To
protect youth from the disastrous effects of abusing drugs, Drug-Free South is
bringing the truth directly to students and the community during Halloween.
The week leading up to Halloween is often filled with children
frantically deciding what costume to wear or ensuring they have enough bags to
fill with candy, but many don’t know that this week is also a time to fight
drug abuse and come together with solutions to end addiction. The week is known
across the country as Red Ribbon Week, commemorating DEA agent Kiki Camarena,
who died in the line of duty in 1985.
Of course,
everything looks different in 2020 than in previous years.
“Red Ribbon Week is the oldest and largest drug
prevention campaign in the country,” according to imdrugfree.com, and it occurs
during the last week of October each year. This is the best time to educate
young people and help prevent drug abuse.
As it comes right before Halloween, Drug-Free
South organizers encourage parents of young children to participate as well,
ensuring their children remain healthy and safe during the holiday.
Many online
resources are available to parents and teachers virtually: drugfreeworld.org
and drugfreegeneration.org are among those websites with downloadable
information and programs.
Drug-Free South began observing Red Ribbon Week
in Tennessee in 2009 by distributing copies of The Truth About Drugs booklets,
which help young people understand what drugs are and how they affect the user,
visiting school classrooms to deliver a seminar to students utilizing the
documentary The Truth About Drugs: Real People, Real Stories, and getting the
Drug-Free World public service announcements played on television. Drug-Free
South has provided seminars to students in over thirty counties in Tennessee.
Drug-Free South is the Tennessee chapter of the
Foundation for a Drug-Free World, an international non-profit organization. Its
materials demonstrate the dangers of drugs through factual information and interviews
with former addicts giving personal perspectives on each of the substances
covered. For more information, visit drugfreesouth.org.
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