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Earthquakes can topple homes, buckle roads and claim lives. But even the strongest temblor can't destroy testimonies or rattle the hope to look
forward to better days while serving others.
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The work of providing aid to Chilean members and others
impacted by the quake continues. LDS Church leaders counsel members to eschew fear.
More than 4,400 wool baby caps were knitted by Relief Society members
in German-speaking Switzerland and neighboring German and Austria for newborns in Guatemala.
When Curtis Broadbent was a Mormon missionary in Brazil in
the early 1960s, he met a teenager named Aldo Francesconi.
Even as Mormons in Chile take their maiden steps of recovery following a massive earthquake on Saturday, Feb. 27, many are recalling the horror of one of the strongest temblors in history.
Leaders of the Mormon church in Chile are
actively assisting in relief efforts and determining how the church can
be of most assistance.
As a tsunami bore down on Asia Sunday, Priesthood leaders took action to protect missionaries and members.
While Bo is the second largest community in Sierra Leone, most people live in rural villages that don't
even appear on a map. Here, people have no paved roads, electricity, or
water systems.
Against a backdrop of snow-capped mountains and beautiful ocean vistas,
a number of Mormons are playing their part in helping host the world
during the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics.











