The
Blossoming Tells Success Stories of Indian Placement Program
By
Laurie Williams Sowby
OREM,
UTAH – Growing up in the small town of Shumway, Ariz., in the
1930s and Gallup, New Mexico, during the 1940s, Dale Shumway
had many friends who were Native Americans. When it was
time to serve a mission, Shumway (whose family had since
moved to Provo, Utah) expressed his desire to follow in
the footsteps of his great-great-grandfather who had served
among the Choctaws in Georgia
and Oklahoma. He was called to the Southwest Indian Mission,
headquartered in Gallup.
"I
wasn't the best missionary there," he says, looking
back 50 years, "but no one enjoyed the experience and
the people more than I did."
He enjoyed
them so much, in fact, that he spent his life working with
them, first as advisor to BYU's Indian students for two
years, then in the Indian Placement Program of LDS Social
Services for the next 31. After retirement, he and his wife
Margene served a mission to Nairobi, Kenya,
but soon after their return resumed their activity with
the Placement Program.
Heading
up a reunion of former Indian Placement practitioners, they
found themselves reminiscing about past experiences as they
visited with loved co-workers and shared spiritual experiences
and success stories. They had witnessed the fulfillment
of D&C 49:24, "...and the Lamanites shall blossom
as the rose."
They
were impressed that "now is the time to write about
the amazing events and choice peoples involved in this important
chapter of Church history."
So the
Shumways got busy gathering stories, interviewing former
students in the program, and putting together The Blossoming,
an inspiring book detailing the genesis of the Indian Placement
Program (officially begun in 1954) and contrasting the past
and present lives of many of its participants. The Shumways
served as co-editors of the 277-page book, published in
2002 by Granite.
They
interviewed 26 Lamanite families where either one or both
parents had been "placement students," describing
their early years on the reservation (mostly Navajo), their
gospel conversion, their culture shock, and the ups and
downs in the dynamics of LDS foster care. Stories tell of
their education, marriages, children, world of work and
Church activity.
Highlights
include Helen John, the first "placement" student;
Edward Clark, a Lumbee from North Carolina; Anna Begay,
daughter of a medicine man who lived with the Leland and
Thelma Priday family in American Fork, Utah; and Frankie
Gilmore and DuWaine Boone, who are now both serving as stake
presidents on the Navajo Reservation.
The
book is a tribute to the families who took them in as well
as to the young people whose lives were changed by their
involvement in the Indian Placement Program.
-- The
Blossoming sells for $12.95 and may be ordered by emailing
dshumway@burgoyne.com, phoning 801-235-0986, or by sending
a check to Shumway at 486 W. 40 North, Orem, UT 84057.