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By Andrew Tavani Nov 13th 2013
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A boy whose last wish was to be home for his favorite holiday has died, two weeks after his hometown welcomed him with a Christmas tree outside his window and a motorcycle-riding Santa Claus.
Doctors had told the family of 13-year-old Devin Kohlman that he didn't have long to live so residents in the city of Port Clinton along Lake Erie spent the past few weeks giving him an early Christmas.
They sang carols outside the family's apartment, piled tons of shaved ice into drifting snow near his window and decorated a park with colorful strings of lights, reindeer cutouts and a red "Merry Christmas, Devin" sign.
Devin, who was diagnosed with brain cancer in the summer of 2012, died Monday afternoon, his family said. Relatives and friends gathered for a vigil after his death while an early-season snow fell over the city.
"He had the gift of being able to see how much everyone loved him," his mother, Alexis Kohlman, said Tuesday.
While he couldn't go outside, he could see from a window how the community was helping his last wish come true.
Hundreds of people, some in Santa hats, sang Christmas carols after his return and Santa himself showed up on a motorcycle.
"It brought him a sense of joy to know so many people cared," said family friend Roseann Hickman.
Thousands of cards from as far away as France, Australia, and Russia filled the family's apartment. They had been sent by people who had heard his story.
"We read as many of the cards as we could to him," his mother said. "He's reminded everybody all over the world of what's important and that's love."
She said her son loved playing sports and being the center of attention. The family once joked that he'd be famous someday, Devin's mother said.
Toys and teddy bears poured in too, many were collected in donation boxes all over the city of about 6,000 people, which sits about midway between Toledo and Cleveland.
Devin gave away many of the gifts, making sure his classmates who came to visit took home a stuffed bear.
"He touched a lot of people," Hickman said. "I hope our community continues to show the love for each other."