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The South Florida
Veterans Multi-Purpose Center has provided
housing for homeless veterans with substance
abuse problems for the last 18 years without
government assistance.
We are now partnered with other non-profit
organizations to provide Homeless Housing
management, Individual Case Management and
Recovery Programs for veterans making the
transition from the street to shelter to
Independent Housing.
We all have a vision of
homeless veterans, the cause and so-forth. I
want to tell our story this way.

Everyday I pass homeless
people on the subway and streets. Many of
them hold up signs saying that they served
in the Vietnam War. Sometimes I don't allow
myself to think about it. I hand them a
dollar and go back to reading my newspaper.
When I do think about it, I try to imagine
what these veterans have seen and been
through.
What is it like to be
shot at during war and know that any day may
be your last? How does one deal with the
pain of having friends killed in your arms?
What does killing other human beings do to
your emotional stability?
It is not hard to imagine
how these experiences lead to
self-medication and drug addiction. How
could you not try to numb out the pain that
must accompany fighting in a war? When
passing homeless people, it seems clear that
some of them have spent years dealing with
substance abuse and mental illness.
I have been thinking
about our current war in Iraq and wondering
what the impact will be on the men and women
fighting there. I get a shiver down my spine
when I imagine what it would be like for me
to leave my fiancee and family, depart the
city I love and go fight in Iraq! It is
horrifying to think of shooting at other
human beings, seeing families getting blown
up in cars and houses, feeling bullets whiz
by me, seeing explosives take off the leg or
arm of a close buddy. I couldn't do it.
Seeing many Vietnam
Veterans with mental problems who are often
self-medicating with drugs, I have
hypothesized that veterans from the Iraq
war, many who are going through similar
horrors, will also have similar problems
with drug abuse. Many of us struggle with
dependency on cigarettes, marijuana and
alcohol, while attempting to cope with the
pressures of our hectic lives, and obviously
our problems are nothing compared to people
coming back from Iraq missing a limb.
According to the military
publication Stars and Stripes, my hunches
are correct. In a July 25th story they
report that alcohol and other drug use
problems are common throughout the forces in
Iraq. "Some of the young soldiers just can't
handle the stress and turn to alcohol or
drugs to self-medicate", said military
defense lawyer Capt. Chris Krafchek.
Today in a story by the
Associated Press, the Army's Surgeon General
said that a survey of troops returning from
the Iraq war found 30 percent had developed
mental health problems three to four months
after coming home.
What is going to happen
to all of these people who are suffering
from depression and suicidal thoughts? Many
will end up using drugs, as many of us
civilians do. Now on top of everything else
going on, many of these people are going to
have to worry about getting caught with
drugs and being arrested. Our prisons are
already filled with non-violent drug
offenders, many serving mandatory sentences
of 15 years to life for small amounts of
drugs. Service members being incarcerated
and separated from their families because of
a drug addition that is a result to fighting
in Iraq will be yet one more instance of
"collateral damage" of this war.
It is easy for people to
buy a bumper sticker and demand that we
"Support our Troops". If we are going to
walk the talk, we better be ready to offer
compassion and treatment.
HELP IS WHAT WE OFFER
HOMELESS VETERANS WITH SUBSTANCE ABUSE
PROBLEMS AT THE SOUTH FLORIDA VETERANS
MULTI-PURPOSE CENTER |