Sandra Batemen
It was but a few
short days until Christmas in 1966. Two young elders of the Mormon Church
walked the streets of Laredo ,
Texas , knocking on doors in search
of someone who would listen to their gospel message. No one, it seemed, in the
entire city had time to hear the teachings of the Savior, so intent were they
that the celebration of His birth should suit their own social purposes.
Filled with
discouragement the two young men turned their backs to the approaching twilight
and began the long walk home. Retracing their steps of the afternoon, they come
upon a low, windswept riverbank. Jutting from its brow stood the barest means
of a shelter, constructed of weathered wooden slats and large pieces of
cardboard. Strangely, they felt moved to go to the door and knock. A small,
olive-skinned child with tangled black hair and large dark eyes answered. Her
mother appeared behind her, a short, thin woman with shy, smiling, dark-eyed
children. The mother proudly introduced each of them - eight in all - and each
in turn quickly bobbed his or her head.
The young men
were deeply moved at the extreme poverty they saw. Not one in the family had
shoes, and their clothes were ill-fitting and in a condition beyond mending. The
walls of the little home showed daylight between the wooden slats, and eight
little rolls of bedding were pressed tightly into the cracks to help keep out
the draft until they were needed for sleeping. A small round fire pit, dug in
one corner, marked the kitchen. An odd assortment of chipped dishes and pots
were stacked beside an old ice chest, and a curtained-off section with a
cracked porcelain tub served as the bathing area. Except for these the room was
barren.
The mother told
how her husband had gone north to find employment. He had written that he had
found a job of manual labor and that it took most of his small wage to pay his
room and board. But, she told the young men, he had managed to save fifty cents
to send them for Christmas, with which she had purchased two boxes of fruit
gelatin. It was one of the children's favorites and would make a special treat
on Christmas day.
Later, long after
the young men had left the family, they still asked each other incredulously,
“Fifty cents?...Fifty cents for eight children for Christmas?” Surely there
must be something they could do to brighten Christmas for such children.
The next morning,
as soon as the local shops opened, the young men hurried to the dime store and
purchased as many crayons, cars, trucks and little inexpensive toys as they
could afford. Each was carefully wrapped in brightly colored paper and all were
put in a large grocery bag. That evening the two young men took their gifts to
the shanty on the river-bank. When they knocked, the mother swung the door open
wide and invited them in. They stepped inside and in halting Spanish explained
to the children that they had seen Santa and he had been in such a hurry he'd
asked if they would deliver his gifts to the children for him.
With cries of
delight the children scrambled for the bag, spilling its contents upon the
floor and quickly dividing the treasured packages. Silently the mother's eyes
filled with tears of gratitude. She stepped forward to clasp tightly one of
each of the young men's hands in hers. For long moments she was unable to
speak. Then, with tears still welling in her eyes, she smiled and said, “No one
ever has been so kind. You have given us a special gift, the kind of love that
lights Christmas in the heart. May we also give you a special gift?” From the
corner of the room she drew out the two small boxes of fruit gelatin and handed
them to the young men. Then all eyes were moist. All knew the true meaning of
giving, and none would ever forget that at Christmas the greatest gift of all
was given.
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