The Way to Happiness—Targeting Violence in Juarez

Report this content

Juarez, Mexico, was known as the murder capital of the world. But the homicide rate has declined by 45 percent since the broad distribution of The Way to Happiness, a booklet featured in a new brochure published by the Church of Scientology.

An employee of the Juarez Water Company delivered copies of The Way to Happiness door-to-door on his rounds through the city.

Twenty-year-old Juan Carlos Martinez looked out across the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez and wondered what had happened to the place where he was raised.

He and his family, Scientologists since 1998, returned home to Juarez in April 2008 from San Jose, California, just as the trouble was beginning— trouble Martinez faced head-on with the help of The Way to Happiness, a nonreligious moral code based entirely on common sense, written by author, humanitarian and Scientology Founder L. Ron Hubbard.

According to an October 2011 article by In Sight Crime, an organization specializing in research, analysis and investigation of organized crime in Latin America and the Caribbean, turf battles between warring drug cartels and their street gangs spilled onto the streets of Juarez in 2008 and the homicide rate exploded. According Chihuahua state statistics, homicides mounted to a gruesome 2,643 homicides in 2009.

“It was shocking at first when dozens of heavily armed Humvees and soldiers began patrolling the streets,” says Martinez. “It looked like we were under martial law.”

Determined to take action to reduce the ever-increasing violence, Martinez began distributing copies of The Way to Happiness in his neighborhood and conducting lectures to students and parents at local high schools. He joined forces with The Way to Happiness Foundation, a Glendale, California-based nonprofit public benefit corporation, and took on the challenge of making a major impact in the city. Scientologists from around the world helped fund the distribution of a half-million copies of The Way to Happiness in Juarez.

As people read the booklet, it made so much sense they began to adopt the campaign as their own. 

  • The Juarez Water Company delivered copies of The Way to Happiness door-to-door on their rounds through the city.
  • A local newspaper, El Diario, included 50,000 copies of The Way to Happiness in a Sunday edition of the paper.
  • Channel 44, the most popular television channel in the city, began promoting the campaign, with TV presenters reading precepts from The Way to Happiness and airing its public service announcements.
  • Schools and businesses began adopting the program, distributing customized copies of the booklet to their students and clientele.
  • The post office came on board, with postal workers hand-delivering copies of The Way to Happiness to every household in the city.
  • A government agency responsible for character education in the schools provided more than 800 hours of seminars on The Way to Happiness reaching 12,000 students.

The Way to Happiness became known and used, the violence began to subside: by the end of 2011 Juarez achieved a 45 percent drop in homicides over the previous year.

The Church of Scientology and its members are proud to share the tools for happier living contained in The Way to Happiness with all who work to build a better world. For more information, visit http://www.Scientology.org/thewaytohappiness.

Volunteers pasted address labels on copies of The Way to Happiness to be distributed to households throughout Juarez.

Youth in a Juarez school bus showing their copies of The Way to Happiness

Press Contact: Karin Pouw
Phone: (323) 960-3500
Email:  mediarelations@ChurchofScientology.net

Church of Scientology International
6331 Hollywood Blvd., Suite 1200
Los Angeles, CA 90028
Phone: 1-323-960-3500

Tags:

Media

Media