Sunday, January 31, 2016

Caring For Calais






























We just got back from Calais.  I haven't had time to download my photos yet, but one of the YSAs from Canterbury Stake (aka "Pebbles") put up this post on our service this weekend.  

That is our van full of blankets (Randy, me and 600 blankets) that they are downloading 

Read more about our service trip on "Pebbles" blog : https://lifeofpebbles.wordpress.com/2016/01/30/volunteering-in-calais/


Canterbury Stake builds a house.



















Here is a great video previously done by the Northampton UK Stake. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PkN-d0NvoaA

In it you will tour the camp and see the same things we all saw this weekend (except we had cold wind and rain the whole time).  Elder Stay and I spent 4 hours with the agency director in the camp meeting with other aid agencies.


Here is a video by some of the other, non-LDS volunteers at L'Auberge de Migrants, one of the agencies we visited and worked with.    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nS0LjKkiEjc

Monday, January 25, 2016

We are Here! First week in Frankfurt


Sunday
We spoke at church in Salem.  Several couples who served with us last time came (Greenwood, Vassel, Johansen, Harrison, Hanks, Smith, Feil). Family and friends also came home for lunch: Ahlstroms, Tim Stay and family. Larry and Joyce Stay, Judi Moore and grandkids,  Doug Holt, Steve and Sue Holt, Rob and Jodi Holt and family, Martha and Aaron & Sam and Isabella Henderson, Glaucia and George Brown.  Leah White, Mary and Kay .  At 6 we were set apart. Watsons came to say goodbye. 


Monday : up at 2 am. Doug drove us to the MTC to catch the airport shuttle at 3:30. Probably the shortest MTC stay on record.  All the luggage made weight (a miracle) and we were TSA approved.  We had a 5 hour layover in Atlanta . On the flight to Frankfurt I had an entire center row to myself so laid down and slept!
Frankfurt airport















Tuesday we arrived in a grey and foggy Germany . Sharpes ( the humanitarian couple we trained) came to pick us up.  They drove us to our apartment in Friedrichsdorf, just 3 blocks from the temple, which is closed for renovation.
view from balcony
spare bedroom and extra chairs

  Our car was here at the apartment, so after unpacking a few things, we headed into the office where we met or re-met lots of people.  New were all the senior missionaries except the Sharpes and Denis and Jackie Hawkins.  But Denis had surgery last month for a torn meniscus and Jackie was flying to Guatemala with a sister missionary in crisis so we didn't see them.
  

Our new office is where Vassels used to be, but they had torn down the wall between their office and were the Footes were: Big airy room, but hard to not overhear conversations. Sharpes had arranged a lovely lunch with salad and homemade rolls. We met Tom King, who is over Family Services.  Our boss, Gilles Francois, was sick all week.  Tuesday night was Relief Society.  GREAT to see everyone, especially Jill Dyches and Jen Kearon!  Melissa Dalton Bradford did a presentation on being a "Global Mom," which is the title of a book she wrote.  Only one woman there is from Germany, so advice on moving around and living in new places successfully was welcome.  We had chocolate chip cookies (which is a big deal here! you can't buy chips, vanilla, baking powder or brown sugar in typical stores so someone goes to a LOT of work and effort to make chocolate chip cookies!).  Bob and Judi Palmer had helped me out by picking up normal bed pillows (American sized : Germans use huge ones) and a under futon bed warmer!  Since our bedroom is freezing, it makes all the difference.

front room and dining room
Wednesday: first full day in the office.  We have 70 projects completed or underway.  We submitted two projects for approval by Gilles and the area committee.  Randy got the warehouse restocking approved: they have supplies for hygiene kits which we then send by truck to European stakes and missions.  Randy also got a report sent in and closed one project.  Only 69 to go. I spent the day getting acquainted with the projects in hand and developing a process to deal with projects from arrival to approval to placing the orders to following thru with delivery.  Many are trucks full of donated goods and hygiene kits from English wards who deliver to Calais.  Italian stakes are combining efforts to pack and deliver 10K hygiene kits!.  So, a lot is going on.  We met with Craig Hunt, who is DTA over all of Europe Area, who offered guidance and suggestions. I went to the Wed. Lunch and Learn - which is the class I started - and it is still going.  They trade off each week: this week was 3 Nephi 17 to 20.   Randy's eyes started to burn so missionary medical set up and appointment for him for tomorrow.  Sister Dyches brought us dinner!  Meat loaf, potatoes, salad and dressing, grapes and lemon cake/bread.  It was wonderful to have a delicous, warm meal when we got home at 8 pm and there is enough for a second meal.

kitchen: one big refrigeraton on the left!




Thursday: We got our computers tweeked and our cell phone set up.  We can call home free from the office anytime.  We can call you with our cell, if we need to, and you can always contact us on that phone. +49 69 1449 2242.  We also have free texting (thanks for checking on that, Peter) on my T-Mobile phone 1 385 309 7675 so you can communicate any time for free (if your texting is free).  The eye doctor said Randy has 'acute dry eye' from air travel, winter heat and computer eye strain!  Deja vu! Just what happened to my eyes on our first mission.  I got trained by Sister Katy Ryser, wife of one of the medical advisors, who has been doing our job for the last two months.  I was able to contact 5 stakes to get needed details on their scheduled projects: one contact was with Pres. Ugo Perego, who gave the most interesting talk I heard at FAIR Mormon: it was about what DNA tells us about Joseph Smith's ancestors and descendants. You can watch it at http://www.fairmormon.org/perspectives/authors/perego-ugo.


We got money out of the bank machine and went to NiHao dinner: Randy had the duck and I got fish and veggies (our two favorites).

NiHao chinese restaurant

















Friday we went straight to the warehouse up near our apt. in Bad Homburg.  We met the people in Purchasing and Delivery who ship hygiene kit contents out to stakes and missions.  It was good to get a look at the quality of the items (we need thicker blankets!).Jenny Rossin has been especially instrumental in the process, setting up the spreadsheets and order forms.We visited with Denis, then had leftovers for dinner.  We are pleased to report that Netfix works for us here! (unlike last mission).    


Saturday we slept in, then walked over to the Friedrichsdorf temple renovation open house.

walking thru Friedrichsdorf


































It was great, with lots of photos and site maps and floorplans, with a video of the original temple buiding. 


 And the food was just amazing!  Imagine serving fresh mozzerella and tomato, or brie, or lachs (smoked salmon) sandwiches! Delicious.









No idea what is being done inside the temple, except we heard that they are moving the baptismal font to a new basement location outside of the old foundation, thus freeing up considerable space within the building.  The new chapel - north of the temple patron housing complex in that field we used for parking - is well underway.  They expect it to be done this summer.  The interiors look a lot like the chapel in Offenbach, clean spare lines I think of as Scandinavian. The baptismal font will be off a foyer and have a big window like Offenbach. The old chapel will be torn down as soon as the new is finished along with the old distribution center building which is gone: big hole there now with a yellow crane (the German national bird😊) and an amazing pile of trailers forming a 3 story construction headquarters. They will both be replaced with two new buildings of temple missionary apartments with a distribution center. I am glad we will get to see the finished product. 

Existing Chapel on the left; Temple Pres home in middle. Construction offices made of shipping containers stacked up on the right, blocking the view of the temple.  Big hole will be new temple missionary housing. 
We walked home and stopped at a new-to-us store: Norma.  It is a low-end, close out place like Penny Markt.  But, they still had some Stollen left from Christmas!  Microwaved for a few seconds, it freshens right up and is delicious with Mandel paste (almonds) in the middle
We had dinner (pizza) and changed into church clothes and went back to the Friedrichsdorf building for the baptism of two Iranian refugees!  Elias and Vahid.  


We also met investigators from Egypt, Dominican Republic and Yemen. I had never seen a baptismal program in Farsi (Persian) before!  The mission president - Pres. Stoddard - and Sister Limer (I think her husband is an area 70?) spoke, and, even tho' it was in German the spirit was strong.  We sang 5 or 6 hymns in German, which I love.  And I understood about 80% of the opening prayer.


  Again, awesome food: some kind of persian chicken and rice with raisins and maybe apricots.  Pistachio candy from Iran. German casseroles with minced meat (think hamburger mixed with ground pork) mixed into mashed potatoes, then topped with lines of colored vegetables.  And then the drink: called nowruz, it is chia seeds in a sweet liquid with either rose water or brewed saffron added.(see  http://www.labnoon.com/en/2015/03/16/persian-chia-seeds-drink-for-nowruz/) Tasted good, but it was so thick it was like drinking a whole cup of roe!

These are the two drinks: nowruz with saffron on left, rosewater on the right.







We went home and watched episode 3 of Downton..

Wednesday, January 13, 2016

How YOU can help in the USA



LDS CHARITIES HELPS REFUGEES ADJUST TO CHALLENGES OF NEW ENVIRONMENTS
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees reports that as of January 2015 there were over 51.2 million refugees in the world. LDS Charities, the humanitarian organization of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, provides assistance to refugees worldwide, including the one percent that are resettled in host countries.
Refugees that are resettled face immense challenges living in a new environment. There are three components to their success: learning the language, securing employment, and building local relationships. Community involvement and volunteers are a critical part of their progress.
LDS Charities takes a special interest in the estimated 70,000 refugees living in Utah by supporting local refugee resettlement agencies with a variety of assistance including: Deseret Industries store vouchers, furniture, bedding, food, English acquisition, job coaching, on-the-job training, and employer placement.
LDS Charities advocates support for local community efforts that assist relocated refugees, and it especially encourages the volunteerism of its members in these causes.
For more information about LDS Charities' Utah partnerships and how you can help click on the links below. (Actually, these links are not active in this blogpost, but if you go to this link on the LDS.org website, you will find active links there  https://www.ldscharities.org/news/ldscharities-supports-refugees-slc  )

Updates from Europe

We have been hearing great stuff about Germany's continuing support and welcome for refugees.  We understand that they are resettling families in towns all over the country at the astounding rate of 3000 people A DAY !!!

That said, the needs continue to be astronomical.  Here is a comment we read in an email from a church member in England :

There is very very little support at these camps. There is very little publicity of what is happening. The group I am part of was there earlier this week and there was no money for providing food to people, new refugees were arriving by the day straight off boats and overland without shoes. Completely desitute. A shocking experience. Support for the 10,000 people now living in these camps is provided on an entirely voluntary basis. It is a humanitarian crisis.

Knowing the need is great, I wanted to give you an idea of how much the Church has been doing.  This is a partial list of individual projects by country where donations of money and service have been given in the last few months.  Projects vary from building a kitchen to service an entire camp, to providing diapers, to members assembling and delivering thousands of hygiene kits.

Germany
Germany
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Serbia
Greece
Italy
Germany
Germany
Germany
Greece
Germany
Germany
Croatia
Czech Republic
Germany
United Kingdom
Slovenia
Sweden
Italy
Macedonia
Germany
Germany
Germany
Italy
Italy
Macedonia
Macedonia
Greece
Germany
Germany
Germany
Serbia
France
Austria
Austria
Austria
Croatia
Austria
Italy
Italy
Italy
Italy
Italy
Italy
Czech Republic
Germany
Greece
Greece
Germany
Sweden
Serbia
Austria
Italy
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Germany
Czech Republic
Germany
Germany
Croatia
United Kingdom
Finland
Germany
Austria
Croatia
Norway
Italy
Italy
United Kingdom
Germany

United Kingdom