Scientologists Gear Up for United
Nations Day Against Drugs
June 16, 2010
Churches of Scientology around the world will host community drug
education activities June 26 in recognition of the United Nations International Day Against Illicit Drugs and
Trafficking. Steadfast drug education advocates for more
than 20 years, Scientology Churches are inviting local police,
officials, community leaders, parents and teens to toughen up their
neighborhoods with youth-oriented drug education activities for
both young and old.
“To bring about real demand reduction, people need facts they
know are real and that’s been missing from most drug education
programs,” says Rev. Bob Adams, spokesperson for the Church of
Scientology International and a former National Football League
player. “To resist a drug pusher, a peer or anyone else
encouraging drug abuse, one’s knowledge about drugs has to be
certain and firm.”
The Church’s community drug education programs have been
conducted at a grass-roots level by both Scientologists and
non-Scientologists since the mid-1980s. Adams says toughening
up neighborhoods against drugs benefits everybody. “Today we
are all affected by drug abuse in some way or another and it’s not
just illegal street drugs and youth. Prescription drug abuse
is also a huge problem. All of it directly relates to health,
crime, and safety, and things people don’t immediately think of in
relation to drugs, like success and economics. The truth is
that today, if you’re not well educated about drugs, you are at
risk.”
In addition to its anti-drug advocacy and community activation,
the Church sponsors the Foundation for a Drug-Free World, the
international provider of The Truth About Drugs education
materials available in 20 languages. Based on authoritative
surveys and studies, The Truth About Drugs series includes
abundant first hand testimonials in a youth-friendly format: 13
pocket-sized booklets and short videos covering the most commonly
abused drugs, a new documentary based on interviews with over 200 former
addicts, which can be seen and ordered free, at www.drugfreeworld.org.
“The Truth About Drugs Documentary and booklets are
upfront, poignant and real,” says Adams. “They empower youth,
parents, educators, law enforcement, social workers and anyone else
concerned because it’s not about scare tactics—it’s true life
experiences with facts.”
The United Nations International Day Against Illicit Drugs and
Trafficking was established in 1987 by UN resolution 42/112 to
strengthen action and cooperation in achieving an international
society free of drug abuse.
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