A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

Categories: North America | Society

Freya David started working at McDonald's in Needham, Massachusetts in 1984. She got a job thanks to a special program of local authorities, according to which jobs were allocated for people with intellectual disabilities. Recently, Freya's 90-year-old mother began to complain about memory problems and asked her daughter to retire as soon as possible. But colleagues could not let Freya go just like that and arranged a party for a hundred people to honorably hold it.

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A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire Source: dailymail.co.uk

A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

Colleagues estimated that in 32 years of working at McDonald's, Freya managed to cook 453 tons of French fries. In 1984, when a woman just got a job, two people who started interning at the same time with her did not even complete a 6-month preparatory course. Freya quickly joined the main team.

A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

Recently, Freya's 90-year-old mother began complaining about memory problems and asked her daughter to retire as soon as possible so that she could spend more time with her. Freya agreed, but her colleagues did not want to let her go just like that. They arranged a farewell party in honor of Freya, to which more than 100 people came.

A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

"Everything was very cool. I'm happy that all my friends are here!"— Freya shared in an interview with CBS Boston. The manager of the restaurant, Roni Sandoval, said that when Freya sees children coming to the restaurant, she always greets them, saying: "Hello, sweet!", and added: "She's a nice, very nice girl."

A woman with Down syndrome who has worked all her life at McDonald's was given a fun party to retire

"Freya is one of the first people we got a job. People with disabilities can be in society, they can learn new things for themselves and benefit others," says Anna—Marie Bayva, director of the Charles River Center for the Support of People with Intellectual Disabilities.

Keywords: Kindness | McDonald's | Massachusetts | Retirement | Down syndrome | USA

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