Cozy Christmas for all
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Suzie Harrison
She was glad she had a place to go to celebrate the holiday. A safe
place to enjoy a Christmas feast, where her young son could talk with
Santa Claus, do crafts and receive gifts while sharing the experience
with other families and people who cared.
That was the setting she and others found at Laguna’s American
Legion Post 222’s annual Christmas celebration for families in need.
She said that she did not want to give her name.
“He doesn’t know where we are,” she said of her husband. “He
burned his first wife’s house down in Canada and sold my son’s
stroller when he was two to three months old -- you don’t do that.”
She has lived in Laguna for about a year, and it was her first
time to this holiday event. She said she was very excited about
eating some turkey and pointed to the large buffet table of
traditional trimmings.
“I was told if I come by here, they will give presents for the
kids,” she said. “Laguna Beach is such a cozy community.”
Sande St. John is the legionnaire’s community outreach person and
event chair for the children.
“I choose the families who are going to come because I work with
them through the year,” St. John said. “We pull more in every year;
we started with two families, and now have eight.”
She said the families are local people who mostly work in
restaurants washing dishes or busing tables, or in hotels
housekeeping.
“We have several families who have been put on leave [from work]
because business is too slow -- so they have no money coming in,” St.
John said. “One family was given a three-day notice to vacate because
they were helping out a friend who lost their job.”
It meant a single woman and her 5- and 11-year-old children
sharing their place with a husband and wife and their 4-month-old
baby and 4-year-old child under one roof in a tiny space.
“They’re in dire need,” St. John said.
Anayeli Gomez, 12, said that her family has been coming for five
or six years.
“We’ve been coming for many years,” Anayeli said. “I’m here with
my friends, too. We paint and we pray. We eat and then get our
presents, and then, we get to open them and see Santa Claus. It makes
me happy and stuff.”
Yolanda Vasquez is a single mother living in Downtown Laguna with
four children.
“Everything is fun, they do the art, and everybody makes a picture
frame,” Vasquez said. “And everybody is so nice, especially Sande St.
John.”
Linda Huerta has been volunteering for six years and feels it is a
good time for people to make a connection and feel part of the
community.
Sgt. Maj. Jim Law said that the American Legion is nonsecular and
accepts all religions and beliefs.
“American Legion has two goals,” Law said. “First, to assist needy
veterans and needy families. Second, to have a program for the
children, youth of the country; they are our future.”
Jessica DeStefano, the snow fairy, was there with her trusted elf
Jim Rue to volunteer. Everyone left with bags of food and presents to
keep the holiday warmth going.
“I come to grant wishes and sprinkle you with fairy dust,”
DeStefano said. “I like bringing good wishes, peace and joy.”
For more information on helping Lagunans in need, call St. John at
(949) 499-9429.
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