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Bidis: The unfiltered American fad

They might be the poor man's smoke in India, but on American soil, bidis are exotica, writes Kanupriya Vashisht.

Updated on: Apr 22, 2005, 13:28:00 IST
PTI | By , Phoenix (Arizona)
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Guess what's common between India's poorest and America's hippest?

HT Image
HT Image

Bidis.

They might be the poor man's smoke in India, but on American soil, like most things Indian, bidis are exotica. These hand-rolled, unfiltered, cheap alternatives to cigarettes are a rage among American teenagers.

Marketing gimmick

The only difference, in America they are laced with sweet flavours, like vanilla, licorice, strawberry, chocolate, mango, or cherry. A clever marketing gimmick to mask the poor quality of the tobacco, and make the unfiltered Indian pungency more palatable.

Bidis look suspiciously like marijuana joints, and come wrapped in colourful, cone-shaped packages adorned with Hindu gods and symbols.

Bidi's exotic appeal

What is a bidi
 

Bidis are hand-rolled in a leaf and tied with strings.

 
 

Though bidis contain less tobacco than regular cigarettes, they have higher levels of nicotine, tar and carbon monoxide.

 
  Because they are thinner than regular cigarettes, they require about 3 times as many puffs per cigarette. They are also unfiltered.  
  Bidis appear to have all of the same health risks of regular cigarettes.  
  Bidi smokers have nearly 4 times the risk of chronic bronchitis than nonsmokers.  
Keeping Your Kids from Starting
  Concerned parents may have more influence over whether their children take up smoking than they think they do.

 
Tips To Parents
  Talk to your kids about the risks of tobacco use.  
  Explain emphysema, heart attacks, poor circulation, chronic bronchitis and cancer are caused by it.  
  Start talking about tobacco use when your children are 5 or 6 years.  
  Talk about ways to refuse tobacco.  
  Discuss with kids the false glamorization of tobacco.  
Concerned website
American Cancer Society

That's part of the exotic appeal for many US teens. But the flavours, which never caught on in India, are the main attraction for Americans.Nash Cook was 17 and stoned when he first tried a strawberry bidi at an Ozzy Osbourne concert.



The bidi, Cook says, had a dizzying impact on his senses. He has tried different flavours and brands ever since.

Popular among hippies and teens

According to Cook, "Goth kids who wear a lot of black, do a lot of a terrible music, and talk about how terrible life is, smoke bidis." Bidis are also very popular among hippie crowds, 'curbies' and youth who enjoy alternative or trance music.

Women and effeminate men love bidis too because of the delicate way they dangle between tattooed fingers and pierced lips.

Mindy Lee started smoking bidis when she was 16. They invariably gave her a headache, but she got hooked because her girlfriends thought they were cool and trendy.

"If you are 18, have a head on your shoulders and party, you know about bidis," Lee says. For her bidis are the closest legal things to smoking weed.

Adults like it too

However, teenagers are not the only ones hooked to these leafy rolls of Indian tobacco. Some adults are intrigued too. Douglas McDaniel, a Sedona-based writer with 10 books to his credit, was in his mid-thirties when he started smoking bidis. "I was having a late childhood," he says.

Bidi was a habit he picked up after his divorce. And he kept on with it because it was something he could do in bars.

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