snuff and tobacco jewish law

note the brotherhood that seems to have existed between jews and muslims. Im not saying it doesnt exists in some places today
http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/14416-tobacco#anchor3

Yes, I loved that detail of Jews, prohibited from smoking on the Sabbath, visiting “Mohammedan neighbors for the sake of the tobacco smoke in their houses.”  Glad to see that snuff could be used at any time … :slight_smile:

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Buzz Bubble gum was made for the Jewish Holiday .Well at lease that was my understanding.

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the rabbi and his friend are enjoying some snuff


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Roderick has mentioned a few times he has a few Jewish customers that LOVE Toque Cheese and Bacon. 

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the question is if the cheese and bacon is kosher.

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Cheese and Bacon is fine, if you bury the tin when it’s empty.

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I like this name of the pipe  “For example, Shivhei Habesht, [3] the legendary biography of the Baal Shem Tov, refers to the famous lulke [4] which the founder of the hasidic movement used to smoke.”

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Very interesting, I’ll have to try that Buzz Bubblegum, even if it’s on Saturday!

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@basement_shaman Why do you think that “Buzz” was made for a Jewish holiday ? It says on the tin “Smelling Tobacco” in Hebrew, but there is no connection between bubble gum and any Jewish holidays. What I have noticed is that frum ( religious ) Israelis like bubble gum “Bazooka” flavor, but I can’t stand it.

Here there is lots of cheap, Takbik ( snuff ). Comes in little plastic containers mostly super sweet flavors like banana and bazooka. Jerusalemites like more of the medicated snuffs.


But this is only Charadim ( Ultra-Ortodox, like me ). The non-religious have no idea what it is. I had a friend yesterday ask me if non-jews even know what Tabik ( snuff ) is.


There is a song that we sing after the holiday of Simchas Torah, that talks about who we are, one of the lines loosely translates to “We are snuff users”.

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@dasr

That should be the “Rebbe” not “Rabbi”

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Is that tin of Buzz especially labeled for sale in Israel? @yisraeldov, thats interesting about Tabik. Is it used by many in Israel? Or is it something only old men do? Are its origins European? Snuff seems to be used by many different cultures, and it has different origins in different places. For example, I have often wondered if the Indian snuff market was started by the British, or if has indigenous history. Fascinating subject! That line from the song, “We are snuff users”, is that an ancient Hebrew song? Very interesting.

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@mrmanos The song is a Yiddish song, I think it’s origin is from Belarus, but it could have been later in Tiberius.

What I have noticed is that the biggest snuff users are Chasidim, and more the ones of Russian origin. I know there are discussions about smelling snuff in jewish law books from hundreds of years ago, so it is defiantly not a modern thing.

Like I said before, the non-religious don’t know what snuff is. I think the jews from more Eastern backgrounds use snuff in place of cigarettes on shabbos, but I think that might be something they picked up from Askanazim. 

I have never heard of women using it, but that doesn’t mean they don’t. I think that most people who use snuff use it once a week on shabbos, in shul ( synagogue ). I have a few communal tins that I bring. It defiantly has a religious significance. 

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@yisraeldov That is what Dave Anderson told me.

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I know its off point though I have to say Rabbi’s look so cool, when ever I see Rabbi’s you just know they are wise men that have established themselves. I dont know what all the technical or official terms are though I think its the hat, beard and robe that give me this impression.
What does the two pony tails they have on either side of the head represent? Sorry about my lack of a better word

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@Aamon, they aren’t ponny tails. Search google for “Peyos”. I guess you would think I look “so cool” as well, I’m no Rabbi and definitely not a Rebbe, but our whole community wears similar hats and long coats ( not a robe ), and beards. 

@basement_shaman , There are 3 major Jewish holidays, many fast days, and many minor holidays, so “the jewish holiday,” is rather meaningless. 

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@yisraeldov I love Judaism and would probably convert if I wasn’t so terrible at learning a second language. The esoteric side of Judaism really fascinates me I probably have around 30 books regarding the Kabbalah. I love the complexity and sheer beauty of all of it.

Thank you for the information :slight_smile:

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I can confirm that BUZZ was made specifically for Jewish holidays. But there is more to the story.

My wife used to be a flight attendant on private jets.

Back in 2011 she did a trip for one of the head rabbis down in NYC, plus 12 or so of his peeps. They were on some sort of charity mission to Tel Aviv then on to Tbilisi in Georgia.

During the flight she got talking to one of the guys who runs a very successful Jewish news website (over a million subscribers). He had some snuff which, by remarkable coincidence, he had bought from mrsnuff.com. Of course my wife was like, no kidding that’s my husband’s website! They both got all excited and he suggested making a private label snuff specifically for the Jewish community. According to him, bubblegum flavor is popular in Israel.

So Buzz was born. 

You will notice if you look carefully that there is a little airplane pulling the BUZZ banner. That is a nod to the fact that the idea was hatched on a private jet halfway across the atlantic.

Now you know.

Dave

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@MrSnuff

I can confirm that bubblegum flavor, Bazooka, is popular here. But I can’t stand it, even when someone opens a tin ( actually Israel snuff comes in those plastic tins ), it stinks up the whole place, IMO.

I think you mean it was made specifically for Israeli Jewish Community, not necessarily for Jewish holidays.

The problem you are going to have is that most of the people who would buy the Bazooka snuff, don’t have internet access, so they can’t access your website. I’m curious how many of the people who bought it were your initial target audience. 

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@yisraeldov

you are right of course, it was initially made for the Jewish community, with, in particular, the high holidays in mind. My apologies, I should have been more specific given your response above.

I am not sure how much of it goes to the initial target audience. It appears, in the USA at least, the the large NY community prefers highly mentholated snuffs such as JH Wilson Medicated 99 and Hedges. We see large orders for those come through right before Yom Kippur, Rosh Hashanna, Purim, Passover and Simchat Torah. We have several rabbis who buy in bulk quantities for their congregation.

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