Choose Your Location
|
![]() |
He adjusts his paisley pocket square and clutches a Bible as his friends give him high-fives and hugs.
They are congratulating him for graduating from the Helping Up Mission, a drug treatment program.
“All I knew was getting high and hustling” said Singletary, 45, of his days as an addict. “When I got to Helping Up Mission, I had to learn there were some changes to be made.”
Singletary is one of 75 men who graduated Sunday from the yearlong residential drug treatment program. Started in 1885, the nondenominational faith-based organization on East Baltimore Street in the city is one of Baltimore’s oldest nonprofits. Most of the men were homeless and addicted to drugs.
As residents, they underwent spiritual classes, 12-step meetings, one-on-one counseling, general equivalency diploma preparation, career counseling and job placement, program administrator Thomas Bond said.
This year, 91 percent of the graduates have jobs.
Gov. Robert Ehrlich praised the Helping Up Mission at the graduation ceremony Sunday, at Martin’s West banquet hall in Baltimore County.
“Anybody — the state, nonprofits — can feed and clothe. It’s what happens in this place underneath the skin that makes these men come together.”
Ehrlich said the Helping Up Mission shows the benefit of faith-based initiatives.
“The separation of church and state was made up. We should never indulge that notion. I use Helping up Mission as an example of how faith-based initiatives work.” he said.
The state recently gave the program a $3.6 million grant, said Robert Gehman, the executive director of the Helping Up Mission.
Jubilant graduates posed for photographs, pumped their fists in the air and hugged family members after the ceremony.
Singletary is now a professional chef. He works at Catholic charities and leads a Bible study group every Friday night.
“It feels wonderful to complete something,” he said. “I don’t want to go back to where I was.”
Dustin Dietz, 24, kicked his heroin addiction after a year with the program. He now works for a Baltimore Gas & Electric contractor and is expecting his second child.
“I didn’t know how in a year I could get my house, my family, my daughter back,” he said. “God did so much for me.”
mmcilroy@baltimoreexaminer.com


Comments from Examiner Readers
8:04 AM MST on Fri., Oct. 17, 2008 re: "Shedding light on teen suicide"
Report as inappropriate
4:32 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 9, 2008
re: "Muscle dysmorphia: The intense fear of being skinny"
Report as inappropriate
4:32 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 9, 2008
re: "Muscle dysmorphia: The intense fear of being skinny"
Report as inappropriate
4:27 PM MST on Tue., Sep. 9, 2008
re: "Muscle dysmorphia: The intense fear of being skinny"
Report as inappropriate
4:15 AM MST on Mon., Aug. 11, 2008
re: "Hospital faces emergency room shortage"
Report as inappropriate
11:43 AM MST on Wed., Jul. 16, 2008
re: "Party planned on Embarcadero"
Report as inappropriate
10:25 AM MST on Wed., Jul. 16, 2008
re: "Party planned on Embarcadero"
Report as inappropriate
4:03 AM MST on Sat., Jun. 14, 2008
re: "Restaurant ratings on the back burner"
Report as inappropriate
10:02 PM MST on Wed., Jun. 11, 2008
re: "Doctors: Heart surgery linked to depression, emotional disorders"
Report as inappropriate
1:27 PM MST on Tue., Jun. 10, 2008
re: "Restaurant ratings on the back burner"
Report as inappropriate
2:50 PM MST on Sat., May. 17, 2008
re: "Calorie-counting measure on menu"
Report as inappropriate
Examiner Reader said:
i can relate to this article in my own experiences. i became very into drugs, and started failing all of my classes. i became so isolated and depressed, that i tried to hang myself. i also tried to crash my car hard enough to kill me. all i wanna say, is don't wait for someone to attempt it! take it seriously, even when they just mention it. it could be the last time you talk to them!
1 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I wil add to my last comment. I was so self conscious about being skinny in high school. I was 6' 2' 140lbs. However, if my parents were not alcoholics, I probably would have seen the positives of being skinny instead of the negatives.
6 agree | 7 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I wil add to my last comment. I was so self conscious about being skinny in high school. I was 6' 2' 140lbs. However, if my parents were not alcoholics, I probably would have seen the positives of being skinny instead of the negatives.
5 agree | 7 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I am a 52 year old men who is 6' 2' and weight fluctuates between 170lbs and 180 lbs. I was made fun of by me two brothers for being tall and skinny as well as my father who is also tall and skinny and was teased by his parents for being tall and skinny. My parents are alcholics and I got clean and sober 22 years ago and have learned to love myself. I now enjoy being tall and skinny instead of hating it. Beauty is truly in the eye of the beholder.
7 agree | 6 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
i can relate this article in our hospital her in the philippines. especially in the main e.r. patient came in and out inh the e.r and i observe some of the staff are not attending the patients; and the e.r doctors are not in the duty or they are not in the e.r room. also i noticed that our e.r is lack of instrumnet being used to the patient. may the problem is in our goverment not in the hospital... thanks for the insight author.
10 agree | 8 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
""Several members of the board, left, right and center, think this has been poorly thought out,” Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin told The Examiner. “Fisherman’s Wharf is the goose that lays the golden egg for San Francisco. We don’t want to commit economic suicide.”" What an absolute crock... completely political on the part of this Supervisor and any other of them. Neighborhood groups continually contact their District Superviors about impact of street fairs and large events in and close to residential areas for years and we are told we are just "killing" the spirit of fun in The City. Well now is a chance to have fun when it doesn't impact neighborhoods. Just the same old political BS from Supervisors who continually enjoy conflict.
18 agree | 14 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
Sometimes Mayor Newsom can be so clueless. Real life can be considerably different outside "Newsom-land" in the Mayor's head.
15 agree | 14 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
In March, Izzy's got a 42 and spent quite a bit of money to follow code and improve. 3 months later they recieve negative press while pending inspection. Latest score--94. How about positive press instead of slamming local hard working firms.
14 agree | 16 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
My 9-year-old son had open heart surgery and was on the heart/lung machine during his surgery,after which he experienced anxiety and depression and had thoughts of suicide. He took his own life at 17 years old. I wish I had known this risk of the heart surgery and specifically the risk of being on the heart/lung machine.
15 agree | 16 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader Hater said:
Did you even read the article?
16 agree | 16 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Examiner Reader said:
I think its incredibly important to know exactly what goes into our food so we can make an educated guess in deciding what goes into our bodies is the best thing for us in order to take better care of ourselves. Had we been informed of the risk of adding sugary and fattening fried food into our diet, we would have never allow these filthy thing to touch our lips. Fried and sugary food should have been expensive, and NOT healthy, nutritious food for our consumption. Also once these bad, nutritionally poor food is consumed, it is unusually addictive and bad habits can be hard to break.
18 agree | 20 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree