| Enrique "Kiki" Camarena grew up in
a dirt-floored house with hopes and dreams of making a difference.
Camarena worked his way through
college, served in the Marines and became a police officer. When he
decided to join the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, his mother
tried to talk him out it. "I can't not do this," he told her. "I'm only
one person, but I want to make a difference."
The DEA sent Camarena to work
undercover in Mexico investigating a major drug cartel believed to
include officers in the Mexican army, police and government. On Feb. 7,
1985, the 37-year-old Camarena left his office to meet his wife for
lunch. Five men appeared at the agent's side and shoved him in a car.
One month later, Camarena's body was found in a shallow grave. He had
been tortured to death.
In honor of Camarena's memory and
his battle against illegal drugs, friends and neighbors began to wear
red badges of satin. Parents, sick of the destruction of alcohol and
other drugs, had begun forming coalitions. Some of these new coalitions
took Camarena as their model and embraced his belief that one person can
make a difference. These coalitions also adopted the symbol of
Camarena's memory, the red ribbon.
The National Family Partnership
organized the first Nationwide Red Ribbon Campaign in 1988. Since that
time, the campaign has reached millions of U.S. children.
In 1997, the Texas Commission on
Alcohol and Drug Abuse began committing resources to ensure the
continuation of the Red Ribbon Campaign in Texas, as well as the hopes
and beliefs behind this grassroots effort to protect children from the
dangers of alcohol and other drugs. |