rawalpindi and frontier Divisions it is comparatively small. I am not prepared to give any explanation of these facts. Within Divisions the consumption is distributed on the whole very evenly. For further details I would refer to Provincial Excise Statement C published with the Annual Excise Administration Reports. For bhang the following details (consumption in maunds) may be given:—.
In none of the remaining districts did the consumption exceed 100 maunds. With regard to these figures of the consumption of bhang one very important fact is established. The Muhammadan population of the south-western districts (Mooltan, Muzaffargarh, and Dera Ghazi Khan), who are prohibited by their religion from the use of spirits, are to a very large extent addicted to drinking an infusion of bhang as an intoxicant. It will be observed that the consumption in the two districts of Mooltan and Dera Ghazi Khan is between one-fourth and one-fifth of that of the whole province. In these districts bhang is undoubtedly a substitute with the Muhammadan population for the spirits which their creed forbids them to take.
Another fact that may be noted is that the districts of Ferozepore, Ludhiana, Lahore, and Amritsar, which come after Mooltan and Dera Ghazi Khan in this matter of consumption of bhang, are those in which the Sikh element is strongest. The Sikh population of the province being 1,389,934, these four districts contribute 781,439 towards this total. It seems likely that the prohibition amongst the Sikhs of tobacco-smoking has a good deal to do with their preference for the drug in a liquid state.
This question of the distribution of consumption according to locality, religion, caste, &c., is one that will, no doubt, receive a great deal of attention from the Commission, and it seems unnecessary in this memorandum to do more than indicate the general features. Annexed to the memorandum will be found two maps showing the consumption of charas and of bhang separately by districts in the year 1890-91, and these will serve to illustrate the above remarks. It will be seen that, roughly speaking, as regards the use of charas the province divides itself into two parts—the eastern districts, in which the consumption exceeds 5 oz. per 100 of the population, and the western districts, in which the average consumption is less than this. As regards bhang, on the other hand, the districts fall into 3 groups:—(1) the southwestern districts, in which the consumption exceeds 40 oz. per 100 of population; (2) the central districts, in which it averages between 20 and 40 oz.; and (3) the northern and eastern districts, in which it is less than 20 oz.
(a) The system in the Punjab is uniform. The arrangements are under the control in due gradation of (1) the Financial Commissioner, (2) Divisional Commissioners and the Commissioner of Excise, and (3) Deputy Commissioners, the actual administration in each district being in the hands of the Deputy Commissioners. The Act is the Excise Act (XXII) of 1881, and the rules are those which will be found at page 107 of the Punjab Excise Pamphlet.
(b) It is not possible to give any estimate of the extent to which the wild hemp plant grows. It is a mere weed, and cannot be said to cover any particular area, as it is scattered about. So much is taken in the form of bhang as is required for the consumption in our districts (4,000 maunds of dried leaves) and in the Punjab Native States, and the remainder is probably allowed to die down. The dry stalks are sometimes, I believe, used for fuel. No preparation of any sort is extracted from the plant. The manner in which the transport and sale of bhang are controlled has been already described. With regard to possession, section 22 of the Excise Act prevents any one other than a dealer from having in his possession more than ¼ of a seer; but, so far as I am aware, there is now nothing to prevent a person within this limit from collecting and using the leaves of the plant. He could not sell bhang. The Commission might usefully refer to Financial Commissioner's Circular No. 3, dated January 1882, in which the system is explained.
(c) With reference to the above, it will be evident that the necessity for cultivating the hemp plant for the production of bhang as a marketable commodity scarcely arises. A few patches of the plant are grown in the Mooltan, Dera Ghazi Khan, Dera Ismail Khan, Shahpur, and Bannu districts, but the total area is probably less than 100 acres. There is no restriction on or regulation of cultivation; and, so far as I can see, there is nothing to prevent a person who grows the crop from using the produce as an intoxicant, provided he is not at any time in possession of more than the quantity allowed by the Act. Where the plant is grown the object is to provide for private consumption. Manufacture of any of the "preparations" is unknown in the Punjab. I may add that I proposed in 1890 either to prohibit the cultivation entirely or to impose an acreage duty that would be prohibitive. No notice has been taken by higher authority of the proposal. It will be easy at the present time to deal with the cultivation and to stamp it out, while there is the danger that, if we adopt measures which will restrict the supply and enhance the price of bhang, the result of these measures may be to encourage the cultivation. It has been suggested that steps should be taken to make persons on whose waste land the wild plant grows responsible for its destruction; but, as already explained, the local Government has not yet agreed to alter the existing arrangements in respect of bhang in any way, and the consideration of the proposal would, therefore, be premature (see Commissioner of Excise, Bengal's Circular No. 6075, dated 26th January 1893).
(d) Charas is imported by (1) Yarkandis, Ladakhis, and others who bring it in, dispose of it, principally at Hoshiarpur and Amritsar, and return with piece-goods, &c., and (2) merchants of Amritsar and other places who have established trade relations with Ladakh. I would refer the Commission for further particulars (if they are wanted) to paragraph 40 of the Report on the External Land Trade of the Punjab for the year 1891-92. The traders are not licensed. The only control over the trade is in the way of requiring a pass from the Deputy Commissioner of the frontier station where a consignment enters the Punjab, and the subsequent transport is regulated. Rule 7 is as follows: "Merchants bringing charas into the Punjab must obtain a pass (Appendix III) from the Deputy Commissioner of the frontier station where they enter the Punjab, and take it for countersignature to the Deputy Commissioner or Collector of every district in the Punjab or the NorthWestern Provinces, which they may subsequently enter with the charas. The article, its quantity (both gross weight of the package and net weight of the charas being given), and destination are stated in the pass, and the package is sealed up with the official seal of the Deputy Commissioner. It may be opened at any head-quarters station or tahsil while on the way to its destination, and a portion of its contents may be sold to the farmer of excise for drugs, the fact being recorded on the pass, and the package resealed. The owners must be warned that if the package is found open and any charas is sold from it, except as above stated, they will be proceeded against under the Excise Laws, and the package will be liable to confiscation."
Where a consignment is conveyed by rail, the provision requiring it to be taken to the Deputy Commissioner, &c., of every district through which it passes is dispensed with. Rules 8—13 may also, if necessary, be referred to.
(e) There is no provision in the existing rules for licensing wholesale vend (section 13 of the Act); but this defect will be supplied in the new rules. The arrangements with regard to retail vend have been already described (paragraph 12 of this memorandum).
(f) As above explained, there is no direct tax on any of the drugs. Indirect taxation is taken in the form of license fees for retail vend in the manner already described.
(g) The system of licensing retail vend has been described in the preceding paras, and it has been explained (paragraph 12) that the practice in the matter is not strictly in accordance with the rules. The rules provide only "for the farm of the monopoly of sale" withing certain areas, the monopoly being either combined with or separate from that of opium. The rules make no provision for fixing the number and sites of the retail shops; but to the form of lease (Appendix I) is added a schedule "showing the names of places at which licensed shops for the retail vend of intoxicating drugs have been ...." and the practice has always been to fix the number and locality of the shops. The arrangements, it should be understood, in respect of licensing the sale of these drugs mostly depend on the ...for the retail vend of opium. In one or two districts the experiment is being tried of licensing for shops for the sale of opium only; but with this exception opium and hemp drugs are almost invariably offered for sale at the same shops, the licenses being in the hands of the same persons. For this reason the number and locality of the shops are usually fixed under the Opium Rules. The number of shops is determined in a general way with reference to area and population, though there is no accepted standard. The number depends in a great measure on the habits of the people in respect of the consumption of opium and hemp-drugs. In the statement appended to this memorandum are given details of the averafe population in 1892-93 to each license for the sale of opium and hemp-drugs; but in considering these figures it should be remembered that, as explained above, there is as a rule only one shop for every two licenses; or, to put the matter in another way, hemp-drugs are usually retailed at the opium shops. There is nothing in the nature of "local option." In practice the shop sites remain as they have been established for a long time, and the necessity for a change in the way of adding new shops or closing existing ones seldom arises.
The license fee to be paid for each shop or each group of shops is determined (except in the four districts where the fees have been formed for a period of years) by annual action. No upset price is fixed.
(h)No rate is fixed at which the drugs must be supplied by wholesale to retail vendors. The wholesale price of charas depends on the state of the market, and bhang cannot be said to have any wholesale price as the cost to the vendor is only that of collecting and carriage. The average retail price charged to the consumers is from Rs. 7 to Rs. 10 per seer (according to the state of the market and the wholesale price) for charas and four annas a seer for bhang. Both are sold in very small quantities to consumed and the price charged, if worked out on the seer, varies a great deal from district to district within limits of (roughly) Rs. 4 to Rs. 15 for charas and 2 annas to 8 annas for bhang.
(i) The maximum quanity fixed for retail sale to or possession by consumers is that laid down in section 22 of the Excise Act [Section 3... bhang one-quarter of a seer; charas, &c, five tolahs. With regard to sale this is provided for by a condition in the form of license. No minimum price is fixed.
(j) Cases occasionally come to light of illicit sale of charas, &c, or of possession of more than the authorized quantity; but they are rare and unimportant. Illicit practices of other kinds are, I believe, unknown. It will, I think, be clear from this memorandum that there is really no room for such practices. No special measures of prevention have been found necessary.
(k) The modification of the present system, which are under consideration, have been described in the early part of this memorandum.
(l) The sources of supply, the extent of cultivation and trade, as well as the other heads mentioned here, have been examined in the memorandum.
T. G. WALKER, Commissioner of Excise, Punjab.
Extract paragraph 40 from the Report on the External Land Trade of the Punjab for the year 1891-92.
"In the Provincial Foreign Trade Report the returns furnished by the Kulu registration post constitute what is known as the 'Ladakh' trade. This general term, however, requires explanation. In so far as Leh is the chief emporium of this trade, it may be convenient to describe as imports and exports of Ladakh all merchandise of Yarkand which is exchanged here for goods from India; but, on the one hand, it is to be remembered that at the Sultanpur post all merchandise is registered which crosses the Rohtang pass, so that imports and exports of Thibet, Baltistan, and the British districts of Lahul and Spiti are included in the 'Ladakh' trade, while, on the other hand, all exports from and imports to Leh which take the Kashmir route are treated in the Provincial Report as trade with Kashmir and not with Ladakh."
He makes some further remarks regarding the agency by which this trade is conducted:—
"The trade with Ladakh is in the hands of four classes:—(1) The merchants of Hoshiarpur, Amritsar, and Sultanpur.—Many of the latter are Lahulis, who deal chiefly in wool. The Indian merchants send up piece-goods or tea in the spring and bring down Yarkand and Ladakh produce, chiefly charas, in the autumn. They use mules for carriage. Latterly the more wealthy muleteers have commenced to trade on their own account. (2) The Yarkandis.— These men generally dispose of their goods at Leh, but some of them come on to India with charas, carpets, and numdahs. Many also, after selling their goods at Leh, bring on for sale in India the horses upon which these goods were laden. Having disposed of their means of carriage, they generally return empty-handed. (3) The Baltis of Baltistan, who visit Simla in the cold weather in search of employment as road coolies and the like.—They are often erroneously called Ladakhis. They do not visit India for the sake of trade, but they take the opportunity of bringing with them dried apricots, which accounts for the entry 'fruits' under the head of imports, returning to their own country with as much as they can carry of brass, copper, and iron vessels. Some of them also carry back with them China cups and saucers, which are in demand in a tea-drinking country. (4) Bhotis, which term includes the Mongolian races inhabiting Ladakh, Zanskar, Chinese Thibet, and Lahul.—The wool and pashm imported by the Bhotis are laden chiefly on the backs of sheep and goats. These sheep and goats figure in the returns of imports. On being discharged of their burdens at Sultanpur they are sold to butchers from Simla. Beyond the various food-grains which are in demand in their desolate, sparsely cultivated country the Bhotis carry little back with them from India. The amount of grain which they can take with them is not much, as they have disposed of their means of carriage."





























































































































































































