I had finished my graphics and I
was going to write something here myself on this subject until I came across
the following story. Nothing I could possibly write would ever come even
close to matching this man's story of his heart, his love for children,
and reassure at least me, that there is so much good in those unheralded
angels among us who quietly give of themselves to make a child smile. See
for yourself as you read below. If you don't feel your eyes misting as
you read I will be very much surprised. I know mine did at the same time
as the thought of the happiness he brought to so many made my heart swell
with such a feeling of warmth, it made me feel happier instantly. Kindness,
tolerance and love... if only this tired old world of ours had more like
him and those of his type how much better off we would all be.
A Christmas Story
A True Story
author: Jay Frankston
Nothing is so beautiful as a child's dream
of Santa Claus. I know, I often had
that dream. But I was Jewish and we didn't celebrate Christmas. It was
everyone else's holiday and I felt left out ... like a big party I wasn't
invited to. It wasn't the toys I missed, it was Santa Claus and a Christmas
tree.
So when I got married and had kids I decided
to make up for it. I started with a seven-foot tree, all decked out with
lights and tinsel, and a Star of David on top to soothe those whose Jewish
feelings were frayed by the display and, for them, it was a Hanukah bush.
And it warmed my heart to see the glitter, because now the party was at
my house and everyone was invited.
But something was missing, something big
and round and jolly, with jingle bells and a ho! ho! ho! So I bought a
bolt of bright red cloth and strips of white fur and my wife made me a
costume. Inflatable pillows rounded out my skinny frame, but no amount
of makeup could turn my face into merry old Santa. I went around looking
at department store impersonations sitting on their thrones with children
on their laps and flash-bulbs going off, and I wasn't satisfied with the
way they looked either.
After much effort I located a mask maker
and he had just the thing for me, a rubberized Santa mask, complete with
whiskers and flowing white hair. It was not the real thing but it looked
genuine enough to live up to a child's dream of St. Nick. When I tried
it on something happened.I looked in the mirror and there he was, big as
life, the Santa of my childhood. There he was ... and it was me. I felt
like Santa, like I became Santa. My posture changed. I leaned back and
pushed out my false stomach. My head tilted to the side and my voice got
deeper and richer and out came a "MERRY CHRISTMAS, EVERYONE."
For two years I played Santa for my children
to their mixed feelings of fright and delight and to my total enjoyment.
And when the third year rolled around, the Santa in me had grown into a
personality of his own and he needed more room than I had given him. So
I sought to accommodate him by letting him do his thing for other children.
I called up orphanages and children's hospitals and offered his services
free. But, "We don't need Santa, we have all sorts of donations from foundations
and ... thank you for calling." And the Santa in me felt lonely and
useless.
Then, one late November afternoon, I went
to the mailbox on the corner of the street to mail a letter and saw this
pretty little girl trying to reach for the slot. She was maybe six years
old. "Mommy, are you sure Santa will get my letter?" she asked. "Well,
you addressed it to Santa Claus, North Pole, so he should get it," the
mother said and lifted her little girl so she could stuff the letter into
the box. My mind began to whirl. All those thousands of children who wrote
to Santa Claus at Christmas time, whatever became of their letters?
One phone call to the main post office
answered my question. They told me that, as of the last week of November,
an entire floor of the post office was needed to store those letters in
huge sacks that came from different sections of the city. The Santa in
me went ho! ho! ho! and we headed down to the post office. And there they
were, thousands upon thousands of letters, with or without stamps, addressed
to Santi Claus, or St. Nick, or Kris Kringle, scribbled on wrapping paper
or neatly written on pretty stationary. And I rummaged through them and
laughed. Most of them were gimme, gimme, gimme letters, like "I want a
pair of roller skates, and a Nintendo, and a GI Joe, and a personal computer,
and a small portable TV, and whatever else you can think of." Many of them
had the price alongside each item ... with or without sales tax.
Then there were the funny ones like: "Dear
Santa, I've been a good boy all of last year, but if I don't get what I
want, I'll be a bad boy all of next." And I became a little flustered at
the demands and the greed of so many spoiled children. But the Santa in
me heard a voice from inside the mail sack and I continued going through
the letters, one after the other, until I came upon one which jarred and
unsettled me.
It was neatly written on plain white paper
and it said: "Dear Santa, I hope you get my letter. I am eleven years old
and I have two little brothers and a baby sister. My father died last year
and my mother is sick. I know there are many who are poorer than we are
and I want nothing for myself, but could you send us a blanket, cause mommy's
cold at night." It was signed Suzy. And a chill went up my spine and the
Santa in me cried, "I hear you Suzy, I hear you." And I dug deeper into
those sacks and came up with another eight such letters, all of them calling
out from the depth of poverty. I took them with me and went straight to
the nearest Western Union office and sent each child a telegram:
"GOT YOUR LETTER. WILL BE AT YOUR HOUSE ON CHRISTMAS DAY. WAIT FOR ME.
SANTA."
I knew I could not possibly fill the need
of all those children and it wasn't my purpose to do so. But if I could
bring them hope.If I could make them feel that their cries did not go unheard
and that someone out there was listening ... So I budgeted a sum of money
and went out and bought toys. I wasn't content with the five-and-ten cent
variety. I wanted something substantial, something these children could
only dream of, like an electric train, or a microscope, or a huge doll
of the kind they saw advertised on TV.
And on Christmas Day I took out my sleigh
and let Santa do his thing. Well, it wasn't exactly a sleigh, it was a
car and my wife drove me around because with all those pillows and toys
I barely managed to get in the back seat. It had graciously snowed the
night before and the streets were thick with fresh powder. My first call
took me to the outskirts of the city. The letter had been from a Peter
Barsky and all it said was: "Dear Santa, I am ten years old and I am an
only child. We've just moved to this house a few months ago and I have
no friends yet. I'm not sad because I'm poor but because I'm lonely. I
know you have many things to do and people to see and you probably have
no time for me. So I don't ask you to come to my house or bring anything.
But could you send me a letter so I know you exist." My telegram read:
"DEAR PETER, NOT ONLY DO I EXIST BUT I'LL BE THERE ON CHRISTMAS DAY. WAIT
FOR ME. SANTA."
We spotted the house and drove past it
and parked around the corner. Then Santa got out with his big bag of toys
slung over his shoulder and tramped through the snow. The house was wedged
in between two tall buildings. The roof was of corrugated metal and it
was more of a shack than a house. I walked through the gate, up the front
steps and rang the bell. A man opened the door. He was in his undershirt
and his stomach bulged out of his pants. "Boje moy " he exclaimed in astonishment.
That's Polish, by the way, and his hand went to his face. "P-p-please ..."
he stuttered, "p-please ... de boy ... de boy ... at mass ... church. I
go get him. Please, please wait." And he threw a coat over his bare shoulders
and, assured that I would wait, he ran down the street in the snow.
So I stood in front of the house feeling
good, and on the opposite side of the street was this other shack, and
through the window I could see these shiny little black faces peering at
me and waving. Then the door opened shyly and some voices called out to
me "Hya Santa" ... "Hya Santa". And I ho! ho! hoed my way over there and
this woman asked if I would come in and I did. And there were these five
young kids from one to seven years old. And I sat and spoke to them of
Santa and the spirit of love which is the spirit of Christmas.
Then, since they were not on my list, but
assuming from the torn Christmas wrappings that they had gotten their presents,
I asked if they liked what Santa had brought them during the night. And
each in turn thanked me for ... the woolen socks, and the sweater, and
the warm new underwear. And I looked at them and asked: "Didn't I bring
you kids any toys?" And they shook their heads sadly. "Ho! ho! ho! I slipped
up," I said "We'll have to fix that." I told them to wait, I'd be back
in a few minutes, then trudged heavily through the snow to the corner.
And when I was out of their sight, I ran as fast as I could to the car.
We had extra toys in the trunk and my wife quickly filled up the bag, and
I trodded back to the house and gave each child a brand new toy. There
was joy and laughter and the woman asked if she could take a picture of
Santa with the kids and I said, sure, why not?
And when Santa got ready to leave, I noticed
that this five-year-old little girl was crying. She was as cute as a button.
I bent down and asked her "What's the matter, child?" And she sobbed, "Oh!
Santa, I'm so happy." And the tears rolled from my eyes under the rubber
mask.
As I stepped out on the street, "Pan, pan,
proche ... please come ... come," I heard this man Barsky across the way.
And Santa crossed and walked into the house.The boy Peter just stood there
and looked at me. "You came," he said. "I wrote and ... you came". He turned
to his parents. "I wrote ... and he came." And he repeated it over and
over again. "I wrote ... and he came." And when he recovered, I spoke with
him about loneliness and friendship, and gave him a chemistry set, which
seemed to be what he would go for, and a basketball. And he thanked me
profusely. And his mother, a heavy-set Slavic-looking woman, asked something
of her husband in Polish. My parents were Polish so I speak a little and
understand a lot. "From the North Pole," I said in Polish. She looked at
me in astonishment. "You speak Polish?" she asked. "Of course," I said.
"Santa speaks all languages." And I left them in joy and wonder.
And I did this for twelve years, going
through the letters to Santa at the post office, listening for the cries
of children muffled in unopened envelopes. In time I learned all that Santa
has to know to handle any situation. Like the big kid who would stop Santa
on the street and ask: "Hey, Santa, where's your sleigh?" And I'd say,
"How old are you son?" And he'd say, "Thirteen." And I'd say, "Well, you're
a big fellow and you ought to know better. Santa used to come in a sleigh
many years ago, but these are modern times. I come in a car now." And I'd
hop in the back seat and my wife would drive off.
Or the kid who would look at me closely
and come out with, "That's a mask," pointing a finger. And you never lie
to children so I'd say, Sure, son, of course. If everybody knew what Santa
really looks like they'd bother me all year long and I couldn't get my
things ready for Christmas."
Or the mother who would whisper so her
young son couldn't hear, "Where do you come from?" I'd turn to the child
and say, "Your mom wants to know where I come from Willy." And he'd say,
"From the North Pole, Mommy," with absolute certainty. And she'd nudge
me and whisper,"You don't understand. Who sent you? I mean, how do you
come to this house?" I'd turn to the boy and say, "Hey, Willy, your mom
wants to know why I came to see you." And he'd say, "Cause I wrote him
a letter, Mommy." And I'd pull out the letter and she knows she mailed
it, and she's confused and bewildered and I'd leave her like that.
As time went on, the word got out about
Santa Claus and me, and I insisted on anonymity, but toy manufacturers
would send me huge cartons of toys as a contribution to the Christmas spirit.
So I started with 18 or 20 children and wound up with 120, door to door,
from one end of the city to the other, from Christmas Eve through Christmas
Day. And on my last call, a number of years ago, I knew there were four
children in the family and I came prepared. The house was small and sparsely
furnished. The kids had been waiting all day, staring at the telegram and
repeating to their skeptical mother, "He'll come, Mommy, he'll come." And
as I rang the door bell the house lit up with joy and laughter and "He's
here ... he's here!" And the door swings open and they all reach for my
hands and hold on. "Hya, Santa ... Hya, Santa. We just knew you'd come."
And these poor kids are all beaming with
happiness. And I take each one of them on my lap and speak to them of rainbows
and snowflakes, and tell them stories of hope and waiting, and give them
each a toy. And all the while there's this fifth child standing in the
corner, a cute little girl with blond hair and blue eyes. And when I'm
through with the others, I turn to her and say: "You're not part of this
family, are you?" And she shakes her head sadly and whispers, "No." "Come
closer, child," I say, and she comes a little closer."What's your name?"
I ask. "Lisa." "How old are you?" "Seven.""Come, sit on my lap," and she
hesitates but she comes over and I lift her up and sit her on my lap. "Did
you get any toys for Christmas?" I ask. "No," she says with puckered lips.
So I take out this big beautiful doll and, "Here, do you want this doll?"
"No," she says. And she leans over to me and whispers in my ear, "I'm Jewish."
And I nudge her and whisper in her ear, "I'm Jewish too. Do you want this
doll?" And she's grinning from ear to ear and nods with wanting and desire,
and takes the doll and hugs it and runs out.
It's been a long time since I last put
on my Santa suit. But I feel that Santa has lived with me and given me
a great deal of happiness all those years. And now, when Christmas rolls
around, he comes out of hiding long enough to say, "Ho! ho! ho! A Merry
Christmas to you, my friend."
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Christmas Index |
MIDI " Have Yourself a Merry
Little Christmas " courtesy of Les Gorven
| Jay Frankston was born in
1928, raised in Paris, escaped the Holocaust to arrive in the United States
in 1942. He received a B.A. degree at New York University and then obtained
his law degree from Brooklyn Law School. He practiced law in New York for
20 years before giving up the legal profession and moving his family to
California. Frankston has read his poetry in Paris, Prague, Madrid, Mexico,
and throughout the United States. In addition to his poetry, he is the
author of A Christmas Story (Summit Books, 1978) which has been
translated into fifteen languages. He now publishes his work by way of
his own press, Whole Loaf Publications, in Little River, California. His
publications include Seeds: A Collection of Sayings and Things; The Offering:
A Series of Meditations on the Meaning of Life; and Yom Hashoa: Remembering
the Holocaust. |
December 2007
|