Father Joseph C. Martin
No Laughing Matter Chalk Talks On Alcohol. San Francisco,
Harper & Row Publishers Inc., A Quicksilver Book.
This practical and hopeful guide to understanding alcoholism by
Father Joseph C. Martin, a well known and respected lecturer on the
subject of alcoholism, provides new hope for the alcoholic, family and
friends. Father Martin's program has been endorsed by, and widely used
in federal, state and private rehabilitation programs. In No
Laughing Matter Father Joseph Martin he himself a recovering
alcoholic, offers compassionate, solid help to others who suffer from
this disease.
Leader in fight against alcoholism founded Father Martin's Ashley in
Harford County
By Frederick N. Rasmussen
March 10, 2009
The Rev. Joseph C. Martin, a recovering alcoholic and an
international leader in the fight against alcoholism and substance
abuse who was a co-founder of Father Martin's Ashley, a Harford
County treatment center, died early yesterday of heart disease at
his Havre de Grace home. He was 84.
Father Martin's "Chalk
Talk on Alcohol" and "No Laughing Matter" have become standard tools
used by recovery centers, schools and employee assistance programs
the world over.
"Father Martin is an icon in the treatment
industry and was one of the first to describe alcoholism in layman's
terms as a disease," said Mark Hushen, president and chief executive
of Father Martin's Ashley, located near Havre de Grace.
"He
helped thousands and thousands directly and indirectly with his
message all across the world," he said. Mike Gimbel, a
substance-abuse expert who was Baltimore County drug czar for 23
years and now directs an anti-steroid program at St. Joseph Medical
Center, is an old friend.
"Father Martin has done more to
educate and treat those suffering from addiction than anyone in the
past 50 years," Mr. Gimbel said yesterday. Born in Baltimore, the
son of a machinist who was a heavy drinker, Father Martin was raised
in Hampden. He was a 1942 graduate of Loyola High School and
attended Loyola College from 1942 until 1944.
He studied for
the priesthood at St. Mary's Seminary & University in Roland Park
from 1944 to 1948, when he was ordained a priest of the Society of
St. Sulpice.
Father Martin began drinking while he held
teaching positions at St. Joseph's College in Mountain View, Calif.,
from 1948 to 1956, and later at St. Charles Seminary in Catonsville
from 1956 to 1959.
"I drank from the age of 24 to 34," he
told The Sun in a 1992 profile. "I was afraid
to go near the altar to say Mass six days a week. I did go on
Sunday, but shaking all the while."
After his troublesome
behavior came to the attention of superiors, Father Martin was
confined to a psychiatric ward in California in 1956, and after his
release, returned to drinking double martinis and shots of vodka
from hidden bottles in his bathroom.
"It never occurred to me
that perhaps there was something odd about a priest walking toward a
garbage dump in the middle of the afternoon carrying two suitcases
of clanking bottles," he told The Sun in an
interview last year.
Finally, the Archdiocese of Baltimore
sent Father Martin to Guest House, a Michigan treatment center for
the clergy, to get sober.
By the time he left Guest House, he
had regained his sobriety and found what would become his life's
work.
He converted his notes based on Bill Wilson's
Alcoholics Anonymous famous 12-step program into a blackboard talk,
which was done on an actual blackboard with chalk. During the 1960s,
he began presenting it at AA meetings, rehab centers and private
businesses.
In 1972, his "Chalk Talk" lecture was filmed by
the Navy and later was picked up by the other armed forces where it
was used as mandatory addiction training for service personnel.
Father Martin and his blackboard lecture were in demand all over
the world, which gave rise to his crack: "Have chalk. Will travel."
In 1964, he became acquainted with Lora Mae Abraham, a mother
and a housewife, who was the daughter of a Baptist minister.
"I've been sober 45 years. Those years when I was suffering from
alcoholism were years of disgrace and shame, and especially so
because I was a woman," said Mrs. Abraham.
One night in 1964,
Mrs. Abraham joined other members from her AA meeting at the Johns
Hopkins University to hear a lecture featuring Father Martin.
"When he walked out on stage and said, 'Hello, I'm Joe Martin,
and I'm an alcoholic,' and that alcoholics are not bad people, they
have an illness, I surrendered right there that night," she said.
The two became close friends, and it was Mrs. Abraham who suggested
in 1978 that Father Martin establish a center where alcoholics could
come for treatment.
It took seven years of fundraising before
they were able to acquire Oakington, the former estate of Maryland
Sen. Millard Tydings overlooking the Chesapeake Bay.
The
22-bed facility opened in 1983 and was named Ashley for Mrs.
Abraham's father, the Rev. Arthur Ashley.
The Rev. Leonard A.
Dahl, a Presbyterian clergyman, stepped down two years ago as
president and CEO at Ashley.
"He also took me to my first AA
meeting, and I recently celebrated 36 years of sobriety," Mr. Dahl
said of Father Martin. "He believed that alcoholism was his cross
and hymn to carry, and he was never bitter about the disease."
Father Martin, who liked to say, "Give me a blackboard, a piece
of chalk and a bunch of drunks and I'm at home," always greeted new
arrivals with a hopeful welcome: "The nightmare is over."
Father Martin also made sure that no one was turned away because of
their inability to pay for treatment that can cost $20,800 for the
28-day program.
In the more than 30 years since it accepted
its first patient, more than 30,000 people have been treated,
including celebrities from the world of Hollywood, sports and
politics.
While retiring from active management in 2003,
Father Martin, who had celebrated 50 years of sobriety, continued
lecturing patients until late last year.
Michael K. Deaver,
former White House chief of staff during the Reagan administration,
had been a patient and later served on Ashley's board for a decade.
"When I came to Ashley, I had been with presidents, kings, popes
and prime ministers, but Father Martin was the most powerful person
I had ever met," Mr. Deaver said. "You see, Father has the power to
change people, to make them better, to make them whole again."
A Mass of Christian burial will be offered at 10 a.m. Friday at
the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, Cathedral and Mulberry streets.
Father Martin is
survived by a brother, Edward Martin of Lilburn, Ga.; two sisters,
Frances Osborne and Dorothy Christopher, both of Baltimore; Mrs.
Abraham and her husband, Tommy Abraham, with whom he lived for 30
years; and many nieces and nephews.
In remembrance of Father Martin...
Father
Joseph C. Martin, S.S. - October 12, 1924 - March 9, 2009. "My
name is Joe Martin, and I'm an alcoholic." Father Martin first
uttered this statement in 1958, when he was in treatment for
alcoholism at the Guest House, what would prove to be a refuge
for him from his drinking and a turning point in his life. His
personal journey in recovery prompted a celebrated career in
which his only aim was to ease the suffering of individuals and
families, around the world, affected by addiction.
He was
born on October 12, 1924 in Baltimore, Maryland . He quickly
developed a fondness for religion and faith. People fondly recall
his special story-telling ability and wonderful sense of humor.
In 1942, Father Martin graduated from Loyola College and entered
St. Mary's seminary. He was ordained a priest in 1948 and
underwent rigorous training to become a Sulpician, a highly
regarded teaching society within the Catholic Church. After
losing this coveted distinction as a result of his drinking, only
in sobriety did he regain this title.
Father Martin taught
minor seminarians and fulfilled several teaching roles within the
church. It was very evident that he possessed a special ability
to educate but his drinking became very troublesome and he was
eventually directed to seek help at the Guest House. Father
Martin frequently cited the tremendous impact his mentor Austin
Ripley had on his journey in recovery. Many of Father Martin's
teachings originated in concepts he learned while at the Guest
House. His enthusiasm for sobriety coupled with his passion for
teaching evolved into an unending quest to ease the suffering
of individuals and families affected by addiction. In his career,
spanning more than 35 years, Father Martin was catapulted into
international acclaim as a prized speaker and educator on
addiction and recovery thru the Twelve Steps. He founded Kelly
Productions in 1972 and used it as a platform to capture the
minds and hearts of millions of people.
Father Martin's
message is no less relevant today than in 1972. He will continue
to inspire love, service, helpfulness to others, and recovery
through the use of his films, audio lectures, and books. In his
last year, he shared his vision that he can be remembered so
that the still suffering individual affected by addiction might
benefit from his God-inspired message of hope.
VIEWING:
Thursday, March 12th, 2009 From 1p-9p St. Mary's Seminary
Laubacher Hall 5400 Roland Avenue Baltimore, MD 21210
FUNERAL MASS: Friday, March 13th, 2009 10 am The Basilica
of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin
Mary 409 Cathedral Street Baltimore, MD 21201