SamIAM™
10-09-2007, 10:54 AM
MAY 2: Taking the hip out hookahs
Dearborn man is on a mission to expose the dengers of smoking the water pipes
October 9, 2007
By JEFF SEIDEL
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Inside the hookah bar, the air is thick with sweet-smelling smoke. Four teenage girls from Taylor and two guys from Dearborn Heights sit in a corner booth, looking at the menu. They are relaxing, munching on bar food, kidding around and taking long drags of flavored smoke through a mouthpiece, unaware of the dangers of this growing trend.
Ahmad Seblini, 21, of Dearborn Heights gets his favorite hookah flavor: grape-lemon tobacco.
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"See, the water filters everything," Seblini says, pointing at a hookah on the table.
But he's dead wrong.
Hookahs are also called water pipes. The tobacco is heated and the smoke passes through a bowl of water or juice to cool it. The smoker draws the smoke through a mouthpiece connected to the pipe by a rubber hose.
Hookahs come in all sizes. One is so small it looks like a crack pipe -"A hookah to go," joked a saleswoman in Dearborn - while other hookahs stand several feet tall and are made of crystal.
They can cost $10 to several hundred. The flavors range from bubblegum to margarita to coffee. It is cheaper to smoke hookah tobacco than cigarettes, which makes it even more attractive to young smokers. It costs about $11 for one flavor, while combinations can cost almost $17 at Sinbad Grand Café in Dearborn.
"Really, it's not bad for you," Seblini says.
Wali Altahif stands a few feet away. He works for the Arab-American and Chaldean Council and is on a mission to educate people about the dangers of hookah smoking. He grimaces in frustration but waits for the right time to correct Seblini.
Olivia Polychroni, 18, of Taylor takes another drag. "There is no nicotine in this," she says.
Altahif can't wait any longer.
"Of course there is," Altahif says. "It's tobacco."
For several years, hookah bars have been popping up across metro Detroit. There are more than 100 establishments in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties where you can buy hookah products, including cafés and stores. Most are in Dearborn, where hookahs are sold everywhere from a kitchen supply center to restaurants. Hookah use is part of the Middle Eastern culture.
But many users don't know the dangers.
The World Health Organization and the American Lung Association recently have released reports listing the dangers of using water pipes, calling it a deadly trend.
Smoking a hookah is worse than smoking a cigarette because more smoke is inhaled over a longer period of time. During a 45-minute session, a water-pipe smoker may inhale as much smoke as consuming the volume of 100 or more cigarettes, according to the World Health Organization.
"Can you get addicted to it?" Polychroni asks.
"It is addictive," Altahif says.
"It is?" she asks, surprised.
"You know how you think the water filters it?" Altahif says, trying to educate without being preachy. "All the water does is cool it down."
Everyone at the table looks surprised.
"Cigarettes make your breath smell and your clothes smell, and it's really nasty," says Stacey Fricke, 18, of Taylor. "This doesn't leave that nasty taste in your mouth."
"How do you feel in the morning?" Altahif asks.
"I drink a lot of water and sleep with a vaporizer," says Fricke, who is studying acting at Wayne State University.
"Actually, your school has done very good research on it," Altahif says. "You'll see it - well informed research. Look it up."
Altahif is trying to be diplomatic, hoping to inform without driving away business and getting kicked out of the café.
"I can't go into details because the owner would get mad but it's really bad for you," Altahif says. "It's worse than cigarettes."
Altahif has visited the café several times. He points to the bottom of the menu. In fine print, it reads: You must be 18 years of age to smoke hookah.
It is a small victory.
But it's something.
Altahif, 35, is a former heavy smoker. His grandparents came to the United States in the 1930s from Yemen. He admits that he has tried the hookah. But after reading about the dangers, he became concerned. Now, educating people about the hookah is his job and his passion.
Because he feels so many people don't know the truth.
"It scared the hell out of me," he said.
Hookah is an ancient form of tobacco use, originating 500 years ago.
Dr. Virginia Hill Rice, a professor at Wayne State, has studied tobacco use in the Arab-American community in Dearborn. Rice said there are two types of smokers who use the hookah.
First, there are people of Middle Eastern descent who have been exposed to water pipes since they were children. Rice found that in a study of 1,671 mostly Arab-American teens in Dearborn, 40% of the 18-year-olds had tried the hookah.
The second group of users is from mainstream America, mostly college kids getting swept up in a fad.
"It is more common among Arab Americans, but it has exploded across campuses across America," Rice said.
Now, it is spreading to high schools and middle schools.
Later this year, Rice will research water-pipe usage among sixth-graders in Dearborn. "This is a family behavior," Rice said. "The study will focus on the child, the family and the community."
Hookah is a cultural tradition, which makes it harder for users to break the habit.
"You aren't just dealing with a physiological addiction," Rice said. "You are dealing with a cultural addiction, too, in a way."
Altahi travels around Michigan, going into cafés and stores that sell hookahs.
He tells store managers they must put the hookah tobacco behind the counter away from children. And he urges them to follow state law and post signs that say no one under 18 can buy hookah tobacco.
"Most store owners are appreciative," Altahif said. "Many people say, ‘I didn't even know that.' But we haven't seen any law enforcement go out and ticket for underage usage. Even law enforcement have limited knowledge about it."
Altahif has met with Dearborn officials to educate them.
"The next step is enforcement," he said. "But when you go into a café, and the whole family unit is at a table with one hookah, and they have underage kids, it's hard to say, they are in violation.
"Let's say the kid is smoking it. What do you do? Do you approach the owner or the parent? Our message to the establishment is, you have a responsibility. We are making progress, but there is a lot of work to do."
Hookah cafés are supposed to have a non-smoking section, but many don't, Altahif says.
It is also unclear whether hookah products are being taxed as a tobacco product.
"We've contacted customs, and they have no idea," Altahif said. "We haven't got a clear answer from the state or federal government. All of this is being imported. It tells you how much people don't know."
Altahif has heard from high school students that marijuana is being mixed with the hookah tobacco. "It is flavored, and it takes away that smell," Atlahif said. "You go home smelling like bananas and watermelon, the oranges. That attracts kids."
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200771008061
Dearborn man is on a mission to expose the dengers of smoking the water pipes
October 9, 2007
By JEFF SEIDEL
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
Inside the hookah bar, the air is thick with sweet-smelling smoke. Four teenage girls from Taylor and two guys from Dearborn Heights sit in a corner booth, looking at the menu. They are relaxing, munching on bar food, kidding around and taking long drags of flavored smoke through a mouthpiece, unaware of the dangers of this growing trend.
Ahmad Seblini, 21, of Dearborn Heights gets his favorite hookah flavor: grape-lemon tobacco.
Advertisement
"See, the water filters everything," Seblini says, pointing at a hookah on the table.
But he's dead wrong.
Hookahs are also called water pipes. The tobacco is heated and the smoke passes through a bowl of water or juice to cool it. The smoker draws the smoke through a mouthpiece connected to the pipe by a rubber hose.
Hookahs come in all sizes. One is so small it looks like a crack pipe -"A hookah to go," joked a saleswoman in Dearborn - while other hookahs stand several feet tall and are made of crystal.
They can cost $10 to several hundred. The flavors range from bubblegum to margarita to coffee. It is cheaper to smoke hookah tobacco than cigarettes, which makes it even more attractive to young smokers. It costs about $11 for one flavor, while combinations can cost almost $17 at Sinbad Grand Café in Dearborn.
"Really, it's not bad for you," Seblini says.
Wali Altahif stands a few feet away. He works for the Arab-American and Chaldean Council and is on a mission to educate people about the dangers of hookah smoking. He grimaces in frustration but waits for the right time to correct Seblini.
Olivia Polychroni, 18, of Taylor takes another drag. "There is no nicotine in this," she says.
Altahif can't wait any longer.
"Of course there is," Altahif says. "It's tobacco."
For several years, hookah bars have been popping up across metro Detroit. There are more than 100 establishments in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties where you can buy hookah products, including cafés and stores. Most are in Dearborn, where hookahs are sold everywhere from a kitchen supply center to restaurants. Hookah use is part of the Middle Eastern culture.
But many users don't know the dangers.
The World Health Organization and the American Lung Association recently have released reports listing the dangers of using water pipes, calling it a deadly trend.
Smoking a hookah is worse than smoking a cigarette because more smoke is inhaled over a longer period of time. During a 45-minute session, a water-pipe smoker may inhale as much smoke as consuming the volume of 100 or more cigarettes, according to the World Health Organization.
"Can you get addicted to it?" Polychroni asks.
"It is addictive," Altahif says.
"It is?" she asks, surprised.
"You know how you think the water filters it?" Altahif says, trying to educate without being preachy. "All the water does is cool it down."
Everyone at the table looks surprised.
"Cigarettes make your breath smell and your clothes smell, and it's really nasty," says Stacey Fricke, 18, of Taylor. "This doesn't leave that nasty taste in your mouth."
"How do you feel in the morning?" Altahif asks.
"I drink a lot of water and sleep with a vaporizer," says Fricke, who is studying acting at Wayne State University.
"Actually, your school has done very good research on it," Altahif says. "You'll see it - well informed research. Look it up."
Altahif is trying to be diplomatic, hoping to inform without driving away business and getting kicked out of the café.
"I can't go into details because the owner would get mad but it's really bad for you," Altahif says. "It's worse than cigarettes."
Altahif has visited the café several times. He points to the bottom of the menu. In fine print, it reads: You must be 18 years of age to smoke hookah.
It is a small victory.
But it's something.
Altahif, 35, is a former heavy smoker. His grandparents came to the United States in the 1930s from Yemen. He admits that he has tried the hookah. But after reading about the dangers, he became concerned. Now, educating people about the hookah is his job and his passion.
Because he feels so many people don't know the truth.
"It scared the hell out of me," he said.
Hookah is an ancient form of tobacco use, originating 500 years ago.
Dr. Virginia Hill Rice, a professor at Wayne State, has studied tobacco use in the Arab-American community in Dearborn. Rice said there are two types of smokers who use the hookah.
First, there are people of Middle Eastern descent who have been exposed to water pipes since they were children. Rice found that in a study of 1,671 mostly Arab-American teens in Dearborn, 40% of the 18-year-olds had tried the hookah.
The second group of users is from mainstream America, mostly college kids getting swept up in a fad.
"It is more common among Arab Americans, but it has exploded across campuses across America," Rice said.
Now, it is spreading to high schools and middle schools.
Later this year, Rice will research water-pipe usage among sixth-graders in Dearborn. "This is a family behavior," Rice said. "The study will focus on the child, the family and the community."
Hookah is a cultural tradition, which makes it harder for users to break the habit.
"You aren't just dealing with a physiological addiction," Rice said. "You are dealing with a cultural addiction, too, in a way."
Altahi travels around Michigan, going into cafés and stores that sell hookahs.
He tells store managers they must put the hookah tobacco behind the counter away from children. And he urges them to follow state law and post signs that say no one under 18 can buy hookah tobacco.
"Most store owners are appreciative," Altahif said. "Many people say, ‘I didn't even know that.' But we haven't seen any law enforcement go out and ticket for underage usage. Even law enforcement have limited knowledge about it."
Altahif has met with Dearborn officials to educate them.
"The next step is enforcement," he said. "But when you go into a café, and the whole family unit is at a table with one hookah, and they have underage kids, it's hard to say, they are in violation.
"Let's say the kid is smoking it. What do you do? Do you approach the owner or the parent? Our message to the establishment is, you have a responsibility. We are making progress, but there is a lot of work to do."
Hookah cafés are supposed to have a non-smoking section, but many don't, Altahif says.
It is also unclear whether hookah products are being taxed as a tobacco product.
"We've contacted customs, and they have no idea," Altahif said. "We haven't got a clear answer from the state or federal government. All of this is being imported. It tells you how much people don't know."
Altahif has heard from high school students that marijuana is being mixed with the hookah tobacco. "It is flavored, and it takes away that smell," Atlahif said. "You go home smelling like bananas and watermelon, the oranges. That attracts kids."
http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200771008061