http://www.dmcityview.com/archives/2007/04apr/04-19-07/people.shtml

We The People


By Sean J. Miller .... sean@dmcityview.com

Still burning

A Des Moines man is fighting for the right to use marijuana in religious services

Carl Olsen is the last member of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church. The church, which blends Christianity with ceremonial marijuana smoking, had thousands of members in the ’70s and early ’80s, Olsen says.

“The members would get together [and] smoke marijuana. It causes an intensification of the spirit. It causes a deeper understanding between people, and when you put that into a group setting it’s magnified,” Olsen says. “Everyone thought we were protected by religious freedom.”

The federal government didn’t see it that way and arrested many of the church’s members, including Olsen, he says. The raids on church property and the jailing of its members caused it to break up.

“You are looking at the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church, it’s me,” says Olsen, 55, during an interview at his home in northeast Des Moines. “There’s no one else claiming to be a member.”

Olsen, who works as a Web site designer, is hoping to change that. In January, he filed a lawsuit against the Polk County Attorney, the Iowa Attorney General and the Drug Enforcement Agency. The suit, called a complaint for injunction, seeks an exemption from the state and federal drug laws so as to allow Olsen to participate in his church’s marijuana smoking ceremony.

Olsen’s church, which is incorporated in Iowa, is not the first to seek an exemption for the religious use of a drug.

The most well-known case involving religious use of drugs is the 1990 U.S. Supreme Court case Employment Division of Oregon v. Smith, says Randall Bezanson, a University of Iowa law professor and author of “How Free Can Religion Be?”

“It had to do with a Native American church that had the religious practice of using peyote.”

Peyote, a hallucinogenic drug, is a controlled substance under state and federal law. The Native American church challenged the law, arguing they should have an exemption to use peyote in religious ceremonies under controlled circumstances.

“It was argued in the Smith case, and the Supreme Court didn’t dispute it, that there had never been any problems with the [church’s] controlled use [of peyote],” he says. “But it never made a difference.”

In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that “the First Amendment doesn’t exempt religion from generally applicable law,” Bezanson says.

Congress reacted quickly to the Supreme Court’s decision. It passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act in 1993, granting a federal exemption for the use of peyote in religious ceremonies. Still, the Smith ruling makes it extremely difficult to make a successful legal argument in favor of using illegal drugs during religious services, Bezanson says. Under the Smith ruling Olsen “has relatively little chance. If there was a law that singled out his church, then he’d probably have a claim.” But a more recent court decision could make it easier for Olsen to get an exemption.

The Supreme Court ruling in the case Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficiente Uniao Do Vegetal, et al., in February 2006 gave Olsen hope, he says. Uniao Do Vegetal is a South American group that blends Christian teachings with Native American rituals. Its members drink hoasca tea, which contains the hallucinogenic dimethyltryptamine, during religious ceremonies.

The Supreme Court ruled 8-0 that the government did not have a compelling interest to bar the sacramental use of the tea — even though, like marijuana and peyote, it is on the government’s list of controlled substances. “It reverses every single ruling,” Olsen says. “Now, I’m filing a suit that says ‘I want that [exemption].’”

Olsen says he hasn’t been able to practice his religion, and hasn’t smoked marijuana since the Supreme Court’s 1990 ruling in the Smith case.

“My case is saying look at my religious involvement in the past and look at it now,” he says. “The reason [the church] doesn’t have any members is because they’re interfering with my religious freedom. How can you belong to something you can’t participate in?”

If Olsen’s suit is successful, he says he would attempt to reestablish his church. “I would do what comes naturally, if I had my liberties,” he says. CV

 

http://www.dmcityview.com/archives/2007/04apr/04-26-07/letters.shtml

Letters To The Editor


Reefer madness

Sean J. Miller’s article in Cityview raises an interesting question [We the People, “Still burning,” April 19]. Why is Carl Olsen of the Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church forbidden by law in the United States of America to use sacramental marijuana in his religious practices?  

Shiva is the Lord of Marijuana for many practitioners of the Hindu religion. Rastafarians consider Cannabis Sativa, the Tree of Life... the sacred plant that has manifested as the holiest of holy signs marking the end of tribulations and the beginning of the City of God here on earth.

Marijuana and man have been together in many ways for a very long time. Columbus sailed to the New World using cannabis sails called canvas. The seeds have been used as a source of nutritious food for thousands of years. Marijuana was a valued medicine for thousands of years. Hindus and Buddhists have considered marijuana extremely sacred for thousands of years.

So who exactly are these people in America who have a bug up their behinds when it comes to marijuana?

My advice to Olsen is to “cultivate that which can not be taken.” For whatever reasons, America has banned the growing and smoking of marijuana, but it is not illegal to consider and believe that marijuana is the holiest and greatest plant in the world.

Jim Hodapp
Elmhurst, Ill.

Prohibition era

Carl, I read the article in Cityview [We the People, “Still burning,” April 19]. Looks great! We’re still living in the days of Prohibition. It’s funny that alcohol is legal. They can dish it out, but they sure can’t take it. Iowa won’t let me get a license or register my vehicles because of child support debts. (My daughter requires expensive operations at $5,000 a pop). It’s hard to keep up. Texas garnishes my wages automatically no matter where I live. Iowa chooses not to work with me and acts like a hysterical child.

It’s sad. I can’t seem to make my ‘tech home base” here... there’s also discrimination based on sexual orientation. It never ends. I do great work, so why the harassment? I guess I can be a fry cook in Iowa while I am here.

Benjamin Lindelof
West Des Moines

Because God wants it that way

One reason to re-legalize cannabis (kaneh bosm/marijuana) that doesn’t get mentioned [We the People, “Still burning,” April 19], is because it would be biblically and spiritually correct since Christ God Our Father (The Ecologician) indicates He created all the seed-bearing plants, saying they are all good, on literally the very first page (see Genesis 1:11-12 and 29-30). The only biblical restriction placed on cannabis is that it is to be accepted with thankfulness (see 1 Timothy 4:1-5).

Stan White
Dillon, Colo.

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