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6 Year Old Girl Drew Michael Jackson a Picture — What He Did 15 Years Later Left Her SPEECHLESS

Michael Jackson was performing in Chicago that weekend. The Dangerous World Tour, Soldier Field, sold out. “Really?” Sarah whispered. “Really? He’s coming here to the hospital tomorrow.” Sarah couldn’t sleep that night. She was too excited, too scared, too everything. “Mama,” she said at 2:00 a.m., “What do I say to him?” “Whatever’s in your heart, baby,” Sarah thought about it.

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Then she asked the night nurse for her art supplies. For the next four hours, Sarah drew. Her hands hurt, her head hurt, but she kept drawing. She drew a ranch with a ferris wheel and a merrygoround. She drew elephants and giraffes. She drew kids playing and laughing and being free. At the top in her six-year-old handwriting, she wrote, “For Michael, this is what heaven looks like. Love, Sarah.

” August 16th, 1994. Michael Jackson arrived at Children’s Memorial Hospital at 200 p.m. No cameras, no press, just Michael, his security team, and a genuine desire to meet sick kids. He visited 23 children that day, held their hands, signed autographs, listened to their stories. Room 438, Sarah’s room.

When Michael walked in, Sarah forgot how to breathe. He was wearing a red shirt, black pants, and that smile. That famous smile that made you feel like you were the only person in the world. “Hi, Sarah,” Michael said softly, kneeling beside her bed. “I’m Michael. I know,” Sarah whispered. “I heard you love to draw.” Sarah nodded.

Her mother handed her the drawing she’d made. Her hands were shaking so badly she almost dropped it. “I made this for you,” Sarah said. It’s a place where kids like me can be happy. Michael took the drawing. He looked at it for a long time. Really looked at it. His eyes started to water. Sarah, he said, his voice cracking. This is the most beautiful thing anyone’s ever given me.

Really? Really? You know what? I have a place kind of like this. It’s called Neverland. And someday when you’re better, I want you to come visit. Do you promise? Michael took her small hand. I promise. And Sarah, I’m going to keep this drawing forever. Okay. Okay. Michael spent 20 minutes with Sarah. He told her about Neverland, about the animals and the rides and the fun.

He made her laugh for the first time in weeks. When he left, he hugged Rosa. She’s going to be okay, he whispered. I can feel it. I can. That night, something strange happened. The hospital administrator knocked on Rosa’s door. Mrs. Martinez, there’s been a development. An anonymous donor has paid your entire hospital bill. All of it.

Past, present, and future treatment. You don’t owe anything. Rosa nearly fainted. What? Who? We don’t know. The donation came through a law firm. They won’t disclose the donor’s identity, but it’s legitimate. $847,000. Rosa started crying. She knew. She couldn’t prove it, but she knew. Sarah’s treatment continued. The chemo worked.

By December 1994, she was in remission. By March 1995, she was cancer-free. Years passed. 1996, 1997, 1998. Sarah grew up. She never forgot Michael. How could she? He’d visited her in the hospital. He’d held her hand. He’d made her feel special. But she assumed he’d forgotten about her. Why wouldn’t he? He met thousands of sick kids.

She was just one girl with a crayon drawing. What Sarah didn’t know was that Michael Jackson had never forgotten. 2001. Sarah was 13, attending art camp in Wisconsin, a camp she got into through an anonymous scholarship. 2003 Sarah’s middle school art show. A man in a hat and sunglasses bought all five of her paintings, paid cash, never gave his name.

2005 Sarah applied to a prestigious high school art program. Full scholarship, anonymous donor. 2007. Art supplies kept appearing on Sarah’s doorstep. Professional grade, expensive, no return address. Rosa noticed. She kept every anonymous letter, every unexplained gift. She was building a file of evidence, but she never told Sarah.

She didn’t want to get her hopes up. June 25th, 2009. Sarah was in her apartment getting ready for her summer job when her roommate burst in. Sarah, turn on the TV. Michael Jackson is dead. Sarah froze. What? He died just now in Los Angeles. He’s gone. Sarah sat down on the floor. She couldn’t process it. The man who had visited her in the hospital 15 years ago.

The man who had promised she’d get better. The man who had kept her drawing. Gone. Sarah cried for 3 days straight. June 28th, 2009. The FedEx package arrived. Sarah opened it with shaking hands. Inside was a large flat box wrapped carefully. She pulled back the layers of protective packaging. And there it was, her drawing, the one she’d made at age six.

The ranch with the ferris wheel. The elephants. the Happy Kids. But it wasn’t just a drawing anymore. It was professionally framed museum quality behind UV protective glass with a small plaque at the bottom that read Sarah Martinez, age 6. This is what heaven looks like. Given to Michael Jackson, August 16th, 1994. Sarah started shaking.

Her roommate grabbed her arm. Are you okay? He kept it. Sarah whispered. He kept it for 15 years. But wait, here’s where it gets even more incredible. There was an envelope taped to the back of the frame. Sarah opened it with trembling hands. Inside was a letter, handwritten, Michael’s handwriting. It said, “Dear Sarah, if you’re reading this, it means I’m gone.

I’m so sorry I couldn’t keep my promise to bring you to Neverland one more time. But I want you to know something. That drawing you made when you were 6 years old changed my life. You drew heaven as a place where sick kids could be happy. and I realized that’s what I wanted to create. That’s what Neverland was supposed to be. Your drawing hung in my bedroom for 15 years.

Every night before I went to sleep, I looked at it and it reminded me why I do what I do. I’ve been watching you, Sarah. Not in a creepy way, but I’ve been making sure you had the opportunities you deserved. The art camp, the scholarships, the supplies, all of it, because you have a gift and the world needs your art.

I’ve set up something for you. My lawyers will explain, but I want you to go to any art school you want. I want you to create. I want you to show the world what heaven looks like. Thank you for that drawing. Thank you for reminding me what matters. You’re going to do great things, Sarah. Love always, Michael.

Attached to the letter was a document, a trust fund set up in 1994, the day after Michael visited the hospital. $500,000 for Sarah’s education, art school, supplies, living expenses, everything. It had been sitting there for 15 years, growing, waiting. Sarah collapsed. Her roommate called 911. They thought she was having a heart attack. She wasn’t.

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