Hyde woke up on Friday — his 9th birthday — and turned on the TV, his jaw dropped.
A phony
breaking news segment — recorded just for him
called on Jaylen to become superhero "Striker Boy" and save South
Florida from the villain Sneaky Pete. It was all part of a surprise
staged event to fulfill a superhero dream for Jalen, who is undergoing
chemotherapy to fight leukemia.
"He was very excited. Totally geeked," said his mother, Dalia Rodriguez, who had managed to keep all the preparations secret.
Dressed
in a gray costume and blue mask based on a superhero he had created,
Jaylen was cheered by dozens of volunteers as he arrived at Nova
Southeastern University's soccer practice field in a yellow Ferrari
Italia.
He defused a fake
bomb, got a helicopter ride, fought a fire, and arrested the green-faced
Sneaky Pete for stealing a puppy. Jaylen then took the villain to jail
and held a news conference.
The event was similar to one
held in San Francisco last year for a 5-year-old cancer patient who
wanted to be "Batkid" for the day, drawing worldwide attention.
Jaylen, who was diagnosed
in January 2013 and is now in remission, was guided through the
scenarios by a professional actress in the role of policewoman "Shadow"
and accompanied by his 13-year-old brother, Daishawn, as sidekick
"Falcon Boy."
Smiling with
tight lips, Jaylen seemed a bit overwhelmed by the news cameras and all
the outpouring. "Striker Boy, Striker Boy," volunteers chanted.
When
asked by reporters about his day, Striker Boy proved to be the strong
and silent type, saying only "I can see through the future and I can
fly."
Read more with pictures after the cut
The Make-A-Wish Foundation,
which grants the wishes of seriously ill children, started preparing the
event more than a year ago at its South Florida chapter. Jared
Fink, who works with the foundation, interviewed Jaylen and noticed
from the start that he was a huge superhero fan. "Whatever superhero
movie is out there, he sees them all," Fink said.
Organizers decided to let Jaylen's imagination run, letting him create his own superhero instead of adapting an existing one.
Norman
Wedderburn, president and CEO of the regional chapter, said the average
wish costs $5,000, but the Friday wish was well in excess of that. He
said he wasn't able to provide a figure because many donations had been
in kind.
"It's not about the
money. It's about granting them one heartfelt wish that they ask for.
Whether it's a superhero wish or going to Disney World, we are going to
give them all the effort that we have," Wedderburn said.
The Make-A-Wish chapter in South
Florida has been granting wishes to more than 9,500 local children with
life-threatening illnesses since 1983. A visit to Disney World is the
most popular request, followed by travel, shopping sprees and meeting a
celebrity. After answering
questions at the mock news conference, Jaylen celebrated his birthday
with a party at the Broward Sheriff's Office.
Fighting back tears, his mother thanked organizers and participants for helping her son.
"Just
like he beat the bad guy today, he's going to beat the bad guy of
cancer," she said. "He's going to get through this and we're going to be
OK."
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