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Sunday, October 23, 2016

Tagaloa: Do Hard Things



One of the most inspiring people we met in Samoa was Taafaga Tagaloa. The whole world needs to know someone like Tagaloa. So often we allow a weakness, or challenge to limit us. We use it as an excuse as to why we can't do or become something. Every once in a while we are reminded by someone that we are not defined by our circumstances. One of those people is Tagaloa.

As a child he contracted Polio, which left him with a club foot. He learned to walk with it, but after seeking the help of a traditional healer his condition worsened and he was unable to run and play. In 1971, when he was about 15, a team of US doctors traveled from Shriner's hospital in Hawaii. They visited district hospitals seeking children to help. One of the nurses at his district hospital was a cousin of his and informed the doctors about his situation. The next day they found him in his village and immediately made arrangements for him to travel to Hawaii for corrective surgeries. He traveled by himself and stayed in Hawaii for nearly two years, until 1973.


While there, he had at least three surgeries, maybe more, he can't remember. His surgeries included first removing a rib and inserting it into his foot so that it would not hang freely and flop around. Next removing part of the growth plate from his good leg to make it match with the leg that had stopped growing. They cut into his lower leg bone 2 inches to insert metal rods that protruded to the outside so that they could be turned every day to lengthen his bone. He said the pain was so bad he soon started asking for an injection of pain killer before the turnings.


At the hospital they fitted him with a brace that went from his hip to his toes. He found it cumbersome and not comfortable. It rubbed and made sores and he felt it wasn't properly made for him. He got rid of it and used a long stick to prop himself up.


So often, when we have a big challenge, it is accompanied with a blessing. This was the case with Tagaloa. The Shriners had a school for all the children that had been gathered from the Pacific islands. They would circle their beds and be taught in English. There were very few children he could converse with in his native Samoan language, so he learned English well. When he returned to Samoa he picked back up in school at year eight and tested for entrance into High school. He scored all A's and was the only pupil from his district (a large area) to be accepted into the prestigious Samoa College on the island of Upolu. He credits his education at the hospital for this accomplishment.


After graduating from Samoa College (High School) he went on to graduate from STC, Secondary Teaching College, a three year program funded by USP and the University of Hawaii. After this he returned to the island of Savai'i to teach at a Methodist school. He was earning $70 tala a week which is about the equivalent of $25 U.S. Here he was expected to care for many of his students. To feed them he would fish at night, then be ready to teach in the morning.


After a few years he was contacted by the Methodist church and asked to be a teacher at the Uesilian, a newly formed College. He taught upper level math and science for three years. This is where he met Vale. She would come and play volleyball in the evenings. Tagaloa played too using only one hand. He loved and still loves playing sports. They were married in 1986.


Tagaloa wanted to find a better job, so he found someone to give him a ride to the LDS school at Vaiola. There was not a great road and the travel was inconvenient. The school needed a biology teacher and he was hired. While teaching at Vaiola he and Vale embraced the gospel of Jesus Christ and were baptized members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. They raised nine children and taught at Vaiola on the island of Savii for many years.



I visited the campus and was inspired by the following story.


When Tagaloa became the headmaster of the graduating class, he wanted to do something to improve the sign at Vaiola. Every village has a sign of some sort. The current sign was made of wood and in need of repair. Tagaloa wanted to make something durable that would last. So he made a plan to build one of cement blocks up on the mountain. Together with another teacher, who was a carpenter, measurements taken and forms made.


The sign was to be high on the mountain which, like all surfaces in Samoa was over grown with vegetation. There was not a trail at that time and it was very steep. To condition his body to be able to carry blocks up the mountain, Tagaloa carried his young daughter on his back and he crawled up on his belly. The first time he made it only half way up. Every day he would go back and work on clearing a path to the top. He was told the project was too big and could never be finished in a year. BUT...they did not know the Steel that Tagaloa is made of. He took this as a challenge and went to work.


Fund raising had to be done to pay for the cement and sand. Every morning he would blow a whistle at 5 am for the year 13 students to gather to work on the bricks, which measured 60 X 60 X 10. First they carried blocks to the top to make a solid foundation. Water was collected at the top in rain barrels and bags of cement carried up to cement the blocks in place. When the day came to place the blocks to spell out Vaiola, the whole school was gathered in lines up the mountain and blocks passed up hand to hand. There are over one hundred of them.





I am reminded of 2 Nephi 2:2  Nevertheless, Jacob, my firstborn in the wilderness, thou knowest the greatness of God; and he shall consecrate thine afflictions for thy gain.
AND
Doctrine and Covenants 78:19
And he who receiveth all things with thankfulness shall be made glorious; and the things of this earth shall be added unto him, even an hundred fold, yea, more.”7


Sunday, October 9, 2016

Snorkeling in Samoa

My sister-in-law Bridgette Dotson is a fabulous tour guide.  She packed so much fun into a short time.  I want to share some of what we did.  This will take a few posts.  My favorite was snorkeling!  Seriously, I could spend days doing nothing else.  Everywhere we snorkeled it was different.  Different corral, different fish.  Pictures don't do it any justice.  It was amazing! 
Garrett

Me

Reuben

A few places we snorkeled with giant clams.  These clams can live over 100 years and no two have the same color pattern.  They are beautiful! Their colors are a collaboration of their pigment cells and algae and are every color of the rainbow.

Tobler and Dan

Dan and Henry

One of the resorts we stayed at.  The stilts of the little hut we slept in were in the ocean!  It was so fun to wake up to the sound of the surf right under me.  While snorkeling here I wasn't paying attention to the tide going out.  I kept thinking the coral was getting awfully close to me.  Too late I realized the tide was going out and I was beached on very sharp coral.  There is no way in when this happens.  I managed to inch my way out to deeper water and find another way in. We were all a little cut up, but it is so worth it!  
The sand in Samoa is made from Coral.  The entire island is basalt and coral! 

Swimming with our Samoa family at sunset.  


Richard and Tagaloa!


Our boys tried to climb a coconut tree, but didn't get very far.  We were impressed that this native 
Samoa was able climb to the top!



 Dan had to seize the moment and get some Garrett pictures!



Thursday, October 6, 2016

Why we went to Samoa

Richard and Maralyn, my mother-in-law and father-in-law served an LDS mission 15 years ago in Samoa.  It was really hard for Maralyn.  The climate and lack of familiar foods was almost more that she could handle.  There was a woman that took her under her wing and made it possible for her to stay in Samoa.  Her name was Valey Tagaloa.   The Tagaloa's lived on the Viola campus and Brother Tagaloa taught biology.  Valie visited often and cooked for Maralyn.  Richard and Maralyn finished their mission and made life long friends.

While Richard and Maralyn were on their mission, my brother and sister-in-law adopted a little Samoan boy.  They took him back to Samoa to be baptized a few years ago, and now they are living there for a few years. Richard has gone back several times.  Once he went back to do a water project. He went back for the temple dedication.  This time we went with him.  We went to visit Pat and Bridgette, and to experience Samoa.  We took our three boys, my nephew Roman Dotson and sister-in-law Jen.

When Richard goes back, he tries to do something for the family that adopted them.  Most of the extended family lives on the Island of Savii.  It is considered a developing country as of last year.  During this trip we planned to purchase steel to replace a thatched roof on Luafitu's fale, and to paint a fale that had been submerged by the ocean during the last major tropical storm.

We didn't have much time to complete this project.  We tried to fit alot into just a few days. It gets dark about 7:00 pm all year round on Samoa.  We started painting at about 6:30 and painted by head lamp and portable lights. We had so much fun!  A crowd gathered to watch all the excitement.  Lots of Samoan music to keep up the enthusiasm!








Coconut was my favorite thing in Samoa.  Coconuts provide so much for the island.  Coconut meat, milk, water, fire wood, and paint cups!



I didn't take a before, but here is the after!  It turned out great!


And for the rest of the trip we all had evidence of our artistic efforts.



  



Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Samoan Sacrifice


While in Satupitaea, the family we were visiting wanted to prepare a traditional Samoan feast for us.  Richard, my father-in-law, wanted us to be able to see the process of preparing the feast, so we got up early Sunday morning to go watch.  When we got there, they were in the process of trying to coax in a pig, but having us there seemed to complicate the process.  The pigs, who had been fed the night before didn't seem eager to come in.  We could see large pigs out in the trees, but they were keeping their distance.

While we were watching this process there was a cute little pure white pig that was running around the yard, much like my dog does at home-secure in it's place in the family.  He was not at all shy.  Preparations for the meal were beginning.  Taro root was cleaned, young taro leaves were rolled in the most impressive way to hold coconut milk for polosomey (my very favorite Samoan food).

Finally, it was growing time to get ready for church. Luafitu walked through the yard with his gun and a single 22 shell wrapped in paper.  He loaded the gun and suddenly I could see what was about to happen.  He called the little white pig and with a little hesitation, he shot him.  Then he gently picked up the pig, and held him while he died.  I didn't know how to feel about what was going on.  I could tell something significant was happening.  Something was wrenched out of my heart!  Time stood still and the moment became etched in my mind forever.  The pig was carefully prepared and placed with the polosomey and taro root on the hot lava rock.  Everything was covered with layers and layers of taro leaves.

I later learned from his daughter, that he had raised this pig from a baby and it was special to him.  I have pondered the significance of this event.  Bridgette, my sister in law spoke with Lupe, Luafitu's sister in law.  She asked if  Luafitu was sad about having to kill his pig.  Lupe said he was a little sad, but it was ok because it was a good sacrifice for all that we have done for them.

I cannot think of this little white pig, without thinking about another sacrifice.  That of a perfect Savior for our sins and a Heavenly Father who loved us enough to make that sacrifice.  With all that he has done for us, what I am willing to give back?  What sacrifices can I make in my life that would be meaningful?  My time, my resources, my obedience, my heart?  This moment taught me that to be a true sacrifice, it needs to be a bit hard.  Things that are easy to give, hold little value.  The hard is made easier by the love and gratitude we feel for all our Savior has done.

As I watched the indecision in Luafitu fade away into decision and the sacrifice performed,  I felt I was watching a lifetime in fast forward.  All of us need to allow the indecision and desire to serve work in us until the moment of decision comes to bring us to be disciples of Christ.

Thank you Luafitu for teaching me more about love and sacrifice.









Monday, October 3, 2016

Samoan Sa



There is a tradition in Samoa called Sa'a (meaning sacred). Everyday just before sunset someone in each village rings a bell for everyone to go inside for family prayer. For thirty minutes everyone must stop what they are doing and pray, read scriptures, and sing hymns. Anyone walking along the road is to go to the side and wait.
My first experience with Sa'a was on the island of Savii in the small village of Satupaitea on the island of Savaii. We were scattered, all doing different activities such as learning how to remove the hull off a coconut to gazing at the ocean, only feet away. Some where preparing the evening meal.

When the Sa'a bell rang we all went inside and sat on the floor in a large circle of about 25 people. A prayer was said in English for our benefit, and then we started to sing. We sang primary songs and hymns. Songs were sung both in English and in Samoan. It was beautiful. As we sang,  I looked into the eyes of women my age and the Spirit of The Lord bore witness to me that they were my sisters. It was as if we were no longer part of time, but just eternity. I saw into heaven. I saw into their souls. We were the same.
The next memorable sa'a I enjoyed was while we were with my brother-in-law's family walking along the beach. We were trying to get back home before Sa'a, but it caught us as we were about to get into our cars. So all 14 of us stood by the roadside under coconut trees with the sun setting on the ocean, and sang. We sang hymns and primary songs that taught the plan of salvation. I was filled with gratitude for the knowledge that I have and an overwhelming desire to share it.

This is a tradition I want to bring home to my family. To have a time set in stone for us to turn our hearts to God. Even if we are not together in body, we would be in spirit. Here we fight with the world for any time together as a family. That moment is often found at 10:30 at night to read our scriptures. It isn't the peaceful sunset moment we found in Samoa, but we are working on that.

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Visiting Fagali'i Cemetery

Pioneer Cemetery in Samoa




On Sunday evening, close to sunset we headed up to the tiny, gated Fagali'i Cemetery.  This is one of the things we wanted to do while in Samoa.  We have come here to remember the sacrifice of some remarkable people.

The gate keeps out the pigs, but not the chickens. On one of the cement grave markers lies an egg, which makes me smile. The cemetery is well trimmed and cared for. We gather around graves of young wives, husbands and babies.

The oldest is the grave of Sister Katie Eliza Hale Merrill. She and her husband had only been on a mission for three months when she took sick and gave birth to a premature child. The child died the next day, and after saying that she ‘could not stay because they had come for her', she talked with her husband, kissed him goodbye, and all was over. The mother and baby boy were buried in one coffin.” After his mission, Brother Merrill took the remains of his wife and infant son back to Utah for burial

Richard pulls out a letter to Sister Sarah M Hilton, written by the George Albert Smith(a former Prophet of the LDS church). The air is quite and still, like only truly humid air can be. I'm afraid to break it. I inadequately read,
 "Dear Sister Hilton:
       "Just as the descending rays of the late afternoon sun touched the tops of the tall coconut trees, Wednesday, May 18th 1921, a party of five stood with bowed heads in front of the little Fagali'i Cemetery in the midst of the old "German" plantation, a few miles out from Apia.  Mr O.F. Nelson, who remembers you and your busband with esteem, had driven us to the place in his spacious automobile.  The others in the party were Pres. Hugh J Cannon, Pres J.Q. Adams, Sister Thurza Adams, and I.  We were there, as youi will remember in response to a promise I made you before I left home.

The graves and headstones are in a good state of preservation.  That you may feel assured that the lettering is unimpaired, I reproduce here with a copy I made as I stood two feet or more outside the stone wall surrounding the spot.:

Janette Hilton                                     George Emmett Hilton                   Thomas Harold Hinton
SLC Utah                                            Born Oct 12, 1894                         Born Sept. 21, 1892
Born Sept 10, 1891                             Died Oct 19, 1894                         Died March 17 1894
Died June 4, 1892                               "Peaceful Be Thy Slumbers"         "Rest on the Hillside Rest"
"Rest Darling Jennie"

As I looked at those three little graves, I tried to imagine the scenes through which you passed during your young motherhood here in old Samoa.  As I did so , the little headstones became monuments not only to the little babes sleeping beneath them, but also to a mother's faith and devotion to the eternal principles of truth and life!  Your three little ones, Sister Hilton, in silence most eloquent and effective, have continuted to carry on your noble missionary work, becun nearly thirty years ago, and they will so continue as long as their are gentle hands to care for their earthly resting place."

"By loving hands their dying eyes were closed,
By loving hands their little limbs composed,
By foreign hands their humble graves adorned,
By strangers honored, and by strangers mourned."

I wonder, how can anyone be asked to give so much? Then I wonder, how many lives have been touched by these babies over the last 130 years? Member's of the church still come to care for these graves, even 100 years after this letter was written. How can the impact of their sacrifice be measured? 

We spent another 30 minutes studying each of the grave markers. Two girls, next to each other, about 20 years old when they died, had the same names as my two nieces that were there with us. Lily and Amelia. I don't even now know what to think about that.  The chances of that are impossible. 

 As it was getting dark we opened the gate to leave. A mamma pig and her little babies were crossing the road. The role of mother Eve crosses my mind. She gave up Eden for her children. The sacrifices of mothers fills my heart. What will it take to stand next to these amazing women?



Saturday, October 1, 2016

Samoan Experience


This summer I had the opportunity to go with my husband and boys to Samoa.  When people ask me how my trip was I don't know what to say.  I LOVED snorkling!  It was beautiful and relaxing.  But that is not the substance of our trip.  I was so touched by the people and had so many spiritual experiences that I have to share them.  I learned so much!  It will take me some time, but I will try to post them this week.
One of the fun things about Samoa is when they have a crescent moon, it looks like a smile!