When David Accardi was just a few months old, he played the Baby Jesus in a Christmas pageant staged by the orphanage in Peru caring for him and his infant sister.
The Kraken senior manager of events and community and his slightly older sibling, Katie, had been given to the orphanage in his native city of Lima by their young, unmarried biological mother. They were later adopted by American parents, Lois and Robert, who lived at the orphanage with the infants for several months until both could travel, then brought them to the U.S. and a home in New Jersey when Accardi was 9 months old.
“It was an orphanage and a school and there were kids running around all the time,” Accardi said. “Christmas is real big there and so they put on a show and my parents told me I played the Baby Jesus. And I apparently cried through the whole ceremony.”
Years later, Accardi and his family returned to the orphanage and ran into the same Priest running it – who instantly remembered the family given how many months his adoptive parents had spent there.
“He was astonished to see us,” Accardi said. “And to see how big we’d gotten and everything.”
Growing up in New Jersey, Accardi hadn’t always given much thought to his roots. But his sister had pushed Accardi to do the same.
“She was a lot more dedicated to finding out more about our history and everything,” he said. “And I thank her for that because it made me kind of who I am today.”