Pubdate: Sun, 05 Dec 2004 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2004 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 REACHING DRUG DEALERS Only time will tell how many of the dealers and users who took part in the "Drug Dealers' Conference" at Union Baptist Church last month really do give up using drugs and dealing them. It won't be many, if history is any guide. But the church is to be commended for tackling an issue head-on that too many houses of worship tiptoe around. "Many times in church settings, we often stigmatize people because of something they are doing," said the Rev. Sir Walter Mack Jr., the pastor of Union Baptist, a big congregation known for progressive social outreach. "But what we have learned this week is that these are some good people who got into some tight situations, made some bad decisions and got caught. This conference was about letting them know that we're not giving up on them." Plenty of churches have support programs for recovering addicts, but not enough invite those still involved in drugs into their buildings, as Union Baptist did. Some of the participants in the four-day conference came voluntarily, and some had already kicked drugs. Others were sent to the program by judges and rehab counselors, who strongly recommended that they go. They took workshops on subjects such as "The Hip-Hop Culture and My Life," "Cleaning Up Your Record" and "Making the Transition to Do It the Right Way." About 40 men and women graduated from the program, although organizers said as many as 150 attended one workshop or another. In comments to the Journal's Jessica Guenzel, some of the drug dealers and users said the program helped them. "I've done everything - sold drugs, shot people," one man said. "It's time to do something else. I hate being broke like this now, but there's got to be a better way." Another man said he was angry at first to be sent to the program. "But once I started coming, on that very first day, I appreciated it," he said. "I seen what was going on, what they were trying to do, and I started appreciating myself a little better, thinking about the bad things I was doing that I shouldn't have been. Everybody really put a hand out to us." It's good that Mack says his Winston-Salem church plans to offer the program again next year. It's worth the effort if it reaches just a few users and dealers and turns them around. More such programs are needed. That's because prison terms, even repeated ones, are not stopping many users and dealers. The drug problem's not going away. Mack said he was moved to start the program after he saw a drug dealer operating near his church. But whether a house of worship is near a drug-plagued neighborhood or miles away from one, its members are affected by drugs, whether in taxes for prisons, the threat of related crimes such as burglary and robbery, or other societal ills. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin