
Story and photos by Thom Curtis, Ph.D.
SOUTH KONA, Hawaii — Most missionaries look forward to Sunday
as a change of pace from the daily routines. It’s a day
to rest from their normal labors and recharge their spiritual
batteries.
For two
elders in South Kona on the Big Island of Hawaii, September 15
started out as another beautiful Sabbath morning in paradise.
That changed abruptly at seven minutes after seven, when their
world literally began to shake apart.
Elder Geoffery Chatham, 20, from Corona, California, and Elder
Greg Jolley, 21, from Provo, Utah, feel blessed to have survived
the 6.7 and 6.0 magnitude earthquakes that devastated the Island
of Hawaii and were felt throughout the archipelago. As Elder
Chatham showered and Elder Jolley studied scriptures in bed, they
both noticed a slight shaking that felt like a large truck lumbering
up the steep driveway next to their small home on the grounds
of the Kona Stake’s Keei Ward.
But it wasn’t a truck and the shaking didn’t stop. It crescendoed
until the walls of their little cement block home began to move
as if they were made of rubber.
Elder Jolley
watched in amazement and thought, “Nothing can make the walls
of this building do that.” He said the shaking went on and
on, “I thought it would go away, but it didn’t.”
He started
to get out of bed to escape the house. “I wanted to grab my journal
because it is the only thing I care about. Then I realized I
needed to put some clothes on.” Suddenly, a large
mirror fell off the wall, hit a dresser and shattered on the floor.
He couldn’t get out of bed because his feet were bare and shards
of mirror were everywhere.
Elder Chatham, who was in the shower at the time, also thought
to escape as he heard rocks from the adjacent retaining wall begin
to fall. He had experienced many earthquakes growing up in Southern
California. “I usually sleep through earthquakes, but I never
experienced one that moved side-to-side like that,” he said.
“The worst I had ever experienced was a few pictures would fall
off the walls.”
He rushed
out dripping wet, but fortunately realized his state of undress
before reaching the door and returned for a towel. He recounted,
“It started as a slow rumble and moved up until the whole house
was moving from side-to-side for thirty seconds to a minute.”
By that time they began to hear loud bangs on their roof.
Boulders were falling from the large wall that holds up the parking
lot and crashing down unto their shingles. With a huge blast,
the ward’s large satellite dish with its heavy concrete foundation
broke loose from the parking lot and punctured their roof.

Rocks, debris, and even a satellite
dish atop and surrounding their house show how close the elders
came to disaster.
Eventually
the shaking stopped, but it was followed by another 6.0 quake
that came about seven minutes later. Many aftershocks occurred
throughout the day. Elder Chatham summed up things up by saying,
“This experience strengthened our testimony that the Lord’s hand
is in everything. He was watching over us.”
The missionaries’
home was one of many earthquake casualties on Sunday. The
Keei Ward building suffered significant damage, and about two-thirds
of the facility was taped-off as unusable. Ceilings collapsed
and light fixtures hung down by their wires in many classrooms.

From the exterior, the Keei Ward building
appears undamaged.

A closer inspection shows that two-thirds
of the building has been taped off as unusable.
Fortunately, the chapel had only minor damage, and leaders determined
that it was safe to hold a brief sacrament meeting. The
chapel and overflow area filled as members gathered to partake
of the sacrament and bear testimonies less than two hours after
the first quake struck. Many had homes that were severely
damaged, but the priority of the members was to attend to their
families’ spiritual needs first and worry about their property
later.

An interior shot of some of the damage
done to the Keei Ward building.
When phone service was restored, the missionaries talked with
their mission president, Ronald K. Hawkins, and were told that
all missionaries in the state had made it through the ordeal unscathed.
Although many members suffered home damage, there have been no
significant injuries reported among the approximately 40,000 Latter-day
Saints in Hawaii.

Fortunately, meetings were not being
held at the ward building at the time of the earthquake.
Editor’s
note: Elder Geoffery Chatham, who will celebrate his twenty-first
birthday this week, is the son of Chad and Linda Chatham
of Corona, California. Elder Greg Jolley is the son of Greg
and Marilee Jolley of Provo, Utah.