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Monday, December 16, 2013

"But Charity is the pure love of Christ,"

47 But charity is the pure love of Christ, and it endureth forever; and whoso is found possessed of it at the last day, it shall be well with him.  Moroni 7:47

Last week Irvin Begaye called to see if we would have a tiller available on Monday.  I was sure we would, so I agreed to have one ready.  Elder Olson and I had followed him to his home a few weeks ago after he came by and expressed interest in having a garden next spring.
He had come into the History Center several weeks before coming to our apartment and said that he had a friend who had had a church garden and how well it had done and how much it produced.  He asked about how he could go about getting one.  He seemed very interested and sincere, so we were glad when he came by again and then called last week.
 Elder Olson went over this morning and found not just Irvin, but 7 other adult men.  They did not say much, but most were willing to shake Elder Olson's hand.  One did talk a little, but they each helped till and seemed happy to have their picture taken.  It turns out that Irvin is retired, but continues to take an active interest in helping those with special needs in the community.  He had gone to get them earlier, brought them back to "help" and encouraged each to take a turn with the tiller and putting up the corner posts.
  When Elder Olson had arrived the men were taking turns carrying the garbage barrels that were filled with manure to the garden spot.  They would stop along the way to change sides to rest their arms.  The wheel barrow they pushed had a very squeaky wheel that made a lot of noise.  No one seemed to mind though, they just wanted to take their turn pushing it.  It was nearly a hundred yards, but no one complained.
  Some were more eager to help than others, but each took their turn tilling and was pleased to have their picture taken more than once.  It looks as if Irvin will have these "special brothers" continue to help in the spring.  Each will be given the opportunity to help plant, weed, water, and harvest. 
  It did not seem to matter that not many words were spoken.  They watched, they helped, they smiled.
  We are eager to watch them next spring as things begin to grow not only in the gardens, but in the hearts of all who are there.
  




  • Matthew 25:40

    40 And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you,Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.
    • Elder & Sister Olson  Tuba City, Arizona 16 Dec 2013

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Missionaries coming Home, Missionaries going out and Christmas coming.




Today we had an amazing young Sister bear testimony of the truthfulness of the gospel as she leaves to serve in the Maryland Baltimore Mission of the the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She enters the MTC Wed., Dec 18, 2013.   She spoke with two other sisters who also bore solemn witness of the truthfulness of this gospel and its restoration to the earth.
  The spirit was so strong and many were touched by the power of their testimonies.  I am not sure how many attended, but the overflow had to be opened to accommodate all those who came.  Although I will not always remember everything that was said, I will not forget what I felt.

  The grandmother who is attending the Temple prep class brought two of her  grand daughters in again.  They ended up staying a little over two hours steadily working on finding census records on their grandfather's father and then his mother.  We were also able to find Mabel Small's grandmother, who apparently raised her. Grandmother is going to try and contact one of the other relatives to find out Mabel's parent's names.
  I am including pictures of the two girls, the younger was is 10.  What an amazing time to start family history.  The girls started to race each other to see who could find the next census record, it was so fun to be a part of and watch their smiles as they found the next census.
  Grandma was also able to request a copy of her patriarchal blessing.  It should arrive in the next few weeks.
  Sister T has been a wonderful asset in the history center.  She invites everyone she runs across to come back to church and to come and start working on their family history.  Two more people are working on their family lines because of her invitation to do so.
  It is so wonderful to serve among such great people and to see them and listen to them as they bear their testimonies.  You know that they will shine wherever they go and invite many to come and share in the truth they have found.

Sister Olson



These are pictures of Shelby Begody, the young sister who will enter the MTC Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2013 the same day we will be driving to Alpine, Utah.

Our other sister who is serving in the Utah Salt Lake Mission is now in Bountiful and Elder Olson's cousin, Kevin Olson took her picture at a Ward Christmas breakfast just this week.  Sister Tammi Horseherder.

Two of our young men have returned from their missions, one served in North Dakota and the other in Vera Cruz, Mexico.  Both left after we got here and have now returned after serving two years.  Both were surprised to find us still here.  The first is going to school in Thatcher, AZ and the other who came home this week will head back to Stanford, where he has already completed two years.  Both are wonderful young men.  Hopefully I can get pictures from our young elders to attach in the near future.

With Christmas only a few days away, there is no doubt of what the holiday is really about.  Let us give the gift of time, listening to the laughter of the children, watching with our hearts and not just with our eyes.
 Let us celebrate the time we have and not the gifts we get. Let us love more deeply and forgive more quickly " for they know not what they do."
  Let us watch with our hearts and see the best in those around us. Let us praise more and overlook the faults "for in the quiet heart is hidden, sorrow that the eye cannot see."
  May we keep the true spirit of Christmas every day and celebrate our unique differences with warmth and gratitude for each is on a long journey home.  May we light the way for those who travel with us, with encouragement and smiles, hugs and listening ears, tenderness and patience.
  Merry Christmas to each of you, may God Bless You and Yours Always.
Elder & Sister Olson





Sunday, December 1, 2013

Asia Yazzie and her grandmother

Tonight we had several people come into the Family History Center and ask about the Temple Prep class.  We had to make several phone calls to find out that the teacher had told the folks that they would be out of town for the holidays and that there would be no class.
The reason however for writing is what happened after we found out the class was cancelled.  One of the folks brought in two grand daughters that she planned to leave in the FHC while she was in the Temple Prep Class.  One of the two little girls is 12 and had been pleading with her grandmother to bring her into the FHC.  She was a little shy, but you could see she was also very excited and quickly came in and sat down.
 We gave her a pedigree chart, but you could see that she wanted to do something right now, even though grandmother would not be going to her class.  So grandma sits down quietly and watches as her grand daughter finds 5 census records with her gr gr grandfather listed with all these children.
 Grandmother recognizes the names.  We know it is the right person, but then we start looking closer and realize the first daughter is two years older than the wife listed.  We start looking again and realize that the first few children cannot be the children of the wife listed because of their ages.
  They also list a sister and brother-in-law, so now we know the maiden name of the listed wife.  We also realize that he obviously had another wife.
  We add his name and the "listed wife" with the children we know have to be theirs and gr gr grandpa with an unknown wife and the older children.
  Asia is very excited and happy as we print each record and her grandmother is sitting behind and lighting up with each new find.  Grandma then says, I am so glad we came tonight, because Asia has wanted to come and I didn't.  I want to bring her in again so she can continue to work, this really has been exciting to find all these records.
  Asia and Grandma leave with a folder with 5 census records, and a pedigree chart to fill out.
  
Having an excited 12 year old come in with a desire to do family history is one of those golden moments, that you hope will become contagious.

Sister Olson

Friday, November 29, 2013

After the Storm



We had a nice soft rain for two days.  This is the end result for the parking lot of the church.  The alley way between our church and the Catholic church belongs to us.  It is also the drainage path from the surrounding places that border our compound.  When you get that much rain things tend to back up.
Elder Olson had to clear the ditch and spillway so that the water would flow more freely into the culvert under the road just south of the driveway.
Sister Olson

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Family History Update

I just spent an hour writing a post to go with this and somehow managed to delete it.  Sometimes I hate my computer.  

This is a message from Ron Galewski who does an amazing amount of research on Polish ancestry.  He lives in Winona, MN  where our ancestors settled.  I wrote him a couple of days ago and asked how he was doing and if he was still doing research.  He sent me three copies of the original files where he found this information.

In order to keep this in perspective, this is how it goes

1st.  Elaine
2nd Lewellyn Felix Daszkoski
3rd Felix James Daszkowski
4th Maxmilian Vincent Daszkowski
5th Joannem Andres Daszkowski
6th Joseph Daszkowski
7th Jacob Dafzkowski

When you add the next two generations your children's lines will go back 9 generations, pretty amazing really.
You can see variations in spellings, but he has copies of the original records and now so do we of the birth records and one death record for a daughter born to Jozefe & Carolina.

 You can see birth records for Joseph born 1797 and Carolina Elisabetha his future wife born to Joannis Egger & Xtina (Christina)  Now we have her  parents to add to our family tree.

I am sure that you will eventually know all these names in order.  Family History is an amazing adventure and it is so easy to feel the love that they have for each of us.  The Lord has promised that he will provide a way for us to accomplish the things that he has asked us to do.  Some of you took names to take to the Temple.  I still haven't seen the work done.  They are still waiting.

Ron also sent a 29 page document with other relatives, I figures there is about 3,200 names.  He has never accepted a dime in payment.  He only asks that you send a donation to his favorite charity, which changes each time we correspond.  It is pretty amazing to watch him work.

I hope you are finding time to work on your family tree and verify things, letting me know when you find errors, because you can be sure you will find some.  I hope you are making time to correspond with other family members, especially the older generation, because they will take their knowledge with them, if you don't make time to record it.  

Here is the short message he sent.  If I can figure it out I will send copies of the original documents.

We love you all.

Elaine,
    The second from the bottom is the baptism of Joseph.
Year is 1797 - Month is January - Village is Jastrzebiec
Day is 29, minister: Andreas bapt Joseph born on 28th of same month - Honest couple Jacob Dafzek (written above name Daszkowski) - wife Elifabetha (f is an s) (written above name Szasla) almost the correct spelling - both Catholic - Filium means son - Sponsors were Joseph Rekowski and Terefia Piechowska fron Piechowicz
 
    The year is 1831 - village is Jastrzebie - entry 100 - day 13 of 8 bris = October - born and mortuary daughter Jozefe & Carolina Daszkowfki
 
    The year is 1896 - third from bottom - village is Odry - month is April - day 3 - minister Joannes - baptized Carolina Elisabetha - born 28 March - Honest couple Joannis Egger & Xtina (Christina) - both Catholic - Filiam maens daughter - Sponsors were Martin Meller & Eleanora Meller
 
    I translated it like it was written.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Tammi Horseherder's Mission and Speaking in Polacca






Dear Family and Friends
   The weeks continue to keep us busy every day.  Saturday we had a Super Saturday and had 40 ladies show up to make some really cute items,  that they can either keep themselves or give as gifts for Christmas.  It was suppose to start at 10 and go to 2, but we got a late start and ladies lingered much later, which was great.  The lunch was amazing, although the flyer said I light lunch, it was a BIG lunch with lots of homemade goodies.
  Today we spoke in Polacca which is 72.4 miles south of Tuba.  It is always fun to go there and speak.  It had been blowing really hard for several days and I was a little anxious about today, but it has been beautiful. 
  On Friday they had a funeral for a 17 year old that was injured in a football game.  It was one of those tragic things that happen.  Apparently it was a head injury that was much more severe than they thought it was.  He was able to walk off of the field if I understand it right, but then collapsed.  The last thing he said was to the coach, when he said, “Help me Coach.”  His coach spoke at his funeral.  The chapel and overflow was packed and people were outside the windows listening.  Our Stake President attended as did many members.
  It was great to see a big group of people out for church today.  We spoke about Tithing and focused our thoughts on some of the things Elder Bednar said in his conference address in October.  One of the men meet me in the foyer.  He was baptized in 1969 just like me.  He said he had listened to my talk and was going home to get his tithing.  We laughed, but then he walked out to go get his tithing.  We had to leave also because one of our young women had given a talk in 2nd Ward.  She is going into the MTC on Wed.  Her family had a family gathering to eat dinner and say their good-byes before she goes up to Provo on Tues.  I will be attaching a picture of Tammi and the cute little invitation cards she sent out.
  When we came here in 2011, I thought she was about 12.  I think she is 22.  She was fairly shy when we got here, but she speaks up and has an amazingly strong testimony of the gospel.  She will be serving in the Salt Lake City Mission.  We are so excited to see her go.  We have 3 more that will be leaving in the next 2 months.
  The pictures of the bulls is especially for Derek.  These big guys like grazing in the area just east of the church.  They didn’t hardly budge when I got out of the truck to take their pictures.
  In the last month we have had 3 people assigned to work with us at the church doing 40 hours of community service.   I don’t know what they did, nor do I need to know, but it is great to have the extra hands in the garden and especially hoeing weeds that grow so well in the front of the church, in the area between the fence and the sidewalk.  When the weather was bad, they helped clean the church, which is also a great blessing.
  The first helper came for 2 days and put in 5 hours.  A month later he realized he was down to the wire for finishing his 40 hours, so he really kicked it into gear.  I was able to sign him off a day before he had to send in the paperwork.
  The other two are much older and realize that it is better not to procrastinate.  I guess I am suppose to watch them and show them, but when they see something that needs to be done and simply do it, it works a whole lot better.
  Elder Olson keeps busy helping the “elderlies” as they are affectionately called here on the rez.  He has his favorites, as do I.
  We have kept busy in the Family History Center, working on the obituaries.  We had 4 families from Utah last weekend come to volunteer to do whatever was needed.  Some of them went to cut wood, one group went to paint a living room and the others tilled gardens.  They brought their kids and everyone rolled up their sleeves and did whatever we asked.  One of the sisters took one of the binders of obituaries and plans to enter the information into the Family Tree and then send the binder back and take another one home.
  We feel greatly blessed to be able to serve and express our love to our kids for supporting us and being our cheerleaders as we spend time away from them.  We are excited about visiting them next month and hope the weather cooperates, so we can travel on bare roads and not during a blizzard.
We think of you often and keep you in our prayers.
Elder & Sister Olson

Thursday, October 31, 2013

New York Times Article

I think this was the article that appeared in the New York Times.

By FERNANDA SANTOS
Published: October 30, 2013

TUBA CITY, Ariz. — Linda Smith lost one son, a methamphetamine addict, when he hanged himself in jail. Her other sons are heavy drinkers, fathered by a man who she said nearly killed her one night in a fit of rage, driving her from her home on this corner of the Navajo reservation to Provo, Utah, where she found solace in the Mormon Church.

Ms. Smith’s narrative echoes an increasingly common theme on this reservation, where unemployment is rampant, domestic violence is common, and alcohol is often used as an antidote to heartaches and hardships. In a land troubled by dysfunction and despair, a growing number of Navajos have been turning to the Mormon Church.

Membership at the church’s Tuba City Stake, which covers 150 miles of Navajo and Hopi lands, has increased by 25 percent since 2008, even as churches around it have struggled. St. Jude Parish, this city’s sole Roman Catholic presence, survives largely because of its Filipino congregants, brought here to teach in the local public schools. In September, the Catholic Diocese of Gallup, N.M., which serves the Navajo Nation and six other reservations, filed for bankruptcy protection because of the mounting costs of defending against accusations of sexual abuse by clergy members.

To attract followers, Larry Justice, a white man who is the president of the Tuba City Stake, took a page from the lives of Navajo ancestors and began a gardening program to teach people how to live off the land.

He and a handful of church volunteers teach gardening techniques, distributing seeds from a plot behind the church building here. The program started with 25 gardens four years ago, each made by Navajos next to their homes. There were 1,800 gardens last month, and by next year 500 more are to be created in Tuba City and communities all around it, Mr. Justice said.

Participants learn how to fertilize the soil, parched by years of drought. They learn to build fences to keep out the animals that roam the land. They learn what to harvest and when: melons and grapes in the summer, squash and cabbage in the fall.

“Their grandparents knew how to farm. Their parents forgot it. We’re working to make sure the young people learn it,” Mr. Justice said as he escorted visitors through the chapel, which was so crowded one recent Sunday that a divider was removed to make way for more seats. “It’s important to teach our people to be self-reliant.”

The Mormon Church has been expanding at a steady pace, primarily in parts of Asia and Latin America, where, Mr. Justice said, there are plans to introduce his gardening program to indigenous peoples, using lessons in subsistence farming as a doorway into the church. The church had three million members worldwide in 1971. Today, there are 15 million, with roughly one-quarter of them in South America, according to the church’s statistics. Its army of missionaries has increased by 37 percent since last October, after the church lowered its minimum age requirements.

As converts here on the reservation tell it, becoming a Mormon has brought them closer to the fundamental Navajo values of charity, camaraderie and respect for the land. There is a feeling of “reconnecting to our traditions,” as one of them, Nora Kaibetoney, explained in Navajo through a translator — even though Mormonism often compels them to leave behind rituals that have long defined their identity, like a medicine man’s healing ceremonies or the cleansing in sweat lodges.

“In Navajo culture, the most important things we have are life and our family,” said Ms. Smith, 64, the daughter of a Navajo code talker and hand trembler, a type of diagnostician. She was baptized as a Mormon in high school.

Converting, she said, “wasn’t about turning away and embracing an entirely different tradition; it was about reconnecting.”

American Indians have had complicated histories with the Christian denominations that have performed missionary work among them, including the Mormon Church, known formally as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In the West, where Mormons migrated during the 19th century while fleeing persecution, they and the Navajo worked together on the land and also fought over it, in a relationship defined by alternating periods of cooperation and strife.

What set the Mormons apart from other missionary groups is the role they ascribed to American Indians in their holy scriptures as descendants of the Lamanites — rebellious nonbelievers whose conversion could help the Mormons build God’s kingdom on earth.

“There’s this paradoxical sense in which the Lamanites are both a rebellious and wicked people, but they’re also key to the consummation of history and they’re central actors in the Mormon scriptural drama,” said Peter J. Thuesen, the chairman of the department of religious studies at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, whose research explores the role of Mormonism in American culture. “No other form of Christianity gives the native people such a unique place in their story.”

In paintings adorning the church’s building in Tuba City, a structure made striking by the modest homes that surround it, American Indians listen as Jesus preaches to them. According to Mormon belief, Indians were the first people to whom he ministered when he came to the Americas after his resurrection.

The connection is one of the ways the church attracts people like Wayne Smith, whom Ms. Smith married last year in the church.

A retired ironworker, Mr. Smith, 52, is among the tens of thousands of American Indians, most of them Navajo, who were recruited as children for placement in Mormon homes outside the reservation, under a contentious program that was promoted as a way to give the children a chance at a good education — but that removed them from their native culture.

The program began just as soldiers were returning from World War II, a time of “profound breakdown of community,” said Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp, a distinguished professor in the humanities at the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington University in St. Louis. For parents, the Mormons’ ban on alcohol and emphasis on a measured lifestyle stood in stark contrast to the harsh realities of life on the reservation, and delivering children was seen as “the most realistic way to give them a leg up,” Ms. Maffly-Kipp said.

Mr. Smith recalled that the program gave him a sense of self-worth.

“Here was an outside group of people telling me I wasn’t just someone who was poor,” he said, “that I had a great heritage, that I have potential.”

Mr. Justice and the missionaries who travel the dirt roads here are working to spread the message, knocking on doors and offering prayers. Their encounters usually include an invitation: Come by the church on Sunday to learn more.

“The thing about us is,” said Mr. Justice, referring to his flock, “is that we take care of one another.”

Monday, October 28, 2013

Geraldine's funeral in Polacca

Dear Family & Friends,
This is an email I sent to the Elders & Sisters serving here in  the mission field.  Our missionary numbers are getting smaller, since 7 couple will be leaving in the next few weeks and at this point we do not have others who will be taking their place.
We do have the Seminary couple next door and the counseling couple who leave about a 1/4 of a mile from the church, but they travel a lot and we don't see them much.  
 Here is the email I sent to them which I wanted to include in our blog, so that I could have a copy.
  We attended a funeral Saturday for a young woman who Elder Olson baptized when she was 9, which was about 45 years ago.  As I looked out over the crowd and saw their faces I was even more intensely aware of how many are wounded not only physically, but spiritually and how easy it is to "judge" wondering why they cannot see what we know to be true.  
 As I listened to Pres. Eyring's Conference talk, I was touched by what he said about our tendency to become impatient, which happens so often when they do not seem to understand what we so desperately want them to understand.  I pray that we can heed his counsel as we share the hope and understanding of the Atonement and its power to heal.  I pray we strive to overcome our impatience and show forth more compassion and love to all those we come in contact with as we serve among the people.
"There is another preparation we must make. It is a human characteristic to become hardened to the pains of others. That is one of the reasons why the Savior went to such lengths to tell of His Atonement and of His taking upon Himself the pains and sorrows of all of our Heavenly Father’s children that He might know how to succor them.
Even the best of Heavenly Father’s mortal priesthood holders do not rise to that standard of compassion easily. Our human tendency is to be impatient with the person who cannot see the truth that is so plain to us. We must be careful that our impatience is not interpreted as condemnation or rejection."  Pres. Henry B Eyring
I also wanted to include the talk I gave at our last meeting with the missionaries who served this last growing season.  They are an amazing group of people who served with incredible diligence among the native American people in this area.
As I pondered on what I could say this day, I knew it would not be easy.  After teaching for 32 years the end of the year good-byes never did easier.  The kids always liked to do a count down, but they never realized the teachers were doing the same thing often with even more enthusiasm.
Today is the last time that I will see some of you during our mortal probation.
I want to express my deepest gratitude for the sacrifices you have made over the last few months by being here and not at home with your “maturing parents,” kids and grandkids.
Gratitude for the time you spent serving the people here.
For the time you spent on your knees pleading with the Lord for His help to know what to do and for who to do it.
  Through the hours you spent serving the people with far more that showing them how to have a successful garden.
Gratitude for sharing your talents, your expertise, your love, and your faith in the gospel and the power to the Atonement to heal both physically and spiritually.
Gratitude for building the people up
Encouraging them
Teaching them
Accepting them where they were and not judging them when they didn’t understand.
Working alongside of them in their gardens and accepting the gospel.
Loving them as your brothers and sisters, sons and daughters of God.
This chapter in some of your lives, just like this planting season, will soon come to an end
I hope you will share your “good memories” and the lessons you learned from the “not so good” memories or as Pres. Justice says “the take aways” you gleaned from the harvest you reaped during the more difficult days.
You may never have your picture appear on the front page of any newspaper and you most likely will never become famous except in your own families and neighborhoods.
BUT all of you will be forever etched in the hearts of those you served here on the “rez”
You have continued to follow the legacy of your pioneer forefathers
You have worked hard
Traveled far
Gone to bed bone tired,   But rose again to serve the next day renewed and refreshed, strengthened with the resolve to help another along the way
You have faced each days challenges with faith in God and His ability to give you whatever was needed to get the job done.
You have each had your Hole in the Rock experiences.
Hopefully, you did not have to eat soup made from boiling a cowhide because there was nothing else to eat
Surely someone was willing to share their mutton and some fry bread.
Many of you probably have beadwork or items of silver.  But your real treasures will be the memories you made while serving faithfully with those who were once strangers, but now have become good friends.
Please know how much President Justice, President Batt, those you served with and even more the love our Heavenly Father has for you and your willingness to serve God’s children in this small area of the world as you return to your homes and families. 
Please know with surety that you will be greatly missed.  You have been tried and tested AND YOU MADE IT.
Your example and attitude has been one of love, hope and faith.
You have loved as God has loved
You have done as He would have done
You have served as He would have served
Well done thou good and faithful servant.
Your children will have changed some and your grandchildren grown an inch or two
Things may have changed at home, but the greatest changes will have been in you.
Having running water, indoor plumbing , lights that work consistently and a Walmart only a few miles away will not be taken for granted anymore.
Please know how much your service has meant to those you served and to everyone in this room and many more.
Our last request is that you would say the things that would build up those who may be a little hesitant to serve a mission.  That your comments would be honest but positive about their ability to serve wherever the Lord needs them.  That their faith will be His faith to do whatever is needed.  That their funds will be His funds and be enough for whatever is needed to keep them there. That His love and foresight will be all that is needed to accomplish whatever is needed to move this great work forward.
I know that Jesus is the Christ,  that in Him and through Him all things can be accomplished.  That Joseph Smith was divinely inspired and that the Book of Mormon will provide the answers to the challenges that we face.  That God will answer the righteous desires of our heart and like Peter we can do all things IF we stay focused on our Savior and Redeemer, Jesus Christ.  And if we falter we can know beyond the shadow of a doubt that He will be there hand extended to get us back on track.
I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen

It is actually more an outline of what I said, because I knew I would not be able to say what I wanted without crying.  Not that I am emotional or anything like that. :o} 
 Elder & Sister Olsn

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Oct Conference 2013





This is Tom and Selina Slim, son Tuchoney, and daughter, Brianna.  They came by to see our Church Garden and it was the very first time that Tuchoney had eaten a raspberry.  He thought they were very good and would like to get some starts for their garden.  It was fun to see his face light up when he tasted the first one.
  They were very excited about their first garden this year and will be getting the ground ready for next year's garden in the next couple of weeks.  We had our first hard frost last night.  The plants in the garden looked 
pretty sad.
  We were able to watch every conference session.  I was especially touched by Elder Jeffrey R Holland's yesterday and President Eyring's talk this morning.  We had about 40 people there this morning.  The spirit was so strong and the feelings of the Savior's love and concern for each of us was so evident.
  Sister Margaret from the Catholic Church on the north of us, invited us over for dinner.  She asked about how a new prophet was chosen and wondered if they voted on who it would be.  Elder Olson explained how it all works.  She also asked if we had a sister missionary who could be called to serve in their "food ministry"  We explained that the sister missionaries served proselyting missions and that we could not call one to serve in the Catholic Food Ministry.  It was actually a very interesting evening.  She had saved a newspaper article about "Mormon women shut out of male meeting"  I just read the article and there wasn't a word about women being shut out.  It was about the membership growing.  It did point out that we are vastly outnumbered by Catholics, who have 1.2 billion members worldwide and Jews with 13.8 million.  Not sure the author did much research before he wrote the other information in the article.
  It was a spiritual feast and we had two families that are taking the missionary lessons attend.  Between sessions today we had a "sort of potluck"  We had invited a family that we knew were coming and then a second family who came.  Once the food is blessed it seems to go as far as it needs to go.  We did not feed 5,000, but we did feed about 20.  It was fun to see the little kids fill their plates.  They were even able to make up some plates for one of the grandmothers. 
  Elder Olson and Elder Walker, the new Seminary teacher, went over to the hospital to give a young woman a blessing.  That actually happens quite frequently.  Sometimes they are being air lifted out and you have to go immediately or they are in the air before you get there.
  Elder Olson helped a new family till and get the Humante, fertilizer, and manure in the grown Friday and yesterday before conference and after.  Unfortunately they were feeding their horse alfalfa and he was down wind of the dust.  I have not seen him wheeze for a long time.  It is not fun for him at all and he is to stubborn to get a blessing.  He keeps telling me he will be fine and I am sure he will, but it is hard to see him struggle to get a breath of air.  Please keep him in your prayers.
  Things are going well otherwise.  Always lots to do and places to go.  
Elder & Sister Olson

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Darlene's garden produce, and finding family names to harvest.

This is a picture of Darlene Claw's harvest.  The potatoes are from her garden too, although she used a store bag to put them in.  Check the background, pretty amazing don't you think to see what can be grown where this was grown.
 Sister Norris and I have planned a road trip for tomorrow to locate a Mission Cemetery.  
We were able to find a census record for one of Fannie Sanders ancestors.  It listed 6 or  7 children, then by going to az genealogy.com we found two birth certificates and a death cert. for 3 other children that were not listed on the census.  With the information we found we will be able to prepare their family to be sealed together forever. 
We are going to the cemetery near Pinion to see if we can verify death dates for several of those family members that we found. It was a pretty amazing experience and you could feel them there guiding us.
We will go in the morning and return in the afternoon.
Sister Olson

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Family History Experience 19 Sep. 2013

Story of the three brothers of Dan Edwin Bighorse who wanted their temple work done.


  I am grateful for this special experience that my foster mother had and shared with me, which greatly defined my life.
  I was living in Bitterspring, Ariz. I had had no contact with my foster parents for an extended period of time.
  I had graduated from the LDS Lamanite placement progam, and had started a family, I had a lot of crucial circumstances that occupied my life. So I guess I was not reachable to the three ancestors who wanted my attention. Thus, they visited my foster mom.They told her they wanted their temple work done and that her foster daughter Marie was the one who should help them. They also told her that their brother, my grandfather was close to death; and that he was the only one who could give me the information.
  After my foster mom contacted me and lit a fire under me, I went to my grandfather to acquire his life history and to obtain the names of those who wanted their work done. He gave me a lot of other information but to my surprise, he did not tell me the names of the three who visited my foster mom. I was happy to get more names but I knew none of these name were the three who visited my foster mom.
 I had questioned him each visit but he did not remember these three brothers. I just assumed that he could not remember.
  On our next visit we were sharing a meal with my grandparents and all of the sudden out of the blue, he sat up and said "SHO," and commanded our attention.  He proceeded to tell us the name of the three men. During this revelation, we found out that these brothers of my grandfather were from an earlier marriage and a couple of them were 50 years older than my grandfather.
  My great-grandfather, Gus Bighorse, was married a few times. My grandfather was the oldest of the siblings in the last marriage of Gus Bighorse and Mae Bah Manygoats Whitehair Bighorse.
  I took another 6 years to do their work. I have had many wonderful experiences that convince me that this work of the dead is of extreme importance in this life. We are Saviors to our families on the other side...as we save them, we also save ourselves. Amen

Written and shared by Marie Singer Goldtooth
(narie5844@gmail.com)
with Sister Elaine Olson
Tuba City, Family History Center, Tuba City, Arizona
22 Sep. 2013

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Stake Primary Day 14 Sep 2013






What a fun week this was.  On Saturday we had a big Stake Primary Day.  We had lots of kids, lots of great leaders and LOTS of FUN.

Sister Allen is an amazing leader.  She divided the kids into three groups and each went to a station focused around the theme of I am a Child of God.  

The bike rodeo course had signs that said, things like Did you think to pray?  Read your scriptures, etc.  The older group loved the course and rode like experts, the youngest kids rode tricyles and loved the course just as much, but watching them pump up the slight slope was pretty funny.  

In the kitchen they made play dough and talked about how their actions shape their lives.  They got to pick two colors and I was pretty impressed that the older kids liked it as much as the younger ones.

In the cultural hall they got to close material to make very simple scripture bags.  They would go over to one of five sisters who would sew the bag together.  Then they got to choose a tablet, a small notebook, a pencil.  a card with the Articles of Faith, a pamphlet with A Proclamation of the Family.  They were able to decorate their notebooks.  Sister Norris said it was neat to see them bring them to church today.  We spoke in Kayenta, so we did not get to see them.

Sister Allen also had Bishop Luna and Bishop Blodgett speak to the kids for 3-5 mins, then everyone ate a the longest submarine sandwich ever.

On Thursday we had about 300 boxes of peaches come into Cameron where they loaded them onto trucks and trailers to take to the various units.  We delivered about 165.  I just sent out an email and told everybody that they had come in and then they came and picked them up.

The sisters either bottled them or made jam.  I suspect a lot were eaten before they ever made it to the bottles. ;o}  It went over so well that we are ordering more peaches this week.

Tomorrow we have our missionary training meeting and then on Thursday we will do our Demo with the participants.

The new Seminary teacher and his wife arrived Friday.  They seem very nice and eager to get started.  We told them to try and relax and get settled, then we will put them to work.  Elder Walker's brother was killed in an auto accident, so they will be traveling to California next weekend for the funeral.

One of our Gardening couples left today, two left last month and the rest will leave in the next few weeks, so Elder Olson and I will be the lone rangers again.  We will hopefully get a new group in Feb.  If you know of anyone who would like to serve here let us know.  The days  are long, but the rewards are great.