CHARLOTTE — A rising fifth-grader at St. Gabriel School recently helped organize a toy drive that collected more than 700 toys for Hemby Children’s Hospital and St. Jude’s Clinic.
Aidan Flynn’s younger brother, Liam, was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin lymphoma in October. While his brother was in the hospital, Liam built 65 Lego sets in 79 days, Aidan explains.
“I wanted to organize a toy drive because Liam used so many toys while he was in the hospital. We wanted to help other kids get new toys to use,” he says.
Liam, a rising second-grader, has completed his treatment, says his father, Shawn Flynn. Currently, all of his scans are clear.
Having new toys for the hospital to use is very important, Shawn Flynn notes. It is hard to rewash and sanitize toys, so they often give them to the children to keep.
After Liam returned to school from being in the Charlotte hospital, the school had a huge celebration for him, and that’s when they kicked off the toy drive. Toys were collected at St. Gabriel School, Holy Trinity Middle School and The Cradle at St. Gabriel Church in Charlotte.
“We collected everything, for babies up through teenagers,” Aidan Flynn says. “Games, Legos, coloring books, a lot of random toys – so many it filled a whole theater at the hospital! It filled the room, and some of the people who worked there, they looked shocked when they saw all the toys.”
Families in the Flynns’ Cotswold neighborhood, with children who attend the two Catholic schools, helped organize this effort. The toys were collected in May and recently dropped off at the hospital.
“It feels pretty good to help,” says Aidan. “It feels even better because I know what it was like to go through this. I know how it will help other kids.”
While the timing wasn’t planned, Shawn Flynn says they learned the supply of toys donated to the Hemby Children’s Hospital at Christmas-time tends to run low by the start of summer.
“So many people helped out with this and the response was amazing,” he says. “Aidan is a pretty awesome big brother to organize this.”
— Kimberly Bender, online reporter