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THIRTY-EIGHT YEARS AGO, during
one hot summer, 31 Asian American youth died of drug
overdoses. As much as elder members of the community
wanted to believe their kids did not do drugs
this epidemic in 1971 jolted the community into a
shocking reality. This was their kids, and something
needed to be done.
The community organized, held meetings, talked to youth
who were working with youth, trying to figure out
what was really going on. What they realized was people
in the Asian American community, both young and old,
had nowhere to go when it came to drug abuse. These
youth needed a place to belong and someone to talk
to, someone who understood their culture and family
and could relate to what they were going through.
A proposal was written and submitted to the Federal
Government asking for funding for the first ever drug
abuse program targeting Asian Americans. The proposal
was funded, and in 1972, the Asian American Drug Abuse
Program was born. Today, some 38 years later, AADAP
remains one of only two programs in the nation with
a mission to target and design services for Asian
and Pacific Islanders with drug abuse problems.
Unfortunately some of the same problems facing Asian
Pacific Americans then are the same problems many
are facing now. A whole new generation of youth are
still struggling with identity and a need to fit
in. Asian immigrant youth and adults bring with
them a whole new set of problems, as they struggle
with a new culture, language and way of living. For
some, drugs and alcohol are still a quick escape from
pain.
The problems of the Nineties have also brought a whole
new set of challenges. HIV/AIDS, infants born exposed
to drugs, people suffering from drug and mental health
problems, homelessness, youth in gangs
The need
for AADAP is greater than ever.
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