Sunday, November 15, 2015

Goings and Comings





 A mission is a microcosm of life since people are in and out of our lives at a much faster pace than in regular life. Missionaries leave and other wonderful people take their job, adding their own personality to it.

Here's our last Tuesday morning team meeting with Sharon and Dale Greenwood.


On the screen are AMAs, Jan and Sterling Piepgrass and Sharon and Harvey Hatch who are in England and Southwest Germany on a temporary basis. Sure enough a new couple will come in January to mix things up.



Church-service missionary, Artur Amoyan, served faithfully in the area office. 
He deserved a great farewell party!



Debbie and Richard Riggs are replaced as zone leaders by Krystal and John Mills. Sister Berkhahn and her husband who have served in the area office previously, returned.


June and Gordon Smith have been a devoted In-Field Representative couple...


... now being replaced by Jim and Diane Hacking. 


As I imagine how loved ones of the Paris attack victims are feeling right now, our simple goings and comings are insignificant.



Aktualisieren (Update)

Remember my post about the refugees coming to Europe?  Refugee Crisis

Well my prayers were answered and I'm able to help!  The Welfare Director asked if I could help him with tracking the distribution of hygiene kit supplies to refugee camps. There the members, alongside refugees, assemble the kits and give them to whoever needs them. So far they've gone to Berlin, Sweden, Greece, Serbia, Croatia and others. (I'm really learning my geography)

Rand and I went to the warehouse and it's filled with boxes of toothpaste, towels, combs, bandaids, etc. This is just one of many services the church is providing to help those in need. 



I receive daily information and here's a site that explains the situation very well. Check out this

In the meantime, we're helping with senior missionary flu shots, 


celebrating November birthdays, 


walking through the woods at St Martin's Lantern Parade with Maslos



and buying souvenirs. Our year-round schwibbogen

Sunday, October 18, 2015

Was Geht Ab? (what's up)

So what's going on in Frankfurt?

Discovering the unexpected is so fun in a new city.  We rode our bikes to the Goethe University and happened across  "The Body of Knowledge" sculpture by Spaniard Jaume Plensa.


It's the same sculpture that Nick enjoyed in Zaragoza, Spain on his mission. There it's called "El Alma del Ebro"   They called it "Letter Man". It represents cells of the human body which is over 60% water. The white letters and hollow structure "invite the viewer to look inside and reflect on the relationship between human beings and water." 


The September Blood Moon showed up here like everywhere else.

Harvest time.  People live in high rises so there are communal gardens (Schrebergärtens) all over Frankfurt.


Grape-growing has gone on at Lohrberg since the 9th century. Some of these grapes make Frankfurt apfelwein.


Here's the tombstone graveyard where they toss them after the 15 to 30 year expiration of "owning a grave".  If a family is unable or unavailable to renew the lease, the grave’s contents are removed and the grave site reverts to state ownership and may be reused.

Schultütes for sale.  When children set off for their first day in school upon entering first grade, their parents and/or grandparents present them with a big cardboard cone, prettily decorated and filled with toys, candies, school supplies, and various other goodies. That's one German tradition I may take with us to the US.


We love our ward.  Last night they put on an "International Evening" where members from thirteen countries put out displays of food, videos, crafts, costumes, games and more. Amazing and eye-opening about how we're having a once-in-a-lifetime experience here.  This is the Italian group - notice Silvia with the red, white and green fingernails.  (She and I do CSM work together.)



The senior missionaries know how to have fun too. We had a Book of Mormon Mystery night. The Greenwoods adapted it to modern times and five tables tried to solve the murder mystery.  These are the maids - pretty good for women who brought everything they own in two suitcases, eh? (Sisters Matheson, Saunders, Hanks, Riggs, Bausman)


The day after I returned from Nick's graduation, Rand presented a "Seniors and Exercise" speech to some temple missionaries. As the meeting started, we realized that we were being welcomed and singing in German. Rand had an elder translate for him, thinking it would be faster but realized his German was better than the brother. Then the sister who was translating for the French missionaries had to leave early so guess who was left - yes, me. Pretty hilarious with a jet-lagged brain and 38-year-old French. Yea for body language.


This is most of our medical team celebrating Dale Greenwood's and Gordon Smith's birthdays. We have become very close as we pray for, discuss and sometimes weep about sick missionaries.
(Biddulphs, Smiths, Rand, Greenwoods, Hawkins. Purdy absent)








Tuesday, October 13, 2015

A new favorite German city


 We had a great time in Heidelberg with Janice and her sister, Pat.



Doesn't this remind you of Monty Python?






Junggesellinnenasvschied (bachelorette party). The soon-to-be-bride roams the streets and gets people to give her money for candy or a kiss on the cheek. 
Guess what we bought for Rand? 



 It was one of three nights per year when they "burn the castle". They make the castle look like it's on fire, then have a fireworks display.  Notice all the people - festive night!






Monday, October 12, 2015

Oktoberfest is over and it's only October 10th


So did you know Oktoberfest begins in September and lasts until the first weekend in October? 
Now you do.
We didn't go to the festivities but we saw lots of preparations for it. Germans need to have lederhosen, a dirndl...   


...and blue and white decorations, heart cookies, beer steins, and costumed cows?


Instead of going to the beer fest, we went to the 25th anniversary of German Reunification. It was held in downtown Frankfurt.


A great party with music, performances, historic displays and food


giant pretzels


Refugee Crisis

I feel that we're in the middle of an historic moment and place here in Germany.  The Refugee Crisis has been going on for years but 2015 marks the largest onslaught of refugees into Europe. Here's a


Of course immigration is a controversial topic, within the EU as well as within each country. I've gone through my own pondering of what's happening.

Last winter I'd see these stickers around town and think "Tut tut. The underground movement is busy trying to sneak illegal refugees into Germany. That's a bad idea." Germans and others talk about how Europeans are being outnumbered by Muslims and it's changing the culture.






and I tended to agree with this protest banner:










As time and personal education has gone on, I'm more open to welcoming people into Europe.  I think the "Christian" culture in Europe has already changed by secularism. And with familiarity comes comfort. One of the most friendly clerks at our little grocery store wears a hijab. Most Muslims have close families. Finally where else can they go?!


I inserted new words as I read the Book of Mormon recently:   And they gathered together all their people... and departed out of the land, and came into the wilderness which divided the land of (Hungary from the land of Austria), and came over near the borders of the land. And it came to pass that (Angela Merkel) said unto them: Behold, I and my brethren will go forth into the land of (the EU), and we will try the hearts of our brethren, whether they will that ye shall come into the (EU) land...  And it came to pass that the voice of the people came, saying: Behold, we will give up (some of) the land (of the EU)...  And behold, we will set our armies, that we may protect our brethren... Alma 27:14-23   Sounds like the right thing to me.





Poor Angela Merkel. Her ratings are going down in the polls but I think she's doing the right thing. She has made rallying cries such as: a Germany that turned away refugees “would not be the Germany I want”. "When someone says, 'this is not my Europe, I won't accept Muslims...' then I have to say, this is not negotiable," she insisted.

And she repeated her message that Europe "won't be able to transform into a fortress," looking back at the fall of the Berlin Wall 25 years ago. "The refugees won't be stopped if we just build fences. That I'm deeply convinced of, and I've lived behind a fence for long enough," she said. (She grew up in East Germany)
Aware of the uncertainty of how this will all come out and its controversy, this morning in our devotional, the head of the Europe Area office explained to us how the Church is providing for the poor and needy in Europe. A medical camp is being funded in Italy, money is being provided for country-wide and stake-wide projects. Our youth helped sort at a local household goods center Saturday.

And this isn't new. Here's how the LDS Church


However, this graffiti isn't so welcoming. :)



Saturday, August 1, 2015

Drinnen (indoors)

Despite what this blog implies, we actually do some work in between bike rides and exploring.  Here's a sample of what Rand has helped missionaries with during the first half of our mission.  (I keep thinking there's another word for what we're doing - service, projects, unpaid employment...) 


And here's a sample of what I'm doing - call and release letters and certificates, ordering badges for Church Service Missionaries around the area. These are the main countries whose letters we initiate; we also serve the Scandinavian countries, UK and Cape Verde.


Our kitchen sink was stopped up so I washed dishes in the bathroom sink; which really wasn't that different from the kitchen. 

Can't remember what I was doing online but they needed me to prove I'm not a robot and look what the words were! Did they know I was in Germany?




When we visited one of our Primary student families, they showed us a wheel their children use when they're having interpersonal problems.  Might work for senior missionary spats too.  :) JK.


Our neighbors asked us to water their plants and bring in their mail while they're out of town. This catalog caught my eye and I love that it has some older models. Makes me want to start a new look, if they weren't so expensive.

Still indoors, look what our local drug store has - a changing stand with free diapers. Wow!  

The Black Forest Museum in Triberg was amazing! This is what people dress up in for Fasnet (Mardi Gras). And we think American Halloween is wild...

Lastly Rand and I went to a marvelous souvenir shop.  Check it out and let me know if you want us to bring or ship something home for you. 











Friday, July 31, 2015

Draußen Sein (Outside)


We've been riding our bicycles lately - so fun, since paths are flat and we sometimes ride along the river, so no traffic. We've gone 16 miles to and from Bad Vilbel


18 miles along the river, even watched polo practice,

and worked our way up to 30 miles to Hanau. Along the way we spotted this clever TV repair truck



I often see wild rabbits while out running.


But I wish I'd seen this one.  100 Euro reward - wow!


Maybe somebody thinks he's in this hole. :)


An octuplet garage, thanks to German ingenuity 

Finally I found a street where I recognized the person's name. “Being 

One of Bonhoeffer's quotes is: "Being a Christan is less about cautiously avoiding sin than about courageously and actively doing God's will.”

Another famous German memorialized. 
"The best remedy for those who are afraid, lonely or unhappy is to go outside, somewhere where they can be quiet, alone with the heavens, nature and God. Because only then does one feel that all is as it should be." - Anne Frank I agree.



A friend told me that Frankfurters don't pick up garbage because the park cleaners do it. It's their socialist version of keeping everybody employed. Hmm.


Do you think our grandchildren would like our backyard to look like this?