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Addressing addiction in Chimayó

Nov. 25—Coming up

The 10 Who Made a Difference series will continue through Dec. 4 with stories featuring the following honorees:

Today: Barrios Unidos founder Lupe Salazar

Friday: Mountain bike trail builder Brent Bonwell

Saturday: Businessman and youth athletics supporter Ralph Ortiz

Sunday: Juanita Quintana, a Foster Grandmother in Santa Fe Public Schools

Monday: Neighbor to Neighbor Fund Drive founder Linda Wilder Flatt

Tuesday: Juliana and Tejinder Ciano, owners of Reunity Resource and the Reunity Farm

Wednesday: Mark Galassi, who offers chess and computer tech programs for kids

Thursday, Dec. 2: Karen Radney Buller, board chairwoman for the Santa Fe Indigenous Center

Friday, Dec. 3: Jeff Padilla, founder of Compassion Through Action

Saturday, Dec. 4: Jytte Lokvig, founder of the Santa Fe Alzheimer's Cafe

Lupe Salazar set out to find help when her son became addicted to drugs.

She didn't find the aid she was looking for, but she discovered a new mission for herself: Building the support systems her family and community desperately needed.

Salazar, 54, an Española native and lifelong resident of the Española Valley, is the founder and executive director of Chimayó-based Barrios Unidos, which provides families with support when a member of the community becomes addicted to drugs or alcohol and gives instruction on how to heal from the ensuing trauma.

The center offers counseling, education, training and healing for addicts and their families.

"Our community is small enough where we should have addressed addiction, and we didn't," Salazar said. Instead, "we tried to cover it up, to pretend that it wasn't there."

Along with her work in community activism, Salazar has another role that's all too common in her community: She's a grandmother who is raising two of her grandchildren. The girls are the daughters of her son Fernando Espinoza, who has struggled with addiction.

Because of her efforts, Salazar has been selected as one of The New Mexican's 10 Who Made a Difference for 2021.

Her journey began 18 years ago, when her son Espinoza was arrested for drunken driving. He was booked in the municipal jail in Española. When she would visit him, Salazar said, "He's straight up drunk. I was like, 'What the hell is wrong with him?' "

She believes her son also began to shoot up heroin during his time in jail.

"I went to the [Rio Arriba] county manager. I went to the city manager. I went to the [county] commissioners. I went to the judges," Salazar said.

She was seen, but not heard, by those in positions of power, she said, adding she's not certain whether it was because she did not have a college degree or because she is a woman.

"Not that I was trying to get my son out of jail," she said. "I've always firmly believed if you do your crime, you do your time. I blindly thought: 'You go to jail, you pay back your debt to society and you come out a productive citizen.' "

But, she added, "That was not at all what was happening in Rio Arriba County."

She decided it was time to get a bachelor's degree, so she enrolled in classes at Northern New Mexico College in Española and began studying integrative health science. When her academic program there was cut, she enrolled in humanities courses and began a new approach to understanding addiction.

"I tried to learn everything that I could about heroin because I didn't know how this drug could come in and grab so many people by the balls and not let go," she said. "What was wrong with my community?"

She came to understand addiction is a disease.

Salazar said she felt stigmatized for having a son who was an addict. She struggled to find a place to talk about her ordeal as Espinoza's condition deteriorated.

In 2015, she established Barrios Unidos as "an interdisciplinary, intergenerational and intercultural community" exploring cultural and psychological issues tied to addiction.

"It is time to be able to share. It is time to be able to know that you're not alone," she said. "And to know that there's no shame in having your child struggle."

Barrios Unidos hosts a Narcotics Anonymous meeting every Thursday night and an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting every Saturday morning at its facility in Chimayó. The group rents the building and property from the Presbyterian Church of Santa Fe for $1 a year.

Salazar and volunteers provide boxes of food and donated clothes to families battling addiction, and they host weekly outreach events for grandparents who take care of their grandchildren, largely due to addiction in the family.

Salazar said there are 25 grandparents and 45 grandchildren, including her own granddaughters, in the program.

To help families who've lost members to drug addiction, Barrios Unidos has created a series of memorial quilts. "The blanket is about not forgetting and keeping their memory alive," Salazar said.

To effect change on a larger scale, the group has partnered with the Transdisciplinary Research, Equity and Engagement Center for Advancing Behavioral Health — the TREE Center — at the University of New Mexico.

It also has teamed up with the National Latino Behavioral Health Association, The Mountain Center, Santa Fe Prevention Alliance, Tewa Women United, the Office of Peer Recovery and Engagement, and other nonprofit organizations.

"It's hard work to be doing what she's doing, and she has the power to stay strong," said Carmen Rodriguez, who nominated Salazar for the 10 Who Made a Difference award.

Rodriguez is the founder of the nonprofit MANA del Norte. The group helps Latina women in Northern New Mexico attain their higher education goals by providing financial scholarships.

Salazar and Rodriguez met years ago at a regional development conference for Northern New Mexico organizations and have been allies ever since.

"She's such a multitasker, but she is — at the same time — always patient," Rodriguez said. "And she has such tenderness in her heart. She has changed a lot of people's lives."