Pubdate: Thu, 03 Apr 2003
Source: Skagit Valley Herald (WA)
Copyright: 2003 Skagit Valley Herald
Contact:  http://www.skagitvalleyherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1582
Author: Steve Howie
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

STORYTELLER IS A MAN WITH A MISSION

His Yarns Warn Teens About Dangers Of Substance Abuse

Standing before a stack of garbage bags overflowing with stuffed animals 
Wednesday, storyteller Alton Veil promised the students at Emerson High 
School a tale that would make them both laugh and cry.

"I want to tell you a story that catches it all and has a goal," he said, 
pausing for effect. "The end of the rainbow."

With that, Veil embarked on a mission that has directed his life for the 
past six years -- teaching teenagers the dangers of substance abuse through 
stories.

The message has a personal implication for Veil, who said he lost three of 
his four brothers to drug addiction, and the fourth to alcoholism.

Veil said the only thing that saved him from a similar fate was an ulcer 
that stopped him from drinking 45 years ago.

After he retired from a career as a writer and baker, Veil began touring 
the country, spreading his message and often sleeping as a guest in the 
jails and churches where he lectures.

In six years, he estimates he has visited 80 prisons, 70 Indian 
reservations, hundreds of churches and "every alternative high school 
within a 200-mile radius of Mount Vernon," where he lives.

Veil began his travels in a mobile home. When that broke down, he threw his 
sleeping bag and stuffed animals into the back of a 1993 van that often 
acts as both a vehicle and a home.

He tells hard stories and lighter ones, depending on his audience, and 
distributes stuffed teddy bears and puppy dogs to teenagers one would not 
normally associate with such items.

The 69-year-old Veil lives off of his retirement pension and doesn't take 
money for his appearances. But he insists that he is not poor.

"I'm devoted to this," Veil said. "I'm never broke. I do fine."

Veil, who calls himself a missionary, said he separates church from state 
and doesn't try to convert his teenage listeners.

At alternative schools, he focuses his efforts on preventing students from 
following a path that could lead to prison.

"The motivation here is to keep them from going to where I really talk," 
Veil said.

Veil's visit to Emerson was his sixth trip to Mount Vernon's alternative 
high school.

Many of the students greeted him enthusiastically and raved about Veil's 
hard-hitting stories.

"Some of his stories are just like a slap in the face," said Jennifer 
Scott, a 17-year-old senior at Emerson. "The stuff he's seen is so real."

Eighteen-year-old Zachary Clay said he appreciated the fact that Veil did 
not sugarcoat his message.

"He taught me a lot," Clay said. "He has a big heart."

Veil thrives on such response. It is his primary payback for all the nights 
he has spent in his van, all the miles he has traveled and all the brothers 
he has lost to drug abuse.

"Do you see my highs?" Veil asked. "I don't need drugs or booze. I get up 
on this stuff."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager