Thursday, October 15, 2009

Religious Freedom

Transcript of Elder Dallin H. Oaks speech given at BYU-Idaho on 13 October 2009.

My dear young friends, I am pleased to speak to this BYU-Idaho audience. I am conscious that I am also speaking to many in other places. In this time of the Internet, what we say in one place is instantly put before a wider audience, including many to whom we do not intend to speak. That complicates my task, so I ask your understanding as I speak to a very diverse audience.

In choosing my subject I have relied on an old military maxim that when there is a battle underway, persons who desire to join the fray should “march to the sound of the guns.”[i] So it is that I invite you to march with me as I speak about religious freedom under the United States Constitution. There is a battle over the meaning of that freedom. The contest is of eternal importance, and it is your generation that must understand the issues and make the efforts to prevail.

I.

An 1833 revelation to the Prophet Joseph Smith declared that the Lord established the United States Constitution by wise men whom he raised up for that very purpose (Doctrine and Covenants 101:80). The Lord also declared that this constitution “should be maintained for the rights and protection of all flesh” (Doctrine and Covenants 101:77; emphasis added).

In 1833, when almost all people in the world were still ruled by kings or tyrants, few could see how the infant United States Constitution could be divinely designed “for the rights and protection of all flesh.” Today, 176 years after that revelation, almost every nation in the world has adopted a written constitution, and the United States Constitution profoundly influenced all of them. Truly, this nation’s most important export is its constitution, whose great principles stand as a model “for the rights and protection of all flesh.” On the vital human right of religious freedom, however, many constitutions fall short of the protections that are needed, so we are grateful that the United States government seeks to encourage religious freedom all over the world.[ii]

II.

To illustrate the importance of basic human rights in other countries, I refer to some recent history in Mongolia, which shows that the religious freedom we have taken for granted in the United States must be won by dangerous sacrifice in some other nations.

Following the perestroika movement in the Soviet Union, popular demonstrations in Mongolia forced the Communist government to resign in March 1990. Other political parties were legalized, but the first Mongolian elections gave the Communists a majority in the new parliament, and the old repressive attitudes persisted in all government departments. The full functioning of a democratic process and the full enjoyment of the people’s needed freedoms do not occur without a struggle. In Mongolia, the freedoms of speech, press and religion — a principal feature of the inspired United States Constitution — remained unfulfilled.

In that precarious environment, a 42-year-old married woman, Oyun Altangerel, a department head in the state library, courageously took some actions that would prove historic. Acting against official pressure, she organized a “Democratic Association Branch Council.” This 12-member group, the first of its kind, spoke out for democracy and proposed that state employees have the freedoms of worship, belief and expression, including the right to belong to a political party of their choice.

When Oyun and others were fired from their state employment, Oyun began a hunger strike in the state library. Within three hours she was joined by 20 others, mostly women, and their hunger strike, which continued for five days, became a public demonstration that took their grievances to the people of Mongolia. This demonstration, backed by major democratic movement leaders, encouraged other government employees to organize similar democratic councils. These dangerous actions expanded into a national anti-government movement that voiced powerful support for the basic human freedoms of speech, press and religion. Eventually the government accepted the demands, and in the adoption of a democratic constitution two years later Mongolia took a major step toward a free society.

For Latter-day Saints, this birth of constitutional freedom in Mongolia has special interest. Less than two years after the historic hunger strike, we sent our first missionaries to Mongolia. In 1992 these couples began their meetings in the state library, where Oyun was working. The following year, she showed her courage again by being baptized into this newly arrived Christian church. Her only child, a 22-year-old son, was baptized two years later. Today, the Mongolian members of our Church number 9,000, reportedly the largest group of Christians in the country. A few months ago we organized our first stake in Mongolia. Called as the stake president was Sister Oyun’s son, Odgerel. He had studied for a year at BYU-Hawaii, and his wife, Ariuna, a former missionary in Utah, graduated there.[iii]

III.

One of the great fundamentals of our inspired constitution, relied on by Oyun of Mongolia and countless others struggling for freedom in many countries in the world, is the principle that the people are the source of government power. This principle of popular sovereignty was first written and applied on the American continent over 200 years ago. A group of colonies won independence from a king, and their representatives had the unique opportunity of establishing a new government. They did this by creating the first written constitution that has survived to govern a modern nation. The United States Constitution declared the source of government power, delegated that power to a government, and regulated its exercise.

Along with many other religious people, we affirm that God is the ultimate source of power and that, under Him, it is the people’s inherent right to decide their form of government. Sovereign power is not inherent in a state or nation just because its leaders have the power that comes from force of arms. And sovereign power does not come from the divine right of a king, who grants his subjects such power as he pleases or is forced to concede, as in Magna Carta. As the preamble to our constitution states: “We the People of the United States . . . do ordain and establish this Constitution.”

This principle of sovereignty in the people explains the meaning of God’s revelation that He established the Constitution of the United States “that every man may act . . . according to the moral agency which I have given unto him, that every man may be accountable for his own sins in the day of judgment” (Doctrine and Covenants 101:78). In other words, the most desirable condition for the effective exercise of God-given moral agency is a condition of maximum freedom and responsibility — the opposite of slavery or political oppression. With freedom we can be accountable for our own actions and cannot blame our conditions on our bondage to another. This is the condition the Lord praised in the Book of Mormon, where the people — not a king — established the laws and were governed by them (see Mosiah 29:23–26). This popular sovereignty necessarily implies popular responsibility. Instead of blaming their troubles on a king or tyrant, all citizens are responsible to share the burdens of governing, “that every man might bear his part” (Mosiah 29:34).

IV.

“For the rights and protection of all flesh” the United State Constitution includes in its First Amendment the guarantees of free exercise of religion and free speech and press. Without these great fundamentals of the Constitution, America could not have served as the host nation for the restoration of the gospel, which began just three decades after the Bill of Rights was ratified.

The First Amendment reads: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” The prohibition against “an establishment of religion” was intended to separate churches and government, to prevent a national church of the kind still found in Europe. In the interest of time I will say no more about the establishment of religion, but only concentrate on the direction that the United States shall have no law “prohibiting the free exercise” of religion.

The guarantee of the free exercise of religion, which I will call religious freedom, is the first expression in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. As noted by many, this “pre-eminent place” identifies freedom of religion as “a cornerstone of American democracy.”[iv] The American colonies were originally settled by people who, for the most part, had come to this continent to be able to practice their religious faith without persecution, and their successors deliberately placed religious freedom first in the nation’s Bill of Rights. So it is that our national law formally declares: “The right to freedom of religion undergirds the very origin and existence of the United States.”[v]

The free “exercise” of religion obviously involves both the right to choose religious beliefs and affiliations and the right to “exercise” or practice those beliefs. But in a nation with citizens of many different religious beliefs, the right of some to act upon their religious principles must be qualified by the government’s responsibility to protect the health and safety of all. Otherwise, for example, the government could not protect its citizens’ person or property from neighbors whose intentions include taking human life or stealing in circumstances rationalized on the basis of their religious beliefs.

The inherent conflict between the precious religious freedom of the people and the legitimate regulatory responsibilities of the government is the central issue of religious freedom. Here are just a few examples of current controversial public issues that involve this conflict: laws governing marriage and adoption; laws regulating the activities of church-related organizations like BYU-Idaho in furtherance of their religious missions — activities such as who they will serve or employ; and laws prohibiting discrimination in employment or work conditions against persons with unpopular religious beliefs or practices.

The problems are not simple, and over the years the United States Supreme Court, which has the ultimate responsibility of interpreting the meaning of the lofty and general provisions of the Constitution, has struggled to identify principles that can guide its decisions when government action is claimed to violate someone’s free exercise of religion. As would be expected, most of the battles over the extent of religious freedom have involved government efforts to impose upon the practices of small groups like Mormons. Not surprisingly, government officials sometimes seem more tolerant toward the religious practices of large groups of voters.

Unpopular minority religions are especially dependent upon a constitutional guarantee of free exercise of religion. We are fortunate to have such a guarantee in the United States, but many nations do not. The importance of that guarantee in the United States should make us ever diligent to defend it. And it is in need of being defended. During my lifetime I have seen a significant deterioration in the respect accorded to religion in our public life, and I believe that the vitality of religious freedom is in danger of being weakened accordingly.

Religious belief is obviously protected against government action. The practice of that belief must have some limits, as I suggested earlier. But unless the guarantee of free exercise of religion gives a religious actor greater protection against government prohibitions than are already guaranteed to all actors by other provisions of the constitution (like freedom of speech), what is the special value of religious freedom? Surely the First Amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion was intended to grant more freedom to religious action than to other kinds of action. Treating actions based on religious belief the same as actions based on other systems of belief should not be enough to satisfy the special place of religion in the United States Constitution.

V.

Religious freedom has always been at risk. It was repression of religious belief and practice that drove the Pilgrim fathers and other dissenters to the shores of this continent. Even today, leaders in all too many nations use state power to repress religious believers.

The greatest infringements of religious freedom occur when the exercise of religion collides with other powerful forces in society. Among the most threatening collisions in the United States today are (1) the rising strength of those who seek to silence religious voices in public debates, and (2) perceived conflicts between religious freedom and the popular appeal of newly alleged civil rights.

As I address this audience of young adults, I invite your careful attention to what I say on these subjects, because I am describing conditions you will face and challenges you must confront.

Silencing Religious Voices in the Public Square

A writer for The Christian Science Monitor predicts that the coming century will be “very secular and religiously antagonistic,” with intolerance of Christianity “ris[ing] to levels many of us have not believed possible in our lifetimes.”[vi] Other wise observers have noted the ever-growing, relentless attack on the Christian religion by forces who reject the existence or authority of God.[vii] The extent and nature of religious devotion in this nation is changing. The tide of public opinion in favor of religion is receding, and this probably portends public pressures for laws that will impinge on religious freedom.

Atheism has always been hostile to religion, such as in its arguments that freedom of or for religion should include freedom from religion. Atheism’s threat rises as its proponents grow in numbers and aggressiveness. “By some counts,” a recent article in The Economist declares, “there are at least 500 [million] declared non-believers in the world — enough to make atheism the fourth-biggest religion.”[viii] And atheism’s spokesmen are aggressive, as recent publications show.[ix] As noted by John A. Howard of the Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society, these voices “have developed great skills in demonizing those who disagree with them, turning their opponents into objects of fear, hatred and scorn.”[x]

Such forces — atheists and others — would intimidate persons with religious-based points of view from influencing or making the laws of their state or nation. Noted author and legal commentator Hugh Hewitt described the current circumstance this way:

“There is a growing anti-religious bigotry in the United States. . . .

“For three decades people of faith have watched a systematic and very effective effort waged in the courts and the media to drive them from the public square and to delegitimize their participation in politics as somehow threatening.”[xi]

For example, a prominent gay-rights spokesman gave this explanation for his objection to our Church’s position on California’s Proposition 8:

“I’m not intending it to harm the religion. I think they do wonderful things. Nicest people. . . . My single goal is to get them out of the same-sex marriage business and back to helping hurricane victims.”[xii]

Aside from the obvious fact that this objection would deny free speech as well as religious freedom to members of our Church and its coalition partners, there are other reasons why the public square must be open to religious ideas and religious persons. As Richard John Neuhaus said many years ago, “In a democracy that is free and robust, an opinion is no more disqualified for being ‘religious’ than for being atheistic, or psychoanalytic, or Marxist, or just plain dumb.”[xiii]

Religious Freedom Diluted by Other “Civil Rights”

A second threat to religious freedom is from those who perceive it to be in conflict with the newly alleged “civil right” of same-gender couples to enjoy the privileges of marriage.

We have endured a wave of media-reported charges that the Mormons are trying to “deny” people or “strip” people of their “rights.” After a significant majority of California voters (seven million — over 52 percent) approved Proposition 8’s limiting marriage to a man and a woman, some opponents characterized the vote as denying people their civil rights. In fact, the Proposition 8 battle was not about civil rights, but about what equal rights demand and what religious rights protect. At no time did anyone question or jeopardize the civil right of Proposition 8 opponents to vote or speak their views.

The real issue in the Proposition 8 debate — an issue that will not go away in years to come and for whose resolution it is critical that we protect everyone’s freedom of speech and the equally important freedom to stand for religious beliefs — is whether the opponents of Proposition 8 should be allowed to change the vital institution of marriage itself.

The marriage union of a man and a woman has been the teaching of the Judeo-Christian scriptures and the core legal definition and practice of marriage in Western culture for thousands of years. Those who seek to change the foundation of marriage should not be allowed to pretend that those who defend the ancient order are trampling on civil rights. The supporters of Proposition 8 were exercising their constitutional right to defend the institution of marriage — an institution of transcendent importance that they, along with countless others of many persuasions, feel conscientiously obliged to protect.

Religious freedom needs defending against the claims of newly asserted human rights. The so-called “Yogyakarta Principles,” published by an international human rights group, call for governments to assure that all persons have the right to practice their religious beliefs regardless of sexual orientation or identity.[xiv] This apparently proposes that governments require church practices and their doctrines to ignore gender differences. Any such effort to have governments invade religion to override religious doctrines or practices should be resisted by all believers. At the same time, all who conduct such resistance should frame their advocacy and their personal relations so that they are never seen as being doctrinaire opponents of the very real civil rights (such as free speech) of their adversaries or any other disadvantaged group.

VI.

And now, in conclusion, I offer five points of counsel on how Latter-day Saints should conduct themselves to enhance religious freedom in this period of turmoil and challenge.

First, we must speak with love, always showing patience, understanding and compassion toward our adversaries. We are under command to love our neighbor (Luke 10:27), to forgive all men (Doctrine and Covenants 64:10), to do good to them who despitefully use us (Matthew 5:44) and to conduct our teaching in mildness and meekness (Doctrine and Covenants 38:41).

Even as we seek to speak with love, we must not be surprised when our positions are ridiculed and we are persecuted and reviled. As the Savior said, “so persecuted they the prophets which were before you” (Matthew 5:12). And modern revelation commands us not to revile against revilers (Doctrine and Covenants 19:30).

Second, we must not be deterred or coerced into silence by the kinds of intimidation I have described. We must insist on our constitutional right and duty to exercise our religion, to vote our consciences on public issues and to participate in elections and debates in the public square and the halls of justice. These are the rights of all citizens and they are also the rights of religious leaders. While our church rarely speaks on public issues, it does so by exception on what the First Presidency defines as significant moral issues, which could surely include laws affecting the fundamental legal/cultural/moral environment of our communities and nations.

We must also insist on this companion condition of democratic government: when churches and their members or any other group act or speak out on public issues, win or lose, they have a right to expect freedom from retaliation.

Along with many others, we were disappointed with what we experienced in the aftermath of California’s adoption of Proposition 8, including vandalism of church facilities and harassment of church members by firings and boycotts of member businesses and by retaliation against donors. Mormons were the targets of most of this, but it also hit other churches in the pro-8 coalition and other persons who could be identified as supporters. Fortunately, some recognized such retaliation for what it was. A full-page ad in the New York Times branded this “violence and intimidation” against religious organizations and individual believers “simply because they supported Proposition 8 [as] an outrage that must stop.” [xv] The fact that this ad was signed by some leaders who had no history of friendship for our faith only added to its force.

It is important to note that while this aggressive intimidation in connection with the Proposition 8 election was primarily directed at religious persons and symbols, it was not anti-religious as such. These incidents were expressions of outrage against those who disagreed with the gay-rights position and had prevailed in a public contest. As such, these incidents of “violence and intimidation” are not so much anti-religious as anti-democratic. In their effect they are like the well-known and widely condemned voter-intimidation of blacks in the South that produced corrective federal civil-rights legislation.

Third, we must insist on our freedom to preach the doctrines of our faith. Why do I make this obvious point? Religious people who share our moral convictions feel some intimidation. Fortunately, our leaders do not refrain from stating and explaining our position that homosexual behavior is sinful. Last summer Elder M. Russell Ballard spoke these words to a BYU audience:

“We follow Jesus Christ by living the law of chastity. God gave this commandment, and He has never revoked or changed it. This law is clear and simple. No one is to engage in sexual relationships outside the bounds the Lord has set. This applies to homosexual behavior of any kind and to heterosexual relationships outside marriage. It is a sin to violate the law of chastity.

“We follow Jesus Christ by adhering to God’s law of marriage, which is marriage between one man and one woman. This commandment has been in place from the very beginning.”[xvi]

We will continue to teach what our Heavenly Father has commanded us to teach, and trust that the precious free exercise of religion remains strong enough to guarantee our right to exercise this most basic freedom.

Fourth, as advocates of the obvious truth that persons with religious positions or motivations have the right to express their religious views in public, we must nevertheless be wise in our political participation. Preachers have been prime movers in the civil rights movement from the earliest advocates of abolition, but even the civil rights of religionists must be exercised legally and wisely.

As Latter-day Saints, we should never be reticent to declare and act upon the sure foundations of our faith. The call of conscience — whether religious or otherwise — requires no secular justification. At the same time, religious persons will often be most persuasive in political discourse by framing arguments and positions in ways that are respectful of those who do not share their religious beliefs and that contribute to the reasoned discussion and compromise that is essential in a pluralistic society.[xvii]

Fifth and finally, Latter-day Saints must be careful never to support or act upon the idea that a person must subscribe to some particular set of religious beliefs in order to qualify for a public office. The framers of our constitution included a provision that “no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States” (Article VI). That constitutional principle forbids a religious test as a legal requirement, but it of course leaves citizens free to cast their votes on the basis of any preference they choose. But wise religious leaders and members will never advocate religious tests for public office.

Fragile freedoms are best preserved when not employed beyond their intended purpose. If a candidate is seen to be rejected at the ballot box primarily because of religious belief or affiliation, the precious free exercise of religion is weakened at its foundation, especially when this reason for rejection has been advocated by other religionists. Such advocacy suggests that if religionists prevail in electing their preferred candidate this will lead to the use of government power in support of their religious beliefs and practices. The religion of a candidate should not be an issue in a political campaign.

Conclusion

It was the Christian principles of human worth and dignity that made possible the formation of the United States Constitution over 200 years ago, and only those principles in the hearts of a majority of our diverse population can sustain that constitution today. Our constitution’s revolutionary concepts of sovereignty in the people and significant guarantees of personal rights were, as John A. Howard has written,

“generated by a people for whom Christianity had been for a century and a half the compelling feature of their lives. It was Jesus who first stated that all men are created equal [and] that every person . . . is valued and loved by God.”[xviii]

Professor Dinesh D’Souza reminds us:

“The attempt to ground respect for equality on a purely secular basis ignores the vital contribution by Christianity to its spread. It is folly to believe that it could survive without the continuing aid of religious belief.”[xix]

Religious values and political realities are so interlinked in the origin and perpetuation of this nation that we cannot lose the influence of Christianity in the public square without seriously jeopardizing our freedoms. I maintain that this is a political fact, well qualified for argument in the public square by religious people whose freedom to believe and act must always be protected by what is properly called our “First Freedom,” the free exercise of religion.

My dear brothers and sisters, I testify to the truth of these principles I have expressed today. I testify of Jesus Christ, our Savior, who is the author and finisher of our faith and whose revelations to a prophet of God in these modern times have affirmed the foundation of the United States constitution, which as we have said, was given by God to His children for the rights and protection of all flesh. May God bless us to understand it, to sustain it, and to spread its influence throughout the world, I pray, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

[ii] Final Report of the Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad to the Secretary of State and to the President of the United States, 17 May 1999, 6–7, 30–65. The International Religious Freedom Act, adopted in 1998, 22 USC 6401 et seq., established an office of international religious affairs in the U.S. State Department headed by an Ambassador at Large and the U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedom. Both of these bodies submit annual reports that assess the status of religious freedom under international standards worldwide and help encourage better implementation of commitments countries around the world have made to respect this fundamental right.

[iii] The information about events in Mongolia was obtained from correspondence with President Odgerel and from Mary N. Cook, former senior missionary and wife of Richard E. Cook, the first mission president in Mongolia.

[iv] Final Report of the Advisory Committee, 6.

[v] 22 USC 6401(a).

[vi] Michael Spencer, “The Coming Evangelical Collapse,” The Christian Science Monitor, 10 Mar. 2009.

[vii] E.g., John A. Howard, “Liberty: America’s Creative Power,” Howard Center, 22 June 2009, 6.

[viii] “In God’s Name: A Special Report on Religion and Public Life,” The Economist, 3 Nov. 2007, 10.

[ix] E.g., The Six Ways of Atheism, which was advertised “to absolutely disprove the existence of God, logically and simply,” was sent free to leading universities and public libraries in all major English-speaking countries in the world. Press release, 26 May 2009.

[x] Howard, “Liberty: America’s Creative Power,” 6.

[xi] Hugh Hewitt, A Mormon in the White House? (Washington DC: Regnery, 2007), 242–43.

[xii] Karl Vick, “Gay Groups Targeting Mormons,” Salt Lake Tribune, 30 May 2009, A8 (Washington Post story).

[xiii] “A New Order of Religious Freedom,” First Things, Feb. 1992, 2; also see Neuhaus, The Naked Public Square (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1983).

[xiv] The Yogyakarta Principles, Principle 21 (Yogyakarta, Indonesia, 2006).

[xv] “No Mob Veto,” New York Times, 5 Dec. 2008.

[xvi] M. Russell Ballard, “Engaging Without Being Defensive,” BYU Commencement Address, 13 August 2009.

[xvii] Among the advocates of this position are Kevin Seamus Hasson, The Right to be Wrong (San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2005); Douglas Laycock, Anthony Picarello Jr. and Robin Fretwell Wilson, Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty: Emerging Conflicts (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008); and Michael J. Perry, “Liberal Democracy and Religious Morality,” 48 DePaul Law Rev. 1, 20–41 (1998). For examples of this kind of advocacy, see What’s the Harm? ed. Lynn D. Wardle (University Press of America, 2008); and Monte Neil Stewart, “Marriage Facts,” 31 Harv. J. of Law & Pub. Policy 313 (2008).

[xviii] John A. Howard, Christianity: Lifeblood of America’s Free Society (1620–1945) (Monitou Springs, Ohio: Summit Press, 2008), 57.

[xix] “How Christianity Shaped the West,” Hillsdale College, Nov. 2008, Vol. 37, No. 11, p. 5.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Alma 29:14

My friend Nathan shared this scripture with me. It's blog-worthy. And so good, too.

Zion.

14 But I do not joy in my own asuccess alone, but my joy is more full because of the success of my brethren, who have been up to the land of Nephi.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Back to school

Friends,

My blog isn't taking a back-seat. I promise. For those of you who actually follow it, I am committed to giving you more information into my life. Honest. I've just been a little...how do you say...busy. Busy with life, with homework, with work, with school. And my virtual "sociality" has taken a hit by my re-born, real-life "sociality" here at school.

But...never fear. One of my classes is requiring me to keep a blog. Yup. A blog with what we learned.

No, no, no. It's not BORING. It's actually pretty cool. You should check it out. I want to share what I've learned. and I want you to share something with me, too. Deal? I mean, we are friends. I want to learn from you.

So...check it out: comm250rocksmyworld.blogspot.com

The first post is pretty good. And better posts are sure to come.

And I promise...eventually I'll get some pictures posted here. And then you can follow my "happenings" along with "what I'm learning in school."

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Last Day...

...of the BEST internship in the world.

State Capitol on Inauguration Day. (Photo courtesy yours truly)

Today was the last day of my internship:

2 Governors
4 months/15 weeks/47 complete days in the office
5 press conferences
1 Resignation
1 Inauguration (so far)
2 Swearing-in ceremonies
2 Senate Confirmation Hearings
1 Senate vote (so far)
300 + hours of office work, errands, events
1 new internship manual written
3 potential interns interviews
5 days at the White House phone
1 Record-breaking 6-hour date with the copy machine
3 Monthly Reports
100's of letters drafted
1,000 (almost) letters logged
47 days in the office
100 + other tasks completed
A few fiascoes avoided
1 red bracelet saved


1 Incredible Summer


And the BEST internship in the world.

The day before I officially started the job: Press Conference with Governor Jon M. Huntsman, Jr. following President Obama's announcement that he would appoint Huntsman to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the People's Republic of China. (Photo Courtesy Office of the Governor)

Me with the first Governor.


Me with the new Governor.


Past Governors and spouses on the day Governor Huntsman resigned as Governor, was sworn in as Ambassador, and Governor Herbert was sworn in as 17th Governor of the Great State of Utah. (Photo courtesy me.)


Governor and Mrs. Herbert, yours truly, Lieutenant Governor-designate and Mrs. Bell. (Due to a new Utah amendment, Lt. Governor Bell has to wait for the Senate to confirm his appointment. I went to his Senate Hearing today; it was great.)


Governor's Mansion. (Photo by me)




Sunday, August 23, 2009

Long-promised Alaska post

Back in April, I had the incredible opportunity of going to Alaska with the BYU-Idaho Collegiate singers. I promised pictures, but it's taken me a while.


We flew out from Boise (then to Seattle, then into Fairbanks). Our plane was small enough we had to walk out onto the tarmac to get on the plane. The flight was nice--especially flying over the beautiful Canadian coast and British Columbia. Our first glimpses of Alaska were breath-taking. I think we even saw Mount McKinley on the way in.



Our first stop was Fairbanks, Alaska. Fairbanks is beautiful! Our host family was great. They showed us what true Alaskans do--including hunting and eating muktuk. Though we didn't get to hunt, they shared with us some of their prizes. Among the delicacies (including muktuk) were smoked seal, raw humpback, and boiled humpback whale. They also made a killer salmon spread.


North Pole, Alaska, is just a twenty minute drive from Fairbanks. Our first performance was at North Pole High. On the way, I took this picture of the famous place where all of Santa's letters go: the post office.



Excuse the poor quality, but this (above) is the North Pole, AK post office.



Only moments later did I realize how cool it was when we started driving down Santa Claus Lane.


We even found a real igloo (okay, it was more like an ice sculpture) in downtown Fairbanks.

It was in Fairbanks that we learned about Alaska's non-existent zoning laws. Because there are no zoning laws, you can build a house just about anywhere.

For example, McDonald's decided to build a restaurant right on a busy highway--only feet from an existing house. The owner of the house was so mad because the drive-thru speaker was right outside his bedroom window. To show sympathy, McDonald's built a wall.

Apparently the wall wasn't big enough. So, to show his disgust, the man hung a Ronald McDonald dummy from his trees just high enough to be seen over the wall. (The building in the picture is McDonald's. The truck in the picture is at the drive-thru.)


We also had the really cool opportunity to experience mushing (dog sledding) first-hand.

Here's a video of my experience:



Here we are after a performance for the high school students at Eilson High School on the military base near Fairbanks. I'm standing next to three choir members: Lizzie, Cassie (the two girls in red), and Sean (the guy with the grey BYU-Idaho fleece jacket). These high school girls thought our show rocked.

One of the best parts of driving a bus through Alaska was seeing how beautiful it is--even if it was interrupted by a big pipeline.


Above is a picture of the trans-Alaska oil pipeline. It was fun learning about it, but it was even cooler seeing it up close.


One of the many breath-taking views. I came home with a greater appreciation for the mountains in Utah, realizing that they are this beautiful, too. I just don't get to see them when I'm in Rexburg.

More mountains.

The scenes were beautiful, but my favorite part was meeting with the people and learning about them--especially after our performances. And especially when a "missionary opportunity" was presented.

This is a picture of the Glennallen school.

Glennallen is a small town located between Fairbanks and Valdez. Special arrangements were made for us to go perform there on our way through.

Glennallen is home to a small branch of members of the Church and is somewhat isolated from other wards and branches in the stake. Several years ago, there was such opposition to the Church that members were denied medical care and missionaries were literally run out of town. Even the one Christian radio station in town was set against the Mormons. The branch president prayed and prayed for help. He didn't know what to do.

A few years ago, BYU Living Legends were planning a tour through Alaska, a miracle took place. The branch president was driving home when he felt the distinct impression to stop at a hamburger joint. He argued with the Lord, saying, "Lord, I don't want a greasy burger." He conceded.

Once inside, he saw a woman. For some reason, something about her bothered him. But a few minutes later she approached him. She said, "I don't know why, but I just felt like I needed to come talk to you." After introducing herself, the man knew why and it was planned for Living Legends to come perform in their tiny town.

Announcing the event became the first priority. They did everything they could to get the community there. Five minutes before the show was to begin, the performance hall was very empty. But by the time the performance started, the hall was full. The Living Legends had an effect on the native Alaskans, touching upon their heritage as the Spirit touched their hearts.


Through that experience, the town began to warm up to the Mormons. So when they heard we were coming through, the stake and branch president's specifically asked us to stop again.

After a small, mid-day performance at the school, we could see that something great had happened yet again.

Kids lined up just to have a high five, and some followed us onto the bus to get our autographs. And then, one girl who was not a member of the Church said, "I am going to go to BYU-Idaho!"

Then the branch president came out and said, "One of the ladies in there has been a friend for many years. We're working on getting the missionaries to meet her--she doesn't know that yet. She just asked me if I could answer some questions about the Church.

As he cried and bore his testimony, the Spirit let me know that what had just happened was nothing short of a miracle. I hadn't done anything particularly extraordinary, but the Lord had used us as His instruments. I was grateful for the opportunity, to have been in the right place at the right time to help further His work.


More beautiful mountains.


This is a frozen-over river outside Glennallen. The current in the summer is so swift that the it has moved the boulder now located in the middle. Not long ago, that boulder was on the banks of the river.


A closer view of the pipeline. The pipe pumps thousands of barrels daily. In order to keep sludge from sticking to the sides, they send "pigs" (large rings the circumference of the pipe that squeak and squeal as they move through the pipe) through. It winds back and forth and is actually set on top of the supports to keep it from snapping in the event of an earthquake. Click here for some more fun facts about the pipeline.


On the way into Valdez (pronounced Val-deez), we drove through a beautiful mountain, home to the annual widow-maker snowmobile (or snow machine, if you're Alaskan) competition. These pipes above the road are to help cars traveling during the winter. The headlights will reflect off the reflectors on the pipes and can help cars see to stay safely on the road.


Our next stop was Valdez, home to the famous Exxon-Valdez oil spill back in the 1990's. Our host family was great. Our "host mom" fed us a delicious meal and refused our help. She told us we were there on vacation and gave us only one rule: "Don't ask. Just do." When one of the guys asked if he could use the bathroom, she (in a mockingly upset tone) said, "Don't ask. Just tell." I learned quickly. She was delighted when I said, "I'm not asking. I'm just telling you that I'm going to do my laundry and will be using your detergent."

Here I am on a "snow machine" in some Church members' backyard. Yes, I know it's too small for me. The big ones were already taken.


This shot was taken in Valdez. Valdez is so beautiful it is often referred to as "Little Switzerland." It has some beautiful peaks and hosts skiers from all around the world. Some skiers even pay to ride a helicopter up to the highest peaks. On our flight home we met some people from Switzerland who ski the Alps. They came to Valdez just to ski.

Valdez is also home to one of the large catastrophes of the 1964 earthquake that hit Alaska. I was surprised to see a sign that said, "Tsunami Emergency Escape Route." That was before I learned that Valdez was hit by a tsunami when the earthquake struck. They re-built two miles in from the original site.


This is a view of the Prince William Sound. I wasn't brave enough to swim in it, though some of my friends did.


Another beautiful view as we were leaving Valdez.

This mountain is near Palmer, Alaska. One of the other highlights was stopping in "Sarah Palin" country and eating real deer tacos and moose tacos.


This picture was taken in front of our host family's beautiful home.

On Sunday night we hosted a youth fireside. And Monday we went to Wasilla High School--where Sara Palin's kids go to school!


Do I look Warrior enough?


After Wasilla we drove through Anchorage to get to Kenai, Soldatna and Homer. The day was clear (apparently it doesn't happen often), so we stopped to get a real look at Mt. McKinley. This is a map at the site to help you know what you're looking at. I posted it here to help you find Mt. McKinley in the picture below.

It was a clear day and we could see Mt. McKinley, but my camera didn't want to show that it was so. If you enlarge the picture, you might see the faint mountain to the left of the twig. That's Mt. McKinley.

A fun fact is that the natives actually refer to McKinley by its original name: Denali. McKinley/Denali was very far away as it appears so small in the above photograph.


Here's a view of the Anchorage skyline from the same site.


This is a beautiful mountain on Turnigan Arm outside Anchorage.


Another view from the same place.


And another view.


This is a picture of an avalanche scene near a visitor's center between Kenai and Anchorage. A small town nearby was actually closed off because there was only one road in, and it got covered by an avalanche.


While at the visitor center, we ran around outside to get our blood pumping again. That's when someone jumped into the snow and got stuck, nearly waist-deep. Something tells me the snow was much deeper than that, though.

After a long drive, we stoped in Kenai and Soldatna (neighboring cities) for a few days. You probably heard about the infamous active volcano that chose to resume its activity shortly before our trip.

This is Mount Redoubt. It really was just across the water from where we were. It was smoking the whole time we were there. Even our host fmaily in Anchorage had ash in their yard. Some of the ash got stuck in the bus engine and messed up the heating system. On our last day in Alaska, the bus decided to perpetually blow hot air, making it very uncomfortable inside.


In Soldotna, we stayed with an awesome family. This view of the famous Kenai River is actually from their backyard. In the summer, anglers from all over the world come to fish the Kenai. The current was still pretty swift, but we walked out on parts of the ice that were still frozen from the winter.

Our first night in Soldotna, our host family wanted to take us skeet shooting. Unfortunately, the range was closed, but we did have a great sunset view of Mt. Redoubt.

After Soldotna it was off to Homer. This is a view from above Homer, overlooking the Homer Spit. A spit can be fored naturally and manually. This spit was created by both. It's a geographical phenomenon. The Spit is rather large, so we went out on it. There are restaurants, gift shops, places to stay, and a nice port.

There's even Cosmic Kitchen--just in case you're in the mood for brakfast, lunch or Mexican.
This is a view of some of the shops on the Spit.

More shops.

While we were in Homer we stopped at an ocean museum. Their building was so inviting we climbed right on it. I guess that's what happens when you're with fun people on a bus for two weeks.
Our last stop was Anchorage.
This is the Anchroage, AK temple. While we were there, we did temple work. It is very small and very beautiful. It was such an incredible experience being there.
This was the home of our last, and largest concert. We performed in the same venue in which they held the cultural celebration for the Anchorage Temple. President Hinckley had been in attendance. The stage manager said, "Your prophet was here a few years ago. He sat right over there." She pointed to the spot. "He was a nice man," she said.

This statue was built to honor Balto, the dog who led a team that got medical supplies to patients in need during a fierce storm that left no other transportation possible. This spot is also the official starting point of the Ididerod (dog sled race) every year.
Across the street from Balto was a mint. This man had been pounding this piece of metal all morning. He explained how pounding it makes it stronger and thins it out. He was making knives.

This is Cassie, who though it would be funny to lick a piece of metal similar to the one the man was pounding. A few hours before we got there, the metal was round like a lollipop. By the time we stopped, the metal was in a thin rectangular shape.



One of our last stops in Anchorage was Earthquake Park, a park built to commemorate the 1964 earthquake. Part of the land where the park was built was actually lowered during the earthquake. Part of the land fell straight into the ocean below.

A view from Earthquake Park.

Another view.

After that we stopped at the Alaska Wild Berry Products factory and learned how they make chocolates. The free samples weren't bad, either. Though Willy Wonka might have the most famous chocolate waterfall, Alaska Wild Berry Products has the largest.

The sign says, "Don't eat the chocolate (from the waterfall)." That's because the chocolate in the fountain isn't completely pure. It has some stuff to make it run more easily and will make you sick.


The pump was broken, so we didn't see it on, but it was cool to see.


These are the chocolate bars actually used to make the fountain flow. They are also used to make the chocolates in the factory. It took 340 blocks to make the fountain. The stack right here weighs 500 pounds.
This shows you how big it really is. Each bar weighs ten pounds.

And then, after a nice Fireside that night with Elder Sybrowsky of the Seventy, we went to sleep and flew home the next morning.


This is my friend, Russell, and me on the tarmac by the plane that flew us from Seattle to Boise.

Alaska definitely is a beautiful place. I would love to go there again. But, above all, it helped me be more appreciative of the blessings and opportunities I have and the beauty that can be found anywhere you go.