Orthodox Jews in New York might eventually be able to celebrate the high holidays — actually high — under doctors’ orders.
With collaboration from a Colorado drug firm and a Jewish group that offers kosher certification, cannabis could be available to Orthodox Jews in the Empire State by next year. The group, the Orthodox Union, could offer certification to start selling legal, edible marijuana with a kosher stamp of approval, The Jewish Daily Forward reported on Monday.
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The marijuana plant itself doesn’t need to be classified as kosher; but for patients to ingest marijuana in food, drinks, or capsules it must be blessed.
Many Orthodox rabbis have accepted the use of marijuana for medical treatment because of health reasons. But most of the Jewish leaders continue to feel strongly about continuing to prohibit the drug for recreational use.
Last February, Dr. Abraham Twerski, who is also a rabbi, cautioned his community about “the increasing problem of alcohol abuse and marijuana smoking among Jewish adolescents.” In a post on the website for the Orthodox Union, he wrote: “It is unfortunate that many people still do not accept that some of our own children are involved.”
The planning in New York comes as states experiment with the regulation of the drug. Almost half of the United States allows medical marijuana, and a handful recreational marijuana. Marijuana use technically is still a crime under federal law.









