Though the pandemic has meant many changes this holiday season, Lorna Ruttan is sticking to one longstanding tradition: donating toys to local children in need via the Mustard Seed.
After almost 15 years, she is making one change, 颅however 鈥 she鈥檚 shopping online rather than in person. One local toystore owner was so pleased that she telephoned Ruttan to thank her after her recent order.
Ruttan, 74, a retired physiotherapist who spent her career working with children with disabilities at a children鈥檚 hospital in Calgary, isn鈥檛 sure exactly how many toys she bought this year, but it could be in the hundreds.
She says she keeps them in a small bedroom and it鈥檚 full. 鈥淚鈥檓 not a rich person, but it gives me a great deal of 颅satisfaction and pleasure to do it.鈥
She prefers to pick up good-quality items that will hold a youngster鈥檚 interest in the long-term, such as Lego and 颅Playmobil. Some children will receive only a few toys through a year, 鈥渟o they need something that is really good that they can play with a lot,鈥 she says.
鈥淎nd also my thought is for older kids, when they go back to school after the Christmas break and people are talking about what they got for Christmas,鈥 they need to be able to talk about something they received for Christmas. 鈥淪o they don鈥檛 feel bad.鈥
Ruttan laughs about the Slime-making kits she bought this year, becoming knowledgeable in the process about the various versions available. She鈥檚 also bought scooters, helmets, trucks and cars, rocking horses and more.
She says she鈥檚 never met the kids who receive the toys, but that doesn鈥檛 matter. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 ever see them getting the toys, but I still get a great deal of pleasure and satisfaction from doing it 鈥 I can imagine them. That鈥檚 all I need.鈥
This holiday season, the Mustard Seed is helping 750 families, distributing hampers and serving takeout meals on Nov. 29 from its 625 Queens Ave. location, with help from the 乌鸦传媒 Christmas Fund.
A special room has been set aside for parents to 鈥渟hop鈥 for two toys per child plus stocking stuffers, as part of the support the non-profit organization provides to families at this time of year.
Ruttan also helps stock the Mustard Seed鈥檚 Fair Start for Kids school kits, which sends children to school in the fall with everything from backpacks to clothing and school supplies.
Every year, she buys a few hundred pairs of sturdy shoes, picking them up whenever there are sales.
Janiene Boice, Mustard Seed director of development, called Ruttan 鈥渋ncredibly generous鈥 and modest.
鈥淟orna doesn鈥檛 ask for anything. She doesn鈥檛 put parameters on her giving. She just gives and there is some beauty in that.鈥
> Donate to the 乌鸦传媒 Christmas Fund at