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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

Let’s Create Our Own Holidays As African Americans in Recovery

October 8, 2018 Mark Sanders
Malcolm and Mother Hale.png

Today is Columbus Day. Each year the Nation takes a day to celebrate a man who did horrible things. Christopher Columbus called the people he met in the "New World" Indians, because he was lost and thought he was in India. He never set foot on U.S. Soil. He landed in the Caribbean Islands and raped, robbed, pillaged and destroyed.

 How about celebrating Frederick Douglass Day as the first prominent American recovering alcoholic and leader of the Black Temperance Movement or Malcolm X Day? Malcolm had a religious conversion in prison and went from pimp, thief and addict to a leader of millions. While these two men are famous there are other lesser known hero's that are worthy of celebration such as Mother Hale, an African American women who mothered hundreds of children whose parents could not care for them due to cocaine addiction, heroin addiction or Aids. Hale's contribution includes a legacy of service which is so important to recovery.

Most celebrations in the country involve drinking and/or drug use including holidays, birthdays, anniversaries, weddings and graduations. Even funerals! African Americans in recovery can create celebrations of our own to reinforce recovery.

Tags Christopher Columbus, African Americans, Addict, recovery, Celebrations, Holidays

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