A disabled veteran in the High Desert is once again rolling in his favorite set of wheels, just days after his $3,500 electric wheelchair was stolen.
A training accident in South Korea in 1975 left Blaine Van Gogh, 70, without a left leg and hip.
"I've worked hard all my life, and even as an amputee, I've worked," Van Gogh said.
Van Gogh overcame his challenges and became a proud grandparent and youth minister, but he says the theft of his wheelchair shook his faith in people.
"I got up to take my two grandkids to school, and I looked out the door and my chair was gone," Van Gogh said.
The wheelchair was only a year old and had improved Van Gogh's life in ways he says he can't explain.
"When I saw that my chair was not there, I felt violated," Van Gogh said.
His motorized wheelchair was stolen from the back patio of his Helendale home.
Van Gogh called Victorville Daily Press reporter Rene De La Cruz.
"Deep down inside I said, 'You know what, we're going to get your chair back,'" De La Cruz said.
His article came out Wednesday morning. Not many hours later, De La Cruz got a nice surprise.
"I had received 25 phone calls, people wanting to donate chairs, donate cash," De La Cruz said.
"I felt hope again," Van Gogh said. "And revitalized with the goodness of people."
Then, the real chair showed up. It had been abandoned at an empty house four blocks from where it disappeared.
"Oh my gosh, I was so thrilled, so thrilled to have my chair back," Van Gogh said.
Thrilled and armed with new lesson material for Easter.
"It's what I'm going to teach my Sunday school class," Van Gogh said.