It was one of the bigger teddy bears I had ever seen, much
bigger than the baby girl for whom the gift was intended. The source of the
gift was an even bigger surprise.
Back in 1981, when our daughter Kris was born (37 years
ago today – Happy Birthday, Kris!), my wife and I worked for the same TV news station
in Miami. She was a videographer; I was a producer. The gift was from another
videographer. Enrique was born in Cuba – as were many South Florida residents.
He kept largely to himself; sandy blonde hair with temples threatening to turn
white, sad eyes, soft-spoken when he spoke at all.
Kris loved her big teddy bear, but giving the gift meant even more to Enrique. |
In April 1980, when the bad Cuban economy got even worse,
some 10,000 Cubans tried to claim asylum by crashing the Peruvian embassy.
Castro responded by allowing anyone who wanted to escape to simply leave. Tens
of thousands of Cubans stormed the port of Mariel to join the ragtag “Freedom
Flotilla” to Key West. It wasn’t long before US officials realized Castro had
forced thousands of criminals and political opponents to join the exodus. Eventually,
South Florida absorbed most of the 125,000 refugees.
Enrique was one of them. When he heard a knock on the
door late one night, he knew exactly what was coming – be at the Mariel docks
by morning. Not his wife, not his two teenaged sons, just him. Enrique was
being kicked out of his homeland because Castro no longer trusted him. Despite
all his attempts to remain impassive, Enrique couldn’t hide “the look.” It’s
the look we all have when we just can’t swallow the lies anymore.
“I want to do this,” Enrique said when we protested that
the oversized teddy bear was overly generous. “I have to do this.”
Enrique was a man of few words, so it only took him a
couple of sentences to give us lessons in deprivation and separation,
generosity and redemption.
“When my sons were born,” Enrique recalled, “there was no
money and no toys in Cuba. This is the gift my heart couldn’t give to them.”
To us, that stuffed animal became more than just a toy.
It became a symbol of how connected we are to each other. It was also an
example of Jesus in our lives – receiving the gift of grace not because we
deserve it, but because of the love in the giver’s heart.
December is the month for gifts. We look for gift ideas
because we have to get something for family and friends. Gifts like that
can sometimes be just things. Maybe there are better ideas – giving of
yourself, your time. A quiet dinner for a spouse. A night out with friends. A
family photo for a parent. Maybe even a load of laundry for an elderly
neighbor. It doesn’t have to be as big as a big teddy bear. It just has to be
from the love in your heart. That’ll be plenty big enough.
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