Alcoholics Anonymous is 75!
Alcoholics Anonymous is 75!
If you want to drink
that’s your business, if you want to stop we can help
6 to 12 June 2010 www.aa.org.nz
Alcoholics Anonymous is 75 years old on 10 June and in the last 75 years has saved countless lives and families by assisting alcoholics to stop drinking.
From two men meeting in 1935
to over two million members estimated worldwide today,
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) celebrates 75 years of “one
alcoholic talking to another”. From 1-4 July over 40,000
AA members are expected to gather in San Antonio for the
2010 International Convention.
US media release:
http://www.aa.org/lang/en/press.cfm?PressID=13&thisyear=2010-01-01
In New Zealand AA is having its first NZ nationwide public information campaign. Newspapers, radio, TV, web advertising as well as the backs of buses in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch. Many of AA’s 420 New Zealand groups will be contacting local media during the week around the 10th of June.
Alcoholics Anonymous has taken the unusual step of finding two non –alcoholics who can speak for AA; Dr Tom Flewett of Wellington and Ian Hastings of Auckland. Dr Flewett is a trustee of AA and Ian Hastings, as an ex-policeman, has dealt with many alcoholics professionally.
AA’s focus week is unusual for a range
of reasons.
• AA does not accept money – AA
only takes donations from members and practices 'corporate
poverty' to prevent money and property diverting AA from its
purpose. This also recognises that most drinking alcoholics
create havoc and getting sober is about being
'self-supporting'.
• The week is simply to show
heavy drinkers how to find AA. The Alcoholics Anonymous
message is if anyone wants to stop drinking, they can make
contact. People who want to drink are not AA’s business.
• AA has no opinions on other treatment
options for alcoholics and co-operates with health and other
professionals.
AA is asking media to co-operate
in 2 ways:
1) by running stories on AA - individuals will
talk to you and tell you their stories and
experiences;
2) by preserving the anonymity of the
members of AA - ensuring their identities are not
revealed.
Anonymity assures alcoholics that their
recovery will be private. Often, the active alcoholic will
avoid any source of help which might reveal his or her
identity. When running stories on A.A. members or anybody
who attends one of our meetings please:
• use first
names only
• do not use pictures in which their faces
may be recognized.
This may seem unusual but AA is not
represented by any specific people and should not be judged
on their public image or success or failure.
AA doesn't
comment on drinking laws, alcohol sales or other issues we
just talk about how AA works and how alcoholics can stop
drinking.
ends