October 8, 2004
Mormon missionaries target Iqaluit
"In Iqaluit there's
a warmth in the midst of the cold"
SARA MINOGUE
Elder Gamble of Preston, Idaho, and Elder Marsh of South Jordan, Utah, manned
a booth full of religious literature and videos at Mass Registration held Sept.
11 at the Arctic Winter Games arena in Iqaluit. They are the first missionaries
from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to visit Nunavut. (PHOTO
BY GREG YOUNGER-LEWIS)
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Several months ago, Iqaluit resident Brian Higgins made a trip to Ottawa, where
he joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Now that he's back
home, two young missionaries have followed him, hoping to bring the Book of
Mormon to the Eastern Arctic.
It was June when Higgins was browsing for a book on Mormonism at Chapters book
store in Ottawa. By coincidence, a clerk at the store was a member of the church.
The clerk invited Higgins to attend a church service, and on Sunday, picked
him up at his hotel.
A week and a half later, Higgins became the first Nunavut convert, thereby
alerting church officials to a new part of Canada thirsty for religion.
"He had studied it on his own for a number of years, so it wasn't a new
thing for him" says Elder Gamble, 21, of Preston, Idaho, who is one of
the two young men from the American church now roaming Iqaluit, neatly dressed
in suit and tie.
"There's a branch of the church in Whitehorse," Gamble says, "but
when he came up here we realized there was nothing for him to come back to,
no network of the church."
David Ulrich, who is taking time off from the University of Michigan to serve
as president of the Quebec mission, says it was the experience of meeting Higgins
that "opened my eyes to what we might do."
Two months ago, he made the decision to send the missionaries to Nunavut.
"As I thought about that, and frankly, as I prayed about that, I felt
like it might be a good time to have our missionaries go up there and complement
the great missionary work that's been done by other churches," Ulrich said
from his headquarters in Montreal.
Mormon missionaries typically spend two years, and their own money, spreading
the word before returning home to their work or education. Young male missionaries,
who make up about 75 per cent of the missionary force, take the name "Elder,"
the honorific that signals their ordination to the post of missionary.
"The overall goal is to bring people to Christ, through baptism,"
Gamble says. "Up here, more so we're just kind of introducing the church
to the North, just to show that it's more than the TV commercials."
Neither of the young men expected to find themselves in the Arctic when they
were assigned to the Quebec region, but both have been pleased since their arrival
on Sept. 3.
Over coffee at the Navigator Inn last Thursday or hot chocolate for the missionaries,
whose church eschews coffee, tea, tobacco and alcohol two people said hello
to the missionaries as they walked in, one of whom they were already scheduled
to visit at home that evening.
"I would say the response here is more open than the towns I've been to
in Quebec," says Gamble, who previously spent time in Quebec City, Chicoutimi,
Valleyfield, and downtown Ottawa.
Gamble, along with Elder Marsh, 19, of South Jordan, Utah and the taller of
the two, made one of his first appearances at Mass Registration at the Arctic
Winter Games complex on September 11, manning a booth stocked with pamphlets
and videos, and making balloon animals for young visitors.
They also volunteered to serve hot dogs at an Anglican barbecue, and have appeared
on local radio.
Last Friday, they visited the young offenders at Isumaqsunngittukkuvik, to
talk to the inmates "about choices," Gamble says.
Ulrich hears reports from the missionaries two or three times a week and is
also pleased with the response.
"Religion is not always an easy thing for people to accept, and yet it
seems like in Iqaluit there's a warmth in the midst of the cold, there's a warm
spot for religion."
Last Sunday, 11 people met for a small church service, including two newcomers
to Iqaluit who were church members before moving here from elsewhere in Canada.
"That's not a lot, but that's pretty good," Ulrich says.
He himself is hoping to visit Iqaluit next spring, and is considering keeping
missionaries here all winter. He is not ruling out future missions across Nunavut
that would treat Iqaluit as a base.
In recent months, Nunavut has been a magnet for religious groups.
The Arctic Bible Conference held in Iqaluit in April attracted crowds of up
to 800 people, and filled every hotel room in town.
In August, over 200 people in the Kivalliq region met in Arviat for a conference
hosted by the Promise Keepers, an evangelical group dedicated to helping men
put family first.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is a Christian church that
emphasizes the importance of family.
Members study the Book of Mormon as well as the bible. Church founder Joseph
Smith is credited with discovering the book inscribed in gold tablets in New
York State in 1823.
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