“Oh the
Rains of Holland”, Part 4
Photo Essay: Temple Dedication in The Hague
Text: Maurine Jensen Proctor
Photos: Scot Facer Proctor
The
Prophet Arrives

At last the
prophet arrives. The first one up the walkway is Sister Marjorie
Hinckley, accompanied by their youngest daughter, Jane Dudley,
who has been caring for her on this trip.

Then comes
President Hinckley, warm and lively as if he had not already made
two European stops the day before.
President Hinckley
offers his hand to many. Parents hope their children will see
him and remember this day.

President Hinckley
passes by fairly quickly, heading into the temple for the 9:00
session.

Following behind
him are those who will be the first dedicatory session of the
temple. The long-awaited moment has arrived.
Coverstone Ceremony

Part way through
the first dedicatory session, President Hinckley and members of
the Area Presidency came out under a white canopy to put mortar
on the coverstone, and with him came the rains. “Oh the
rains of Holland,” he laughed, and no one would be driven
away.

The choir who
had been practicing all morning broke into “Now Let Us Rejoice”
while the rains came.

Somebody ran
to get umbrellas left over from the open house.

The choir was
drenched but smiling. The news media stuck it out, and so did
the people who were merely walking by.

Children lined
up to put mortar on the stone and it rained. They waved the trowel
and it rained. The crowd didn’t thin, and I asked the handsome
young man next to me to tell me about himself, wondering why he
stayed in the rain.

His name was
Faizel Zahman, and he is one of the assistants to a justice of
the Dutch Supreme Court, training to one day become a judge himself.
He said, “We knew that someday there would be a temple here
because President Kimball prophesied it, but I never thought it
would be in my home town.
“I grew
up as Muslim, but my parents always sent me to Catholic schools
so I would understand people of other faiths in my country. As
one of my projects in school, I had to write a paper on a non-mainstream
religion and so I opened a newspaper and chose the religion with
the longest name, “The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints.”
For my project I got help from the missionaries and read the Book
of Mormon and A Marvelous Work and a Wonder. Then I wrote my paper
and that was it.
“Then
about nine months later,” he said, the missionaries invited
me to a baptism. I felt the Spirit so strongly at the baptism
that two days later I was baptized. I had been studying to become
a Muslim cleric, but once you get that feeling in your heart…
It’s been the best thing that ever happened to me.”

“When
all that was promised, the Saints will be given,” the choir
sings and the rain falls, and there is a happiness in the air
that surpasses understanding.

Watch for another
photo essay on The Hague Temple Dedication on Wednesday.
Click here to go back to
Part 1 of “Oh The Rains of Holland”

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