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TINY GERMAN VILLAGE IS SANTA CENTRAL FOR CHILDREN’S CHRISTMAS LETTERS

- Rachel Stern and Nicholas Spencer Special for USA TODAY

One memorable letter came from a boy who wanted his little sister to grow teeth soon so that they could eat together.

HIMMELPFOR­T, GERMANY

This tiny village 60 miles west of Berlin has one long street, iconic half-timbered houses and a very special post office. Here, 20 multilingu­al “angels” spend months answering hundreds of thousands of letters that children from around the world write to Santa Claus in hopes he’ll grant their Christmas wishes.

“It’s Santa’s magic,” says Deutsche Post spokeswoma­n Tina Birke during a bustling afternoon at the German postal service’s special branch office. “The children put so much work into the letters that it’s nice when they receive an answer.”

Himmelpfor­t (Heaven’s Gate) has run Santa’s postal operation since 1984, when a couple of German children addressed their letters to Santa and sent them here. They believed that as a result of the village’s name, Santa must live here.

A local postwoman decided to answer them herself, and word quickly spread that Himmelpfor­t was the place to reach Santa. Growing at a steady pace, the letters exploded in number after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

Now the village of 500 residents receives more than 300,000 letters each year from 69 countries, including the U.S.

The official address: An den Weihnachts­mann (To Santa Claus ), Weih na ch ts post filia le (Santa’s Post Office Branch), 16798 Himmelpfor­t, Deutschlan­d (Germany). But some make it here addressed simply “To Santa.”

The letters can be heartwrenc­hing, uplifting or funny. Some children ask for toys and the latest electronic gadget. Others ask for their sick parent to get better or a wish for a family member. One memorable letter came from a boy who wanted his little sister to grow teeth soon so that they could eat together.

“Santa’s response is a secret,” Birke says. “We want every child to be surprised.”

The children often illustrate their wishes with vibrant drawings or color their lists with crayons. These letters often brighten the letter-writers’ days.

In one, 9-year-old Leena Zerbock from Berlin drew a starry sky with an angel hovering above a snowman and a deer. She wished for accessorie­s for her toy horses.

“We’re delighted to read these letters with beautiful pictures and handcrafte­d wish lists,” says “angel” Konni Matzke, as she sat at a table flipping through books of postal codes with fellow helpers to properly address replies.

Santa and his helpers, mostly nearby residents dressed as angels in flowing silky white gowns, write handwritte­n responses in languages from English to Lithuanian. These are stamped with a special seasonal postmark of Santa Claus surrounded by stars.

Some children can’t wait until Christmas: By summer, the town had received 7,700 letters waiting to be answered, Birke said. By its official opening Nov. 10, it had already received 23,255 missives.

The holiday spirit in Himmelpfor­t, whose founding dates back to 1299, is not just limited to the post office, which sits at the end of the main road, marked by a wooden elf holding a letter.

The Weihnachts­haus (Christmas House) Himmelpfor­t and ca- fé, the town’s year-round Christmas-themed bed-andbreakfa­st next door, is decorated as though it were December all year round, with a museum in the back representi­ng Santa’s abode, from his bed to desk.

Almost every day in the season, children and adults visit from Berlin and surroundin­g towns. They pose for photos with Santa, meet his “angels” and sometimes send letters and packages in colorful Christmas-themed boxes from the functionin­g post office.

Last week inside the post office, a group of children gathered around Father Christmas himself.

A woman dressed like Frau Holle, a character from a popular German fairy tale, greets the group of 4- and 5-year-olds.

“Happiness for these children is shaking Santa’s hand, or to ask him a question,” she says. “That’s something they can’t get from a book or CD.”

 ?? BERND SETTNIK, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Santa Claus attends the opening of the Santa Claus post office in Himmelpfor­t, Germany, in November last year. Children can send their Christmas wish lists to Himmelpfor­t and receive a reply from Santa.
BERND SETTNIK, AFP/GETTY IMAGES A Santa Claus attends the opening of the Santa Claus post office in Himmelpfor­t, Germany, in November last year. Children can send their Christmas wish lists to Himmelpfor­t and receive a reply from Santa.
 ?? SEAN GALLUP,
GETTY IMAGES ??
SEAN GALLUP, GETTY IMAGES

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