Join us at the 2024 RICH Conference!

Join Agape and our partners at the 4th Annual Recovery, Inclusion, Community, Harm Reduction (RICH) Conference on Tuesday, April 9th, and Wednesday, April 10th at the Sheraton Harborside Hotel in Portsmouth.

Click on the button below to learn more about the conference.

Dignity’s Mission

To develop a community-based movement that promotes dignity and ends shame and discrimination. We ground our approach in science and empathy. We promote:

Overdose Prevention Sites

Legalization

Decriminalization

Dignity for All Users 

Saving Lives

Amnesty

Explore the work of Dignity through Conversations in Compassion, a podcast hosted by Stephen Andrew.

OUR MISSION

  • WHO WE ARE

    We are a small group of activists under the non-profit Agape, Inc. umbrella working to bring dignity to people using opiates, both currently and in recovery. 

    Our goal is to encourage people in our community to examine their own assumptions and consider a new approach that compassionately accepts people as they are. 

    We support trauma-informed, empathetic, and holistic approaches of abstinence and harm reduction that balance physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual needs. 

    We believe that people die from shame, not from the drug.

    We believe that everyone, including people using opiates, is doing the best that they can with the resources they presently have.

  • WHAT WE DO

    We are committed to bringing compassion and education to the public and to health professionals to gain a broader perspective of addiction that includes science and evidence-based strategies for change at a community and individual level and acceptance of human suffering as a source of addiction.

    We are dedicated to change in our own community. Replacing stigma with compassion and training leaders to incorporate the philosophy of resiliency and harm reduction into our health care and social service organizations.

    We are committed to look at our conversations.

    We work towards bringing naloxone and overdose prevention sites to prevent death and allow for safe use, access to resources, and the building of trusting, empathetic relationships.

  • WHY WE DO THIS

    Our current social, legal, and medical responses to people using opiates are not working. Neighbors and friends are dying.

    Mortality rates from drug poisonings are often under-reported, yet the numbers are staggering. In the United States, it is estimated that more than 200,000 deaths were attributed to opiate overdoses since 2015 alone. According to MaineHealth, drug overdose is now responsible for the most years of life lost prematurely among men under age 70 in Maine.

    Our escalating losses call for radical change in our thinking, beliefs, and strategies.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

HOW YOU CAN HELP

Dignity Emergency Fund

Provides funding for recovery housing and life-saving medication for individuals who are in a critical point in their lives.

If you or someone you know needs emergency funding please contact us.