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Online Museum of African American Addictions, Treatment and Recovery

  • Home
  • Museum History
  • Blog
  • Free Scholarly Articles
  • Dissertations
  • Historical Pioneers
  • Rising Stars
  • Thurston Smith Advocacy Award
  • Books
  • Podcasts
  • Free Workbooks
  • Leadership Interviews
  • Hall of Fame
  • Trainers
    • Roland Williams
    • Delbert Boone
    • Marc Fomby, CEO
    • Alfred Coach Powell
    • Cherie Hunter
    • Micheal Johnson, MSW
    • Lonetta Albright
    • Fred Dyer
    • David Whiters
  • Scientists
    • Carl Hart
    • Andrea Barthwell
    • Carl Bell
    • Benny Primm
    • Lydia Muyingo
    • Monica Webb Hooper
    • Ijeoma Opara
    • Renee Cunningham-Williams
    • H. Westley Clark
    • Michael V. Stanton
    • Renee M. Johnson
    • William A. Cloud
    • Allecia Reid
  • Dr. Carl Bell
  • Dr. Fred Dyer
  • Adolescent Corner
  • Educational Videos
  • History of A.A.
  • Movies
  • Songs
  • Celebrities In Recovery
  • Gone Too Soon!
  • DREAMS CUT SHORT
  • Story of the Month
  • Webinars
  • Becoming a trainer
  • Bibliography
  • Biographies, Autobiographies and Memoirs
  • Black Temperance Movement
  • Non-African American Contributors
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contact Us

A Historical Event!

August 4, 2025 Mark Sanders

On July 31, 2025 history was made when Dr. Olykunbi Oyedele launched the first annual conference on Trauma, Mental Health and Substance Use sponsored by Living Vines Mental Health Foundation, an organization founded by Dr. Oyedele to address the intersection between trauma, mental illness and substance use disorders in Nigeria.

This informative conference was historic in that this was the first major conference which primarily featured African American and Nigerian speakers. In order for members of the African diaspora to heal historical trauma, the root cause of many of our mental health and substance use challenges, collaborations across the Atlantic Ocean between African Americans (the descendants of the European slave trade) and Africans living in the Motherland will play an important role in that healing. 

African Americans bring to the table knowledge of evidence based practices and peer based recovery support and our brothers and sisters in Africa bring a great awareness of African cultural practices and the teachings of the ancestors. This combination when integrated could ignite healing and recovery worldwide.

The conference was particularly inspiring given current tensions between African Americans and Africans. A biproduct of the psychological impact of colonialization. Onward!!

Tags conference, African Americans, Africans, Nigeria, trauma, Mental Illness, substance use disorder
Interview With Kenneth Ginlack, author of the book Motivational Interviewing for African Americans →

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