I was told (correctly) that cannabis in the Dominican Republic is illegal. Minutes later, after a conversation that felt less like a transaction and more like a mutual acknowledgment, I was holding a joint that was not quite a joint like I’ve ever seen before, rolled not in thin white paper but in cigar leaf paper, brown, the kind used to roll habanos, as if the culture itself had decided that if this plant was to be smoked, it would be smoked on local terms.
That Dominican joint was offered to me almost immediately after leaving the airport in Punta Cana. It happened so fast that I declined the first offer, more out of surprise than caution.
I have no idea if this is how Dominicans always do it. So far, I’ve been unable and unwilling to ask anyone who might settle the question.
The paper burned slowly, as expected, and with every draw it reminded me that tobacco had been here long before cannabis learned how to ask for shelter. In the Caribbean, tobacco is an institution. Entire cities were shaped around drying leaves, around thousands, maybe millions, of hands trained to roll before they ever learned to read. Cannabis arrived later, without ceremony, and wisely chose not to challenge any of this. It slipped into the existing choreography of smoke, a quiet guest who knows better than to rearrange the furniture.
In places like this, where cigars are not symbols but facts of life, cannabis borrows the ritual. It folds itself into what already exists. That’s why there are no flashy rolling papers, no engineered cones, no talk of strains or percentages. Just leaves, paper, and the unspoken agreement that whatever you smoke will be good enough—or better.
A Dominican cigar leaf comes from different strains of Nicotiana tabacum. The cigar paper changes the experience in quiet but decisive ways. It slows combustion, flattens flavors, and introduces a welcome note of nicotine into the mix. All ways of smoking, after all, are shaped by history and by technology.
Tobacco was once the great extractive obsession of empires, carried from the Caribbean to Europe and back again as capital and addiction. Cannabis, now globalized and branded elsewhere, returns stripped of slogans, wrapped in the leaf of its predecessor, as if acknowledging a lineage of smoke that predates both prohibition and legalization.
Tobacco was here before European law arrived.
It did not come to La Española as a commodity; it is native to that region.
Long before Europeans named the island shared today by the Dominican Republic and Haiti, the Taíno people cultivated and smoked tobacco in ritual contexts, sometimes inhaled through nasal pipes, sometimes rolled into crude forms for ceremonial use. When Christopher Columbus reached these lands in 1492, he encountered tobacco not as a vice, but as a social, medicinal, and spiritual practice. The plant was already embedded in daily life.
What Europeans did was not introduce tobacco, but reorganize it.
By the early sixteenth century, Spanish colonization had turned La Española into a logistical hub of the Atlantic world. Tobacco became one of the few crops that could thrive outside rigid imperial control. Unlike sugar, it required less capital, less land, and less infrastructure. It could be grown by small producers, dried locally, and moved quietly.
Throughout much of the 1600s, tobacco from the northern coast of La Española circulated through contraband networks linking Spanish settlers, enslaved Africans, remaining Indigenous communities, and foreign merchants—especially Dutch and Portuguese. Tobacco taught the island early that smoke could move faster than law.
And What’s the Deal Now?
The Dominican Republic today is one of the world’s leading producers of premium cigars, exporting over a billion dollars’ worth annually to more than a hundred countries. Tobacco remains a national industry, rivaled only by gold and tourism. Factories, fields, and free-trade zones coexist with family operations and informal knowledge passed hand to hand.
If you pay attention, the way a society smokes often tells you more about its relationship to power than anything written in its laws.
It was only afterward, when the taste of cigar paper still lingered like a sentence that refused to end, that I understood the quiet irony of those Dominican guys—the Polanco Brothers—taking over the Nat Sherman cigar house in New York City, a shrine to old money and North Atlantic tobacco mythology, and why they called it destiny rather than a business move.
Only then did the cigar-paper joint make full sense as a small signal of a much larger continuity that lets cannabis borrow tobacco’s rituals in Santo Domingo or Port-au-Prince, and lets Dominican hands redefine luxury cigar culture in Manhattan.
The distance between periphery and center collapses.
Weed and tobacco blur.
All that vanished in smoke.













