Old Lady Tells Neighbor She’s Being Evicted, Neighbors Get Together to Buy House for Her

It was the fault of all these emerging families, Barbara pondered. Over the past five years, the once familiar neighborhood had rapidly undergone ‘gentrification,’ as the real estate agents labele

 

 

It was the fault of all these emerging families, Barbara pondered. Over the past five years, the once familiar neighborhood had rapidly undergone ‘gentrification,’ as the real estate agents labeled it. One by one, her long-time friends were compelled to sell or faced lease terminations by profit-driven landlords eager to make a quick profit. “I detest them,” Barbara exclaimed, tears welling in her eyes. “Hate them!”

Barbara had resided in the same house for over half a century. She and her late husband had moved in when their oldest was seven, and the youngest was two. She’d raised her children and buried her husband living in this house.

 

She crumpled the eviction notice in her trembling fingers. Her landlord desired her departure. He planned to renovate the house and put it on the market. Barbara’s fate meant nothing to him. No one cared.

Her children relentlessly urged her to move to a senior living facility. Her son had remarked, “This is the best thing for you, Mom! Now you go to Joyful Fields and get the care you need.”

But Barbara didn’t want to go to Joyful Fields or anywhere else. She wanted to live in her own home, with her memories and her things all around her.

In this world, there are no strangers; we all rely on each other. She sat on her porch and wept. At eighty-one years old, she felt lost, unsure of what to do or where to turn for help and support. Then she heard a gentle voice inquire, “Are you okay?”

 
 

One of the new neighbors was standing by her gate, a young woman with long, dark hair wearing a smart suit and high heels. Who on earth wore high heels on the street? Barbara wondered.

“I’m fine,” Barbara said and wiped hastily at the tears on her cheeks. “And even if I wasn’t, it isn’t any of your business!”

“You’re mistaken,” the young woman asserted. She opened the gate and approached Barbara. “My mother always said that as human beings, we must care for one another. We are a community, not strangers. That’s what a neighborhood is. So why don’t you tell me what’s troubling you?”

“I’m 81,” Barbara heard herself saying. “My landlord is evicting me, and my children want to put me in a home. But I don’t want that! I want to live out my days with dignity! Not have people dictate what I should eat, when to wake up, or what to do! I want to stay in my own home!”

Barbara burst into tears yet again, and the young woman put her arm around her shoulders.

“When do you have to leave?” she asked.

 

“By the end of the month,” Barbara said. “I can’t afford to go anywhere else!”

“Well,” the young woman said. “Don’t give up hope. You never know what can happen!”

Two weeks later, Barbara was packing her belongings into cardboard boxes when the young woman knocked on her door. She was accompanied by two men and another woman.

 

“Hello, Barbara!” the young woman greeted. “We’ve come to help you move.”

 

“Move where?” Barbara asked, bewildered.

“You know that big green house two streets down?” the young woman asked.

“Yes,” Barbara replied.

“We purchased the little cottage next to it,” the woman said, smiling. “The entire neighborhood pitched in. That’s where you’ll be living.”

Barbara gasped, pressing her hands to her mouth. “You did this?” she asked the young woman. “For me, a stranger?”

 

“Not a stranger, Barbara,” the woman said gently. “A fellow human being, my sister, in need of assistance.”

“You’ve been the answer to my prayers,” Barbara said. “God’s hands on Earth!”

What can we learn from this story?

– Don’t ignore those in need. We are all part of God’s family. In this world, there are no strangers; we all depend on each other.

– God answers prayers in unexpected ways. Barbara’s prayers were answered through the people she least expected—her new neighbors.