History of the Church in the Cook Islands, Pacific Islands Area, - TopicsExpress



          

History of the Church in the Cook Islands, Pacific Islands Area, New Zealand Auckland Mission Source: Deseret News Church Almanac Facts and Statistics: 1844 total church membership, 1 district, 5 congregations, 3 family history centers, Located in the South Pacific, about 400 miles southwest of French Polynesia, the Cook Islands are made up of 15 islands. It is self governing and 75 percent of the people are Protestants. The islands maintain close ties with New Zealand. The first missionaries arrived in 1899, but failed to gain converts. Elder Osborne J.P. Widtsoe and a companion, Elder Mervin Davis, arrived in Rarotonga 23 May 1899, becoming the first Church missionaries in the Cook Islands. During World War II, Matthew Cowley, then president of the New Zealand Mission, assigned Fritz Kruger, a New Zealand baker who owned a business at Avarua, Rarotonga, to help establish the Church on the Cook Islands. He and his family subsequently moved to Rarotonga, and their first convert was Samuel Glassie and his family, baptized 12 May 1942. In 1946, a couple, Elder Trevor and Sister Mildred Hamon, and later Elders Donlon DeLaMar and John L. Sorenson were sent to Avarua. By 1949, 160 Cook Islanders had joined the Church. During the next decades, the Cook Islands were transferred to several missions in an attempt to maintain better communication with the remote location. The islands were part of the Samoan Mission (1954), New Zealand North Mission (1966), Fiji Mission (1971), and the Tahiti Papeete Mission (1975). The Islands are now part of the New Zealand Auckland Mission. President David O. McKay visited in 1955. A Rarotonga Mission was created 20 November 1960, but was discontinued in 1966, and Rarotonga became part of the New Zealand Mission. In the early 1960s, the Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ was translated into Cook Island Maori. In 1979, there were 718 members in 10 branches (small congregations) in the Cook Islands. President Spencer W. Kimball visited Rarotonga in February 1981 during a trip to the South Pacific and held a short service with members there in an airport hangar. In 1990, the government issued a series of stamps featuring the first missionaries to the Cook Islands of various denominations. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints stamp featured a painting of Elder Widtsoe in the foreground and a drawing of a Church building in the background. On September 4-7, 1996, Church members celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Church in the Cook Islands. During the four-day celebration, members participated in dances, exhibits, sporting events, district conference, and a special fireside. A celebration in Hawaii attended by Pres. Gordon B. Hinckley Oct. 7, 1997 honored pioneers of the Pacific, including those from the Cook Islands. In 2001, the Church distributed more than 3,000 dental care kits to school children of Rarotonga. The effort to improve the childrens dental hygiene was begun by Elder Richard Anderson, a dentist serving a church service mission in Rarotonga.
Posted on: Tue, 07 Oct 2014 18:21:19 +0000

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