Saturday, October 26, 2019

True story of Elder Kafoa


For a change up, I thought I'd share this story written by a member in Brisbane Australia about a tough experience of 2 missionaries in Papua New Guinea that happened a couple of weekends ago.  We were all concerned but it looks like he'll be ok.  My usual mission update is found after this:

Meet Elder Kafoa, A stranger to us until today who grew up in Tonga and is currently serving an LDS mission in PNG.

He is in Brisbane recovering from a home invasion while on the mission. He described it like a movie it was crazy.

4 dudes kidnapped him and his Samoan companion in their own vehicle. beat them up and had their lives threatened with rifles, shotguns and machetes.

They were driven to a spot to be ridden of.
He was asked 3 different times “do you have any last words”. Elder Kafoa would buy himself more time by saying he needs to disable the gps so the police couldn’t track the vehicle.
That saved his life. While making a run for his life, one of the guys attempted to slice him from the top off his head with a machete but Elder Kafoa blocked it with his left arm and fought back which left him with damaged nerves in his arm. Also had his knee sliced up and was wheel chair bound for the first couple of days. But he managed to get away and hid in the bush for 5 hrs until help arrived.

His companion was chucked off a cliff but survived. And walked 2 hrs to a police station where they came back looking for Elder Kafoa.

We couldn’t heal the brothers wounds or take away his trauma. We could do one thing and that’s heal his hunger with a KFC bucket 😂

As a family we visited with him and let him know we love him and thank him for his example, courage and service to the PNG people.

Once recovered he will return to PNG to serve his remaining 8 months on the mission.

I asked the bro, when you go back are you going to round up some boys and go find these guys, he replied “nah we will find them and hopefully baptise them”.

Elder Kafoa, a modern day hero. I said to him you could make a movie with his experience.

Other side of Hell. 😂😂

But he’s determined to go back and finish his mission. Salute to you Elder Kafoa. Ofa Atu

Hope my sons can have the same courage as this Elder when, and if they choose to serve.

Elder Kafoa recuperating in Australia


THE HMB ENDEAVOUR


Wednesday morning I substitute taught early morning seminary, covering John 20.  Great young people in the class asking good questions.  There was a traffic jam so the drive back to our apartment took 1 ¼ hours, usually a 15 minute trip.  Part of the traffic hold up was likely tied to the new $700 million dollar Auckland convention center catching on fire.  It took 3 days to put the fire out.  That evening Alisa and I drove over to the Redoubt Road Chapel to attend a Launching Leaders event for one of our business class students, Vivian.  This is also the site of the new Auckland temple, which will be built soon.  The sight is just off Highway 1, and will be a very visible part of the Auckland skyline when finished.  It is a great location, land that was given to the Church by the Maoris.  There is a hugh stake center and the New Zealand MTC already built on the same site.
Friday was Ed’s 28th birthday.  We’re looking forward to his visit this coming week.  Saturday Alisa and I took it easy.  I spent some time at the office working on my upcoming Education week remarks.  In the afternoon we took the express bus into Auckland down to the port where the Maritime Museum was hosting an exhibit of a full size replica of the HMB Endeavour, the ship that Captain Cook sailed around the world from 1768-71. During that time he charted New Zealand, the east coast of Australia, and many of the Pacific islands. The ship will be in the harbour for a few days, we got to explore the entire ship, Captain Jack Sparrow would have been impressed!  After climbing around that ship we then explored a New Zealand naval ship parked in the bay next to it, then toured the museum.  We then found a food court with various Asian restaurants, where Alisa had Indian and I had Vietnamese for dinner.
After church and our business class today, this evening Alisa and I are in charge of a devotional for the senior missionaries at the Administration building.  We have invited a couple who joined the Church in Brazil and then emigrated to NZ to share their experiences, then we’ll share root beer floats.

The HMB Endeavour in the Auckland harbour


On board the HMB Endeavour


Guess what this hole was used for? It was found at the front of the ship, and was called the "head"!


Steaming Vietnamese stir fry for dinner


Saturday, October 19, 2019

TONGAN FEAST


We took it a little easy this week after our adventure last week to the Bay of Islands.  Friday morning I substitute taught the same seminary class as I taught before.  We studied from John 16, fine young students in the class. 
Friday evening we had YSA ward activity at the church house.  It was a quiz night/trivia game.  A lot of the questions were centered around New Zealand so that made it a little more difficult for us to answer.  Luckily Alisa and I were at the smart table, and our team won, not because of the 2 of us that’s for sure, but rather due to the others, but I did have a few answers they didn’t.  It lasted a couple of hours, probably the best activity we’ve had with them.
Saturday morning the 2 of us went to the church house to play pickleball with 2 other couples.  Then mom and I attended another YSA activity, this time in Milford park, which is right on the beach.  We played touch rugby for about an hour.  I definitely have lost my speed and agility I learned!  I did score one try, but forgot to touch the ground after crossing the goal line, but they let our team keep the score anyway!  Then we went by the Wearhouse, which is in a mall in Milford.  The store is like a small version of Home Depot.  I found a small bbq which I purchased and assembled for our balcony once the weather turns nice.  We are still having storms and clouds, but things are definitely warming up.  Spent the afternoon napping and prepping for my NZ Education week presentation in two weeks. In the late afternoon we went with the McMurrays to a Tongan ward in south Auckland.  The ward was having a missionary weekend, with food on Saturday and a fireside on Sunday.  They had over 100 guests/non-members attend the event in their cultural hall, their neighbors from others churches.  They had banquet tables set up and literally covered in food.  They had over 30 roasted pigs, distributed around the room on the tables.  Then they had trays of taro and numerous food items, each food in a little container piled up by each plate, along with fruits and grapes.  There was hardly any room on the tables for the cups and plates!  The Tongans are definitely a big people, and it is considered a sign of beauty for the women to be very large apparently!  Some of the men were huge around the girth.  The women were decked out in traditional dress and danced during the meal.  The youth also did some dances for us.  There were speeches (all in Tongan) and visiting.  I sat next to  Bishop Kaufusi.  He said that each pig cost over $200, I’m amazed at the amount of money that was spent on this feast, well in excess of $6,000 just for the roasted pigs, from which just a few slices were cut. That’s as much as our annual budget used to be for our ward when I was bishop.  After the party was done, the leftover food disappeared quickly as the families took the leftovers home. According to the bishop, a lot of Tongans migrate to the Auckland NZ area looking for jobs.  They hope to send money home to their families in the islands.  There are only about 100,000 people living in Tonga, and not a lot of room for growth or good employment opportunities there.

Ready to feast and party!


Banquet table covered with pig and food!


Young women dancing


More Dancers


Adult dancing, visiting Methodist minister in front!


Young men dancing


Food piled up


Sunday, October 13, 2019

BAY OF ISLANDS AND MISSIONARY WORK


This week at the Church offices things were a little slow. The area presidency and some department heads were still gone for meetings in SLC.  Instead of any large projects I worked on a bunch of small projects, mainly reviewing tender/bid projects involving food services at various Church schools in the islands.  One new potential project that came in over the weekend looks like it will be fun to work on if it goes forward.  The Marshall Islands mission covers 2 different countries, the Marshall Islands and Kiribati.  Because of the distance between the 2 island nations (cost of air fare), and because they speak different languages (English and then whatever the native tongue is on each), apparently the missionaries assigned to that mission spend their entire mission in one or the other country.  The mission home is in the Marshall Islands, but it has proved cheaper to send the missionaries going to Kiribati directly there than to have them go via the Marshall Islands mission home going and returning.  So the Church rented some rooms in a hotel in Kiribati which the mission president flies to so he can use it to welcome new missionaries directly there, and for zone conferences and for missionaries’ farewells.  Anyway, to make a long story short, the country of Taiwan has a 25 year land lease which they built their embassy on in Kiribati, which they still have 10 years remaining on. For whatever reason Taiwan has decided to shut down their embassy.  Because they like the Church, as a good will gesture, they have offered to let the Church have their embassy for the final 10 years for free, except that the Church would have to pay the annual rent for the underlying land, which comes to about $1,200 per year.  This possibility just arose a few days ago, so once the local leaders and missionary department decide if they want to go forward and accept this offer, I will review the leases and make sure that everything is in good order with the Kiribati government and landlord.  The other interesting prospect is that last week in General Conference Pres. Nelson announced a new temple in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, which is in our Pacific area.  Our Office of General Counsel office is speculating that the Church is thinking about using 17 acres that it has a long term lease on there, but which land is in litigation, or on an adjacent 4 acre parcel the Church is in the process of buying (this is speculation, nothing official has been announced).  In the upcoming months I will be taking over the real estate matters, and in March the litigation in that area.  So one way or another I’m hoping to be involved in securing the land for the new temple.  One possible scenario is that the temple would be built on the 4 acres to be purchased, with ancillary buildings, parking lot and landscaping on the adjacent leased land?  In the islands, in some countries you can’t even buy land, it is owned by the government, so many of our Church buildings in the islands are built on lands covered by long term leases.
Thursday evening, I was walking home when a nice looking fellow, probably in his 40’s, at a gas station I was passing looked at me, saw my name tag and said “hello Elder”.  I stopped and said “You sound like you know something about the Church,” which led into a nice conversation about his family. His name was Jason and I believe he said that he was from Samoa originally and came from a very large Mormon family.  Many of them have immigrated to Utah. He said that he was the one who didn’t go on a mission, is inactive, but that he has fond memories of the Church growing up and had mentioned it to his own children. I visited a little more with him about the Church and about my senior mission, then I asked him if he had a copy of the Book of Mormon, which he did not.  So I reached into my briefcase and pulled out a wrapped Book of Mormon and gave it to him along with the video Meet the Mormons.  I also gave him my card, and suggested that it was time he go back to Church with his own family, that they’d be warmly welcomed.  It made me feel good to have a more traditional missionary experience here in NZ.   I felt like a young missionary again in Japan doing street proselyting, my first street contact in over 40 years!  I hope that meeting will be a blessing in Jason’s life, and I felt fortunate to have been the tool to deliver the message.
Since office work was on the slow side, I got permission to take Friday off.  As I mentioned previously, here in NZ the wards don’t have regular church services this weekend, many of these wards will show last weekend’s General Conference on Sunday at the church houses, and have a pot luck in between sessions, using it almost as a social.  Our YSA ward wasn’t meeting and our Self Reliance class we are facilitating got canceled. So since Alisa and I had already watched all the sessions, we decided to take a trip.  We left Friday morning around 7 a.m. and drove about 3 hours north to a touristy area known as the Bay of Islands.  Cruise ships land there weekly to let their passengers off.  They claim there are 140 islands in this bay.  On the drive there we stopped and hiked into the Waipu Caves.  We had to wade through a stream inside the caves about 2 feet deep, but were rewarded to see glow worms all over the ceilings of the caves.  There were two young Germans we visited with who had camped overnight in this out of the way area who are touring here for 10 months!  Apparently NZ is a popular place for Germans to tour, and they usually fly in to Auckland, buy a converted van, in their case paying NZ$6,000, which has shelving, a kitchen and a sleep area already built in, sort of like the hippy VW vans from the 60’s.  They’ll drive all over NZ for their 10 months here, then resell the van to the next tourist, and fly back to Germany to go back to college or jobs.  Anyway, we finally made it to Paihia, which is the town we were staying in on the Bay of Islands (there are a lot of small towns in this touristy area).  We first walked around and got our bearings.  Then we took a ferry across the bay to a town called Russell.  It was the first English settlement in NZ in the 1820’s, and was the capital for several years before it was moved to Auckland, and eventually to its current site in Wellington.  Anyway, back then Russell had 30 saloons, many brothels and was known as the Hell Hole of the Pacific, until the Maoris made the English clean up their act.  Anyway once Auckland became the new capital and center of commerce in NZ, things quieted down there, and Russell is now known as the city of Romance!  It looks like a cross between New England and Catalina Island.  We had lunch at the Duke of Marlborough establishment, one of the original hotels there.  After lunch we walked around and visited the little shops, and toured their original Anglican church know as Christ Church, NZ’s oldest church.  It is a traditional looking wood sided church house with steeple and surrounded by a church grave yard.  The wood siding still has a few holes made by musket balls back when the town was still known as the Hell Hole of the Pacific! We caught a ferry back to Paihia, and drove to our BnB.  It was in the downstairs apartment of a home situated up on a hill overlooking the bay, and for $75 per night was quite the delight.  It had a nautical theme. This area looks like a cross between CA and Hawaii, many tropical plants along with citrus, avocados, grapes, kiwis and even some loquat trees! After we rested some, we drove about 25 kilometers to the Ngawha natural hot springs to soak some.  The water temperature was around 110 degrees, and the place was a little run down, but only cost the equivalent of US$3.50.  Drove back to Paihia, stopped at a grocery store, then went home to bbq some steaks before bed.
Saturday morning we drove to the Waitangi Treaty grounds to explore their museum and their grounds.  It is about 1,000 acres which is where the original treaty between the British and the Maori was signed calling a truce and allowing England and the King to be the new rulers, Feb. 6, 1840.  It was quite impressive.  They have the world’s largest canoe there made out of the native Kauri tree, 117 feet long and able to carry 160 warriors.  That would have been a scary sight to be greeted by! They actually take the canoe out on the ocean once a year on Feb. 6, their treaty day celebration. The original local governor’s house still stands there.  There is also a Maori meeting hall on the grounds and we were treated to a Maori song and haka show.  Then we took a charter boat out into the bay for a 3 hour trip around the islands, to Hole in the Rock and back.  We even saw a school of dolphins. In the evening we went out to dinner at Green’s Thai and Indian restaurant.  I had Thai and Alisa had Indian. 
Today we drove over to KeriKeri to see that historic town.  We visited their farmer’s market, the old Stone Store, which is the oldest stone building in NZ, and the house next door, which is the oldest house in NZ.  This town is more inland, but still with a view of the bay and the Pacific ocean.  I also stopped to check out one of their orange orchards and a kiwi farm.  They have gone organic here, which means they stopped spraying their orchards, and as a result their citrus and trees don’t look very comely.  I suspect their local industry is dwindling as they import more of their fruit from the US and elsewhere, and the old farms are being replaced by housing and development. We stopped by Rainbow falls for a short hike, then drove back home this afternoon.  We felt fortunate that while we saw plenty of clouds and some sprinkles, for the most part we had warm sunny weather, and the tourists haven’t really descended on the Bay of Islands yet, the place is supposed to be packed come summer time (December).

Rainbow falls in KeriKeri


World's longest canoe at Waitangi Treaty grounds


Maori dance at Waitangi Treaty grounds


Bay of Islands cruise


Hole in the Rock, Bay of Islands


Bay of Islands


Approaching Russell, the city of romance


Christ Church in Russell


Looking across the bay from Russell to Paihia


In the stocks


Duke of Marlborough Hotel


Lunch at Duke of Marlborough


Waipu caves


German tourists at Waipu Caves


Saturday, October 5, 2019

GENERAL CONFERENCE WEEKEND--HOW IT WORKS IN NEW ZEALAND


Last Sunday was day light savings here, so the clock moved forward an hour.  Spent the rest of the week adjusting my wake up time.  Monday evening was our YSA ward’s FHE at the church house.  It was a missionary theme, with a singing activity afterwards.  Friday I took Alisa and the public affairs intern Holley out to lunch at a poke restaurant.  Saturday I spent the day at the office with no one else there, finally working on putting together my power point and remarks for the upcoming NZ Education Week.  That’s what I needed, just a block of time to have to myself to think and meditate.  I have been collecting photos and local articles that I thought would illustrate the points and make it more interesting to the local Kiwis who will attend.  In the evening we had the Wrights and the Simpsons over for dinner.
This morning (Sunday) I got a charlie horse on my left leg at 4:15 a.m. which quickly woke me up.  So I just stayed up for the 5 a.m. session (Saturday morning) of conference.  I have to admit I did doze some, but did much better for the 9 a.m. session (Saturday afternoon).  We’ll watch the Sunday sessions tomorrow morning (Monday in NZ), then will go in to work around noon.  We’ll get our conference donuts tomorrow, since we didn’t want to go shopping on the Sabbath here.  In New Zealand, today was the usual Fast Sunday church services, then next weekend they cancel church services and watch the week old conference sessions. I facilitated the self-reliance class after church this afternoon (only 3 lessons to go!).  Then next weekend, since church services and our class are canceled, and we will have already seen General Conference, we’ll make the 6 hour drive north to spend the weekend in the Bay of Islands doing sight seeing. 
The other big news is that the appellate decision in my CPS v. Ciachurski case finally came out this week, and the court completely affirmed our trial victory.  That was my last big trial before retiring, down in Santa Ana, Orange County, CA in 2017, where my trial date got continued day by day until a court room became available, so Mom, Kimi and I got to go to Disneyland while I waited.  Anyway, that was a $1.3 million verdict, and with post judgment interest is now up to $1.6 million at least. That is a huge relief, and left my big victory in tack.  The debtors had to post a bond, so there is a source of complete payment, CPS is ecstatic and will continue to be a good client of the firm.


FINAL REPORT FROM NEW ZEALAND, HEADING HOME

It 's December 6, 2020.   We’re finally on the plane, winging it back to America.   I'm writing this note on the plane.   We are tra...