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Meridian Magazine : : Home

A Day of Celebration
A Photo Essay
Text by: Maurine Jensen Proctor
Photography by: Scot Facer Proctor

click photos to enlarge

PART SIX

Then began the story that Sister Wall had adapted from African folklore about a little spider named Kwaku Ananse who had a large calabash or gourd. In Ghana, families like to sit around in a circle and take turns telling stories.  One of their favorite characters is Kwaku.

Kwaku, played by Desmond Ahwireng, wants to collect good things from all over the world and collect them for himself into his calabash.

With his calabash balanced on his head, he goes from place to place collecting courage, service, music, differences, love, families, and, of course, the gift of following the prohet. 

With each quality he gathered, the LDS youth performed an African dance, with the grace and natural rhythm that can only be a gift.

Their dances included the Apatampa, the Kete, the Kundum, the Damba-Takai, the Boboobo, the Adowa, and the Kpanlogo, choreographies of meaning and happiness that remind us this is not the Gold and Green Ball of yesterday. 

The international Church is in a new era.  Join in the African Day of Celebration through these photos.


© 2004 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

After receiving her education from University of Utah and Harvard, Maurine Jensen Proctor, the Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Meridian Magazine, began her writing career with McGraw Hill Magazines and the Chicago Sun-Times. She has created award-winning television documentaries, has written a radio show for more than six years that played on 300 radio stations, and was a long-time writer of The Spoken Word for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

She, and her husband, Scot, have written several books together, including Witness of the Light, Source of the Light, Light from the Dust and The Gathering. They also edited a new version of Lucy Mack Smith’s biography of her son called The Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph Smith by His Mother and The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt. They were formerly the editors of This People magazine.

Maurine has been a part-time Institute teacher for the past 13 years and is the mother of eleven children and grandmother of three.

Scot Facer Proctor, Publisher of Meridian Magazine, is the author, co-author, or editor of several books including History of the Prophet Joseph Smith by His Mother. Scot is a photographer by trade, teaches Institute part-time, is married to Maurine Jensen Proctor and the father of eleven children grandfather of three. Scot and Maurine reside in the Washington D.C. Metro area.

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A Day of Celebration
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