The Jewish Boston Globe columnist whose son went missing for
four days earlier this month broke his silence on Wednesday, describing the
"amazing community" that helped his family get through the
nerve-wracking experience.
In a column titled, "Blessed by an 'Amazing
Community,'" Jeff Jacoby describes the gut-churning anxiety that washed
over him and his wife, Laura, when they realized their eldest son Caleb was
missing.
"What are you supposed to do when your teenager has
been gone for hours — six hours, 12 hours, 24 hours — and hasn’t been seen or
heard from?" he writes. "When you’ve called in the police and given
them all the information you can think of? When you’ve checked your child’s
usual haunts and come up dry? When his friends, realizing that something is
wrong, are beginning to sound the alarm on Facebook and Google Chat? And when
the temperature outside is in the single digits — and falling?"
The reasons for Caleb Jacoby's disappearance remain unknown,
though police have said the teen ran away from home, and have closed their
investigation, The Forward reported.
Still, Jeff Jacoby said what helped them pull through during
the 80 hours of Caleb's disappearance was the support of friends, fellow
members of the Brookline, Mass., Jewish community – and even strangers,
"many of whom were prepared to drop everything and go anywhere they were
needed to search for a teen they didn’t know from a city many had never been
to," he writes.
"During the worst ordeal of our lives, my family
experienced the best that human beings are capable of," Jacoby concludes.
"That was a blessing I’ll never forget, or ever cease being grateful
for."
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