Nick Renowski(m):
Those habits stuck with me 
from the age of 12 
up until 26. 
And this is my first time 
in recovery. 
I've been a student here 
for 19 months now. 
So this is the longest 
I've been clean 
from any type of drugs 
or alcohol in my life.
HOST: 
Greetings, 
thoughtful viewers, 
and welcome to 
Good People, Good Works.
Today, June 26th, 
is the United Nations 
International Day 
Against Drug Abuse 
and Illicit Trafficking, 
a day to unite the world 
in achieving 
an international society 
free of the selling 
and using of drugs. 
Drug addiction is 
a major concern worldwide. 
A 2008 study found 
that in the USA alone, 
20 million people 
age 12 or older, or 
approximately six percent 
of the population, 
use illicit drugs.
It came to the point 
in my life where everyone 
that I cared about 
or everyone that I knew 
had pushed me away 
from them, and you end up 
all alone essentially. 
And you end up 
around a bunch of people 
that don’t really care 
about you or you don’t 
even really know them. 
The only thing 
that you have in common 
is that you’re both 
using (drugs) together, 
and that’s a scary place. 
HOST:  
Successful drug treatment 
has been shown 
to save lives, reduce crime 
and rebuild families. 
Dean(m): 
There's always a way out 
if you seek help; it's just 
as far as asking for it, 
and no matter how dark 
or scary the place is 
that you're in, 
you can get out of it.
HOST: 
Today 
we’ll find out about two 
non-profit organizations 
whose staff and volunteers 
are dedicated to rescuing 
drug abusers from 
aimless lives of addiction 
and helping them 
to become constructive 
members of society. 
Dean (m): 
At first 
I didn’t want to do it. 
I didn’t want anything 
to do with it, but then 
several months later after 
I was still using (drugs) 
and my life had continually 
gone downwards 
and gotten a lot worse. 
At that point I chose to 
come to Welcome Home. 
(Interview in English) Dean (m):
The organization here is 
called “Welcome Home.”  
It’s a two-year program. 
It’s based upon 
a therapeutic community. 
It’s very intense. 
HOST: 
Founded in 2004 
by John Volken, 
a German-Canadian, 
Welcome Home operates 
long-term residential 
treatment facilities 
in Seattle, USA 
and Surrey, Canada 
for men and women 
who struggle 
with substance abuse 
but are determined to 
overcome their addictions 
and lead productive lives. 
Mr. Volken 
founded and operated 
a furniture chain store 
with more than 
148 locations 
and over US$200 million 
in annual revenue. 
In 2004 
he sold the business 
and became 
a social entrepreneur 
focusing on 
drug rehabilitation.
www.welcomehomesociety.org
John Volken(m):
We teach them 
to get up in the morning 
and to brush their teeth, 
to look after hygiene, 
and how to eat properly. 
We teach them leadership 
you know and all aspects 
of successful living. 
Nick Renowski(m):  
The basic principle 
of Welcome Home 
is to gain your life back. 
And that is 
through accountability, 
through responsibility, 
and through hard work. 
It's daily, basic principles, 
such things like 
keeping your room tidy, 
keeping the chores 
up to date, 
being responsible 
for your actions, 
what comes out 
of your mouth, 
your attitude, 
your behavior, 
and your values. 
All these things 
make the person 
that you see here 
in front of you today. 
And it's not just 
from one day; 
it's from training over 
and over and over again. 
So, the therapeutic 
community teaches people 
how to live 
among other addicts 
with other attitudes, 
with other ways of life, 
and really develop 
that strong character, 
that strength that you have, 
inner strength 
that we all have.  
It's taught me a lot 
about leadership. 
It's taught me who I am 
and what I want to do 
with life.  
HOST: 
Welcome Home’s 
comprehensive program, 
which requires 
a modest registration fee 
but is otherwise 
free-of-charge, incorporates 
addiction recovery, 
personal development, 
and vocational training. 
Housing, clothing, 
legal assistance, and meals 
are also provided 
to participants.
John Volken (m): 
We got you know, all kinds of 
different opportunities 
for students to acquire 
a specific training, but also 
what’s more important 
really is the work ethic. 
Here they learn life skills. 
We run it like a business 
(SMTV(f): Yeah.) 
because we want to 
make sure all our students, 
when they leave here, 
they are equipped 
to be good employees.
Nick(m): 
It’s a minimum 
two-year program. Like 
If you speak with anybody 
who knows anything 
about addiction 
or recovery, they’ll say 
it takes anywhere 
from two to five years 
to properly heal, whether 
it’s mentally, physically, 
or spiritually. 
To think 
that we can change our 
behaviors and attitudes 
that we’ve engrained 
for 5 years or 10 years 
of addiction 
in 60 or 90 days 
is unrealistic. 
That two to five years 
is a realistic goal 
where you’re able to now 
think clearly, act clearly 
and behave responsibly. 
And so graduation comes 
when the student is ready 
and when the program feels 
the student is ready. 
So it’s not one or the other. 
John Volken (m): 
We want lifelong sobriety. 
When they leave here, 
we give them US$3,000; 
it’s for first month’s rent 
for an apartment 
and for furniture. 
We want to make sure 
that they have 
a solid foundation. 
HOST: 
The Welcome Home 
Society has 
many success stories, 
with students going on 
to lead meaningful lives 
free of intoxicants.
John Volken(m): 
One fellow’s been with us 
down in Seattle 
for almost five years. 
Now he’s married 
and he has a steady job. 
For weeks I thought, 
“He’s not going to make it.” 
But he made it and 
he’s doing wonderful. 
We have graduates 
who have a steady job now 
and a good future. 
HOST: 
We now shift 
to Southeast Asia 
to learn about BASMIDA, 
a non-profit organization 
that has excellent 
drug prevention and 
rehabilitation programs 
that serve the people 
of Brunei. 
BASMIDA means 
“basmidada” in Malay; 
(it) means 
“Get rid of drug abuse.” 
It was formed 
back in 1987, 
and at that time, 
a lot of our community 
did not know about 
the dangers of drug abuse. 
So a non-governmental 
organization was formed. 
We do 
preventive drug education, 
not only targeted towards 
the young people, 
but also through all strata 
of the community. 
We received recognition 
from the government, 
and of course, 
the support of Her Majesty 
Kebawah Duli Yang 
Maha Mulia Raja Isteri 
Pengiran Anak Hajah 
Saleha, which is
(refers to a female sovereign ) 
our Queen of Brunei. 
She has 
graciously accepted 
to be our royal patron.
HOST: 
BASMIDA has 
over 100 active and 
2,000 registered members 
around the country, who 
strive to keep youth away 
from narcotics and those 
formerly addicted to drugs 
clean and sober.
 Datin(f): 
So a lot of people, 
they want to know 
“How do we inculcate 
positive values 
in our young people?” 
Success stories 
in drug prevention 
in Brunei, 
(are) done not only 
through the government, 
but through the community, 
through the civil societies, 
through NGOs, 
things like BASMIDA, 
through schools, 
through religion, 
through the leaders 
in the community, 
through the mosque leaders 
and so on and so forth. 
Islam is a religion that 
teaches us to value life. 
To value life means 
not doing drugs, 
not killing people, 
not causing harm 
to other people.
HOST: 
Working in cooperation 
with the nation’s 
drug rehabilitation center, 
called Rumah Al-Islah, 
BASMIDA also offers 
various forms 
of assistance to those 
who’ve gone through 
the center’s program, 
thus enabling them to 
make a new start in life. 
Datin(f): 
We have three groups. 
One is, 
I would like to call them 
our Rakan BASMIDA. 
Rakan means “friends.” 
Friends of BASMIDA 
are ex-drug addicts. 
They are looking after 
our headquarters here. 
We don't charge them for 
their water or electricity 
because 
they have no homes. 
Because they 
have been stigmatized 
by the community, 
we allow them to live here, 
stay here free of charge. 
But we also, 
for our Rakan BASMIDA, 
we have computer lessons 
for them, 
taught by a teacher. 
Then we have a group 
called the Dhikr BASMIDA, 
which consists of 
our families 
of ex-drug addicts. 
These are women 
who are taught how to say 
verses of the Qur’an 
and appropriate verses 
to praise our Prophet, 
our Nabi, Nabi 
Muhammad Sallallahu 
Alaihi Wasallam. 
(Prophet Muhammad, 
Peace Be Upon Him ) 
By doing that, 
these family members, 
they get to learn about 
spiritual values. 
Because in Islam 
we pray five times a day, 
and by doing that, they 
always remember Allah, 
and not to go back 
to drug abuse.
Then we have 
another group called 
the Youth BASMIDA. 
And BASMIDA Youth 
is very, very active. 
HOST: 
Drugs not only 
utterly ruin lives, 
they also cause 
enormous damage 
to our beautiful home, 
planet Earth.  
Datin(f): 
Did you know 
that by doing drugs, 
you are also destroying 
the environment? 
Because these people 
producing the shabu 
(methamphetamines), 
the chemicals 
that they produce, 
that they have 
as a by-product of their 
producing the drugs, 
they just throw it 
down the river, kill the fish, 
kill the environment 
and so on. 
But at the international 
level, you know the cocaine 
for example, do you know 
that to produce 
one kilogram of cocaine, 
you need to destroy 
three hectares 
of the virgin forest 
of Colombia? 
HOST: 
BASMIDA president 
Datin Hajah Masni binti 
Haji Mohd Ali 
prays for a drug-free world 
in which our children 
and future generations 
can live in peace.
Datin(f): 
If we want 
to promote and protect 
the rights of children, 
we want to make sure 
that there is 
no environment anywhere 
that they will be able to 
see, do drugs, 
be promoted to take drugs 
and so on and so forth. 
The producers 
of all these TV programs, 
and movies, please 
do not glamorize them. 
If you love your family, 
if you love your children, 
if you love your life, please 
don't glamorize smoking, 
don't glamorize 
hard drugs, soft drugs, 
whatever you like 
to call them, and 
don't glamorize alcohol, 
because that is one thing 
that will destroy their lives. 
As I have 
always emphasized, 
TV programs, 
the mass media, you have 
a very important role 
in the inculcation 
of good, positive values, 
good lives. 
Because lives as it is, which 
is given by Allah to us, 
we have an obligation, 
we have a responsibility 
to protect it. 
HOST: 
As on many occasions, 
during a 1999 lecture 
in South Africa, 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
spoke about the hazards 
of addictive drugs 
while reminding 
about the preciousness 
of protecting 
our physical, mental 
and spiritual health
SM:
It affects everything,
don't you know?
It makes your mind 
blurred.
It shrinks your brain.
It clogs your nerves.
It makes you 
hallucinate.
It makes you go crazy
when you don't have it
and become addicted to it.
It breaks your family
love, relationship.
It drives your girlfriend,
boyfriend away.
It makes you become
a criminal sometimes.
How do you have peace 
in this chaotic state 
of mind in order to 
practice spiritual even?
You have to be first 
calm and normal.
We have enough 
confusion with work,
with war, with disaster,
with relationship already.
Do not create 
more confusion 
for yourselves and 
damage your only vehicle
to reach God; 
this is the body, 
the temple.
Keep it well, in order,
healthy,
because you must use it.
Drug is no, no, no, no.
HOST: 
We sincerely thank you 
John Volken and 
Welcome Home Society 
staff as well as 
Ms. Datin Hajah Masni
binti Haji Mohd Ali 
and BASMIDA members 
for your wonderful work 
that is giving lost souls 
another chance at life. 
May your noble efforts 
continue to help bring about 
greater harmony 
in the world. 
For more information 
on the organizations 
featured today, 
please visit 
the following websites:
Welcome Home Society
www.WelcomeHomeSociety.org
Connect with BASMIDA 
on
www.Facebook.com
Gracious viewers, 
thank you for 
your company today on 
Good People, Good Works. 
Coming up next is 
The World Around Us, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May our hearts always 
be connected 
to the Divine light.