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I was quite shocked to read this article. How sad!

BBC news story [news.bbc.co.uk]

Quote
Kids celebrate smoky saint's day

By Suzanne Bush
BBC, in Capena

Simone is nine years old. On Saturday, in between playing football, sitting down for a big family lunch and watching a spot of television, he spent the day smoking, like almost all his friends and the rest of the town.
He is seven years too young to buy the cigarettes himself, but that is okay.
"My parents bought me some," he explains.

Nearby one mother is encouraging Agostino, her two-year-old, to take his first puff, but he does not seem very convinced.

Welcome to Capena, a small medieval town to the north of Rome which - on this day in the calendar - the anti-smoking message does not appear to have reached yet.

Every year, like many towns and villages across Italy, they light a bonfire as part of the festival of St Anthony, which is also celebrated with the blessing of animals to bring prosperity in the year ahead.

But unlike other places, once the fire is burning in the square, the town's inhabitants use it to light cigarettes.

The Italian Government may have fallen into line with many other countries around the world this month, introducing a tough new law banning smoking in bars and restaurants, but that did not stop the people of Capena.

“ I like smoking. I help out with mass, then I come here and my parents think it is okay because it is only one day a year ”
Tancredi, 10
As in previous years, the most eager participants were children, some as young as six.
Even the official brochure about the town talks of how characteristic it is to see everyone, "even the children" smoking throughout the day.

Rosalba has been coming from her village nearby for 11 years to take part and has photos of her children, Giulia,9, and Lorenzo,6, posing with cigarettes since they were one.

"They don't smoke properly," Rosalba explains.

"Then again, Giulia did just try inhaling and started choking," she laughs.

"But I'm not worried about them taking up smoking."

Origins

Nine-year-old Emanuel proudly announces that he doesn't smoke for St Anthony because it is bad for him.

The rest of his friends though, are very much into the tradition.

“ I am convinced that when children associate the souvenir of their first cigarette with having fun... these memories can lead a kid to repeat that behaviour ”
Raffaele Luise,
Italian Cancer League
"I like smoking," says 10-year-old Tancredi.
"I help out with mass, then I come here and my parents think it is okay because it is only one day a year."

It all began harmlessly enough in Capena, hundreds of years ago, with the smoking of rosemary.

Some remain faithful to that custom, but the majority now opt for cigarettes instead.

All this puts the Mayor of Capena, Riccardo Benigni, in a rather awkward position, as he is also the local doctor.

"It is not a good thing. This I can say as a doctor and a non-smoker. It is not that I like this new tradition. Of course, it's not a good example for anyone, but the origins were completely different."

Dangerous message

He says efforts are made to discourage children from taking part.

This year, for the first time, there was a sign by the fire, suggesting parents give their children sweets instead.

Indeed, some younger children were puffing away on candy cigarettes, but most just ignored the sign.

Possibly the most amazing aspect of the event is the fact that it appears to have passed unnoticed for all these years.

Even anti-smoking organisations have been blissfully unaware of it, but Raffaele Luise of the Italian Cancer League says it passes on a dangerous message to children.

"I am convinced that when children associate the souvenir of their first cigarette with having fun in a happy situation with the whole village and all their mates, these memories can lead a kid to repeat that behaviour."

Back in Capena, Simone and his friends finish their cigarettes and go off to play, but they will probably be back later.

It is only one day a year after all.

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Utterly irresponsible!!!

Quote
Indeed, some younger children were puffing away on candy cigarettes, but most just ignored the sign.


Do any of the other American baby boomers here remember the sleek see through plastic cigarette cases with chocolate cigarettes inside them that candy stores used to sell in the 1960's?

Though I was once a smoker, I can say that those chocolate cigarettes were far superior to tobacco...but then again--they do have one thing in common: they are BOTH addictive!! *eek*

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Originally Posted by Alice
Do any of the other American baby boomers here remember the sleek see through plastic cigarette cases with chocolate cigarettes inside them that candy stores used to sell in the 1960's?

I am slightly less than a baby boomer (I'll be 40 next month), but I do remember candy cigarettes. I also remember being at McDonald's and pretending that a french fries with ketchup on the tip were cigarettes. Back then, it seemed somewhat glamorous, but now I would recoil in horror if I saw my kids doing it. I guess the propoganda campaign against smoking has been successful.

Elizabeth

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The candy cigs available in my youth were bubble gum, not chocolate.

I took up smoking at about 14. I quit at 38. 40 is just around the corner. 15 months of not smoking, and I still crave them.

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I smoked for 20 years, but my father's death from lung cancer was enough to get me to quit in 1986. I have never wanted another one since. I do remember the candy cigarettes but they were not chocolate. They came in a box and were a hard white candy with red on one end to simulate fire. They really didn't taste that good. I probably would have liked the chocolate ones.

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The candy cigarettes were around when I was a kid. They were a semi-hard sugary stick and I used them to pretend to be smoking, but I was not very taken with their taste.

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They weren't just an American 'thing' either.

I well remember getting "sweet cigarettes" that actually tasted of chalk - but then we were imitating our elders so thought the taste was wonderful .

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They still make those candy cigarettes, the white ones kind of chalky-like. Just in case you're wondering.

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Originally Posted by Orthodox Pyrohy
They still make those candy cigarettes, the white ones kind of chalky-like.

Good description, Matt. They had about the consistency and taste of a styptic pencil as I recollect.

Many years,

Neil


"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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Gracious - styptic pencil

no don't even think about a nasty comment to me biggrin

Another Blast from the Past biggrin

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Originally Posted by Our Lady's slave
Another Blast from the Past biggrin

Blast from the past, my foot, I still have and use one biggrin


"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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I kind of remember those chalky ones, but no one here ever encountered those chocolate ones?!? grin

Please don't tell me that they were a New York City exclusive!!! wink

LOL! laugh

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I have had the chalky ones and the chocolate ones that had real paper around them. I dont think I have seen them for some time now.

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Hmm, styptic pencils, 8 tracks. It must be nearly time for the medication cart to come by at the old folk's home. Make mine a double chocolate. grin

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only a double ?

biggrin biggrin biggrin

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