Tuesday, November 19, 2019
Should Church members celebrate Halloween?
A ward's "Trunk or Treat" decorated vehicle, as part of a Halloween party, with inside the cultural hall events too.
THERE are some members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day saints who DO NOT believe in celebrating Halloween, mostly because of its dark beginnings. That is their freedom of choice to do so.
When I grew up in the 1950s and 1960s, Halloween was mostly about scary and the equivalent in costumes.
However, today that is NOT the universal case. When some 170 children came to my door on Halloween night of 2019, I'd estimate that 95 percent-plus were wearing super-hero and fantasy costumes -- not scary ones.
Halloween today is mostly about candy and cute or inventive costumes. Yes, there are some haunted houses one can visit and even Lagoon Park in Farmington, Utah, hosts "Frightmares" each fall, with a scary twist.
However, even some of the most popular decorations of Christmas have strong roots in pagan rituals and so does one forsake Christmas because of that shady past?
The choice is yours, but about the only advice on Halloween in Church Handbooks has been that masks are not allowed inside a Church building.
So, Halloween is what you make it.
Monday, January 28, 2019
History of the Ogden and Layton Deseret Industries stores
DESERET Industries opened its Harrisville Store, 435 North Wall Avenue on Sept. 24,
2009.
That meant
the DI left Ogden City after more than 6 decades there.
The first DI
in Ogden opened in 1941 on the south side of 24th Street, between
Grant Avenue and Washington Boulevard. It later moved to 2360 Washington
Boulevard, just north of where ZCMI used to be located. Finally, the old
Williamson Auto Body property was secured and the Ogden DI moved to 2048
Washington Boulevard.
That third
store location meant the DI remodeled almost annually. Also, in that era, the
DI repaired TVs and electronics and even recut and reused broken mirrors. Used
shoes were also repaired and shined. Old furniture was repaired and rugs
were made from rags, as waste was kept to almost zero.
“Nothing is
wasted when sent to the Deseret Industries” was almost a DI motto in the 1970s.
humanitarian-services
program throughout the world.
Two photos of the Ogden DI from“The Church in Ogden Yearbook for 1978.”)
-Deseret
Industries was born during the post-Depression era when The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints sent two officials to Los Angeles in 1938 to study
Goodwill Industries and determine how the church could create similar
employment opportunities through a thrift-store business.
The Ogden DI manager in the late 1970s.
Deseret Industries was born later that year under the direction of LDS Church President Heber J. Grant. It was originally part of the Bishop’s Storehouse. It became its own separate entity in early 1941.
The Ogden DI manager in the late 1970s.
Deseret Industries was born later that year under the direction of LDS Church President Heber J. Grant. It was originally part of the Bishop’s Storehouse. It became its own separate entity in early 1941.
Today it is
one of the largest thrift store chains in the nation, behind Goodwill and
Savers stores, with 46 stores in seven Western states: Arizona, California,
Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington.
The stores
operate on the principles of thrift, work, giving and self-reliance, and their
primary purpose is employment rehabilitation.
-According
to information from the organization, Deseret Industries is composed of three
related parts. First, employees receive training and find long-term employment.
Second, the public may purchase inexpensive, quality merchandise in a clean,
safe retail environment. To those in need, merchandise is provided at no cost.
Third, all people may provide meaningful service through the donation of time
and merchandise.
Richard L.
McKenna, director of Deseret Industries, said the ultimate goal of Deseret
Industries is to provide temporary employment and job skills to people who need
them.
"We
serve without regard to religion," he said. Currently, D.I. stores
probably employ about 50 percent non-LDS workers.
He said
selling used clothing and items is what keeps the DIs funded — they have to be
self-sustaining.
McKenna said
the DI system hasn't expanded with new stores in recent years, because it is
oriented toward quality and not just to opening more outlets.
"We
have a desire to be the best," he said.
He also said
the DIs have no desire to set a price at the maximum amount, but simply a fair
price.
(-Adapted from an Oct. 16, 2008 story
by Lynn Arave in the Deseret News and a Sept. 6, 2009 Deseret News story.
Additional information came from “The Church in Ogden Yearbook for 1978.”)
-LAYTON DI:
The Layton,
Utah DI originally opened May of 1998 at 1010 West Hill Field Road. This was a
leased building of about 30,000-square feet.
About 11
years later in October of 2008, the DI moved eastward, a few hundred yards, to
930 West Hill Field Road and into a new building that was about twice the size
as its original Layton store.
The Layton DI.
The Layton DI.
This DI was
part of the Welfare Service Center, which included six components besides the
D.I. — LDS Family Services, LDS Employment, the Distribution Center, Bishop's
Storehouse, Family Home Storage Center and a humanitarian volunteer room — all
under one roof.
The new
facility was dedicated by Presiding Bishop H. David Burton of the LDS Church. A
ribbon-cutting ceremony is planned for 9:45 a.m. today. The grand opening
celebration continues through Saturday.
Also, the
process of moving the estimated 12,000 items that are donated each day to the
sales floor became much faster in the new facility.
Every
morning, Monday through Saturday, a line of up at least several dozen patrons
forms outside the Layton DI, as they await a chance to see what new items have
been donated.
(-Adapted from an Oct. 16, 2008 story
in the Deseret News.)