Guest guest Posted June 8, 2009 Report Share Posted June 8, 2009  The Star.com   Boy hears back from 'Heaven' CRAIG GLOVER FOR THE TORONTO STAR Pinto, centre, and his class got T-shirts from the letter's recipient.  May 31, 2009 04:30 AM  Bob STAFF REPORTER When Pinto tied a letter to God to a helium balloon and sent it flying into the sky, he hoped but never dreamed the Almighty would write him back. , 11, of Brantford, Ont., asked God in the letter what it was like in heaven and whether miracles happen. 's father, , has served in Kosovo and Bosnia with the Canadian Forces and the boy is worried because his father is expected to join a unit in Afghanistan next March. While God never replied, a Brampton criminal lawyer did, and their unlikely paths have created an experience neither will forget. It was actually Batasar's wife who found the mysterious letter inside a zip-lock bag on the driveway of their Brampton home earlier this month. " It was such a touching letter that I knew I had to try to give him a reply that he deserved, " said Batasar, who has defended drug dealers and killers. Batasar also had T-shirts made and he sent them to Notre Dame, the boy's school in Brantford. The T-shirts have a child holding a pink balloon and looking up into the air with the words " Dear God. What is it like it heaven? " Batasar initially thought about buying pizza for 's Grade 6-7 class, where all 26 students wrote letters to God as part of a project. " But I wanted something they would remember for a long time, " said Batasar, who has three young children. " I think that over 100 years have passed since the famous 'Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus' letter. Perhaps this will have the same kind of snowball effect like – Yes, , there is a God. " It has been three weeks since the students sent their letters into the air but is the only one to receive a reply. " I was so surprised, " said. " It was amazing that he liked my letter. It was really cool. " In his return letter, Batasar told he wasn't an authority on God but tried to answer him the way he thought God would reply. He said heaven was a " wonderful place " filled with love, life and laughter, where children play, families reunite and adults love each other regardless of religion, ethnic origin, class or skin colour. He also said it was unfortunate people don't always get along on earth, where wars are fuelled by hate, greed and differences. " It makes no sense, " Batasar wrote, suggesting things could be different if people could read 's letter. " They would feel ashamed of themselves that a child of your tender age has more sense than they do. " McDermid, principal of Notre Dame, called it the " feel-good story of the year at our school. " At first, school officials didn't know what to make of the large parcel that arrived at their doorstep. " We weren't sure ... what was in the box, " McDermid said. " It was addressed to one of our students from a Brampton lawyer with 'Heaven' marked as the return address. said he and his younger sister, is, 8, have been tying letters to balloons for a couple of years. Usually, it's just pen pal stuff, asking people to reply. " We've never got a reply so was really excited, " said his father. Pinto, 38, has been with the army for 14 years and is a reservist posted in Cambridge. He had been based in Petawawa but moved back to his hometown last August to take some time to be a full-time single father. 's teacher, Andy O'Brien, has been having his students send letters into the sky for more than a decade, although most have been hellos, not questions to God. Once, when he was teaching in Oshawa, a reply came back from an international school in Panama. " Nothing like this, " O'Brien said. " I know everybody, the entire staff, was touched. "  Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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