A lady who misplaced her house in Altadena throughout the devastating wildfires that tore by means of huge swaths of Los Angeles County final winter is reflecting on shedding one factor specifically: her Black Santa assortment.
In an emotional essay for the Los Angeles Occasions in collaboration with Zócalo Public Sq., Katrina Freeny, a retired Social Safety Administration claims consultant, shares how she and her household, together with her husband and daughter, are trying to rebuild each reminiscences and that means after the fires destroyed every thing they owned—together with a group of greater than 80 Black Santas.
Altadena, lengthy thought of a traditionally Black, middle-class enclave and one of many few locations the place Black households might personal properties within the area for generations, was among the many communities hardest hit by the fires. Practically a 12 months later, restoration stays uneven, and for a lot of households, the vacations look nothing like they as soon as did—formed not solely by displacement and loss, however by wider strains together with a federal authorities shutdown, mass layoffs, and rising financial uncertainty. For many who misplaced their properties, even the small comforts of custom—ornaments, heirloom Christmas angels, favourite tree toppers—are gone.
“The loss hit me yet again this vacation season, when my daughter and I’d normally be taking these heirlooms out of storage to brighten the tree and our house,” Freeny wrote. “I discover myself asking a query that has no simple reply: How do you rebuild one thing that was full of irreplaceable love?”
Freeny defined that she started gathering Black Santas within the Seventies, lengthy earlier than they have been extensively available in shops. Her assortment expanded to incorporate over 85 particular person Black Santa collectible figurines, various in measurement and magnificence, in addition to over 80 totally different Black Santa ornaments. Many have been handmade by family members who’ve since handed, created throughout a time when Black illustration in vacation imagery was uncommon, contested, or seen as a novelty. Whereas Black Santas have turn out to be extra widespread in current many years—embraced by many Black households as affirmations of pleasure and belonging—they nonetheless carry deep generational significance for households who as soon as needed to search them out or make them by hand.
Like clockwork, Freeny stated she and her daughter would take the Santas out of storage every November, leaving them on show effectively into the New 12 months. Tragically, they have been nonetheless up on January 7, when the hearth claimed their house.
“My coronary heart is heavy this Christmas,” she wrote. “I’m grateful my household is alive. I take into consideration how, if we had gone to sleep that January evening in our house, we’d not be. Nonetheless, I’m mourning all that burned within the flames, and I’m combating learn how to transfer ahead, when so many traditions I’d held shut really feel misplaced or distant.”
Since sharing her story, Freeny has begun receiving Black Santas from buddies, household, and even strangers. Whereas she’s touched by the outpouring of assist, beginning over hasn’t been simple—particularly figuring out that most of the originals, together with her very first Santa, can by no means get replaced.
“Having to begin my assortment yet again is heartbreaking,” she stated. “However I hope in time they could turn out to be one thing new: new reminiscences, new pleasure and new moments I can maintain on to.”


















