"OK so it finally hit me. Today is Sunday morning, I am in a guarded compound with bars on all doors and windows, it is raining, so we won't be going outside much. We have shared every story that we have with each other over a couple of weeks, and we have been sharing a room and sleeping on bunk beds which feels like summer camp with the scouts.
It is 6:30AM and my bunk mates are giving me a hard time about being ready for church, white shirt, tie and all. I told them it was an example that I learned from my Father. Besides, I have learned that the tie protects the white shirt from the BBQ beef MRE stains. Today we cook our own breakfast. Tonight one of the doctors wants to treat us to something special. (He does all the cooking at home)
I did dishes for the second time to keep myself busy and tried to get the guys to take a picture to prove to my wife. No chance they said.
It didn't take too much personal wining to realize that in an hour I will be sitting with the good Latter-Day-Saints of Haiti who are still living in tents, it is raining, there are no showers unless the rain counts, they have to get thier children fed and dressed, and they have been studying thier lessons for thier classes and quorums today. It is hard not to be preachy even to myself.
You can see the stress is taking its toll on the Priesthood Leaders. They had two accidents this week with the motor pool cars. One of the Presidents found a way to send his family to Long Island NY. So he can focus on his duties here. Overall, they are remarkable leaders who are following principles and teaching from the scriptures.
I love Sunday's. I love the break from normal duties. I am not a fan of early morning meetings (in case President Meservy reads this) but I am grateful for the opportunity to serve in any capacity. Today back home the Stake will hold Welfare Council. I'm sure that they will be discussing the same issues. Preparedness, employment, family services, ect... Welfare Principles are universal. I have seen how they work in Haiti and Utah.
Tonight we are going to the mount where President Monson dedicated Haiti for missionary work when he was an Apostle. I'm looking forward to that and I'll send a note about that later.
I still mean what I have been saying:
Haiti is close to Heaven"
I'm not quite sure what this is; it looks like some sort of vehicle but in the e-mail that it was attached to Neal said, "my replacement has arrived." Now I don't know if the truck is his replacement or the other guy in the picture but he said they were the first to get to take it for a ride - the truck I mean. :)

Marjorie who is one of the interpreters and one of the doctors who is also their "chef."

This is one of the doctors. He is an orthopedic surgeon and team doctor at USU and he is also an Iron Man runner. Neal told him he would pay him 800 Gould which is $20.00 if he would climb the tree and get a coconut for them to shred over their rice. Neal said it was worth the $20 to see. :)

The $20 coconut...

Robert Hokanson, employment center manager and Neal's roommate at the Croix Des Mission chapel. He was able to get 60 people employed over the weekend.

Robert Hokanson and some children of the Croix Des Mission.

More from the Croix Des Mission. They have mango and banana trees growing on the chapel grounds. Wouldn't that be nice? To have fruit trees right outside our churches. Talk about your between meeting snack!








Much of Haiti lies in rubble. Collapsed roofs lie at angles, smashed against the floor below them. Cinder blocks slant in heaps along the roads. Some streets in Port-au-Prince look like old pictures of bombed-out Berlin after World War II. It's a horror, an apocalypse.






That is not all. Their lessons and talks were sophisticated and scripturally based, as if they had a library and computer at their fingertips to prepare instead of the side of the road.












The lessons for the youth were very much like those for the adults.
We must be strong in this time of adversity. We must reach out with love to those who are discouraged.
Francy Saint-Preux, the High Priest group leader for the ward, said doing home teaching is ten times harder than it used to be because people are no longer in their homes and sleeping somewhere on the street, but after the quake they made every effort to assure that everyone was safe. Temporal needs are difficult to meet because they are so overwhelming and every priesthood leader is inundated. They'll do anything to help, but there are some things they just can't do.
We are here in Haiti with 70 Haitian-speaking missionaries who are assisting in translating for medical teams and food delivery. At the airport before we left, we asked several of them why their loyalty and love for the Haitian people was so intense. Richard Clawson, a former missionary summed it up: "I met so many people in Haiti who are friendly and wonderful, but I also met a number of people in Haiti who I would aspire to be if I can. I met people who were role models to me."
Guerby Pierre is one of those exceptional people in Haiti who actually has a job. He is well-educated and has a job as an accountant with a billboard company. He tells what happened to him when the earthquake hit:
"I was inside at my work, working at my computer, at what seemed like a normal day. Then, all of a sudden with a roaring noise, it seemed like a giant beast had taken the building in his arms and was twisting and shaking it back and forth. My screen fell off my desk; bookshelves started falling, and I ran for the door, but could hardly keep my footing with the shaking. As I stood at the door, the wall I had been leaning against before completely collapsed.
"My work is destroyed. That was my livelihood. I went to my house and it is completely gone, but I was able to go in and get the things that really mattered to me-my temple recommend, my passport, some clothes and my scriptures."
Each night as he lays under the stars, it reminds him of what is really important in life. He said, "In one sense I have nothing, but in another, I have everything because I have the gospel, and this earthquake has only augmented my testimony. My life is changed. The earthquake simplified it. Since the earthquake, I could all of a suddenly think clearly."
"After it stopped, I found myself, I was yelling, but I had a strong feeling I shouldn't leave my house. I should just stay there. I went to open my door to go out, and my door was blocked, I couldn't open it.
"Outside, everyone was crying and screaming out to God, 'What is going on?' The farther I got out, I saw that churches had fallen and people had been killed.
"I prayed, 'Give me strength so that I can hold on.' I found the strength to help a few people who were injured. I found a lot of people who were in shock. The next day I met a brother from the church who came to my house to see if I was OK. He told me I needed to come to the church that all of the members were meeting there. That gave me strength.
They didn't try to get out, as it was hard to stand, impossible to walk. They just started praying. He did not know it was an earthquake as he had never experienced anything so overwhelming before.
Now, he and his family are sleeping wherever they can find a spot at night, mostly in the road by their house. He'd like to come and sleep at the church, but his home is too far away.
He says with some good cheer, "Everybody is praying. There is definitely a feeling of unity and my testimony has been strengthened. You drive through my neighbourhood and mine was the only house that is not completely destroyed.
About 4:45, he started to feel the shaking movement. Immediately his children ran outside as the roaring, pitching earth got worse. As soon as they ran outside, the house collapsed.
Now, he doesn't know what he's going to do. "God must have a plan for me," he said, "and I'm just going to have to see what it is."
The scriptures are his life and he loves to read.



