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  Letter from Arch Woodruff and Linnis Cook in Brazil
 
     
 

April 28, 2002

Dear Friends,

Since January I’ve been working several days a week in Jardim Ângela, a neighborhood on the southern periphery of the city of São Paulo. Most people in the neighborhood live in plywood shanties or very crowded housing built of unpainted brick and mortar. The neighborhood was identified by the United Nations in 1997 as one of the most dangerous in the world, according to my colleagues at Casa Sofia, one of two places in this enormous city to which women victims of domestic violence can go for support. Well, in fact, women can also go to "women’s police stations" too, but the support they receive there is very limited and bureaucratic at best.

At Casa Sofia we provide psychological and legal counseling, various types of group support for the cultivation of self esteem, and in extreme cases we provide financial aid or its equivalent in bus tickets, food, and even rent. I am fascinated and horrified by the stories of the women who arrive needing help. In another letter I will tell you about some of them.

In this letter I want to reflect on the problem of drugs in Jardim Ângela. It isn’t exactly drugs that are the problem—it is more the politics of drugs that have created a society that is difficult to imagine. Let me give some examples.

One: Hardly a week goes by that doesn’t bring a young woman who was recently widowed. Their husbands (usually fathers of one or more small children) are killed because of a drug debt (often pathetically tiny) or perhaps because of rivalry between sellers. One woman heard of her husband’s death while she was having their third child in the hospital. When she arrived home, she heard that the killers had promised to return to kill the rest of the family, to make an example and discourage others from repeating whatever offense the victim had committed. (In the meantime, the two older children were being hidden by courageous neighbors.) Casa Sofia was able to finance their move to a distant city.

Two: One woman said that her husband refused to support their 3-year-old. The father was being threatened because he owed R$46, about $20. When drug debtors are murdered as examples to other debtors, family members who are present are often killed. The woman didn’t want a divorce, but didn’t want the father around because of the danger his presence represented to their child.

Three: Another woman, a victim of serious physical abuse by her husband, was told by the local trafficker, "We know you have problems, but don’t call the police. If you need protection, we’ll take care of him." She interprets this as a promise to kill him, not a solution she prefers!

Four: A mother of an adult daughter with mental problems said that three men broke into her shack looking for X, her daughter’s best friend, who owed the men for drug purchases. X wasn’t there, but the daughter with problems was. In front of her two small children and her mother, the men raped the daughter. They returned later in the week and did it again. The daughter has received medical attention, but for financial and other reasons, the family has no ability to move elsewhere.

Five: A volunteer at Casa Sofia remarked that people in her large neighborhood are terrified when the police come, because they come shooting, jeopardizing the lives of all. Her neighborhood is particularly dangerous because most of the shacks are made of plywood, which doesn’t stop bullets.

Six: All of São Paulo suffers from high unemployment rate, but in poor neighborhoods the rate is astronomical. The young and the old (over 40!) suffer most employment discrimination. Almost all employment possibilities are drug related.

Seven: Jardim Ângela has a number of drug treatment programs that are said to be good.

Eight: Many women mention that their aggressors are under the influence of alcohol when they attack. Not one has yet said that she was victimized physically by someone under the influence of illegal drugs.

I cannot help but think that almost all of these problems would disappear if currently illegal drugs were decriminalized and sold, for instance, at health clinics, where their purity could be controlled and where there would be no advertising to attract new users and no
attraction of the legally forbidden.

Since drugs are illegal and are controlled by groups that attempt (by violence) to establish monopolies, the prices are not related to the actual cost of production. Decriminalizing would mean lower prices and greater availability, it’s true. Obviously, a mixed blessing, even if the drugs were sold at cost by the government. But there would be no criminal or even market interest in enticing others to use drugs. And the cost of lives murdered in the maintenance of monopolies and for drug debts by users, their families, neighbors and the police should decline to zero. Finally, the monetary expenditures on the war on drugs, including legal and prison costs, could be redirected to treatment.

I’ve read that some drug rehabilitation workers and others are against decriminalization because of the havoc that drugs make of the lives of the users. And I have to ask: How can there be havoc worse than what I see and hear about in Jardim Ângela?

Please include the residents of Jardim Ângela in your prayers, and please, if you are not already involved in finding solutions, make your prayers a first step in resolving the problem of the politics of drugs. Many lives are in the balance and these lives are every Christian’s
concern.

Shalom e Salaam,

Linnis Cook

The 2002 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 258

 
     
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