Santa Claus fulfils dying boy's Xmas wish

Eric Schmitt-Matzen, whose 136-kg frame and real white beard and curled mustache make him a popular Santa in Knoxville city.

Update: 2016-12-14 01:24 GMT
Eric Schmitt-Matzen

Chicago: Christmas may be weeks away but a terminally ill 5-year-old boy in the US state of Tennessee had his last wish fulfilled, dying in the arms of Santa Claus after he was afraid that he would miss Christmas.

Eric Schmitt-Matzen, whose 136-kg frame and real white beard and curled mustache make him a popular Santa in Knoxville city.

“When I got there, it was my job to make sure he got Christmas,” Schmitt-Matzen told NBC affiliate WBIR channel through tears.

Schmitt-Matzen said he had just returned home from work about a month and a half ago a when a nurse at a local hospital called him and said she had a very sick child who wanted to see Santa.

“He was more concerned about missing Christmas, than dying,” Schmitt-Matzen said.

After he arrived at the hospital room within 15 minutes, Schmitt-Matzen asked the boy, “What’s this I hear you’re going to be missing Christmas this year?”

That’s when the boy told him he heard he was going to die.

“Well, you’re not going to miss Christmas, the elves already had your present, we knew you wanted this for a long time,” he said he told the boy.

“Really?” the boy asked, according to Schmitt-Matzen. He then gave the boy the gift his mother had given “and that put a grin on his face,” he said.

Schmitt-Matzen choked up as he said that he told the boy, “When you get up those pearly gates, you just tell them you’re Santa’s number one elf.”

“I am?” the boy asked, perking up, according to Schmitt- Matzen. “You sure are, I’m sure they’ll let you right in,” he said.

The boy then gave him a big hug, he said, and “he just looked at me and said, Santa, can you help me?” “And that’s when he passed,” Schmitt-Matzen said. Schmitt-Matzen first told the sad story to Knoxville News Sentinel and it has since gained national attention.

He said that after the boy died in his arms, he left the hospital as fast as he could.

“I spent four years in the Army with the 75th Rangers, and I’ve seen my share of (stuff). But I ran by the nurses’ station bawling my head off,” he told the paper.

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