(Photo by Wes Tank)

Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service invites community members to submit opinion pieces of 500-800 words on topics of interest to central city Milwaukee. To send a submission for consideration, please email info@milwaukeenns.org. The views expressed are solely those of the authors.

February is Black History Month, a time to reflect on the many great accomplishments and contributions by African Americans throughout the centuries. As we celebrate this rich history, we also must acknowledge the many tragic and oppressive aspects of our history with America, including the oppressive 400+ year relationship between the Black community and the tobacco industry.  

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Though commercial tobacco has evolved over the years, from regular cigarettes to menthols, flavored cigars to e-cigs and vapes, there is one constant — the deliberate industry targeting of Black communities. What began with tobacco being introduced to West Africa by Europeans, then cultivated in Sierra Leone, and used to suppress hunger in the Congo by the 1600s, devolved into tobacco and tobacco pipes being established as one of the main goods used to buy enslaved people on the African coast by the mid-17th century. 

The slave trade brought tobacco to North American colonies, mainly Virginia, to supply the English market. Slaves in North America now cultivated the very crop that had enslaved them. Not until the Emancipation Proclamation did Blacks in America cease to cultivate tobacco fields as slaves. Still the tobacco industry refused to release its hold on free Black labor. They now used the deception of sharecropping, Jim Crow, the chain gangs, incarceration and generations of Black Americans to cultivate their tobacco fields. 

Ayana Smith is a mother, wife, student and longtime resident of Milwaukee.

Sadly, the multibillion tobacco industry of today has been built on the backs of the enslaved and their lineage. This success has been achieved to the detriment of Black health and through the egregious behaviors that are so deeply entrenched in the tobacco industry’s DNA. 

The cancerous footprint is still prevalent in the United States, including here in Wisconsin. In Black neighborhoods, tobacco marketing occurs at a rate 10 times higher than found in other communities. The tobacco industry spends an estimated $161.2 million dollars to market its deadly products in our state. Many of their ads feature menthol and are targeted towards Black communities.

Menthols are the most heavily marketed and sold product in communities of color.

Menthols and Black smokers

Their targeting tactics are working. The adult smoking rate for Black people living in Wisconsin is 17%, much higher than the rate for white people in the state (12%). In the 1950s, less than 10% of Black smokers in the U.S. used menthol cigarettes; today in Wisconsin the number has grown to 85%, compared to 41% of White Smokers.

Menthol’s influence is not limited by Black communities in the state, as forty-three percent of adults in Wisconsin who smoke currently smoke menthols. 

There is some light at the end of the tunnel. Efforts to raise awareness about the tobacco industry targeting, especially with menthol, continue to grow. Exhibitions like “Same Game Different Smokers,” which explores the troubled history between African Americans and tobacco, and the film series “Black Lives/Black Lungs,” have motivated thousands to learn this history and take action so it doesn’t keep repeating itself. 

You have the power to make a change. Join or support Wisconsin African American Tobacco Prevention Network.  Speak out against tobacco industry injustices. Help those who are victims of targeting quit by urging them to utilize the Wisconsin Tobacco Quit-Line at 1-800-QUIT-NOW, or by texting “VAPEFREE” to 873373. Youth can become involved by joining FACT, Wisconsin’s youth-driven tobacco prevention movement. 

Take action, speak out. Your breath matters.


Ayana Smith is a mother, wife, student and longtime resident of Milwaukee. She is currently working toward her goal of establishing a nonprofit organization, Proteges of Milwaukee.

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Raised in a South Side neighborhood where he still lives, Edgar Mendez is the managing editor of the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service. Mendez is a proud graduate of UW-Milwaukee, where he double majored in journalism and sociology, and of Marquette University, where he earned a master’s degree in communication. He won a 2018 Regional Edward R. Murrow Award and 2014, 2017, and 2018 Milwaukee Press Club Awards for his reporting on taverns, marijuana law enforcement, and lead in water service lines. In 2008, he won a Society of Professional Journalists’ regional award for columns dealing with issues such as poverty, homelessness and racism. His writing has been published by the Associated Press, Reuters, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and other media. He has also co-authored three articles published in scholarly journals.