Pubdate: Mon, 30 Jul 2001 Source: Detroit Free Press (MI) Copyright: 2001 Detroit Free Press Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/125 Website: http://www.freep.com/ Author: Jeffrey May Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) NEEDLE EXCHANGE PLAN HIS CALLING, MINISTER SAYS He Wants Heroin Addicts To Lower Risk Of AIDS It's not church -- far from it. But as the Rev. Richard Harris waits on a van in southwest Detroit for drug addicts who come seeking new, clean needles, he feels like he's doing God's work. Harris has seen heroin addicts with flesh-exposing abscesses the size of softballs. He has counseled recovering heroin abusers who contracted the AIDS virus from using a contaminated syringe. And he has watched his brother die a lingering death from longtime heroin use. So the 58-year-old Ecorse Baptist minister has done something rare for a member of the clergy and started needle exchanges in metro Detroit. Harris is the president and founder of the Resurrection of a Child's Mind, a nonprofit child development program in Ecorse that targets children ages 6 to 16. Lately, Harris has been getting a lot of attention -- not all of it positive -- for his fight against AIDS and HIV. The Ecorse City Council on Tuesday granted Harris a license to start a needle exchange program there. In addition to trading dirty needles for clean ones, the programs offer food, water, soap, sanitary products, referrals to rehabilitation centers, condoms and other safe sex information. They also treat abscesses. The goal behind needle exchanges is to lower the percentages of heroin addicts with AIDS or HIV by encouraging the use of clean needles. Harris said the religious community's discomfort in working with gay and lesbian people has prevented it from bringing help and information to the people whose actions must be changed to contain the spread of HIV and AIDS. "This killer can be contained, but we don't want to deal with the lesbian and the gays," Harris said. "You can't just sweep it under the rug, you got to deal with it!" Harris' ideas aren't an easy sell in the religious community -- even for a man born and raised in it. His father, Price Harris, has been the pastor of Morelight Missionary Baptist Church in Ecorse for 52 years. His older brothers are associate ministers at Morelight, and he is a street minister affiliated with the church. He said his brothers don't fully support his efforts. But Harris is known for doing his own thing. "I've always done things differently," Harris said. "I know God is with me and what He told me to do for his people." Harris said he feels that it's his job to help people. He also said he believes that if he can meet the present needs of addicts, whether it is with food or a syringe, he can gain their trust, thus opening the door for future reference to rehabilitation. But others, including the Rev. Anthony V. Price, say that it's wrong to assist in a drug habit, no matter the higher goal. Price is the pastor of New Greater Bethlehem Temple Community Apostolic Church in Ecorse. "The church is a hospital where we can help people of all walks of life ...But I don't want to be an accomplice to wrong," Price said. "Instead of introducing them to needles, he should introduce them to the needle: The Lord Jesus Christ." Harris's supporters think he is an example to other clergymen. "I have no problem with the program. It will do more good than harm," said Brian Johnson, 42, of Detroit, who said Harris helped him overcome his alcohol problems. "A minister should get involved more than anybody else in the community." Sylvia Potomski, director of nursing at the Salvation Army Harbor Light Rehabilitation Center, called Harris a wise man. "He's not supporting the use of drugs. He's just trying to stop the spread of HIV," she said. "Any chance of reduction is good." Harris said he believes that in order to gain the support of addicts, he must go to the streets. While awaiting permission from Ecorse to begin his program, he rode along with a needle exchange run by Latino Family Services, a Southwest Detroit group that offers one of two needle exchanges in Detroit. On a recent visit Mary, 37, boarded the van for the first time to pick up needles, sanitary items, and bandages for an abscess on her wrist. The Detroit woman, who declined to give her last name, rubbed her hands and arms repeatedly while glancing nervously around her. Mary said she had a college education and three children, and that she used to look down on addicts. But for the past three months, she has been one herself. She said she admired the minister for leaving the safety of the pulpit. "I think it's great. You think if a person is not judging you, they're going to help you," she said. That's exactly how Harris hopes his customers will react. "If people need help, I'll help them," he said. "That's how I get my satisfaction." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk