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Black Woman in New Jersey Has Accumulated an Impressive Collection of Black Santas

Crystal Kittles is using her 21-year-old collection of Black Santas to make a positive impact on her community

Crystal Kittles received her first Black Santa as a housewarming gift from her husband. Little did she know, two decades later sheโ€™d still be collecting Black Santas, according to WPVI.

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Unfortunately, Kittles husband passed away, but she is still continuing the tradition he helped her start.

These are not your regular everyday run-of-the-mill Santas. Kittles has a saxophone-playing Santa, a Malibu Beach Santa, a rapping Hip-Hop Santa, and a six-foot-tall Santa statue, according to WPVI.

I would love to see the rapping hip-hop Santa.

From WPVI:

โ€œSo many different ones, but Iโ€™ve never taken the time to count them,โ€ she said. To me, itโ€™s not always about the gifts. Itโ€™s just about the gathering, just seeing each other enjoying each other.โ€

Once every two years, Kittles unearths the collection and invites community members for a seasonal open house. It has become a tradition to gather all the children and grandchildren for a day filled with Christmas music, food, and decorating.

โ€œI would have the church members come out and they can bring their children, their grandchildren,โ€ she said. โ€œWe just sit back and enjoy the spirit of the holiday.โ€

Kittles, an educational assistant in the Cherry Hill School district, now has grandchildren of her own. She says that displaying her diverse array of Black Santa trinkets has earned a new meaning.

โ€œI think itโ€™s very important that they see it and they can identify with it,โ€ she said. โ€œIt helps them to be proud. They can say, โ€˜Okay, I can be anything. I can be anyone.โ€™โ€

Isaac Ware has noticed his motherโ€™s collection of Black Santas is positively influencing his daughters. โ€œItโ€™s great to have that tradition and something that weโ€™re able to share with them and the representation it brings for them to see someone who looks like them,โ€ Ware says. โ€œIt can be shared amongst everybody. Santa is for everyone,โ€ according to WPVI.

But, Kittles wants her collection of Black Santas to be shared with children who are not just family and wants them all to โ€œbelieve in the spirit of Christmasโ€ and hopes to continue collecting Black Santas in the future, per the story from WPVI.

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