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The
Day of Africa
Text by Maurine Proctor and Sylvia Finlayson
Photography
by Scot Facer Proctor
click
photos to enlarge
PART
FOUR

On the temple
lawn, beautiful people mill about, waiting for their turn at one
of three dedicatory sessions that President Hinckley will conduct.
Some of them live in tinned-roof shanties; some in comfortable homes.
Some sign their name with a mark; some have Ph.Ds. Some who were
married in a tribal tradition had to legalize their marriage; others
have already been sealed at another temple. All of them will wear
white in the temple and their vast difference in rank and opportunity
will dissolve. All of them represent the hope of Africa.

Goodbye to the
shanty towns of the heart.

It took much behind-the-scenes
work for each person to be here, who smiles with such hope, waiting
in line, with a white or colored ticket, for the dedication. Today
it was a physical effort—washing and brushing and preening little
children until they shined, negotiating a ride, maybe traveling
long distances For this day of dedication, nearly 100 people have
come from Ivory Coast. The choir has practiced so they sing with
power and verve.

More than that,
however, each person here has made a journey of the heart, looking
up from superstition or despair, believing that God could love them,
that Jesus was the Christ and their sins could be forgiven. Here
are people who have heard a whisper when the marketplace was shouting,
families who could see beyond the paint-peeling, dingy realities
to learn the high knowledge of the temple.

Some of them have
a long way to go before they comprehend the nuances of the restored
gospel and how to live it. They are new to the Church, recent converts.
Others show how remarkable the human spirit is at comprehending
the things of God, demonstrating that there are no stronger Saints
or stakes than in Ghana.

Family History
To prepare a land
for a temple is multi-faceted work that takes advanced vision and
planning. Family history specialists have been at work in the stakes
for years helping people find their ancestors. For the Aba, Nigerian
temple, currently under construction, the Latter-day Saints have
already found 15,000 family names, according to Thomas Okben, family
history specialist.

In Ghana, genealogy
miracles abound as they do in every place where people become concerned
about their dead. Clarence Baah Kofi, a high councilor in the Ghana
Christianborg Stake, found that the family home was scheduled for
renovation and all the old clothing, papers and records of his great
grandfather were to be burned. He rushed over to see what papers
were scheduled for the ash heap and discovered that they were the
journals of his great grandfather, kept throughout his life. They
were very old and fragile, but still easy to read. Studying them,
he learned that the journals recorded names and dates of births
and deaths for the family members as well as for the members of
his grandfather’s congregation.

Clarence sent
239 names to the temple in South Africa and has compiled all the
documentation for 700 additional names that he has saved for the
Accra Ghana Temple.
This day of dedication
marks the beginning of their new day.
Click
here to go to Part 5 of The Day of Africa
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© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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