Black youth, churches team up to fight tobacco use
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Posted 7:31AM on Saturday 29th June 2002 ( 22 years ago )
ATLANTA - Hundreds of black youth from churches throughout the state are teaming up to fight tobacco use by their peers. <br>
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An estimated 15 percent of middle-schoolers in Georgia use some form of tobacco. <br>
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``The youth are saying tobacco companies target us, so now we're going to target them,'' said Debbie Wallace, director of the local African-American Churches Target Tobacco Control Program (ACT). <br>
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The group was holding an anti-smoking rally Saturday at southeast Atlanta's Greater Piney Grove Baptist church, including a gospel concert, dialogue and health screenings. <br>
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But the focus was a competition among youth who created religious anti-smoking messages through ACT's participating churches. <br>
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Smoking among black high school boys has doubled from 1991 to 1997, to 28.2 percent, according to the Washington-based campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. <br>
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C. Xavier Ford, state bishop of the United Church of God in Christ, said churches must take an active role in social and health issues. <br>
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``It's the same thing with smoking,'' he said. ``It starts with the deacon who goes outside to smoke on the steps.''
http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/6/193014
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