{"id":905,"date":"2021-08-04T18:51:05","date_gmt":"2021-08-04T18:51:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/dr-mikuriyas-medicine-project-cbd\/"},"modified":"2021-08-04T18:51:05","modified_gmt":"2021-08-04T18:51:05","slug":"dr-mikuriyas-medicine-project-cbd","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/dr-mikuriyas-medicine-project-cbd\/","title":{"rendered":"Dr. Mikuriya’s Medicine | Project CBD"},"content":{"rendered":"


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This article is adapted from Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana \u2013 Medical, Recreational and Scientific by Martin A. Lee<\/em><\/p>\n

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Tod Mikuriya, c.1960s<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

Tod Hiro Mikuriya was a man on a mission. At a time when the therapeutic use of marijuana had been abandoned in the United States, Mikuriya rediscovered the forgotten medical literature and brought it to the attention of physicians and scientists. The tall, handsome psychiatrist sought to remedy a historical injustice by fighting to restore cannabis to its proper place in the Western pharmacopeia. Almost singlehandedly, he kept the issue alive while very few Americans \u2014 even cannabis smokers \u2014 were aware of marijuana\u2019s medicinal history.<\/p>\n

Born in 1933 and raised on a small farm in eastern Pennsylvania by his German mother and his Japanese father, Mikuriya experienced double-whammy bigotry as a child during World War II<\/span>. Although his father, a convert to Christianity, worked at a defense plant, the Mikuriyas were visited by the FBI<\/span> and threatened with confinement in an internment camp. \u201cMy sister and I were shot at, beaten up, spat upon, called names. The local kids chased us like a pack of dogs,\u201d Mikuriya recalled. \u201cI realized that people could be brainwashed and trained to hate. The same thing has been done with marijuana and marijuana users. I learned to fight back.\u201d<\/p>\n

Mikuriya earned his medical degree from Temple University in Philadelphia. His interest in marijuana was piqued when he perused an unassigned chapter in a pharmacology textbook, which included a brief reference to the curative qualities of cannabis. A voracious reader, he scoured the library at Temple for more information about the herb. During a break between semesters in the summer of 1959, he traveled to Mexico and purchased a small quantity of mota <\/em>from a street dealer. He smoked his first reefer after watching his guide take a few puffs \u201cjust to see that it wasn\u2019t poison,\u201d as Mikuriya later explained.<\/p>\n

Mikuriya in Morocco<\/h2>\n

In August 1966, Mikuriya traveled to North Africa to investigate what proved to be spurious claims of kif-induced madness. (Kif \u2014 pronounced \u201ckeef \u201d\u2014 is a potent form of hashish powder.) Dr. Mikuriya wrote articles for several academic journals on traditional kif-smoking communities in the rugged Rif Mountains of Morocco. \u201cThey had never seen any Westerners there before,\u201d Mikuriya reported. He shared pipefuls of kif with Berber tribesmen, who had resisted previous attempts by the French colonial government to stamp out cannabis smoking. Mikuriya dined with the local chief of police who stated, \u201cMy policy is, if it\u2019s under two kilograms, it\u2019s for their own personal use.\u201d<\/p>\n