Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jul 2004 Source: Daily Nation (Kenya) Copyright: 2004 Nation Newspapers Contact: http://www.nationaudio.com/News/DailyNation/Today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/868 Author: Bernadette Murgor EASTLANDS RESIDENTS AND THEIR STRUGGLE AGAINST DRUG ADDICTION Nairobi - Deep within the sprawling Dandora Estate in Nairobi's Eastlands, is a small centre that is bringing hope to many of the estate's alcoholics and drug addicts. New Life Hope Centre, sandwiched between buildings and classrooms, is a small two-roomed office that consists of the director's office and the small room where group therapy takes place. The centre is also within the Holy Cross Catholic church that has given it abode. However, it is not a treatment centre tied to any religious grouping, says Michael Shabani, counsellor and director of the centre. Eastlands is known for being a high-risk security area and a den for criminals, says Shabani. This is not only because it is a large and densely populated area. From its history Eastlands, jokingly referred to as the labour pool, has been a place of consistent poverty, violence, addictions and crime, which have become a way of life, Shabani says. It is because of this poverty that the youth, especially between age 12 to 25, drop out of school and stay idle at home. "Thus after hanging around the house for some time, the youths get bored and start moving around the estates with friends and within no time, they get introduced to drugs and alcohol. Many become addicts while others go into crime," says Shabani. He adds: "The youths in these areas have become an endangered species, because these addictions may lead to crime, prison and early death in the hands of police or mob justice and due to HIV/Aids." Many youths find themselves caught in the alcohol and drug addiction trap, which becomes an unending cycle of fear, pain and hopelessness. And with no one to turn to and with treatment in most centres being too expensive, some contemplate suicide, others join the criminal rings while others just continue in the unending hopelessness. The New Life Hope treatment centre aims to intervene and provide hope to the under-served population in Eastlands and the poor. It aims to educate and create awareness that would lead to intervention, treatment and rehabilitation. The centre intervenes and assesses the addict and depending on the situation, the patient may be referred to other centres such as the Asumbi Treatment Centre, Homa Bay, Redhill Place Limuru, or continue with out-patient treatment at the centre. It also counsels drug and alcohol addicts who are infected with HIV. The centre also counsels parents, wives, husbands and children of the addicted to deal with the situation. And for some of those who have been attending counselling and treatment sessions at this centre, the light at the end of the tunnel, is drawing closer. Here they tell their own stories: Mr Jacob Wausi I grew up knowing that alcohol and drugs were bad and I kept away from them. But my younger brother loved sniffing glue and scavenging and would escape from school often to do this. I would scold and advice him against such a life. But he continued and was even taken to an approved school. For some strange reason, which I have never understood, I started doing the same thing when I joined Standard Eight. It began as we went to school. We would pass by garbage composed of biscuits and sweets that had been discarded because of their expiry date. We enjoyed these free goodies. But I began getting used to this habit, and somehow, I joined the rest in glue sniffing. I passed my Standard Eight and was selected to join secondary school but my mother could not afford the fees. The glue had also began taking effect on my brain and I became confused. I decided to take life as it came and drifted along with my friends who were now accomplished street boys. We used to scavenge from Dandora to Jericho, where we would sell our wares. I used to scavenge for scrap metal, which would fetch some good money. With time I realised I had taken the same road as my brother and could not advice him any more. In 1994, I managed to stop sniffing glue. I was lucky to get a sponsorship through the church and joined Don Bosco, a vocational centre in Karne. I was very bright and competed well against colleagues who were Form Four graduates. Here, I was also made a prefect. In June 1995 things began to get bad. I made friendship with boys who I later learnt were drug addicts and joined them in this vice. On Sunday, we often had a day out of college and it was during this time that we bought bhang. It had started with two of them inviting me to join them on their outing. They bought some bhang and gave me a smoke. I felt good. It made me feel strong and important. I even tried twanging (speaking with an accent) in my broken English. I realised that with it, I had the strength to read harder and the strength to excel in football and boxing. When I was high on the drug, I did my best and people praised me and I appreciated the drug more and more. It really did open up my mind and I wondered, so what have I been missing all this time? I even dreamt of starting my own drug business. But little did I know it would be my doom. In March 1996, I fell sick. I felt like a robot. If I wanted to turn, I had to turn my whole body. At the time, I was operating a lathe machine but couldn't continue. I just lost focus and balance. By then we had a very good director who liked me. He took me to a hospital, which did not discover my problem and at another clinic I was thought to be possessed by demons. I had to leave school then and my mother took me home. Here, I had to look for a way of getting the drugs and my mother's money was not spared. When I got drugs, I would be fine. When I didn't have them I became very sick and moody. I enjoyed smoking the drug while reading the Bible which I enjoyed and I did very strange things. While reading the Bible I would literally do what it asked. If it said shout for joy, I would shout out loud and joyfully. My mother began to think that I was mentally sick and took me to Mathari Hospital. It was here that she learnt the truth - I was a drug addict. It was difficult to stop taking the drug. My mother would pray for me and take me to prayer meetings. I would stop for a while and then continue. But she did not tire praying. After a while, I started feeling as if some nuts were coming loose in the head and the stiffness and loss of focus increased. It was at this point I was introduced to the New Life Hope rehabilitation centre, from where I was sent to Asumbi for Rehabilitation and treatment. I learnt a lot here. After three months of rehabilitation, I was back home a little stronger this time but it did not take long before I was back on the drugs again. I started again because I did not follow up with therapy meetings. I went back to the centre where I was told I held the key to stopping my problem. So I started listening to the counsellor and after two months of counselling and therapy, I stopped smoking bhang but did not stop smoking cigarettes. It was an uphill task stopping cigarette smoking but now I am completely clean: no alcohol, bhang or cigarettes. Before I stopped my addictions we used to live in a two-roomed mudwalled-structure with my four siblings and my mother. Today, I live with my younger sister in the house, which is now four roomed and made from iron sheets. These days I am very responsible. I help my mother buy clothes and food. Sometimes I even pay fees for my sister. I am now a newspaper vendor. I feel like a new man and I am proud of myself. Salome Wausi Wambui (Jacob's mother) My parents died while I was young and left four children. I was the first born. This left me with a big responsibility because I had to fend for my siblings. I dropped out of school and got a job as a housemaid. My salary was five shillings. However, with this little money I struggled to educate and feed my siblings. At some point I got a job with the Nairobi city council, which helped me to educate my brother. He later became a teacher. But as fate would have it my brother died soon after becoming a teacher. When he died I went berserk. I became very sick and was taken to Mathari hospital for one year. It pained me so much to think of my dead parents and brother. I wondered why they had to die and why I had to struggle so hard to educate my brother only for him to die. Life was just not fair, I thought. Ever since I was young, I have tried taking poison to kill myself because I used to be mistreated by the people I lived with. I always wanted to die and follow my mother. I even abused God so that he could take me. But he never did. As I grew older I got married and we had five children but after many years of life together, my husband decided to leave and married another wife. He took away everything we owned together. Then as if to add insult to injury, one of my very promising children died early last year. I went back to Mathari hospital where I was tied with ropes. In one year I visited the mental hospital about four times. Then my other son (Jacob) started misbehaving, sniffing glue, running away from school, then becoming a street boy. People used to call me mad. They the jibes at me especially because of my sons. Then I heard of the centre and I came here and cried my heart out. I cried about how my parents had died, how I had suffered bringing up my siblings, then my brother and son's deaths and how they hurt me and now my wayward son-I cried. And as I cried my heart out, I felt as if my burdens had been lifted. Today, I am okay, I don't cry any more. My pain has lifted and I am less angry and disagreeable. I used to fight a lot and get angry at any little thing but now am free. Today I work for the church where I wash dishes and prepare tea. My children are also going to school and my wayward son has also reformed due to this place. I now eat and dress well and am waiting for God to take me in his own good time. I have even built myself a house. Andrew Myendo I could say my parents introduced me to drugs. When we were young my parents used to take us on outings where my father used to drink a lot. He used to give me some of this alcohol and with time I got used to it. My parents did not give me the parental love that I so dearly craved. I was torn between them because they used to fight a lot. I used to wonder who or where to go to. My life in school was hectic because I didn't know whom to turn to especially when I had a problem. I started taking bhang in Standard Five and later added changaa. When I took these, I would feel like I was in a world of my own and nothing could stop me from doing anything. I joined a bad group in school and within the estate, which saw me getting deeper and deeper into the world of alcohol and drugs. With them I added miraa and other drugs like a yellow tablet we called taptap to the list. In Standard Six, I realised I needed money to buy drugs, which I was now addicted to. At home I had no peace with my family. I started selling things like spoons, plates and anything I came across. At the time, we lived at Buru Buru and my father worked for an international company. My mother worked at a four-star hotel. My father would come home drunk every night and my mother never spoke to me. My home was a chaotic place. One day when I was high on bhang I stole money from my sister, which was meant to buy food for the evening meal. Somehow my sister realised that I had stolen this money and demanded for it. But I denied it. She insisted to the point that we started fighting. I took a knife and stabbed her on the arm. She screamed. Just as I was about to stab her in the stomach, neighbours arrived and held me. When my father arrived from work that evening he beat me mercilessly, while my mother chased me away saying, 'let him go and sleep in the streets.' Then my parents divorced. We moved with my mother from Buru Buru to Dandora, a totally different world. In secondary school in Meru, things turned from bad to worse. The craving for drugs grew so strong, I could not do without them. In Forms One and Two, I sold all my things including bedding. By second term, I already knew all the hidden routes that I could use to sneak out of school to go and buy drugs. I even graduated to being a supplier of drugs. In class I became a dimwit sleeping at every chance and my grades were pathetic. My mother discovered my problem and transferred me to a school in Machakos. She thought that because her cousin was a teacher there, I would change because he would keep an eye on me. Sure, I tried to change, but there was this group that dealt with drugs and I was back at it again. I sold my belongings one by one until I had nothing and became like a hermit with no abode. I failed my 'O' Levels. I realised I had a problem but did not want to admit it. I used to smoke and drink all sorts of things. I struggled to stop smoking cigarettes. It took me a long time, but I finally managed. However, I still smoked bhang and swallowed tablets. I stopped drinking changaa' but continued with other types of alcohol. I continued stealing money from my mother and others at home. One year after my Form Four examinations, I started thinking seriously about my life. Was this all there was to it? Alcohol, drugs and more drugs and alcohol? Was there nothing else for me in this world? It was during this time of depression that I heard of the rehabilitation centre in Dandora. And it took me a lot of courage to take the first step to this place. It was from here that I realised that things could be different in my life. My mother still drinks a lot. She even wakes up at 5am to look for alcohol. Though I have quit I am still very vulnerable because of my neighbourhood. All these drugs are available everywhere you turn in Dandora. I look at my mother and wonder what to do to help her. Here at the centre I get advice on how to handle life. Idleness pushes people into drugs. I started an acting group with friends to keep ourselves busy. My former friends think that I am proud now that am not doing drugs or drinking any more but my age-group is dying from HIV/Aids, mob justice and being shot by police for crimes they commit under the influence of such substances. I am now one year clean. I stopped taking marijuana on my birthday on April 20, 1998. Stopping all these addictions was an uphill task, but it took a lot of counselling, group therapy and a lot of willpower. Something else that gave me the impetus to stop completely was what I found my best friend about to do. I found him trying to hang himself after smoking bhang. When I saw this, I asked myself, is this it? If it is, then I give up on it. Rich or poor, parents must give their children love. Majority of the time I was left alone to make all the decisions for myself. Parents should sacrifice time to be with their children and should have dialogue with them. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D