Mark A. Sanders, LCSW, CADC; Illinois State Program Manager, Great Lakes ATTC, MHTTC, and PTTCPublication Date: Feb 11, 2021
Frederick Douglass was the first prominent American to recover from alcohol use disorder (White, 2014 ). Douglass's alcoholism was triggered by the trauma he endured in slavery. Douglass believed that alcohol was used to control the slaves. In his autobiography, Douglass stated that the enslaved would be abused Monday through Friday and given alcohol to drink on Saturday as medicine for the abuse (Douglass, 2019 ). In a speech in Scotland in March of 1846, Douglass stated, "When a slave was drunk, the slaveholder had no fear that he would plan an insurrection. No fear that he would escape to the north. It was the sober thinking slave who was dangerous and needed vigilance of the slaveholder to keep him a slave ( Douglass, 1846)."
Speaking on his own alcohol use, Douglass stated, "I used to drink. I found in me all those characteristics leading to drunkenness." He went on to state, "I have had some experience with intemperance. I knew what it was like to drink with all the ardor of a drunk. Some of the slaves were not able to drink their share. I was able to drink my own and theirs too. (Douglass,1846)."
Like Douglass, Malcolm X experienced trauma in childhood, which proceeded his substance use disorder. In his youth, Malcolm grew up in Omaha, Nebraska. He grew up in an environment of race riots and lynchings. His father was killed by the Klu Klux Klan, and his mother was placed in an asylum. Leaving a young Malcolm and his sibling to be placed in the child welfare system (Payne and Payne, 2020). If the ACE's test were available in Malcolm's youth, he would have scored high on childhood trauma exposure, a precursor to substance use disorders.
Both Frederick Douglass and Malcolm X achieved long term recovery, although their pathways of recovery differed. Douglass's pathway of recovery was social protest. Refusing to continue to use a drug he believed was used to control the Africans who were enslaved. Malcolm X's recovery story began in prison and is often described as a quantum spiritual awakening. All the urges to use drugs were removed instantly (Haley, 1999).
Both men became advocates in recovery. Douglass was one of the founders of The Black Temperance movement. Malcolm fought for civil writes and started a program he called "Fishing For The Dead." The goal of this program was outreach to incarcerated African Americans to help them with recovery, employment, and to avoid future incarcerations (Haley, 1999).
The recovery legacies of Frederick Douglass and Malcolm X offer three lessons:
1. Addictions professionals who work with African Americans with substance use disorders need to be trauma specialists. Like Douglass and Malcolm, many African Americans with substance use disorders have legacies of historical and current trauma that include slavery, lynchings, mass incarceration, police brutality, high unemployment, and community violence.
2. Advocacy can be a liberating force for African Americans in recovery. There is a famous 12-step slogan, "To keep it, you've got to give it away." In other words, one can maintain their own recovery by helping others. Both Malcolm X and Frederick Douglass were advocates for African Americans in their recovery. One question to ask African American clients is: “How can the African American Community benefit from your recovery (Williams, 1993)?”
3. It is important to honor multiple pathways of recovery for African Americans. Neither Douglass nor Malcolm X initiated recovery through a treatment facility. While many African American who initiate recovery through traditional treatment, other African Americans initiate and maintain recovery through 12-step recovery, faith-based recovery, medication-assisted recovery, solo recovery, dual recovery, rites of passages, and return to culture.
About the author Mark Sanders, LCSW, CADC is Illinois state project manager for the Great Lakes ATTC, MHTTC, and PTTC. He is founder of Online Museum of African American Addictions Treatment and Recovery. Photo Credit: Frederick Douglass, Library of Congress, public domain
References Douglass, F. Narrative of The Life of Frederick Douglass (2019) Kindle Edition.
Douglass, F. Temperance and Anti-Slavery. Address Delivered Paisley Scotland, March 30, 1846.Renfrewshire Advertiser, April 11, 1846.
Haley, A. The Autobiography of Malcolm X. (1999) Ballantine Books. New York, NY
Payne, L & Payne, T. The Dead Are Arising: The Life of Malcolm X. (2020). Liveright Publishing Corporation. New York, NY
Williams, C. & Laird, R. No Hiding Place. (1993). Harper Collins, New York, NY
White, W. Slaying The Dragon. (2014). Lighthouse Institute. Bloomington, IL.