LDS Members Rally in Central America
June 7, 2010 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
Thousands of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormon Church) have been affected by a pair of disasters in Central America which killed hundreds, destroyed homes by the thousands and prompted a ongoing Church humanitarian response.
Guatemala’s Pacaya volcano erupted May 27, spewing lava and rocks and blanketing sections of Guatemala City — located 19 miles to the north — in ash and debris. The eruption forced the evacuation of hundreds of families living near Pacaya, including several member families. The international airport was closed because volcanic ash and debris.
Two days later, a devastating tropical storm, Agatha, made landfall at the Guatemalan border with Mexico. As it moved south, the storm wreaked havoc not only in Guatemala, but also in Honduras and El Salvador. The storm dumped rain, caused flooding and landslides, and even created sinkholes. About 129,000 people were displaced.
No Church meetinghouses were harmed by the disasters and many building are being utilized to shelter LDS families who have been displaced. Many LDS members were evacuated before the storm hit.
“The Church provided emergency food, water, clothing and tools to victims and local priesthood leaders. The Central America Area was also working with civil authorities in the three affected Central American nations to purchase and distribute medicine, building supplies and other relief provisions.”
The Church will continue to assess the needs of church members and their neighbors to see what ongoing aid needs to be rendered. Help rebuilding houses and planting crops is forthcoming.
Mormon Helping Hands in Slovenia
May 25, 2010 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
Members in all three branches in Ljubljana joined with a national effort to clean up Slovenia. Wearing their yellow Helping Hands vests, members from Ljubljana joined with members in the Maribor and Celje branches to help to clean up Slovenia in a day of service on April 17, 2010. [1]
The Church offered widespread support, including the full-time missionaries and President David H. Hill of the mission. The service included rubbish clean-up projects in several areas, including Hill Roznik, behind the city park Tivoli and the Heracles temple in the park. In the entire country, 250,000 people participated in the clean-up project, and the government sponsored festivities for the participants.
LDS Church Responds to Earthquake in Chile
March 4, 2010 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Giving Aid Globally
Leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are determining how the Church can be of most assistance in the wake of one of the most powerful earthquakes of the last century. With over half a million Latter-day Saints living in Chile, the Church has a substantial presence. There are well over 100 Mormon missionaries in the country. They were well prepared for the quake through the guidance of the Holy Spirit given to their mission president, who was warned ahead of time by the Lord that the disaster was coming. All safe and accounted for, they were able to render assistance to their neighbors almost immediately.
“We, along with the rest of the world, are watching with concern as reports from the massive earthquake in Chile continue to unfold. As with any disaster, immediate details are difficult to confirm.
“We have confirmed that all of the Church’s missionaries in Chile have reported in and are safe, including the two elders on the Juan Fernandez Island.” (This is an update from a report earlier today when some missionaries had not reported in).
Latter-day Saints are counseled by their leaders to store food, water, clothing and fuel against unpredicted emergencies, and this helps them weather such disasters and again be ready to help their neighbors. Local leaders and members began relief efforts shortly after the quake distributing food and water already located in Concepción. Early reports indicate that one Church member has died. [Later reports confirmed 7 church members dead and one missing.]
Church leaders have identified that food, water, tents, blankets, hygiene kits and sleeping mats are needed to assist people in the affected region. Representatives of the Church in Chile have been in contact with the country’s Interior Ministry to determine how the Church can most appropriately assist in relief efforts. Emergency response personnel at Church headquarters are poised to provide assistance as appropriate. Leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Chile delivered six tons of food from local bishops’ storehouses to the city of Talca on 2 March to help meet needs in several cities north of Concepción. A second shipment of 20 tons of food is expected to reach Concepción on 3 March. Two additional shipments of food have been sent to affected areas to the south of Concepción.
Most Latter-day Saint meetinghouses in Chile fared well in the quake, though many are filled with dust. At least three meetinghouses suffered extensive structural damage, and another was severely flooded. A house that also served as a meetinghouse was swept away in the tsunami triggered by the earthquake. Those wishing to donate to the Church Humanitarian Aid Fund can do so here. Resources from the Church Humanitarian Aid Fund make it possible for the Church to conduct humanitarian activities all over the world. One hundred percent of all contributions are used to help the needy.
Update: March 3, 2010
Food supplies are being pulled from Bishop’s storehouses in locations in Chile for delivery to earthquake-stricken areas. Six tons of food were delivered Tuesday to the city of Talca to help meet needs in several cities north of Concepcion. A second shipment of 20 tons of food was to reach Concepcion later Tuesday. Also, two additional shipments of food have been sent to affected areas south of Concepcion.
Update: March 17, 2010
An airlift of tents, tarps, diapers and other supplies sent by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to the Chilean government arrived in Santiago from Miami on Monday, 15 March. The supplies had been specifically requested by the previous Chilean government and will provide relief in the wake of the 8.8 magnitude earthquake that struck Chile in February. The Church’s Chile area presidency, which directs the work of the Church throughout Chile, met with Rodrigo Hinzpeter, Chile’s new interior minister, and Cristobal Lira, the general coordinator of donations, to formally donate the shipment. The ministers expressed their gratitude for all the Church was doing to help the Chilean people.
Local Church leaders are also continuing to coordinate the delivery of food, water and other supplies provided locally from bishops’ storehouses in Chile to affected areas, including the Juan Fernandez Islands, which were hit by a major tsunami. Several tons of relief supplies have already been provided by the Church from resources in country. Still, nearly 450 Church members are temporarily using 25 Church meetinghouses as living quarters.
Update: April 19, 2010
Click here to read a piece about the Mormon missionaries in Chile, the protection they were blessed with, and the service they were able to provide.
Mormon Brings Hope to the Poor in Kenya
December 9, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Giving Aid Globally
Louis Pope, the retiring chief executive of US Synthetics, is moving to a nice beach house in Kenya. Rather than launching out on a dream vacation or relaxing retirement, the 62-year-old Mormon instead will take a hands-on approach to directing two businesses he has created to lift the poorest people in Kenya out of abject poverty.
Pope formed Orem-based US Synthetics in 1978 and built the company into the world’s leading producer of synthetic diamond drill bits, a critical component in oil and gas exploration. He is using the rewards of this success to bless the lives of others in a remote part of the world. His entire family is behind the move and eager to help.
While working as a busy executive, Pope took the time to join a humanitarian aid project called Choice Humanitarian to rural Mexico in 1996 to help build a school. Choice Humanitarian is based in West Jordan, Utah. The experience was the first step in what became a life-changing journey for Pope. A year later, he went to Kenya with the same organization.
Pope has since returned more than 25 times to the former British colony on Africa’s east coast on a personal mission to help “the poorest of the poor,” he said.
During the past 10 years, Pope has established two Kenyan-based companies — Yehu Microfinance, which offers loans to women living in extreme poverty, and Coast Coconut Farms, which produces coconut oil using low-tech methods developed by a group of BYU engineering students as one of the school’s Capstone projects. Pope created a third company, Basa Body, based in the US Synthetics Orem plant, to use the coconut oil to make body lotion and similar products.
Coast Coconut Farms provides work for more than 100 Kenyan families, from farmers’ cooperatives to harvest coconuts to groups of micro-franchisees that operate small-scale oil presses.
Yehu Microfinance offers loans that average about $135 to women who have had no access to money lenders in the past to start small businesses. 17,000 women are currently employed (MormonTimes.com).
In January, 2010, Pope and his wife, Chriss, will take the next step when they move into a home they are building near Mombasa. They plan to live there nine months out of the year so Pope can focus his energy on his Kenyan businesses and perhaps launch some new ones — all of them designed to provide work for the Kenyan poor. The Popes will be distancing themselves from their 5 children and 21 grandchildren, but will stay in touch via the internet. Members of their family will make the trip for visits and extended stays to help with the work and experience the culture.
The presence of the LDS Church in the area — Mombasa has three branches — means the Popes can stay close to their faith. And as a former British colony, Kenya has two official languages — English and Swahili.
And they are building a beautiful house on a beautiful beach.
LDS Church Receives Community Service Award
November 13, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
Kentucky’s Leaf Chronical newspaper announced the award bestowed by Mayor Dan Kemp and Pennyrile RC&D for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ volunteer service. In April 2009, for their Annual Day of Service project, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints partnered with Pennyrile RC&D, the city of Hopkinsville and thirty additional organizations and businesses in efforts to clear debris from the Attucks High School to prepare it for future renovation and preservation of the historic building.
Over 300 Latter-day Saints from the surrounding area, including Clarksville, TN, removed over 240 cubic yards of debris using over 1500 man hours during the Church’s annual Day of Service event. A variety of such Day of Service events were performed by over 550 Latter-day Saint congregations throughout the Southeastern United States. (The local LDS Congregations are currently accepting proposals for service from the Clarksville community for the April 24, 2010 Day of Service.)
Mormons Help Locally – All Over the World
November 10, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
Latter-day Saints believe that giving service to others is a lifestyle based on the teachings of Jesus Christ, who “went about doing good.” The desire to serve others crosses cultural boundaries and has been manifested in recent months with stories featured on International Church Web sites. From Brazil and El Salvador to Samoa and Guatemala, members of the Church are reaching out around the world to help those in need. Below are some examples.
The Mormon Helping Hands program has reached its 10-year anniversary in Brazil. Mormon Helping Hands has served the needs of thousands while providing many more thousands the opportunity to serve. On 12 October, National Volunteer Day in Brazil, tens of thousands of Mormon Helping Hands volunteers completed service projects throughout the South American country.
“The need to supply blood banks is compelling, as there is a deficit of more than 30,000 units of blood each year,” said Ana Vilma Aguilar, national coordinator. “Aid from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is invaluable and it enables us to significantly reduce the gap in our inventory.”
In Samoa volunteers helped restore both a grandmother’s home and her hope at a time of significant human loss following the recent deadly tsunami in the South Pacific.
By Uniting against Hunger, Mormons in Guatemala have responded to drought conditions that have destroyed crops.
“I brought two pounds of rice for my little friends who are without food,” said an eight-year-old girl who worked side by side with her father for two hours preparing rations.
The Church joined hands with numerous charitable and municipal organizations in collecting more than 300 tons of food.
Following September’s tropical storm, members in the Philippines continue an ongoing effort to provide food, water, clothes and other relief supplies.
In the Dominican Republic, members say they were following the admonition of their Savior when they donated 500 much-needed wheelchairs.
And on a smaller scale, women in England donated a portable machine that helps hospice patients breathe easier by clearing airways.
From LDS Newsroom.
Mormon Ward Hosts Moslem Worshippers
October 12, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
When a California mosque was severely damaged in an electrical fire, Mormons opened their nearby meeting house for Friday Moslem prayers for over a year. The Moslem congregation is comprised of Ahmadi Muslims, a branch of Islam founded by Mirza Ghulam Ahmad in 1889. There are millions of Ahmadi Muslims in the world, but they are often persecuted by other Moslem sects. The congregation in Chino, California, has some members who have fled persecution in other countries and enjoy freedom of worship in the United States.
Although much of the mosque was destroyed in the 2003 fire, the prayer rooms were left intact. For the first 3½ years, as the mosque raised the $3 million for the first phase of rebuilding and expansion, worshippers were able to pray most weeks in those rooms.
In October 2007, construction forced them to move elsewhere, to a nearby ward — congregation — of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The ward hosted the mosque’s Friday prayers for 1 ½ years. The Mormon ward’s invitation to the Ahmadis came after years of friendship and members visiting each others’ congregations, said Ken Rasmussen, director of public affairs for the Latter-day Saints region that includes Chino. Rasmussen said he didn’t know about the striking similarities between the two faiths’ histories of persecution and misunderstanding until a few months after members of the two congregations began holding joint dinners.
Just as some Muslims consider Ahmadis heretics, some Christians call Mormons heretics. Ahmadis believe Mirza Ghulam Ahmad was the messiah; Mormons believe Joseph Smith was a prophet. Smith was murdered in 1844 during an era of severe anti-Mormon attacks and persecution in the United States.
Rasmussen said that after attending dozens of Ahmadi prayer services, he’s realized there are other similarities as well: Teachings to love others, honor your family and serve God.
“It’s been a wonderful blessing for us to be such good friends with them,” he said.
The newly remodeled mosque will be larger than the original. The new 27,000-square-foot, two-floor mosque is more than twice as big as the old one. About 300 to 400 people worship there during Friday afternoon prayers, Anwer Khan said. The mosque is still raising the $1 million necessary to build a basketball court, industrial-sized kitchen and a home for Imam Nasir.
Article adapted from ThePressEnterprise.com, and MormonTimes.com.
LDS Aid in Tsunami-Stricken Samoa
October 5, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
In October, 2009, an 8.3 earthquake occurred in the sea southwest of Samoa and American Samoa. Since there are a large number of Latter-day Saints on the islands, local Saints and church leaders first tried to locate every member. Emergency response was then coordinated between the Church and local congregations. About 150 people died in Samoa, American Samoa and Tonga, 26 of whom were Latter-day Saints. All Mormon missionaries on the islands were accounted for and found to be safe.
Latter-day Saint authorities in Samoa and New Zealand have continued to devote substantial energies to organizing humanitarian relief locally for the battered islands of Samoa and American Samoa.
Latter-day Saints throughout unaffected areas in Samoa have been gathering supplies and are continually shipping these to the impacted communities. Aid is to be given to all people in need, regardless of their religious affiliation (MormonTimes.com).
In American Samoa, at the request of the government, church meeting houses have been opened to residents who lost their homes in the disaster.
In Tonga, the tsunami crushed the small northern island of Niuatoputapu, destroying most of the homes in its three villages and leaving roughly 90 percent of its 1,019 people without shelter and clothing. Survivors reported that the waves reached the boughs of the coconut trees and obliterated the island’s hospital, bank, government offices, telecommunication facilities, jail and airport buildings. Nine people died and four were critically injured.
No Latter-day Saints were killed in Tonga, although some lost their homes and all their possessions.
Church members on Tonga’s main island of Tongatapu provided relief for the people of Niuatoputapu. On Thursday, Tongatapu’s 12 stake presidents broadcast a message on local Tonga radio inviting church members to donate food, clothing, cooking equipment, pillows, blankets and other necessities.
Church members were invited to drop their donations at their local churches, where full-time missionaries helped load them into trucks. At first light Friday, dozens of trucks began transporting the goods to government warehouses. From there, military trucks transported them to the nearby wharf, where they were loaded into a French ship, which will carry them to Niuatoputapu.
Government leaders on all three islands were impressed with the speed and coordinated efforts of the LDS Church and its members and expressed gratitude for the help. Rebuilding efforts will also receive the continuing attention of the LDS Church. The Church is still continuing rebuilding efforts in the tsunami-stricken regions of Indonesia and Thailand, even though the disaster occurred several years ago.
Click here to read a personal account of the devastation in Samoa. This article has many before and after photographs.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAaBJrn9su8
All Africa Service Project Mobilizes African Mormons
August 29, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
Europeans and Americans are used to seeing newspaper photographs of humanitarian aid workers in Africa. The workers are invariably white, and from developed, “first world” countries, trying to lend a hand to poorer Africans. The photographs are different, however in an article on Vanguardngr.com, a Nigerian paper reporting a major cleanup effort in Lagos, Nigeria.
Nigerian members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints mobilized in Lagos to clean up Ikeja General Hospital, especially clearing drains that were breeding grounds for mosquitos. Church members were clad in the recognizable yellow aprons bearing the logo “Mormon Helping Hands.” The aprons are the same that were apparent at the hurrican Katrina service sites in the U.S.
Male members of the Church sand filled some failed sections of the hospital road while the females swept the hospital premises and also cleared the garbage at the back of Ayinke ward. Mormon children also participated. The exercise also took place in places like Ifako Health Centre, General Hospital, Ogba, Ikoyi Prison, Agege General Hospital, Ajuwon Community Health Center, Ikorodu General Hospital, Surulere Local Government Premises, Onilegogoro Bus-stop, among others.
The same sort of service was taking place all over Africa as part of the project sponsored by the Church.
“A Ghanaian, Richard K. Ahadjie, said of the exercise: ‘I came for a leadership training meeting yesterday and I was supposed to leave for Accra this morning. I know the project is for all Africans and if I decided to leave this morning, I shall miss this project back home in Accra. So I decided to stay in Nigeria for the three hours exercise. This exercise has been able to portray Christ’s attitude on cleanliness.’”
“Chairman, National Public Affairs Council in Nigeria, Elder Alexander Odume told Vanguard Metro, ‘We feel great for doing such a thing. Mormons means good; we are here to render service because we believe in service for humanity. This is our own contribution to assist our fellow human beings who need the service more. We have been able to fill some parts of the road with laterite; we have trash bags and we are partnering with the Lagos State Waste Management Authority, LAWMA who will come and evacuate the rubbish as soon as we are through with what we are doing. Unit leaders of the Church have identified projects that would address the needs of the areas the church is located where members would render service. In some of the projects, we are partnering with organisations, other churches and leaders of other faiths to serve Nigerians.’
There are over 88,000 members of the Church in Nigeria. The aim of the service project is to “sweep the street, clear the drains, paint and mark roads, clean markets and other public places, including hospitals, health centres, police stations, old people’s home, motherless babies homes, among others,” said Elder Odume.
See the full article at Vanguard Metro Nigeria.
Local Mormons Provide Food Relief in Florida
June 26, 2009 by Gale
Filed under Mormons Serving Local Communities
On June 25, 2009, Florida Today.com, in an article by John A. Torres, reported the following:
Starting today, hungry families struggling to provide can go to the nearest Catholic Church for a week’s supply of food.
More than 12,000 pounds of food collected and donated by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was picked up Wednesday by volunteers with Catholic Charities of Central Florida. The partnership is expected to ease the economic crunch for struggling families for the next three weeks. The food is available for anyone, regardless of faith.
It’s the first time an LDS Stake has connected with the local Catholic Church to work on this type of project. There are a large number of Catholic Churches in Brevard County that can serve as distribution centers. The project follows a successful fund-raising campaign called Project Hunger, aimed at providing food for the poor during the summer months. Donations are typically lower during the summer than during the winter holiday season, so it’s difficult to keep food banks stocked. This recent donation will help provide needed food until the Project Hunger funds are allocated. Funding for the effort was provided by donations from Latter-day Saints (Mormons) throughout Central Florida.
To read the full article, click here.


