Dubai Telegraph - Beatles fan's lost letter turns to story of pandemic hope

EUR -
AED 3.846682
AFN 76.521468
ALL 98.693297
AMD 417.008071
ANG 1.880737
AOA 957.74059
ARS 1106.226981
AUD 1.646217
AWG 1.885123
AZN 1.782273
BAM 1.949759
BBD 2.107072
BDT 126.797171
BGN 1.953212
BHD 0.39473
BIF 3089.967986
BMD 1.04729
BND 1.400136
BOB 7.210661
BRL 5.973533
BSD 1.043547
BTN 90.47171
BWP 14.394131
BYN 3.415154
BYR 20526.891799
BZD 2.096206
CAD 1.486205
CDF 3001.533913
CHF 0.943054
CLF 0.025704
CLP 986.380088
CNY 7.597012
CNH 7.602166
COP 4320.240458
CRC 529.150538
CUC 1.04729
CUP 27.753196
CVE 109.924444
CZK 25.054435
DJF 185.834268
DKK 7.459315
DOP 64.867795
DZD 140.96619
EGP 53.035204
ERN 15.709356
ETB 133.664343
FJD 2.404893
FKP 0.841659
GBP 0.831648
GEL 2.958578
GGP 0.841659
GHS 16.123049
GIP 0.841659
GMD 74.884705
GNF 9021.877104
GTQ 8.056042
GYD 218.333582
HKD 8.148741
HNL 26.60407
HRK 7.566753
HTG 136.545665
HUF 402.431987
IDR 17009.305175
ILS 3.721725
IMP 0.841659
INR 90.96348
IQD 1367.064708
IRR 44077.833205
ISK 147.081518
JEP 0.841659
JMD 164.78633
JOD 0.743051
JPY 158.962996
KES 135.257823
KGS 91.585381
KHR 4178.055998
KMF 490.767366
KPW 942.655678
KRW 1511.564327
KWD 0.323173
KYD 0.869606
KZT 518.832609
LAK 22679.736089
LBP 93449.400559
LKR 308.414503
LRD 208.194993
LSL 19.175592
LTL 3.092376
LVL 0.633496
LYD 5.120137
MAD 10.418522
MDL 19.514542
MGA 4915.676906
MKD 61.524155
MMK 3401.55836
MNT 3624.831151
MOP 8.36648
MRU 41.543501
MUR 48.509032
MVR 16.126343
MWK 1809.359883
MXN 21.330581
MYR 4.641611
MZN 66.913708
NAD 19.175592
NGN 1581.209626
NIO 38.400299
NOK 11.655164
NPR 144.751781
NZD 1.826632
OMR 0.40322
PAB 1.043567
PEN 3.877188
PGK 4.196917
PHP 60.771643
PKR 291.29506
PLN 4.163001
PYG 8222.525858
QAR 3.804414
RON 4.976408
RSD 117.096542
RUB 95.620819
RWF 1464.136011
SAR 3.92797
SBD 8.831503
SCR 15.070344
SDG 629.421942
SEK 11.21748
SGD 1.405197
SHP 0.862535
SLE 23.825878
SLL 21961.161904
SOS 596.341092
SRD 36.888749
STD 21676.796766
SVC 9.130712
SYP 13617.933852
SZL 19.171422
THB 35.343938
TJS 11.390511
TMT 3.665516
TND 3.304163
TOP 2.452859
TRY 37.941074
TTD 7.082059
TWD 34.282949
TZS 2722.954732
UAH 43.42374
UGX 3840.103007
USD 1.04729
UYU 45.329565
UZS 13558.992991
VES 64.924586
VND 26679.722887
VUV 129.51133
WST 2.971549
XAF 653.918612
XAG 0.032313
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.830354
XDR 0.799009
XOF 653.918612
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.727812
ZAR 19.314884
ZMK 9426.868239
ZMW 29.402907
ZWL 337.227081
  • GSK

    -0.3800

    36.17

    -1.05%

  • RELX

    -0.8400

    51.07

    -1.64%

  • NGG

    -0.5400

    60.73

    -0.89%

  • BP

    0.5100

    35

    +1.46%

  • AZN

    -0.8700

    73.58

    -1.18%

  • RBGPF

    63.5700

    63.57

    +100%

  • BTI

    -0.7900

    38.82

    -2.04%

  • CMSC

    0.0900

    23.5

    +0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.84

    +0.26%

  • RIO

    0.0700

    63.36

    +0.11%

  • BCC

    1.0300

    121.63

    +0.85%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    23.82

    +0.8%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    12.35

    -0.57%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    8.36

    -0.84%

  • CMSD

    0.1872

    23.69

    +0.79%

  • JRI

    0.0435

    12.83

    +0.34%

Beatles fan's lost letter turns to story of pandemic hope
Beatles fan's lost letter turns to story of pandemic hope

Beatles fan's lost letter turns to story of pandemic hope

Like so many victims of Covid-19, Brazilian Karlo Schneider never got to say goodbye to his family. Unlike most, he managed to get them a message a year after he died.

Text size:

Schneider's family, who describe him as a die-hard romantic with an infectious love of life, kissed him farewell when the Brazilian hotel manager left for work one morning in February 2021, and never held him again.

Schneider came down with coronavirus symptoms that day, and stayed at the hotel to avoid infecting his family. Their only contact after that was in calls from his sick bed and one socially distanced look -- the badly ill father in his car on his way to the hospital, his wife and three kids waving from the house.

But Schneider, who died at 40 that March, delivered his loved ones a letter a year later, with a little help from his friends, the Beatles and a viral video.

The story starts at a dinner party in 2006, when Schneider, then expecting his first child, got the idea for he and his friends to write letters to his unborn daughter to open on her 15th birthday.

A passionate Beatles fan with hundreds of rare records, he stashed the letters inside his most precious possession: his vinyl collection.

"He loved that kind of thing," says his wife, Alcione, who was six months pregnant at the time.

"He was always asking things like, 'If you could leave a message in a bottle for someone in the future, what would you say?'"

He was the kind of dad who created elaborate treasure hunts for his kids, the kind of friend who showed up at dawn on your birthday to surprise you with a present, she says.

Such escapades were so common at the Schneiders' home in the northeastern city of Natal that they soon forgot all about the letters, she says.

- 'Find those letters' -

Fast forward 14 years, and the pandemic was wreaking worldwide havoc. Like many, Schneider lost his job.

Struggling financially, he decided to sell most of his record collection.

Things looked to be getting better in early 2021, when he got a job at another hotel in Mossoro, 280 kilometers (175 miles) away.

But he soon caught Covid-19. It was the start of a brutal second wave that saw more than 3,000 people a day dying in Brazil.

It happened very fast, says Alcione, 41. The moving truck arrived in Mossoro with their things on February 12. A week later, Schneider got sick. On March 2, he was intubated. By March 11, he was gone.

It was only later, sifting memories in her mind, that she remembered those long-ago letters.

The impact hit slowly, she says. Barbara, their first-born, would be turning 15 in March, a week before the first anniversary of her dad's death.

"Oh my God. I have to find those letters," she remembers thinking.

- Unsaid goodbye -

After failing to locate them in Schneider's remaining albums, she realized what had happened.

With her blessing, Schneider's friends posted a video on Beatle-maniac discussion forums asking for whoever bought the albums to return the letters.

The video soon went viral, inspiring a flurry of stories in the Brazilian media.

Last September, a man called Alcione saying he had bought some vintage records around that time. He hadn't opened them yet, he said. He had himself lost his son to Covid-19, and was struggling with depression.

But he promised he would look when he could.

In December, the man called again, asking her to meet him in Natal. There, he gave her Schneider's copy of John Lennon's "Imagine," with three letters inside.

Barbara opened the one from Schneider on her birthday last month, with Alcione at her side.

"He wrote that he was so in love with my mom. He talked about the Beatles. He asked if Paul McCartney was still alive," Barbara says, between laughter and tears.

At the end of the letter, Schneider's blue pen ran out of ink.

The message fades, then ends abruptly -- reminding his family of the way he died, his lungs weakening to nothing.

"It was surreal," says Alcione.

But "it was so, so good to get that letter," says Barbara, a poised, precocious high-schooler.

"We never got to say goodbye. This gave me a chance to see him again."

H.Pradhan--DT