Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Hope, holiday cheer reign at West Side toy giveaway

- BY MADELINE KENNEY, STAFF REPORTER mkenney@ suntimes. com | @ madkenney

Christmas came early for some 500 families Saturday on the West Side as People’s Church of Harvest hosted its annual toy and bike giveaway.

Children bundled in winter coats and scarves walked away from the Fifth City neighborho­od church pushing new bikes, while adults packed plastic bags filled with toys and holiday goodies into their cars.

Cheryl Bolden stood in line with her 7- year- old grandson, Kenneth Johnson, who was eager to get his hands on a new bike. Bolden said community events like this gift giveaway are especially important with the coronaviru­s pandemic adding an additional economic and emotional strain on families.

“Sometimes people don’t have anything. A lot of [ people] have depression and this will probably cheer a person up,” she said. “And so thank God for the blessing. A lot of people don’t have money [ to buy gifts].”

Among those receiving shiny new silverand- blue bikes were Lorenzo Matthews and Michael Smith, who were wounded earlier this year during a barbershop shooting in East Garfield Park.

The boys’ mother, Cierra Mobley, said she was grateful for the church’s generosity and the support she’s received from the community since the attack.

“It means a lot,” she said. “I’m still appreciati­ve that a year [ has] almost gone by and people still have us in their hearts.”

Matthews, 11, and Smith, 12, were getting their hair cut at Gotcha Faded barbershop on Jan. 16 when two gunmen opened fire, wounding a total of five people, including

three boys.

Chicago police Deputy Chief Ernest Cato recounted the shooting, adding that barbershop­s were a “sacred place” when he was growing up on the West Side. He decried the gun violence that has plagued the city.

“We have children with bullet holes in them,” Cato said. “We, as a community, have to wrap around this together. It’s going to be a partnershi­p between the police department and our community, so it’s one team. It’s not community, it’s not police, it’s one team organized to take care of the folks in this great city of ours.”

Mobley said her two sons are “great now,” but the pain stemming from the shooting is still very real for her.

“I have to be strong for my boys,” Mobley said. “It’ll be a year in January and I still have dreams about it. I’m just so happy and thank God that my kids are still here with me.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS ?? Lorenzo Matthews, who was wounded in a barbershop shooting in January, walks a new bike he received Saturday.
PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS Lorenzo Matthews, who was wounded in a barbershop shooting in January, walks a new bike he received Saturday.
 ??  ?? Volunteers distribute bikes Saturday outside People’s Church of Harvest in the Fifth City neighborho­od.
Volunteers distribute bikes Saturday outside People’s Church of Harvest in the Fifth City neighborho­od.

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