Volunteers tucked a special note inside each package as they wrapped toy cars, stuffed polar bears and games in colorful Christmas paper in a Roseville warehouse.
"Merry Xmas," a 34-year-old woman wrote to her 17-year-old stepson: "I didn't give you life, but life gave me you. I'm so grateful."
Hundreds of children across the U.S. with incarcerated parents in Minnesota and North Dakota prisons will get a note and toy from their parent thanks to a program called Toy Lift. For 40 years, the Salvation Army's Northern Division, which is headquartered in Roseville, has organized the program, not just helping parents give a gift but stay connected to their children as they serve time.
"It's just really heartwarming," said Jeanine Kersey-Russell, the chaplain at the North Dakota State Penitentiary in Bismarck, the state's largest prison. "It's that spirit of giving — it's not about buying a bunch of stuff; it's about having their child know that they're thinking about them on Christmas even if they can't be with them. It's pretty touching."
After cancelling the program last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Salvation Army resumed it this year at five North Dakota prisons, sending more than 300 presents in November to children across the U.S. Minnesota prisons didn't participate due to COVID.
"We're trying to restore a life. We understand they've done something, but we want them to know someone cares about them," said Charles Berry Sr., the correctional services director for the Salvation Army Northern Division. "It's an excellent way for them to have some responsibility or connection with their children."
Planning for the program kicks off each May, and inmates apply to participate. The prisons vet them to make sure there's no court order prohibiting contact with their child or children. Then on a fall day, Salvation Army chaplains and volunteers arrive with bins of gifts, displayed on a table decorated in Christmas wrapping. Inmates whose applications were accepted select one toy for each of their children or stepchildren and write out a note.
"The look on the guys' face, the joy of something that feels pretty close to normal: to be able to come in and shop for a gift," Kersey-Russell said. "Justice is getting what you deserve, but grace is maybe what you don't deserve ... the grace of being able to give gifts to their children."


