A
homeless man’s good deed has not gone unnoticed.
When
Billy Ray Harris, a homeless Kansas City, Mo., man, returned a diamond and platinum
engagement ring to the woman who had accidentally dropped it into his beggar’s
cup, he wasn’t looking for a reward.
“My
grandfather was a reverend. He raised me from the time I was 6 months old, and
thank the good lord. It’s a blessing, but I do still have some character,”
Harris told KCTV5 last week.
Floored
by his honesty, Sarah Darling and her husband, Bill Krejci, dug into their
wallets the day they recovered the ring and gave Harris all the money they had
on them as a reward.
“It was
40 to 60 bucks,” Krejci told the Daily News. “We don’t carry a lot of cash
around with us.”
Days
later, after the story was picked up by news outlets, Krejci, who works as a
Web designer, said he realized he wanted to do something more for Harris.
“My wife
was interviewed, and I noticed that on some websites people were asking how
they could help Billy Ray,” Krejci said. “That’s when I got the idea to start
the campaign.”
Krejci
went to the site GiveForward and started a page where donations are being collected
for Harris over the next 90 days.
“The idea
was maybe to come up with a couple hundred dollars, something nice for him,”
Krejci said. “But now we’re talking about an amount that could really make a
difference.”
Nate St.
Pierre, director of communications for GiveForward, said that his staff alerted
him to the flurry of activity on Krejci’s page over the weekend.
“A couple
of days ago we noticed it was really starting to gain traction,” St. Pierre
told The News. “He (Krejci) put the goal at $1,000, and had no idea it would
get so big.”
As of
Tuesday evening, donations to Harris were nearing $14,000, and the
“fundraiser,” as the site calls it, isn’t scheduled to end until May 15.
So far,
Krejci hasn’t been able to find Harris to tell him of the outpouring of
support.
“I went
down to try and tell him, but I couldn’t find him,” Krejci said. “My main
concern is his privacy. I don’t want people bugging him.”
Krejci
says that he has been talking to GiveForward advisers about how best to deliver
a payment to a homeless man.
“My
feeling is that he’s not going to go out and do something stupid with the
money,” Krejci said. “He’s just a really cool guy, and I’m hoping this will
give him a better foundation.”
Though he
has only spent limited time getting to know Harris, the two have talked about
their shared passion for music. Harris used to do sound for local bands, while
Krejci worked as a roadie.
The main
reason that the public has been so moved by this story isn’t hard to fathom,
Krejci says.
“It’s a
nice, positive thing that’s different from all the negative news you normally
hear,” Krejci said.
Noting
the hundreds of comments and donations the GiveForward campaign has received so
far, St. Pierre agrees.
“I really
love this story,” St. Pierre said. “The staff is all pulling for him
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