Homeless People In Salem, Oregon Get Food, Socks From 'Superheroes' Steve Naylor And Jeff Bronson

Superheroes Come To Homeless Peoples' Rescue

The hungry and lonely homeless people of Salem, Ore., don’t need to look up at the sky for a sign of a superhero. They have two masked saviors working right at street level.

For nearly a year, Steve Naylor and Jeff Bronson have been on a mission to help homeless people, while sporting masks and capes, KGW reports. The disguised do-gooders –- “The Rev” and “Hazmat” –- hand out sandwiches, socks and toothbrushes to those in need, but have learned that the homeless often just lack something money can’t buy.

"I make eye contact and shake people's hands because when I was homeless, people wouldn't talk to me or look at me for days at a time," Naylor told the news outlet.

But this isn’t the first time we’ve seen costumed characters giving back to their communities.

Volunteers with the Real Life Superhero Movement slip into their alternate identity before visiting the sick and getting involved in public safety patrols, among other benevolent acts.

Eight-year-old Ben Roseth, who suffers from a rare condition that zaps his strength, was so inspired when he met a superhero at the hospital that he and his siblings started their own dress-up movement, HLN reports.

The Minnesota kids became the “Fearsome Four” to pay back the goodwill they received. Ben, AKA “Power Boy,” his two brothers and sister have helped their neighbors clean their yards and have donated teddy bears to ill children, the news outlet reports.

“Ben used to cry and scream and fight anytime we went near the local clinic. He would burst into tears at the smell of rubbing alcohol,” his mom wrote on his Facebook page. “Power Boy doesn't fear the tests much anymore.”

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