Posted: Friday,
December 16, 2011 11:48 am | Updated: 1:57 pm, Fri Dec 16, 2011.
Associated
Press -
OMAHA, Neb. —
The young
father stood in line at the Kmart layaway counter, wearing dirty clothes and worn-out
boots. With him were three small children.
He asked to
pay something on his bill because he knew he wouldn’t be able to afford it all
before Christmas. Then a mysterious woman stepped up to the counter.
“She told
him, ‘No, I’m paying for it,’” recalled Edna Deppe, assistant manager at the
store in Indianapolis. “He just stood there and looked at her and then looked
at me and asked if it was a joke. I told him it wasn’t, and that she was going
to pay for him. And he just busted out in tears.”
At Kmart
stores across the country, Santa is getting some help: Anonymous donors are
paying off strangers’ layaway accounts, buying the Christmas gifts other
families couldn’t afford, especially toys and children’s clothes set aside by
impoverished parents.
Before she
left the store Tuesday evening, the Indianapolis woman in her mid-40s had paid
the layaway orders for as many as 50 people. On the way out, she handed out $50
bills and paid for two carts of toys for a woman in line at the cash register.
“She was
doing it in the memory of her husband who had just died, and she said she
wasn’t going to be able to spend it and wanted to make people happy with it,”
Deppe said. The woman did not identify herself and only asked people to
“remember Ben,” an apparent reference to her husband.
Deppe, who
said she’s worked in retail for 40 years, had never seen anything like it.
“It was like
an angel fell out of the sky and appeared in our store,” she said.
Most of the
donors have done their giving secretly.
Dona Bremser,
an Omaha nurse, was at work when a Kmart employee called to tell her that
someone had paid off the $70 balance of her layaway account, which held nearly
$200 in toys for her 4-year-old son.
“I was
speechless,” Bremser said. “It made me believe in Christmas again.”
Dozens of
other customers have received similar calls in Nebraska, Michigan, Iowa,
Indiana and Montana.
The
benefactors generally ask to help families who are squirreling away items for
young children. They often pay a portion of the balance, usually all but a few
dollars or cents so the layaway order stays in the store’s system.
The
phenomenon seems to have begun in Michigan before spreading, Kmart executives
said.
The good
Samaritans seem to be visiting mainly Kmart stores, though a Walmart spokesman
said a few of his stores in Joplin, Mo., and Chicago have also seen some
layaway accounts paid off.
Kmart
representatives say they did nothing to instigate the secret Santas or spread
word of the generosity. But it’s happening as the company struggles to compete
with chains such as Wal-Mart and Target.
Kmart may be
the focus of layaway generosity, Yala said, because it is one of the few large
discount stores that has offered layaway year-round for about four decades.
Under the program, customers can make purchases but let the store hold onto
their merchandise as they pay it off slowly over several weeks.
The sad
memories of layaways lost prompted at least one good Samaritan to pay off the
accounts of five people at an Omaha Kmart, said Karl Graff, the store’s
assistant manager.
“She told me
that when she was younger, her mom used to set up things on layaway at Kmart,
but they rarely were able to pay them off because they just didn’t have the
money for it,” Graff said.
He called a
woman who had been helped, “and she broke down in tears on the phone with me.
She wasn’t sure she was going to be able to pay off their layaway and was
afraid their kids weren’t going to have anything for Christmas.”
“You know, 50
bucks may not sound like a lot, but I tell you what, at the right time, it may
as well be a million dollars for some people,” Graff said.
Graff’s store
alone has seen about a dozen layaway accounts paid off in the last 10 days,
with the donors paying $50 to $250 on each account.
“To be
honest, in retail, it’s easy to get cynical about the holidays, because you’re
kind of grinding it out when everybody else is having family time,” Graff said.
“It’s really encouraging to see this side of Christmas again.”
Lori Stearnes
of Omaha also benefited from the generosity of a stranger who paid all but $58
of her $250 layaway bill for toys for her four youngest grandchildren.
Stearnes said
she and her husband live paycheck to paycheck, but she plans to use the money
she was saving for the toys to help pay for someone else’s layaway.
In Missoula,
Mont., a man spent more than $1,200 to pay down the balances of six customers
whose layaway orders were about to be returned to a Kmart store’s inventory
because of late payments.
Store
employees reached one beneficiary on her cellphone at Seattle Children’s
Hospital, where her son was being treated for an undisclosed illness.
“She was
yelling at the nurses, ‘We’re going to have Christmas after all!’” store
manager Josine Murrin said.
A Kmart in
Plainfield Township, Mich., called Roberta Carter last week to let her know a
man had paid all but 40 cents of her $60 layaway.
Carter, a
mother of eight from Grand Rapids, Mich., said she cried upon hearing the news.
She and her family have been struggling as she seeks a full-time job.
“My kids will
have clothes for Christmas,” she said.
Angie Torres,
a stay-at-home mother of four children under the age of 8, was in the
Indianapolis Kmart on Tuesday to make a payment on her layaway bill when she
learned the woman next to her was paying off her account.
Associated
Press writers Michael J. Crumb in Des Moines, Iowa; Matt Volz, in Helena,
Mont.; and Jeff Karoub in Detroit contributed to this report.
NOTE:
Remarkable, uplifting and heartbreaking all at
once. Not to spoil the mood, but as a point of comparison, interested
readers might consider Googling the shocking (and appalling) charitable donation history of
US Vice President Joe Biden. It's been widely reported and is easy research. In this case, comparisons, which are often invidious,
aren’t.
No comments:
Post a Comment