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'Heroin in Ireland is an economic massacre - we have to find a new solution'

Grace Dyas and Rachael Keogh – author of Dying To Survive – want their new play about heroin to spark change in Ireland.

I KNOW YOU see drug users every day on our streets. Their faces are different to yours. They are thin. They look in pain.

You’re scared. You’re asked for money as you sit in cafés. You put your foot on your handbag under the table. You try to casually pick up your iPhone.

Sometimes you give money; sometimes you don’t. It’s always a complicated decision. You don’t understand. You’re afraid.

You haven’t been given the tools to know what to do. You don’t hear about drugs from politicians on your doorstep. You live with drug users in your home. Alcohol, prescription drugs; sometimes recreational drugs, when they need re-creating.

They are your mother or father, your sister or your brother. If it gets out of control and they need help, they can pay for it. When you leave your house, you feel safe.

Ireland’s relationship with heroin

In 2010 I wrote the play Heroin. It was critically acclaimed and award winning. But eight years later, it’s as crushingly relevant as ever. 

The play views the past 60 years of Ireland’s relationship with heroin. Only 1,000 people will get to see it. Those 1,000 people will be from all social backgrounds. Some will be middle class people, there because they feel upset, demoralised and powerless seeing the heroin problem on their streets over the past few years.

Some will be older citizens, deflated from seeing the problem go in cycles of crisis, promises of action, reports with recommendations not acted upon for years and years and years.

Some will be doctors, lawyers, priests, guards who deal with addiction everyday, some will be young people, here to see something that might help them navigate the peer pressure of drug taking. Some will here to see their story acted out, the power of being represented.

It’s an economic massacre. There are 30 detox beds available in Ireland today. That’s the most there has ever been.

In 2015, 695 people died from drug addiction. In the same year, 425 people died by suicide and there were 196 road deaths, but the lives of those who die from addiction aren’t represented in national campaigns.

A full 72% of the prison population are there because of drug related crime. Most have had traumatic childhoods. It costs 22,000 a year to house a drug user.

In 2010, when I first produced this play, it ended where it started. It was a hopeless cycle because that’s how things were. I hoped the play would make people angry. In that anger I hoped a creativity would emerge.

Talking solutions

For 60 years, our approach to drugs has been dividing us as Irish citizens and making the space between us ever more entrenched. Attending this play is an opportunity to come together. To hear about the solutions we know will work.

We will hear about promises which are being fulfilled among us. In Portugal, they have decriminalised drugs and drugs users and now they only have four overdose deaths a year compared to our 695. Portuguese people rejected the failed ‘war on drugs’ and took back their cities by caring for their traumatised, vulnerable and sick children.

I promise, by October 2020, we will have solved the drugs crisis in our country. Is that an extravagant promise? I don’t think so.

Promises such as those have been fulfilled by us before: the Ryan report, marriage equality, repeal. This is an invitation to come together and talk about rising. About reviving our power to do something different.

It’s an opportunity in Ireland to become WE again.

Heroin will be performed in the O’Reilly Theatre in Belvedere College, Dublin this week – 24, 25 and 26 September 2018. Written by Grace Dyas, with additional writing by Rachael Keogh, and devised by Dyas, Keogh, Barry O’Connor and Lauren Larkin in collaboration with Tony May, Mark Kenny, William Lennon, Graham Ryall and the staff and clients of Rialto Community Drug Team and the communities of Fatima Mansions, Dolphin House and Ballymun.

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    Mute Kim
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    Sep 4th 2012, 8:22 AM

    RIP little one. How heartbreaking. The poor little mite. Thoughts go out to his poor parents & that they find the strength to cope some how.

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    Mute Tom O Laithimh
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    Sep 4th 2012, 8:16 AM

    Such a sad story, if the HSE had concerns in the past why did they not act sooner? Such a waste of a life and the HSE have a lot to answer for

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    Mute Micheal
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    Sep 4th 2012, 8:38 AM

    Without knowing the specifics of this case, it sounds like the boy may have died in his sleep, (IE: cardiac issues). Can we please hold the HSE bashing until after p/m results are released?
    RIP Little Man, RIP.

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    Mute Resel
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    Sep 4th 2012, 9:45 AM

    Ya Tom. Serious assertions there based on what exactly?

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    Mute McNamees On TheGreen
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    Sep 4th 2012, 11:41 AM

    Blaming James o Reilly is pathetic. Using this tragedy as a little political football is disgusting. The family, regardless of circumstance deserve more.

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    Mute Fon Ellard
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:27 AM

    Only going on hearsay but it looks like there may be mental health problems involved and if so then I’m not surprised that the HSE’s systems have failed, we’ve seen it happen time and again. Such a tragedy.

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    Mute Goldie Locks
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    Sep 4th 2012, 11:25 AM

    Hearsay is a dangerous thing Fon. Imagine it were untrue? Heaping more pain on this family at a time of immense tragedy. Necessary???

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    Mute Tom O Laithimh
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:04 AM

    Comments based on press release from the HSE stating they are familiar with the family as they have been monitoring them ….. Obviously not week enough I think

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    Mute Micheal
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:23 AM

    It’s a standard procedure in the case of infant death outside of a hospital setting.

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    Mute Mick Lennon
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:41 AM

    of course it’s ultimately his job,he takes the huge salary and benefits to run the health service,if theres failings collectively or individually within the hse it ultimately falls in his lap in my opinion,he’s as bad as Harney and she was dreadful

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    Mute Lauren Halligan
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:25 AM

    Terrible thing to happen. Hope the family get the support they need. x

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    Mute Tom O Laithimh
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:04 AM

    Comments based on press release from the HSE stating they are familiar with the family as they have been monitoring them ….. Obviously not week enough I think

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    Mute Eoin Meany
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    Sep 4th 2012, 12:21 PM

    I don’t know the specifics of this tragic incident and face it, neither does anyone else commenting on this page. Reading between the lines, yes mental health issues may well have been a factor. However, we don’t know what the HSE involvement with the family was before the death of the child and what other factors were at play.

    It may well be the case that there was a failure of HSE systems or it could be the case that the standard of care was high and it was an unpreventable tragic outcome.

    To suggest otherwise is unfair on all those concerned.

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    Mute Margaret Doyle Hanley
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    Sep 4th 2012, 12:02 PM

    I think all managers should be responsible for employees in their company, otherwise why have them? If they can’t do the job, there’s plenty out there that can.

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    Mute Mick Lennon
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:27 AM

    tragic,the poor little lad,if the hse are found to be at fault then James Reilly has blood on his hands

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    Mute Fon Ellard
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    Sep 4th 2012, 10:35 AM

    Really? Is James Reilly supposed to be personally monitoring EVERY employee in the HSE to see they do their jobs right? I’m no fan of his but you can’t seriously expect him to be held responsible for everything that goes on.

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    Mute Barry Basstard
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    Sep 4th 2012, 1:20 PM

    I read that he died of asphyxiation.

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    Mute Andrea Rock Massey
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    Sep 4th 2012, 1:02 PM

    Front page of some newspaper this morning said the police are treating the death as suspicious. It always makes it so much more horrendous and heartbreaking. God love his little soul x

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