Twenty-year-old Christmas shoebox still inspiring lives today

<p>24 January 2018 | St Albans, UK [Victor Hulbert] Each year thousands of children in developed countries pack boxes of simple toys, crayons and other gifts to share with children in countries where life is often more difficult. They send their box with good wishes — and that is normally the end of it.</p>

News January 23, 2018

24 January 2018 | St Albans, UK [Victor Hulbert] Each year thousands of children in developed countries pack boxes of simple toys, crayons and other gifts to share with children in countries where life is often more difficult. They send their box with good wishes — and that is normally the end of it.

Christmas intro letter sarah 270x197Not, however, for two 11-year-old schoolgirls who, at the height of the 1990s Balkan crisis, packed a shoebox with their precious gifts and sent it as part of the Boxes for Bosnia Appeal, a national campaign in the UK. This box was special in that it included a letter, photographs of the senders and an address in case their ‘unknown friend’ wanted to write back.

Sarah and Rebecca from Stockport, near Manchester, were elated when they got a reply from 7-year old Daniel Presecan. Daniel wrote a lovely letter despite confessing that the only English word he knew was ‘thanks’. Along with his parents and little brother Michael, he had been displaced due to the Balkan wars and whilst trying to re-establish life in northern Croatia, his parents could not afford gifts — Christmas or otherwise: so for the two boys, that Christmas box was very meaningful. The new pen-friends lost contact a few letters later, but the impression that was made was lasting.Machester Evening News article 1970 197x277

Daniel recently came across those messages from two decades ago, which had been carefully preserved by his mother in the family archive. Using social media, he managed to trace Sarah, who told the Manchester Evening News (MEN) that she ‘just couldn’t believe it’ when she received the message out of the blue.

Erica Hole, the former Director of the School of English at Newbold College of Higher Education, remembers when Daniel first came to England — with hardly more vocabulary than he had as a 7-year-old. Learning English at the institution, he discovered a culture that would involve itself annually in the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) Gift Box appeal. Today, now age 29, Daniel works in International Development, currently serving as Programme Director for ADRA in Central Asia. He puts his success down, at least in part, to the kindness of people like Sarah and Rebecca and remarked, ‘We are there because people did help us, thought of us, believed in us and supported us.’

Daniel Presecan 262x197Now a mother of two, Sarah expressed her delight at the reconnection. On his own social media account Daniel wrote, ‘It was cool to connect with someone 20 years later. And as I have said in the [MEN] article, “we are never self-made people, rather a web of humanity whose strength is determined by the strength of the weakest connections and the way we treat them.”’

More than twenty years on, the tradition remains as Sarah’s two children helped pack their own Christmas box last year: perhaps a box that will stimulate another child elsewhere in the world and continue the journey of good will. [tedNEWS]


 tedNEWS Staff: Victor Hulbert, editor; Sajitha Forde-Ralph, associate editor
119 St Peter’s Street, St Albans, Herts, AL1 3EY, England
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.ted.adventist.org
tedNEWS is an information bulletin issued by the communication department of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the Trans-European Division.

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