I don't know at what moment, exactly, I stopped believing in Santa Claus. I'm guessing that it came when I was about four or five years old and I saw four "Santa Clause"s on the same block of 18th Avenue in Brooklyn.
If my belief held on beyond that moment, it probably would have ended when I realized that Santa Claus would've been centuries old. At least, he would have been the Santa who piloted a reindeer-drawn sleigh across the sky and descended chimneys for kids like me was the same one that did those things for my parents, grandparents and other kids who came before them.
On a more serious note, it's hard not to wonder how many programs ,especially the informal ones, that distribute bikes and other things to needy kids survive beyond their founders or volunteers.
Moses Mathis, the Bicycle Man, with a kid whose Christmas he brightened. |
That question entered my mind when I saw a news story about such a scheme--one that I'd mentioned in a post five years ago. One day, Moses Mathis asked a little boy in his Fayetteville, North Carolina neighborhood what he got for Christmas. "A raggedy old bicycle," he said.
"Bring it up here and we will fix it."
Word got around and other kids came by. The next thing he knew, the Mathis' garage was full of bikes.
That's when the idea of a bike giveaway came to Moses. So, thirty-two years ago, Moses Mathis began a beloved holiday tradition that earned him the moniker "The Bicycle Man." A few days before Christmas, he allowed kids to choose from among the bikes he'd fixed--without any adult, besides him, present. He continued this holiday ritual every year until he died in 2013. Ann, his widow, kept her promise to continue his legacy until she couldn't.
Ann Mathis, in blue top and black jacket, with some of "her" kids. |
Well, that day has come. She has announced that this year's bike giveaway will be the last. When she started working alongside Moses, she was "a young girl," she explained. "I'm old now." After many years of service to her community, she wants to spend more time with her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
The last day for donations will be the 15th of this month, and kids will be allowed to choose their bikes and helmets on the 17th.
Will there be another "Bicycle Man" or "Bicycle Woman"--the local version of Santa Claus for three decades--in Fayetteville, North Carolina?
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