The Story Of Tobacco: 7 Interesting Facts About This Addictive Substance On No-Tobacco Day

Notoriously hard to quit, the world shares this vice—with China leading the charge and India close on its heels

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Notoriously hard to quit, the world shares this vice—with China leading the charge and India close on its heels

Tobacco isn’t good for us—that’s hardly news. But this plant that dates back to the Pleistocene Era 2.5 million years ago and its corresponding vice has survived all manner of laws and sermons—In the 1700s, when smoking took European society by storm, in Turkey you could be beheaded for smoking in public. In Russia and Austria you could be fined, jailed, or tortured, the Catholic Church even tried limiting its use by proclaiming its everyday consumption as sin. The habit is so widespread that World Health Organization in 1987 instituted this day every year to warn the public about the terrible health effects of tobacco and inviting them to join the fight against this daily epidemic.

1. For those who love-loathe the habit, cheer up. If your yearly resolution to kick the habit is not been going as planned, repeat this mantra—smokers can and do quit smoking. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, since 2002 there have been more former smokers than current smokers.

2. Native Americas, who are said to have been using tobacco as early as 1 B.C., used it for religious, medicinal, and hallucinogenic purposes. They believed that it was a gift from the Great Spirit. The myth has it that in ancient times, when the land was barren and people on earth were starving, the Great Spirit sent a woman to save humanity. She travelled the world and everywhere her right hand touched the soil, potatoes grew. All the places, her left hand touched the soil, there sprang corn. Finally, when the world was lush and fruitful—her work done, she sat down and at last rested. When she rose, there grew tobacco.

3. On 12 Oct, 1492, Christopher Columbus and his landing party set foot on a Caribbean island no European had seen before. The indigenous Arawaks greeted him with gifts of fruit, wooden spears and tobacco—they didn’t know, but the invader had chri...

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