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Text by Maurine Proctor and Sylvia Finlayson
Photography by Scot Facer Proctor

click photos to enlarge

The morning of the Accra Ghana temple dedication, January 11, 2004, the Latter-day Saints started arriving early, pulling up in tro tros and spilling out of their doors like water too long held back. 

Tro tros in Ghana are any form of transporation that is neither a taxi, nor a bus, and they come in assorted styles and types.  Their virtue is that they are inexpensive, and even more so when they carry twenty-three people, as one lumbering vehicle did that morning. 

The parking lot on the temple square is small, holding only a few cars, but this is no problem, for a car is a luxury in Ghana and to ensure that awkward travel doesn’t make them late for one moment of this long-awaited day, they have come early.

The cramped quarters of a tro tro have not crushed them.  Many of the women emerge in the verdant colors of African dress, looking fresh, happy, their eyes cast up toward a granite temple.  In the streets they have left behind hawkers, who have already balanced loads of oranges, sugarcane, or cookies on their heads and begun their hopeless walk up and down looking for business.

Behind them is a city that has no sewage treatment plant and lives, for some, of unemployment and illiteracy.  Behind them is a history of brutalization from slave trade and government coups.  But it is what lies before them that matters—for they are about to learn how truly they are sons and daughters of the King.

Happy Day

“Today is the happiest day of my life and I am going to write it down in my journal so that I never forget,” said Margaret Frimpong.  Next to her, her friend Selina Fendjour Duah, who lost her husband 11 years ago knows something about temple sealings and the importance of family.  Not only are all six of her own brothers and sisters Church members, but four of her children have served full-time missions.  “All of my family are here today,” she smiles.

Click here to go to Part 2 of The Day of Africa

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© 2004 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

About the Author:

After receiving her education from University of Utah and Harvard, Maurine Jensen Proctor, the Editor-in-Chief and co-founder of Meridian Magazine, began her writing career with McGraw Hill Magazines and the Chicago Sun-Times. She has created award-winning television documentaries, has written a radio show for more than six years that played on 300 radio stations, and was a long-time writer of The Spoken Word for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.

She, and her husband, Scot, have written several books together, including Witness of the Light, Source of the Light, Light from the Dust and The Gathering. They also edited a new version of Lucy Mack Smith’s biography of her son called The Revised and Enhanced History of Joseph Smith by His Mother and The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt. They were formerly the editors of This People magazine.

Maurine has been a part-time Institute teacher for the past 13 years and is the mother of eleven children and grandmother of three.

Sylvia McMillan Finlayson has a Masters Degree in Political Science/Middle East Studies from the University of Utah. During the 1980s she worked with the Proctors on numerous video and film projects. She is a student of history and has taught world history in private schools in Salt Lake City and Los Angeles. Sylvia has a passion for other countries and cultures and has served on humanitarian expeditions in the Middle East, Africa, China and South America. Sylvia is a glider and power pilot and enjoys high adventure. She served a mission in Christchurch, New Zealand and currently serves as Stake Emergency Preparedness Specialist. Sylvia lives with her family in Los Angeles and is the Associate Editor of Meridian Magazine.

Scot Facer Proctor, Publisher of Meridian Magazine, is the author, co-author, or editor of several books including History of the Prophet Joseph Smith by His Mother. Scot is a photographer by trade, teaches Institute part-time, is married to Maurine Jensen Proctor and the father of eleven children grandfather of three. Scot and Maurine reside in the Washington D.C. Metro area.

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