Monday, February 22, 2016

The Story Continues

Last week we posted about the sealing of the Rodriguez Family.  Bill was surprised that Hermano Rodriquez would have remembered him from 50 years ago.  However, when we went to church on Sunday, Bill was impressed to go back to church to La Esperana and it all started to make sense.


Two wards meet in the building we went to, Bellavista and Tahuantinsuyo.  Bill has always been drawn to La Esperanza since he opened this area 50 years ago and was there at least 6 months towards the end of his mission.  


We always arrive at church early so we can see people from both wards and have a chance to talk to the members.  When we arrived Sunday morning, we ran into the Bishop of the Bellavista Ward and two Elders.
Elder Wynn form Orem, UT, Bishop Quezada of the Bellavista Ward
and Elder Bailey from Payson, UT.
When Bill told Bishop Quezada he had served in La Esperanza in the late 60's he told him his wife grew up in La Esperanza and he went to get her out of the nursery. 
Maria Elena & Eloy Quezada with their daughter Maria Valentina.
Maria Elena asked Bill if he knew her mother and father, Irma and Guillermo Rodriguez who were baptized by an Elder William Hartman in 1968. She was just a little girl. Bill said he remembered Irma and Guillermo and that they had two little girls, 5 or 6 years old, that were twins. She promptly went back into the classroom and returned with her twin sister, Maria Dolores. Bill told them he remembered their home across the street from the Plaza de Armas, and she said, "Yes, on the corner." They both became very emotional as they continued to talk.  Dolores never married and lives with Elena & Eloy in that same family home.  She helps take care of their daughter when they are working.

We also found out that Elena & Dolores both served a mission to Arequipa; same mission, same time.  Their mission president was our Temple President, Romulo J. Casos.
The Twins

Bill told them he remembered they had an older brother in his 20's who didn't want to talk to them and always left the house when they came to teach their family. Maria Elena said, "Yes, you know him. He and his wife were the couple that got sealed in the temple on Tuesday." We had officiated their endowment session and Bill was asked to be a witness at their sealing.

Bill told them that their mother Irma had told the missionaries that she had been a nurse in a hospital when a woman died after delivering twin baby girls.  The father was poor and couldn't take care of them and left them at the hospital.  Irma took them home to her husband and son and her husband said, "We can't keep them, we can't even feed the three of us."  She said, "We will manage."

This was truly a tender mercy from our Heavenly Father to make the impossible a possibility. It was not just a coincidence that we ran into their daughter and son-in-law at the Mercado last Monday that set this all in motion.
Another picture of he Rodriguez's with their daughter and son-in-law from Provo.
They are outside the distribution center before their sealing.  Thanks to my friend, Jan, for taking
the picture.  We were at the temple.
With the Quezada's.
Paulina Merreros, a Voluntaria at the temple in the Tahuantinsuto Ward.
Jan teaching me to knit slippers.
We take the bus from time to time.  Sen:27 and Par:16 means there is room
for 27 to sit and 16 to stand.  We have seen many buses that exceed that
capacity.  If the bus is full we always wait for the next one.  They come every
few minutes.


Last week after one of our shifts we went out to eat at the El Sobrero 
Restaurant.
They have good sea bass and a floor show.



Today we met some of the senior missionaries at Chong Wha for chinese food.  Afterwards we went with the Hawes to Makro, Peru's answer to Sam's Club.


With the Hawses in front of the restaurant.  We were the first to arrive.
This dish was kind of like sweet and sour chicken but made with peaches,
pineapple and mango. It was very good. Jim Fackrell ordered several different
dishes for all of us to share.
The young sister on the left is the Fackrell's daughter Kara. She just returned
from her mission is Latvia.  She came to spend some time with her parents
on their mission.




Anyone want cuy (guinea pig) for dinner tonight. 
We found generic peanut M&M's.  They taste pretty good when you
haven't had the real thing for months.


Here are some of the American Products we find from time to time in Trujillo.  They may only have them every 3 to 4 months or you may only find a few of each on the shelves.
It is like a treasure hunt to seek and find familiar items.  We usually buy more than one to put in our cupboards.  We were so excited to find the tomato soup and have enjoyed several meals with it and grilled cheese 
sandwiches. Meals that weren't that exciting back home have become delicacies down here.


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