"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
LDS Travelers Can Now Connect with LDS Guides Around the World
by Dian Thomas
For
more than six years, I traveled with BYU Education Weeks all over the
United States and Canada. One of the nicest benefits of this was
that we were met by our hosts and often had the most wonderful tours
of their city.
If
there happened to be a temple in the city, the tour would include the
temple. There would be stories about the temple, and the host guides
would share a great deal about the growth of the Church in their
area.
When
I went to Calgary, Alberta, more than 30 years ago, my tour guide was
Barbara Benson Walker, who was President Ezra Taft Benson’s
daughter. We learned about her time in Washington, D.C., when her
father was Secretary of Agriculture under President Eisenhower.
Her
husband was the stake president and she shared many insights with us
about the growth of the church in Calgary, Canada.
Dick
Jensen, who got me into the travel business, caught the vision of
providing local LDS guides for LDS travelers. When he asked me what
I thought about starting a business, I told him it sounded just like
what we did during Education Week for so many years.
Dick
created a website that offers guides in more than 20 cities across
the globe, but he plans to add many more guides in additional cities.
In
addition to providing tours of traditional sites and offering
historical and cultural background, guides booked through
www.ldscityguides.com
can give information about the local history of the LDS church,
schedule temple excursions, or even arrange attendance at a meeting
of a local church congregation.
Henry Shi is a guide who gives tours of his home in China
Henry
Shi has been a guide for Dick in China for more than a decade. On a
trip to the United States a year ago, he took the lessons and joined
the Church.
Dick
tells a story of a guide that they had in South America. Dick asked
him to guide him on Sunday to take him to church meetings because the
guide was already a member. The guide said that his tour schedule
was so busy that he did not have time to go very often.
Dick
insisted that the guide take him to church, and when the two of them
went to their church meetings. Everyone recognized the guide and
welcomed him. Then the bishop called the guide aside and did
something quite interesting. He called the guide on a mission. The
former guide is now serving on that mission.
Serving
as an LDS guide can be a great opportunity for church members to
share their love of the gospel with tourists, and being a tourist who
is guided by LDS guides can be a great opportunity for you to share
your love of the Church while learning more about the culture and the
country you are visiting.
Information
about the guides and the cities available can be found at
www.ldscityguides.com
or by calling 801-917-1131.
Dian Thomas was blessed with the good fortune to be born near and raised in
the remote, breathtaking Manti-La Sal National Forest in southeastern Utah,
where her father was the forest ranger. She took the skills she learned in the
outdoors and turned them into a New York Times best-selling book, Roughing It
Easy. Her appearance on the NBC's "Tonight" show with Johnny Carson
boosted her into the national media scene, where she became a regular on
NBC's "Today" show for eight years and then ABC's "Home Show" for six years.
After more than 25 years of media exposure and 19 books, she now shares her
practical insights and wisdom with audiences who want to savor life.
A former Relief Society president, Dian is currently serving as a visiting
teacher. Visit her website at www.DianThomas.com