Elvy Musikka
Elvy Musikka is an American cannabis rights activist.
Life and activism
Elvy Musikka is one of three surviving patients qualified to enroll in the Compassionate [Investigational New Drug Program], getting medical marijuana from the U.S. federal government.Born in Columbia with congenital cataracts that severely limited her vision, Musikka underwent a series of surgeries both in her home country and in the US. Her condition was compounded by a diagnosis of glaucoma in the 1970s, after which a doctor advised her to try marijuana to lower her eye pressure and preserve what was left of her vision.
In 1988, Musikka was arrested for growing a few marijuana plants in her backyard in Hollywood, Florida. Facing a five-year jail sentence, she stood her ground and was defended by activist attorney Norm Kent at a trial where her doctor and activist Robert Randall, also a glaucoma sufferer, testified. The judge found her not guilty due to medical necessity. Shortly thereafter, Musikka was accepted into the federal IND program, which began to provide her monthly tins containing 300 joints grown at a government farm in Mississippi.
Musikka’s case earned international headlines and she soon was recruited to join Journeys for Justice and the Cannabis Action Network, appearing at pro-pot rallies across the country. She has also traveled internationally, appearing at events in Mexico, Colombia, Amsterdam, Australia, and Scandinavia.
Musikka was active in California campaigning for Proposition 215 in 1996 for medical marijuana patients’ rights, and also campaigned for reform measures in Oregon. She has worked with many of the key players in the marijuana reform movement, like Jack Herer, and attended and spoke at Seattle Hempfest, The High Times Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam, and the Million Marijuana March in New York City. She has won several awards for her activism.
Musikka has regularly appeared on TV news and has been interviewed by countless newspapers. At a time when possessing pot still meant arrest and jail, Musikka was uniquely able, and willing, to be open and honest about her marijuana use, since it was sanctioned by the federal government.
A powerful singer and musician who has always been at home behind a microphone, Musikka wrote and recorded many pro-hemp songs that she performed at rallies across the country and around the world.
Musikka resides in Eugene, Oregon, and served on the board of advisors of Voter Power.