The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Returned wallet brings tears of joy

- JULIE KOTSIS POSTMEDIA NEWS

WINDSOR, Ont. – A Windsor woman was moved to tears by the kindness of her Syrian neighbour and his young son after the pair returned her lost wallet on the same day the father became a Canadian citizen.

“I was very impressed with this family,” said Suzan Dietering, just days after one of the worst moments of her life.

“It was horrible,” Deitering said of the day last week when she lost her wallet – with a small amount of cash but all her identifica­tion and bank cards – on her way to a dental appointmen­t.

“My stomach went up into my throat because the thought of not having access to any money, not having the little change that I had,” said the 62-year-old Deitering, who lives on a disability pension. “Everything was in that wallet.”

Deitering was rushing to catch a bus to take her to her dentist when she reached into her pocket for some change and inadverten­tly dropped her wallet onto the sidewalk.

Halfway to the office, she noticed the wallet was missing.

Abdullah Almathhoul, 12, was riding his bicycle on an errand for his mother when he spotted something yellow on the ground. He picked it up and brought it home to his dad.

The family was celebratin­g dad Abdalslam’s newly bestowed Canadian citizenshi­p following a ceremony that day.

But in the midst of the celebratio­n, Abdullah presented the wallet to Abdalslam.

“I cannot open it because it’s not mine,” Abdullah said. “I have to give it to my dad to open it.

“When he opened it and he checked everything, there was money. It didn’t belong to me. I have to give it back to the owner.”

So the pair immediatel­y walked to Deitering’s nearby apartment building to return it but she was still at her appointmen­t. So they left a message with the manager.

Hours later, Deitering arrived at the Almathhoul home.

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