Cyclone disrupts Suva
Fiji Temple youth cultural celebration
Amid severe weather conditions caused by Tropical Cyclone
Winston, Church leaders halted the youth temple cultural celebration in Suva,
Fiji, on Feb. 20.
Originally scheduled to be held in the open-air ANZ Stadium in
Suva, the event was moved across the street to the enclosed Vodafone Arena —
which event organizers had also reserved months in advance.
However, as weather conditions intensified and the government
asked everyone to vacate roads by 5 p.m., organizers skipped several numbers
and had the 1,300 youth perform their finale.
Earlier in the day President Henry B. Eyring, first counselor in
the First Presidency, told a group of missionaries serving in Fiji that he
studied the weather before getting off the plane in the Pacific island nation.
He asked the question: “Should we change plans?” The answer, he felt, was “No.”
Although he did not know what was going to happen with the
cyclone, President Eyring said he felt at peace with plans to hold the cultural
celebration and rededication. “I got the feeling, ‘Go forward. Don’t be
afraid,’” President Eyring said, noting that the “Lord is in charge.”
During the cultural celebration, President Eyring addressed the
youth, praising their preparation and sharing the love President Thomas S.
Monson has for them.
“I join with you in celebrating the great contributions of so
many who have built up the kingdom of God in these isles,” he said. “The Lord
has blessed you with an increase of your talents and in your feelings of
gratitude for all the Lord has done here and in all the places from which the
people will come to enjoy this house of the Lord in Suva.”
He asked the youth to treasure their cultural celebration
experience. “I know you will never forget it.”
Also addressing the youth was the Fiji Minister of Sport and
Youth, Laisenia Tuitubou. He praised the youth for “their love of their God as
well as their faith.”
Speaking of the cyclone, he said, “Through our faith we are all
here.”
Ernest Vitinavulagi, director of the cultural event, said it was
a “celebration of faith” intended to showcase the islands of the Fiji temple
district — Fiji, Kiribati, Vanuatu, and New Caledonia — to the Pacific and the
world.
The cultural event brought youth by bus and boat to the
celebration. After the event, organizers reported that all the youth made it
safely to the Church schools, where the majority would spend the night during
the storm.
When the event was cut short, Selai Vuetibau, 18, did not get to
perform the number she had prepared for the celebration. But she will always remember
gathering with the youth of the temple district for the opening number and
again for the finale.
She said the youth had been working on the finale for two weeks.
“We thought it wouldn’t be perfect, but it was,” she said.
Accompanying President Eyring to the cultural event were Elder
Quentin L. Cook of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and his wife, Sister Mary
Cook; Elder Kent F. Richards, a General Authority Seventy and executive
director of the Temple Department, and his wife, Sister Marsha Richards; and
members of the Church's Pacific Area Presidency — Elder Kevin W. Pearson, Elder
O. Vincent Haleck, and Elder S. Gifford Nielsen all General Authority Seventies
and their wives, Sister June Pearson, Sister Peggy Haleck and Sister Wendy
Nielsen.
Cyclone disrupts Suva
Fiji Temple youth cultural celebration
Amid severe weather conditions caused by Tropical Cyclone
Winston, Church leaders halted the youth temple cultural celebration in Suva,
Fiji, on Feb. 20.
Originally scheduled to be held in the open-air ANZ Stadium in
Suva, the event was moved across the street to the enclosed Vodafone Arena —
which event organizers had also reserved months in advance.
However, as weather conditions intensified and the government
asked everyone to vacate roads by 5 p.m., organizers skipped several numbers
and had the 1,300 youth perform their finale.
Earlier in the day President Henry B. Eyring, first counselor in
the First Presidency, told a group of missionaries serving in Fiji that he
studied the weather before getting off the plane in the Pacific island nation.
He asked the question: “Should we change plans?” The answer, he felt, was “No.”
Although he did not know what was going to happen with the
cyclone, President Eyring said he felt at peace with plans to hold the cultural
celebration and rededication. “I got the feeling, ‘Go forward. Don’t be
afraid,’” President Eyring said, noting that the “Lord is in charge.”
During the cultural celebration, President Eyring addressed the
youth, praising their preparation and sharing the love President Thomas S.
Monson has for them.
“I join with you in celebrating the great contributions of so
many who have built up the kingdom of God in these isles,” he said. “The Lord
has blessed you with an increase of your talents and in your feelings of
gratitude for all the Lord has done here and in all the places from which the
people will come to enjoy this house of the Lord in Suva.”
He asked the youth to treasure their cultural celebration
experience. “I know you will never forget it.”
Also addressing the youth was the Fiji Minister of Sport and
Youth, Laisenia Tuitubou. He praised the youth for “their love of their God as
well as their faith.”
Speaking of the cyclone, he said, “Through our faith we are all
here.”
Ernest Vitinavulagi, director of the cultural event, said it was
a “celebration of faith” intended to showcase the islands of the Fiji temple
district — Fiji, Kiribati, Vanuatu, and New Caledonia — to the Pacific and the
world.
The cultural event brought youth by bus and boat to the
celebration. After the event, organizers reported that all the youth made it
safely to the Church schools, where the majority would spend the night during
the storm.
When the event was cut short, Selai Vuetibau, 18, did not get to
perform the number she had prepared for the celebration. But she will always remember
gathering with the youth of the temple district for the opening number and
again for the finale.
She said the youth had been working on the finale for two weeks.
“We thought it wouldn’t be perfect, but it was,” she said.
Accompanying President Eyring to the cultural event were Elder
Quentin L. Cook of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and his wife, Sister Mary
Cook; Elder Kent F. Richards, a General Authority Seventy and executive
director of the Temple Department, and his wife, Sister Marsha Richards; and
members of the Church's Pacific Area Presidency — Elder Kevin W. Pearson, Elder
O. Vincent Haleck, and Elder S. Gifford Nielsen all General Authority Seventies
and their wives, Sister June Pearson, Sister Peggy Haleck and Sister Wendy
Nielsen.
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