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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Havana cigar festival draws puff daddies the world over


An unidentified woman smokes a cigar during the annual Havana cigar festival in Havana, Cuba, on Friday. Cigar fanatics  travel from around the world to experience the supreme stogie at its source. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Vanessa Arrington Associated Press

HAVANA – Passion comes in many forms. For hundreds of visitors to Cuba this month, it’s brown, rolled and good with brandy.

Cigar fanatics, deterred by neither money nor distance, travel across the world and pay thousands of dollars to experience the supreme stogie at its source. Those making the pilgrimage to Cuba for the annual Havana cigar festival say the smokes bring them pleasure, peace and, often, big bucks.

“This is my life,” said Jimmy Ng, a Malaysian who left the travel business to become a cigar merchant some 10 years ago.

Ng, 46, spends most waking moments devoted to his new trade. He owns hundreds of books on cigars, and smokes from five to seven stogies a day.

At his La Casa Cubana in Singapore, he only sells Cuban cigars – “I’m a purist,” he says – to a clientele that is 75 percent foreign.

Ng started smoking cigars when he was in his 20s, for “status” and to attract women. “But after five or six years, you get the right crowd, and you learn to really appreciate cigars from the brothers, the other aficionados,” he said.

Frenchman Guillaume Boudin says cigars helped him quit smoking cigarettes. He considers it a form of meditation.

“I know if I’m going to smoke a cigar, I have to take time to do it properly,” he said. “It really clears my mind, and lets me come up with ideas and answers to problems.”

The aficionados in Havana scoff at those who pay large sums of money for cigars but don’t know how to smoke them.

“It should not be smoked like a cigarette, and it should not be smoked in a disco,” said Alvin Leung, a chef in Hong Kong. “It’s just like at a fine restaurant: You shouldn’t eat something as if it were a hamburger, or drink a fine glass of wine as if it were Coke.”

Leung, who sports long hair and a T-shirt of the Latin American revolutionary icon Ernesto “Che” Guevara, said real connoisseurs need to come to Cuba to learn about the history of cigars.

Participants get to visit cigar factories and plantations and meet distributors at trade fairs and seminars. Multimillionaire businessmen and mysterious figures who decline to reveal their full names mingle with publishers, musicians and engineers.

The Cuban ballet and British actor Joseph Fiennes opened the festival on Monday, and some 850 people attended Friday night’s closing dinner.