Keep Tobacco Sacred

Understanding the profound difference between our sacred plant traditions and the commercial tobacco industry — and why it matters for our community's health and healing.

“Traditional cultural values and practices can successfully support prevention efforts and nicotine addiction treatment.”

– American Lung Assocition (2024). Addressing Commercial Tobacco Use in Indigenous Communities: Protective Factors and Resilience

Understanding the Difference

Sacred vs. Commercial Tobacco

Not all tobacco is the same. Our ancestors cultivated a sacred relationship with the tobacco plant long before commercial interests transformed it into an addictive product. Knowing this distinction is the first step toward healing.

Sacred Tobacco

Traditional & Ceremonial Use

  • Hand-prepared for prayer, healing, and ceremony — used with deep intention and respect
  • Not linked to addiction or negative health effects in ceremonial or medicinal contexts
  • Grown and prepared without chemical additives or industrial processing
  • Connects community members to ancestral traditions and spiritual identity
  • Part of a holistic approach to health that honors cultural, spiritual, and physical wellbeing
  • Passed down through generations as a living cultural practice — not a consumer product

VS.

Commercial Tobacco

Industrial & Addictive Products

  • Engineered with thousands of addictive chemicals designed to create dependency
  • Directly linked to cancer, heart disease, respiratory illness, and premature death
  • Mass-produced by corporations that have historically targeted vulnerable communities
  • Marketed to exploit Indigenous communities — smoking in tribal communities often starts around age 14
  • Contributes to environmental degradation through cigarette waste on tribal lands
  • Creates addiction cycles that interfere with individual, family, and community wellness
Reclaim & Reconnect

Reclaim & Reconnect

Cultural

Keeping our culture alive is a form of resilience. 1978 marked the year when our people gained the freedom to openly practice sacred traditions. It is crucial that we continue the practices for which our ancestors faced punishment — honoring their sacrifice by living the culture they protected.

Spiritual

Reconnecting to our spiritual roots and traditions is healing. This work heals our generational trauma and helps support our future generations. We should never be ashamed to want to learn more or for practicing our traditions — spirituality is medicine.

Physical

Our ancestors lived through centuries of oppression. This historical trauma shows through our bodies, minds, spirits, communities, and well-being. Reconnecting with our traditional values is empowering and can lead to profound personal and community wellness.

How the Tobacco Industry Has Harmed Us

Effects of the Tobacco Industry

Significant Health Risks

Commercial tobacco products are engineered with thousands of chemical additives that cause cancer, heart disease, stroke, and respiratory illness - disproportionately impacting Indigenous communities.

Environmental Degradation

Cigarette waste is one of the most prevalent forms of litter on tribal lands. Filters contain toxic chemicals that leach into soil and waterways, harming the ecosystems our communities depend on.

Exploitation of Vulnerable Populations

The tobacco industry has a long history of deliberately targeting Native American communities through advertising and product placement — knowing that economic hardship increases vulnerability to addiction.

Interference with Public Health

Tobacco corporations have spent billions lobbying against public health policies, making it harder for communities to access cessation resources and protective legislation.

How Does This Directly Affect Us?

The loss of tradition and culture - driven by colonization and a hostile federal government - has created severe health impacts in our community. Sacred relationships with plants like tobacco were severed and replaced by addictive commercial products.

In recent years, many communities have set out to educate tribal members, young and old, on the traditional use of this plant in an effort to restore and revitalize those ancient connections destroyed by colonization.

This is not just a health issue - it is an act of cultural reclamation and resistance.

Age 14

The average age at which smoking begins in tribal communities - making early education and cultural connection essential.

For more information on the difference between commercial and sacred tobacco visit: truthinitiative.org

Reclaim and Reconnect

Our path forward is rooted in who we have always been. By returning to our cultural values, spiritual traditions, and physical wellness practices, we reclaim the health and wholeness that colonization sought to take from us.

Culture as Medicine

Culture as Medicine

Participating in cultural practices, ceremonies, and language revitalization actively protects against commercial tobacco use by strengthening identity and community belonging.

Grounding

Spiritual Grounding

Reconnecting with sacred traditions provides a framework for understanding the proper, respectful relationship with tobacco — distinct from commercial addiction.

Strength

Community Strength

Together, we are more resilient. Community events, education programs, and peer support build the collective strength to address commercial tobacco's impact on our lands and lives.

Monthly newsletter

Stay Connected to Your Community's Health Journey

Each month, the TRIHCI Tobacco Cessation Program shares resources, community stories, upcoming events, and guidance rooted in both traditional wisdom and modern health practices.

Leaf

Cultural Education

Learn about sacred tobacco traditions and their role in healing

Calendar

Community Events

Learn about sacred tobacco traditions and their role in healing

Heart

Wellness Resources

Learn about sacred tobacco traditions and their role in healing

Community

Community Stories

Learn about sacred tobacco traditions and their role in healing

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