Pubdate: Mon, 07 Nov 2005 Source: Ann Arbor News (MI) Copyright: 2005 The Ann Arbor News Contact: http://www.mlive.com/aanews/index.ssf Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/20 Author: Scott Daniel PROMISES PLANTED Hoffman Students Put Tulips In Ground, Symbolizing Drug-Free Pledges For students at Bessie Hoffman Elementary in Belleville, saying no to drugs means getting your hands dirty. Students recently "Planted the Promise" with 600 red tulip bulbs adjacent to the Lincoln Consolidated School's playground. The bulbs, which will flower next spring, were planted to serve as a visual reminder to students of their written pledge to stay drug, alcohol and tobacco free throughout their lives. Judy Taylor, who teaches a second- and third-grade split, explained to her class that the tulips are a metaphor for their lives and that like the plant, they will flower if they can stay drug free. It's a message that sunk in with one of her students. "It's really important to make sure you don't do it when you are a teenager," said Rod Hook, a third-grader who helped his parents till the soil for the plantings. "I've learned not to drink or take drugs or use tobacco." The event was part of Hoffman's Red Ribbon Week. The Florida-based National Family Partnership began Red Ribbon Week in 1986 as a way of honoring Enrique Camarena, an agent of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency who was kidnapped and killed while investigating suspected drug traffickers. At Hoffman, school social worker Pam Gharaibeh coordinated Red Ribbon activities. Besides planting the tulips, students took part in programs called Hugs not Drugs, Give Drugs the Slip, Team Up against Drugs and Get a Clue, Drugs aren't for You. Elementary school is the perfect age to reach children, Gharaibeh said. "You get more bang for your buck with kids at an earlier age," she said. "We think it's better to do prevention now rather than intervention later." All of Hoffman's 300 students got a chance to plant a tulip bulb. Each also made a three-part, written pledge. Students promised to make healthy food choices, take care of their bodies and say no to drugs. Each student received a Red Ribbon Week bracelet for making the pledge and planting a tulip. Roxane Hook, Rod's mother, was impressed with the school's effort to educate students away from drugs. "They're not just doing the minimum," she said. "I think it's great that they're focusing on Red Ribbon Week. Any time the kids can put their hands in something, they're going to remember it better. They will remember planting the tulips long after this event." While Hook and her family tilled the soil for Planting the Promise, Gharaibeh also received other help. Belleville Greenhouse & Nursery and the local Meijer Thrifty Acres each donated 300 tulip bulbs. "There were Planting the Promise kits that included everything, but they were very expensive," Gharaibeh said. "We're very grateful for the donations we received." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman