The Hamilton Spectator

Dear Mother clip wins son big Youtube salute

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TORONTO Most people don’t make headlines for writing mortgage cheques, but a payment made by a 23-year-old Canadian has recently vaulted him to digital stardom.

Aba Atlas saved his entry-level military salary for two years in order to pay down the mortgage on his mother’s Ottawa home. His years of frugality culminated in an emotional presentati­on that he captured on video and posted to YouTube.

The Dear Mother clip has garnered 1.6 million views in the four days since it went online, a reaction that took its creator by surprise.

“When I put it together, I didn’t think it would blow up like this,” Atlas said from Ottawa. “I’m humbled by the response and I think it’s good that positive energy is going everywhere, but I don’t want to make it seem like it’s about me.”

The true focus of the video should be his mother, Atlas said, noting the gift she’s enjoying now doesn’t compensate for the grief she’s experience­d over the years.

Atlas said his mother — whom he

You just make sacrifices here and there, find out what’s important and just make the choice.

declined to name — came to Canada from Eritrea, in northeast Africa, more than 20 years ago and has toiled as a hotel housekeepe­r to make ends meet for her five children.

Atlas said he added to her burdens in his teenage years. He dabbled in drugs and alcohol, joined the military against his parents’ wishes and even dropped out of his family’s life around the time he turned 18.

When he resurfaced two and a half years later, Abbas said, his mother greeted him with a smile, an offer of food and a total lack of recriminat­ions for his long neglect.

“It doesn’t matter how long you’re gone, family’s family. That’s the kind of relationsh­ip we have,” he said.

The importance of that bond was reinforced months later when his father died unexpected­ly at 56. Atlas said the loss forced him to re-examine his own life and commit to making some wholesale changes.

He swore off booze and drugs, took up new hobbies such as dance and decided to do something that would compensate his mother for her sacrifices.

Scrounging a mortgage payment on the annual $30,000 salary of a Canadian army private was not an

ABA ATLAS

SON

easy feat, but Atlas said the task was made easier by the fact that he was living rent-free in a military barracks. His army lifestyle also kept food costs to a minimum.

Still, Atlas said he passed on car ownership, eschewed restaurant meals and gave up other small perks in order to bring his plan to fruition. He declined to share the exact dollar amount necessary to pay down the mortgage.

“You just make sacrifices here and there, find out what’s important and just make the choice,” he said.

Atlas presented his mother with the mortgage cheque — he didn’t want to disclose the amount — on April 30, his birthday.

 ?? IPROJECTAT­LAS, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Aba Atlas is pictured in a video posted on YouTube this week.
IPROJECTAT­LAS, THE CANADIAN PRESS Aba Atlas is pictured in a video posted on YouTube this week.

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