After the dedication our caravan moved down the mountain and through the streets of Bangui. The red dirt makes this area quite distinctive, but other things are much like the rest of our mission. Many little shops, people trying to make a living, children going to school and everywhere people walking and walking are found in every city in our mission.

In a few minutes we had traveled the distance from the dedication site to the building that is rented by the church.
The members had worked hard to make the building look it's best for the visit of an Apostle. They had a new sign on the front fence. The one that they had earlier had been stolen. It's hard to imagine why anybody would do that, but now they had one prominently displayed on the outside gate. They had painted the exterior and interior and had put in fans. The whole building just looked fabulous and they were so proud to show it off to the visitors. There were 128 in attendance, in a very small chapel.
As we come into the yard, we saw that the meeting room was not large enough for all who had come. The members had spilled out of the chapel and filled the porch in front of the building.
They were tightly packed in the front rows, siting quietly in their little plastic chairs. They had been waiting for some time for the arrival of the Apostle. Their primary leader had given each one of them a white tissue to wave to welcome the visitors. Just before we were to start the meeting Elder Holland said that he would like to have a picture with these little children.
Elder Holland first addressed the children directly. He told the story of a little girl who had worn her favorite dress out to play. It had been soiled and torn and she was brokenhearted when she returned to her mother. But her mother repaired and washed the dress and the little girl was happy again. He then related this to the atonement and how, through Christ's atonement, we can be clean and right again even when we make mistakes. It was a great lesson for the children.
Then he addressed the adults saying how many places an Apostle could and needed to be and how happy he was to be able to be in this building today with the members of this branch. He talked about the blessings that would now come to their country. It was a message of love and hope for the members of the Bangui Branch.

After the member meeting we went back to the hotel and rested for a couple of hours and prepared for a reception and dinner for government, religious, and educational officials. When we entered our room I was touched with what I saw. On the dresser there was a note from the Bangui Branch. They wanted to welcome us in a special way and had written a welcome note and left it with several bottles of water and some small packages of cookies. It was their way of saying how grateful they were for the visit.
That evening we went to the dinner and reception. I'm sad to say that after the remarkable day we'd had, it was quite a bit less remarkable. But how could it compare to the things that we had witnessed that day. There was a small turn out but Elder Holland spoke to them in very clear terms about the mission and objectives of the church.

We had spent a wonderful 24 hours with the devoted leaders and wonderful saints of Central African Republic. We loved our time with them and look forward to coming back. There is a great love that forms between the pioneers of the church and those who are blessed to see them and help to watch over them. It's a special relationship that makes it hard to leave and makes us want to go back over and over again.
In a few minutes we had traveled the distance from the dedication site to the building that is rented by the church.
The members had worked hard to make the building look it's best for the visit of an Apostle. They had a new sign on the front fence. The one that they had earlier had been stolen. It's hard to imagine why anybody would do that, but now they had one prominently displayed on the outside gate. They had painted the exterior and interior and had put in fans. The whole building just looked fabulous and they were so proud to show it off to the visitors. There were 128 in attendance, in a very small chapel.
As we come into the yard, we saw that the meeting room was not large enough for all who had come. The members had spilled out of the chapel and filled the porch in front of the building.
Entering the room and taking our seats Elder Holland took special notice of the children.
Quickly chairs were moved and little ones lined up. It was a special site to see Elder Holland standing among these little folks in this tiny hall in a small branch in Bangui.
I thought of the words of the Savior when he said, "Behold your little ones." It was a very tender moment.
Then he addressed the adults saying how many places an Apostle could and needed to be and how happy he was to be able to be in this building today with the members of this branch. He talked about the blessings that would now come to their country. It was a message of love and hope for the members of the Bangui Branch.
As Elder Holland spoke he noticed that the little
children on the front few rows in small plastic chairs were getting weary. The long day of waiting and listening had become too much for them. One little girl fell fast asleep. Then a few more and a few more. Finally most of the row were sleeping peacefully. He chuckled about it and had us take pictures of the progressive abandonment of the little people.
It was a great day for our little Bangui Branch. They never dreamed that an Apostle would be with them in their humble little rented building in isolated Bangui.
Later, in the church news Elder Holland was quoted as saying.
"I was so moved by their faith. These are believing people. They accept the gospel when they hear it — it is in their bones. They have genuine faith. They will walk scores of miles to attend meetings and perform their duties. It isn't superficial. It isn't a fleeting thing with them. They just believe. The thing I come back with from Africa is the spirituality and faith of the people who have so little materially."
Elder Holland spoke of Bangui Branch President Langue, a lawyer who trained in France, practiced law in the United States and then returned to Central African Republic. "He kept saying, with tears in his eyes, that he couldn't quite fathom that a member of the Quorum of the Twelve had come all that way and sought them out in their interior African world, in the jungle, in the isolated communities that they are in. He couldn't get over the fact that we would come and find them, that their little handful of members mattered. That was touching to me. I said, 'Of course you matter. Of course we will find you.' It was a great day."After the member meeting we went back to the hotel and rested for a couple of hours and prepared for a reception and dinner for government, religious, and educational officials. When we entered our room I was touched with what I saw. On the dresser there was a note from the Bangui Branch. They wanted to welcome us in a special way and had written a welcome note and left it with several bottles of water and some small packages of cookies. It was their way of saying how grateful they were for the visit.
That evening we went to the dinner and reception. I'm sad to say that after the remarkable day we'd had, it was quite a bit less remarkable. But how could it compare to the things that we had witnessed that day. There was a small turn out but Elder Holland spoke to them in very clear terms about the mission and objectives of the church.
We had spent a wonderful 24 hours with the devoted leaders and wonderful saints of Central African Republic. We loved our time with them and look forward to coming back. There is a great love that forms between the pioneers of the church and those who are blessed to see them and help to watch over them. It's a special relationship that makes it hard to leave and makes us want to go back over and over again.
Early Tuesday morning we had breakfast together at the hotel and then headed to the airport to take the charter flight back to Kinshasa. We had to land at the main airport an hour out of town to have our passports checked.
After a few minutes we took off again and flew four minutes to a small airport fairly close to the hotel and mission home. The Salt Lake visitors spent a couple of hours resting at the hotel before catching a night flight for Paris and then Salt Lake. Elder Holland told me that, when he arrived on Wednesday afternoon, he would go straight to the church offices to resume his work; this would be after three weeks of intense travel and meetings throughout southern Africa and nearly a 30-hour flight. These men work so hard and give so much. They could not do what they do without divine help. They left great memories and the love of the leaders of the church, which will always be remembered by the members of Kinshasa, Bangui and us.




