Here to Help: The core members of
the Underground Oasis addiction support
group include Bertie Harris, Jim Harris,
Steve Fund, Kirk Shea and Dale Johnston
(standing); and John Shepherd (with
daughter Malia), Ricia Kallunki and
Jerra Woods (kneeling). Not pictured
is Oasis co-founder Leo Bristol. -
Bill Rautenstrauch, The Observer
On Adams Avenue in downtown La Grande, there’s
a place where people go underground to see
the light.
People with addictions, people at the end
of their ropes, people feeling lost, alone
and friendless, walk one flight down with
hopes of recovering their sense of direction
and reason for living.
Salvation is a possibility, though it isn’t
guaranteed. What is guaranteed is the friendship
and goodwill of others who have been there,
done that and want to help.
“We’re a family, and we’re
here for each other,” said Kirk Shea,
a core member of the Underground Oasis outreach
ministry.
The Underground Oasis conducts most of its
business in the basement of the Olde Towne
Mercantile at the corner of Adams Avenue
and Fir Street. The building is owned by
Steve Fund, who also happens to be a co-founder
and principal member of the ministry.
The program got its start on a night five
years ago when Fund, owner of a sewer and
drain cleaning business, received a frightening
telephone call from employee John Shepherd.
Shepherd was high on meth and threatening
to kill himself. Fund did not feel prepared
to handle the situation alone, but had friends
he knew he could count on.
He called Dale Johnston, a man who like
Fund himself is best described as one part
old-school biker, one part businessman and
one part lay minister.
Johnston in turn brought in Leo Bristol,
a fellow who has spent 15 years of his life
on drug offenses and knows a thing or two
about the hell of addiction. Together, the
three answered Shepherd’s cry for help.
They spent two hours talking
with the troubled man, basically giving him
the message that he could win his struggle
against drugs. Words they spoke struck a
chord.
“When we left, Johnny said, ‘I
have a lot of friends who need to hear this.’ That
became our battle cry,” said Johnston.
Johnston, Bristol, Fund and Shea all live
a biker lifestyle — Johnston in fact
is the chaplain for the Las Vegas-based Tribe/M/C
Motorcycle Club — and they’ve
all battled personal demons, including drug
or alcohol addiction, at some point in their
lives.
For a long time, they had thought about
forming a local addiction support group.
The encounter with Shepherd set them in motion.
Fund opened his basement for meetings, giving
rise to the name “Underground Oasis.” Around
the same time, he shut down a pawn shop he
was operating on the main floor of the building.
In doing so, he eliminated a major conflict
of interest.
“You can’t very well work
on both sides of the drug trade. In the pawn
shop business, you have a lot of people selling
stuff to get drugs,” he said.
Though by no means a professional social
worker, Johnston had some experience in community
service. In Nevada in the late 1990s, he
had worked with Oasis Outreach, a street
ministry that provided food for the poor.
He had always hoped the call to serve would
come again. After he met Shepherd, he felt
he and his friends had found the right mission.
“Leo and I had often talked about
doing something, but we didn’t know
what it should be until after that night,” he
said.
In shaping the ministry, Johnston wrote
his own version of a 12-Step Program, keeping
principles he believed to be useful but adding
emphasis on spiritual faith.
He said he thinks some recovery groups have
moved too far away from that.
“I’d been a part of Alcoholics
Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous in the
past. I love those programs, but I felt I
wanted to do something to put God back in
the center,” Johnston said.
He drafted a list of goals for the ministry,
plus a statement of commitment and a unique
definition of a successful outcome. The spiritual
aspect is present in all the wording.
Johnston is the first to say that the religious
approach to recovery isn’t for everybody.
But for many, including Shepherd, it works
very well.
“I love the program, and love knowing
about God. I can always stay clean and sober,
and that’s something I couldn’t
do with other programs,” Shepherd said.
In the five years since the founding of
the Underground Oasis, many people have come
and gone. They have sought not only help
for substance abuse problems, but also with
depression and family violence.
“There are all kinds of addictions,
and not every one of them has to do with
drugs,” said Shea.
There have been success
stories, and some failures, too.
A core group consisting of Johnston, Bristol,
Fund, Shea, Johnston’s wife Diane,
Jerra Woods, Jim and Bertie Harris, Shepherd
and his life partner Ricia Kallunki, keep
the ministry going. They conduct meetings,
help with outreach, and generally spread
the word.
Some, though not all, of those members are
associated with Underground Oasis because
of addiction and an ongoing need for friendship
and support.
Shepherd overcame his crisis long ago but
stays with the group nonetheless. He said
the Underground Oasis has given him something
to believe in.
proud business owners: John Shepherd
and Ricia Kallunki, pictured here with
their daughter Malia, operate Shepherd's
Almost Perfect Clothing in the Olde Towne
Mercantile. Shepherd is a former meth
user who turned his life around with
help from the Underground Oasis.
With help from Fund, he has opened Shepherd’s
Almost Perfect Clothing on the main floor of
the Olde Towne Mercantile. Considered a part
of the ministry, the store sells items of donated
clothing, inexpensively, to people in need.
Other core members are associated with Underground
Oasis simply because they want to help.
The Harrises, for instance, have never had
substance abuse issues but see the ministry
as a way to share their own spiritual beliefs.
“I never had any time for people of
that class of society, drug addicts and such,” Jim
said. “But Dale was a member of my
church and he showed me how people were responding
to this. Bertie and I decided to come and
show our support, and we’ve never looked
back.”
Over the years, the ministry has taken on
community service projects, including an
ongoing drive to provide clothing and hygiene
items for the La Grande School District’s
Youth In Transition Program, which serves
the needs of kids who have been kicked out
of their homes or have run away.
Coordinator Pam Dodds said she is more than
grateful for the help she has received from
Underground Oasis.
She also had words of praise for the ministry’s
efforts to help people with addictions.
“What a great program for recovering
addicts. It’s a real asset to the community,” she
said. “They’re a bunch of old
bikers who got clean and found God and are
sharing it. They’re doing it right.”
Also in the way of community service, Underground
Oasis “adopted” a poor family
at Christmas time last year, raising $800
for presents. This coming Christmas, the
group plans to adopt two families.
Shepherd and Kallunki head up that effort,
and take great pleasure in it.
“It was so much fun
going out and buying the gifts last year,” Kallunki
said.
Johnston, a self-employed physical therapist,
said the ministry is gaining in the battle
for local acceptance, garnering support from
churches and public agencies.
Not only that, the program is spreading
to other places. Johnston said there are
now Underground Oasis ministries in four
different states.
But there are still hearts and minds to
win, he added.
“There are all kinds of different
programs out there, established programs
like Ala-Non and Ala-Teen, and a lot of people
wonder if we’re just a flash in the
pan,” he said.
Through it all, Underground Oasis carries
on. For those with addictions, people needing
friends who have been there, done that, the
stairway leading down beckons.
And no one is ever turned away.
“We don’t care where someone’s
been. We care about where they’re going,” Johnston
said. |