SAGU Alumnus Ministers Through Wild Horse Inmate Program
Florence, AZ
March 14, 2019 | Deann Alford
Republished from AG News :
In the quarter-century that聽Randy Helm聽has broken and trained mustangs, the ordained Assemblies of God minister had long since discovered that his work with horses is a lot like how God works with people.
As supervisor of the聽Wild Horse Inmate Program聽at Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence, a mainstream plan to address recidivism by instilling responsibility and life skills in the offenders, Helm finds that the program鈥檚 nonspiritual focus doesn’t thwart the Lord from transforming the hearts of participants.
Such inmate training programs also exist in other states. One in Carson City, Nevada, is the subject of a feature film released March 15 called聽The Mustang. The film, produced by Oscar-winning director and Sundance Film Festival founder Robert Redford, is generating worldwide press interest in Helm鈥檚 program.
Helm, 64, recently released a devotional book,聽Lessons From Horses, which draws upon his experiences as a pastor and horse trainer.
Overall, within five years, more than three-quarters of released offenders end up聽right back in prison. In contrast, only one of the 75 inmates who have graduated from the program has returned to prison.
The wild horse instruction is a win-win for all. Those who learn responsibility and life skills through preparing animals captured for adoption by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) will readjust better to society and be less likely to end up reincarcerated. The BLM removes excess horse and burro populations from public lands unable to support them.
Helm鈥檚 hard-knocks childhood and adolescence bore the all-too-common thread found in the stories of inmates in his program: poverty, wayward parents, foster care, drug- and alcohol-addicted siblings, and an older brother who himself served time at the Florence unit. He grew up on his grandparents鈥 farm, which included horses, but he ran away at age 14.
At 18, Helm came to faith in Christ. After serving four years in the Air Force, he began his studies at聽Southwestern Assemblies of God University聽in Waxahachie, Texas. Along the way, he鈥檚 served as a 鈥渃owboy who pastors鈥 on church pastoral staff, and on the Arlington, Texas, police force.
His horse and peace-officer background prompted the penitentiary to tap Helm in 2012 to lead its Wild Horse Inmate Program. He oversees five employees from the Department of Corrections and around 25 inmates. In a year, 50 horses and burros are trained. The animals not bought by the mounted Border Patrol and police departments are sold to the public.
While the program doesn鈥檛 include a spiritual component, Helm has found that while he believes true change has a spiritual base to it, his own interactions with prisoners have proven to be the loudest sermon.
鈥淚t took me a while to realize just how much the inmates watch me,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey know what I’m saying when I talk about spirituality. The message gets out.鈥
Apart from Helm鈥檚 leadership of the Wild Horse Inmate Program, four or five times each year a prison chaplain invites him to conduct a 鈥渇ull blown鈥 cowboy church, in which he brings a horse on the prison yard for an outdoor service.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 where I can totally not have to worry about separation of church and state, and can get in there and talk about Christ,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hen I鈥檓 preaching there, I can put Scripture with it. They can connect the dots.鈥
One who connected is Justino Balderrama, 40, who grew up poor on an Akimel O鈥檕dham Pima Indian reservation in Arizona. A self-described ex-gangster, his life of crime began with stealing food at age 11. He鈥檚 been in and out of prison multiple times. In 2007 an aggravated driving under the influence conviction landed him in county jail, where he had a Holy Spirit encounter at a church service and came to faith in Christ.
While there, Balderrama saw a notice about the Wild Horse Inmate Program seeking prisoners to work with the mustangs. Helm chose him as one of 15. Officials transferred Balderrama to Florence.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an awesome program; it changed my life,鈥 says Balderrama, who credits it for instilling a work ethic. 鈥淭aking care of the horses made me take care of myself. It put me in a leadership position where they鈥檙e looking to me for guidance.鈥
Now Balderrama lives in a Christian halfway house in Phoenix along with two other men from the Wild Horse Inmate Program who also converted to Christianity. He鈥檚 landed a job installing air conditioners while helping Helm conduct horse training clinics and exhibitions. Balderrama aspires to launch an equine therapy program on his reservation to help youth without mentors.
鈥淎 lot of kids on the reservation are going through hard times,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no alpha in their life who could teach them. I lived that lifestyle. They threw the book at me. It was the best thing that could have happened.鈥
In 2013, prison officials asked Helm to write devotionals for inmates in solitary confinement. He opted to keep penning Christ-centered messages aimed at the cowboy community.
鈥淭he big encouraging thing is that it鈥檚 reaching people who have an interest in horses, but marginal interest in faith,鈥 he says.
Because national and international media have publicized the program, and with the release of Redford鈥檚 feature film, its promotion has brought widespread attention to聽Lessons From Horses. With chapters titled 鈥淭raining the horse you have鈥 and 鈥淭he edge of a precipice,鈥 its message has resonated far beyond cowboy circles into the general public.
In the book, just as in his sermons, Helm links foundational Scripture to his horse-training methods, providing a platform to explain points that his prison job doesn’t allow him liberty to elaborate upon. In the process, something unexpected has happened: relatives are sending the book to inmates.
As a result, 鈥淚nmates are coming up to me asking questions,鈥 he says. These inquiries Helm is free to answer.
Southwestern Assemblies of God University is a private, Christian university located 30 minutes south of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex in Waxahachie, Texas. The university was established in 1927, and now offers more than 70 associate, bachelor鈥檚, master鈥檚 and doctoral degrees on campus or online. More information is available at www.sagu.edu