Houston Rabbi’s Kosher Certification Extends to … Weed?!

‘Air Mail’ reports on Rabbi Yaakov Cohen’s unique take on having a toke.

photo-1596656933

A Houston rabbi has received some national attention for a, well, unorthodox reason this week.


Digital magazine Air Mail — published by Graydon Carter, the longtime Vanity Fair editor — posted a story about Yaakov Cohen, who owns Whole Kosher Services. Cohen was recently tapped by Los Angeles entrepreneur Roxanne Dennant to certify her products as kosher. So why is this newsworthy?

Dennant makes Fruit Slabs — all-natural, vegan and weed-infused “gelatin” squares. “Some Jews keep Shabbat to the degree that they will not light a lighter,” Dennant, who is Jewish, tells Air Mail’s Michael Kaplan. “They rely on edibles if they want to [indulge] during the Sabbath.” Dennant also mentions that local rabbis were wary of getting into the marijuana market, and couldn’t certify her edibles as kosher.

Enter Cohen, whose six-and-a-half-year-old son died from brain cancer in 2014. Cohen saw firsthand that cannabis helped relieve the unpleasant side effects of the chemotherapy, and believes that the line between medicinal and recreational usage is a little fuzzy. “While you can look at it all as recreational, what about the person with migraines who only gets a good night’s sleep after eating a gummy?” he asks Kaplan. “He should be able to get it in a kosher form.”

Cohen, who has five other children, is a director of Torah Outreach Resource Center of Houston (TORCH), a community organization that boasts a “unique, non-judgmental approach to Jewish education” near Bellaire.

AT TOP: Rabbi Yaakov Cohen, photo courtesy of Whole Kosher Services

Art+Culture
Make-A-Wish CEO Yara Elsayed Guest Says Nonprofit Will Grant 1,000th Wish this Summer

Describe the mission of Make-A-Wish. Make-A-Wish Texas Gulf Coast and Louisiana grants life-changing wishes for local children battling critical illnesses, serving 47 counties in Texas (from Lufkin to Corpus Christi) and the entire state of Louisiana. We are on a quest to bring every eligible child’s wish to life because a wish is an integral part of a child’s treatment journey.

Keep Reading Show less

Bashar and Brigitte Kalai, and Alicia and Lance Smith

ONE OF HOUSTON'S most beloved charitable galas made a comeback, as the newly renamed “Voices for Hope” in support of Avenue 360 Health and Wellness and its nearly 40-year-old Omega House hospice for HIV patients bowed at River Oaks Country Club.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties

Michelle and Jonathan Zadok (photo by Jacob Power)

WITH A COWBOY theme and terrific country band — think big hats and big hearts, said organizers — the Crime Stoppers gala was a huge hit and moving evening.

Keep Reading Show less