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Cannabis
(bhaṅga) is a tall herb with board spear-shaped,
serrated-edged leaves and which gives off a strong odour. The plant
is known to botanists as Cannabis sativa. In ancient India
cannabis fibre was used to make ropes, mats and cloth (D.II,350;
Vin.III,256). The Buddha commented that cloth made from this fibre
was unattractive, rough, cheap and when worn out was used to scour
pots (A.I,246), although he allowed monks and nuns to wear robes made
out of it. Smoking dried cannabis leaves or ingesting the
resin from its flowering tops, has a dramatic effect on the
cardio-vascular and the central nervous systems. In small amounts it
imparts a sense of well-being and relaxation and in higher amounts
causes sensory distortion, an altered sense of time, short-term
memory loss, hallucinations and sometimes toxic psychosis. For
centuries, certain sects of Hindu ascetics have smoked cannabis
believing that they are able to commune with Siva while under its
influence, although taking cannabis for its hallucinogenic effect is
mentioned nowhere in the Tipiṭaka. From the Buddhist perspective,
taking cannabis would be breaking the fifth Precept.
Like
many people before and since, the Buddha recognized the medicinal
value of cannabis and he recommended it as a cure for rheumatism
(aṅgavāta). The patient should be placed, he said, in a
small room filled with steam from a tub of boiling water and cannabis
leaves (bhaṅgodaka), and inhale the steam and rub it on the
limbs (Vin.I,205).
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