Thursday, May 30, 2013

Family History for Children

We are teaching a class of 31 third graders on "family history" at the Long Hua Elementary School.  We are doing 4 lessons, once a week, from May 17 to June 7.  It has been fun.  The children are so creative as you can see from some of the work they did on decorating their names.


Saturday, May 25, 2013

3 yellow roses for Sister B

Following is a story shared by Sister B, our supervisor @the Family History Support

From: Sister B

Dear Missionaries,

I walked into the grocery store not particularly interested in buying groceries. I wasn't hungry. The pain of losing my husband of 57 years was still too raw. And this grocery store held so many sweet memories. 

He often came with me and almost every time he'd pretend to go off and look for something special. I knew what he was up to. I'd always spot him walking down the aisle with the three yellow roses in his hands. 


He knew I loved yellow roses. With a heart filled with grief, I only wanted to buy my few items and leave, but even grocery shopping was different since he had passed on. 


Shopping for one took time, a little more thought than it had for two. 


Standing by the meat, I searched for the perfect small steak and remembered how he had loved his steak. 


Suddenly a woman came beside me. She was blonde, slim and lovely in a soft green pantsuit. I watched as she picked up a large package of T-bones, dropped them in her basket... hesitated, and then put them back. She turned to go and once again reached for the pack of steaks. 


She saw me watching her and she smiled. 'My husband loves T-bones, but honestly, at these prices, I don't know.' 


I swallowed the emotion down my throat and met her pale blue eyes. 


'My husband passed away eight days ago,' I told her. Glancing at the package in her hands, I fought to control the tremble in my voice. 'Buy him the steaks. And cherish every moment you have together.' 


She shook her head and I saw the emotion in her eyes as she placed the package in her basket and wheeled away. 


I turned and pushed my cart across the length of the store to the dairy products. There I stood, trying to decide which size milk I should buy. A Quart, I finally decided and moved on to the ice cream. If nothing else, I could always fix myself an ice cream cone. 


I placed the ice cream in my cart and looked down the aisle toward the front. I saw first the green suit, then recognized the pretty lady coming towards me. In her arms she carried a package. On her face was the brightest smile! I had ever seen. I would swear a soft halo encircled her blonde hair as she kept walking toward me, her eyes holding mine. 


As she came closer, I saw what she held and tears began misting in my eyes.. 'These are for you,' she said and placed three beautiful long stemmed yellow roses in my arms. 'When you go through the line, they will know these are paid for.' She leaned over and placed a gentle kiss on my cheek, then smiled again. I wanted to tell her what she'd done, what the roses meant, but still unable to speak, I watched as she walked away as tears clouded my vision. 


I looked down at the beautiful roses nestled in the green tissue wrapping and found it almost unreal. How did she know? Suddenly the answer seemed so clear. I wasn't alone. 


Oh, you haven't forgotten me, have you? I whispered, with tears in my eyes. He was still with me, and she was his angel. 


Every day be thankful for what you have and who you are.
I am so grateful for each one of you.   I miss those who have gone on before me.   I am so thankful for the gospel that I know I will see and be with them again. 
Lots of Love

Sister B

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Finding Your Ancestral Village in Guandong

If you are from Guangdong Province, you are in luck.  

If you are a descendant from one of these counties, the Village Database can now be utilized to find your ancestral village. To find your ancestral village you need the Chinese characters for your surname, the name of the village and the county. Let us take for example your surname is Chan (陳) and you are looking for your village called:
Shek Tau Village (石頭村) in Sun Wui (新會) County
Here are the steps needed to find this village:

Chinese Genealogy - Finding Your Ancestral Village in China

The Complicated Chinese Family Tree

what is genealogy

Friday, May 17, 2013

family tree - the new tools to get you started著手作家譜

Discover your family history. Explore the world’s largest collection of free family trees, genealogy records and resources.

著手作家譜

For starters, check this out: (You may change the language by clicking on the language tab below)

The following website will get you started.

https://www.familysearch.org/ask/gettingStarted

Noticed the language tab on the bottom of the screen. You can click on the language you'd like to see. 這一個網路的下面有語言的選擇。請點你要聽的語言。下面是中文的。

步驟1. 探索你的故事

探索你的故事的第一步是聯絡你的父母、祖父母、以及可以和你分享故事、相片或其他資訊的親人。你可以使用FamilySearch「相片和故事」來拍攝、保存及分享你所找到的紀錄。如此一來,你便會發現自己正走在發掘自己故事的這條路上。

探索你的故事           開始分享


步驟2.探索你的家譜樹


「家譜樹」是你匯集家譜的地方。著手開始後的第二個步驟是探索你的家譜樹。由於世界各地的研究人員和義工每天都在擴充「家譜樹」資料,因此他們可能已幫你完成了部分工作。加入漏掉的名字、日期和關係,與家族其他成員合作,然後目睹你的家譜樹日益茁壯。


探索你的家譜樹




步驟3.尋找你的祖先 第三個步驟是藉著在FamilySearch.org網站上搜尋歷史紀錄來擴展你的家譜樹。你的祖先每天的經驗和里程碑──如出生、結婚和死亡──這些歷史紀錄往往已編製索引,並在線上供人搜尋。使用「搜尋」來為你家族故事裡的人物找出更多詳細資料。


尋找你的祖先



Go to http:  www.familysearch.org and open up an account.  It's free and this is where fun begins...


LDS Population in Taiwan


Estimated LDS Membership and Percentage of LDS members by Administrative Division in Taiwan
RED = Over 0.40% LDS
YELLOW = 0.30-0.39% LDS
GREEN = 0.20-0.29% LDS
TEAL = 0.15-0.19% LDS
BLUE = Less than 0.15% LDS
INDIGO = Unreached; no known LDS

Estimated LDS membership was ascertained by multiplying the average number of members per congregation in Taiwan in 2011 (545) by the number of wards and branches per administrative division at present. Administrative division population figures were retrieved from www.citypopulation.de and are as of 2012.
Penghu
545 members; 0.55% LDS 98,843 inhabitants
Hualien
1,635 members; 0.49% LDS 335,190 inhabitants
Taitung
1,090 members; 0.48% LDS 226,252 inhabitants
Hsinchu
2,180 members; 0.42% LDS 523,993 inhabitants
Chiayi
1,090 members; 0.40% LDS 271,220 inhabitants
Hsinchu Shih
1,635 members; 0.38% LDS 425,071 inhabitants
Nantou
1,635 members; 0.31% LDS 520,196 inhabitants
Taichung Shih
8,175 members; 0.30% LDS 2,684,893 inhabitants
Miaoli
1,635 members; 0.29% LDS 563,976 inhabitants
Pingtung
2,180 members; 0.25% LDS 858,441 inhabitants
Changhua
3,270 members; 0.25% LDS 1,299,868 inhabitants
Kaohsiung Shih
6,540 members; 0.24% LDS 2,778,659 inhabitants
Tainan Shi
4,360 members; 0.23% LDS 1,881,645 inhabitants
Taipei Shih
5,450 members; 0.20% LDS 2,673,226 inhabitants
Taoyuan
3,815 members; 0.19% LDS 2,030,161 inhabitants
New Taipei City
7,085 members; 0.18% LDS 3,939,305 inhabitants
Yunlin
1,090 members; 0.15% LDS 710,991 inhabitants
Keelong
545 members; 0.14% LDS 377,153 inhabitants
Ilan
545 members; 0.12% LDS 458,595 inhabitants
Chiayi
545 members; 0.10% LDS 533,723 inhabitants
Jinmen
113,111 inhabitants
Matsu
11,310 inhabitants

Saturday, May 11, 2013

When family visits...

We were so happy to have our daughter I-Shuan, my sister Alice, my other sister Ling and her husband Stan, and their son Dennis, visit us, April 18 - 28, 2013.

To accommodate everyone on this trip, we rented a van.  Here is how it all transpired.
This was how we felt when we first got the rental car.
Renting a minivan for the 7 of us was probably one of the better moves.  We were able to get to places quickly without having have to wait for buses and trains.  We decided that we had had enough of that.  But following the GPS was another issue.  After much navigating through the Taipei Mass Freeway System, I called the rental company and told them the navigation system didn't work.  He agreed that we needed to go back and exchange for a new one.  Two hours later, the agent called to see if we were okay.  I told him we were so confused and frustrated that we decided to go on our trip by train, he could pick up the rental in front of the Taipei Train Station.  I had to calm him down and tell him the truth that we were almost at the town of YiLan where we were supposed to be.  After that, we were just fine, driving.

Highlights of the trip:

Day 1:  Saturday, April 19, 2013

      Since our mission started 7 months ago, we have researched and found many of the Song and Shi ancestors.  With the computerized system from the LDS Church website, familysearch.org, we were able to organize a lot of the information.  With the help of Elaine Wiley, our daughter, and her family, we set out to do some temple work for these ancestors.  What a happy morning it was for us to do ordinances for my great-great-grandfather, Song Zhang and his wife, Liu He in the Taipei Temple.  The Song Zhang 宋彰 and Liu He 劉蚵 stories were shared in previous posts.  We know there is much more work to be done.  A facebook page is dedicated to do the Song family history at https://www.facebook.com/groups/songagong/.  Take a look.  Contribute if you have any photos or stories to share.

      We had lunch with Meri Lin at the Hilton Hotel Restaurant.  Meri's mom, Shi Quan E 施瓊娥, was our mom's best friend growing up.  施瓊娥's dad is Mom's eldest brother, and she and Mom were close in age.  After lunch we went to visit her.  She has been sick, but smiled when she recognized us.

Pictured here are:  施瓊娥 in the wheelchair,  (from r to l), Ling Winters 宋鈴惠, Huang Li Yun 黃麗雲, Alice Feng 宋秋惠, I-Shuan Warr 戴怡萱, Shirley Davis 宋文惠, Elwin Davis 戴亞文, Aunt Shi MeiJuan 施美絹, her daughter Shi JinYu 施錦瑜, Meri Lin 林萌利, Huang ShiShi 黃奕時, Lin Feng Ji 林豐基 (They have an apartment in DaZhi大直 overlooking JiLong River)

方媽媽 w/Ling and Alice
I-Shuan's kindergarten in TianMou
     Next, we went to TienMou to visit our dear friend, Fang Mama 方媽媽, who used to work for us and helped us raised our kids when Elwin was working as the Engineering Manager for Philco in DanShui 淡水, 1977-1982.  The reunion was sweet as they, I-Shuan and 方媽媽, haven't seen each other for 31 years.  We left Taiwan when I-Shuan was 10 years old.  We also took I-Shuan to see her old kindergarten, St. Vincent Academy.










Stan and Dennis Winters arrived Saturday night.  We were able to hire a taxi to pick them up at the TaoYuan Airport and bring them to the hotel for US$35.  It was reasonable and convenient as it would have taken us more than 3 hours to go get them.

Day 2:  Sunday, April 21, 2013


We attended church at JinHua Jie where Stan and Elwin  both served the LDS Mission at one time or another.  Stan reunited with his old buddy, Brother Wang.  The two of whom served as President Kimball's bodyguards when he came to attend the Taiwan Area Conference back in 1979.  Elwin met an old friend, too, from when he served a mission in Taiwan.

We met again with our Aunt MeiJuan as she wanted to take us out to lunch.  It turned out to be her 84th birthday.  So Ling and I did the Chinese custom of fighting with her to pay for the lunch; we won and paid it.  Aunt MeiJuan is mom's youngest sister and we all love her.  It was a pleasure to be there for her birthday.  She is in good health, but Uncle Shi is bedridden now, he is 91 now.

After lunch, we went to a place near the famous LongShan Buddhist Temple to visit my cousin AhDing.  It was the only time slot left, so we took the MRT to meet her.  She's the daughter of our Dad's #6 sister.  She co-owns a karaoke shop.  We were happy to see her, and she, too, was delighted to meet the family.





Day 3 - 5:  Monday, April 22-24, 2013

We picked up the van and started our trip to YiLan, LuoDong, HuaLian and TaiDong.  The trip went well and we were delighted to see the beauty of Taiwan mountains and seashores.

One of the most memorable places during the Eastern Taiwan trip was the Buddhist Temple in LuoDong that our cousin Waka Song told us about.  It is a beautiful building in the middle of some rundown old homes.  The GPS did a superb job of taking us to the front steps of the place.  Waka is the daughter of Dad's #5 brother.  Her mom became a nun (a story to tell some other time) at this place.  She brought our Grandma Xu Tao's ancestral plate to this temple.  We didn't know what to expect, but what we saw was very interesting.

name plates at the Buddhist Temple

temple altar

candles for blessings

Waka and her daughter's names appear on the donors' list

Vegetarian lunch with the Master



Waka's mom passed away many years ago.  Because she gave up her secular life to become a nun (shaved head), she had a special place at this temple.  Her name plate is honored at the front of the temple next to their gods.  We don't know quite the reason, but she brought our Grandma Xu Tao's name plate here for her to have a resting place.  The master nun was very kind and welcomed us.  She even invited us for a vegetarian lunch.  We graciously accepted.  Everyone was surprised at how delicious the food was.  We sat at a round table with at least 10 dishes of food.  The food looked like chicken, some fish, beef, but were all made with some soybean derivatives.  We were glad that we gave it a try.  This time, Alice sneaked out and paid for the lunch.  We are doing well here to maintain the customs.

Some hotel accommodations are fine, but a little rough.  Since we only stayed at each hotel for one night, it was fine.  We did some hiking, lots of walking and just enjoyed the places we visited.  This would fast forward us to day 6 when we got back to Gaoxiong.

Day 6:  We got back to Gaoxiong at around 4 pm.  We got Ling and Stan settled at a hotel near the 85 Building in Gaoxiong.  We all went out to have some Korean food.  Since I-Shuan served a mission in Korea, we thought we'd surprised her with some good Korean food.  It was fine, but not great.

Day 7:  A big day as we plan to visit Tainan Old Homestead

I arranged for the Song village magistrate to meet us.  He couldn't be there because of a prior appointment, so he brought in his brother and several of the Song cousins to show us around.  They set up the front room in the community center for us to meet and chat.  Several cousins brought their genealogies with them.  Most of us share the same great-grandfather, Song Lu.  They had the record of Great-great-grandfather Song Zhang, whom I
We think Ling was born in this house behind the picture.
spent a lot of effort to find.  But they didn't have dates.
The village was settled by Song Zhang, and many of his descendants still live there.  They occupied important posts such as mayor, magistrate, commissioners, representatives, and union leaders.  They were all eager to share what they have with us.  One of them suggested that we should have a clan organization and build a memorial there since the Song's still own some land there. It was a delightful meeting as we exchanged contact information.  

My sister Ling was born in one of the few remaining original houses there.  This reunion was very special as our cousin Waka (daughter of Dad's #5 brother) came to meet us there.  Waka came to live with our mom and dad when she was very young.  She was assigned to be Ling's nanny.  She loved Ling so much that she carried her around on her back wherever she went.  Waka is 5 years older than I am, and I remember her running around with us playing in the fields with Ling on her back, as happy as she could be.  It was told that Waka never let Ling down on the floor until she was 3 years old.


After the meeting, one of the cousins, Song Shi Ying, drove us to our Grandfather Song Tian-An's gravesite.  Elwin and I were just there a month ago, but since we didn't drive, we couldn't quite remember where it was.  We brought some flowers and put them there.  It was special to visit Grandfather Song.  He was a great man.


Lunch was at the ChiMei Museum Coffee Shop as we were scheduled to visit the museum at 2 PM.  Song Shi Ying took us there.  He is the son of our cousin, Chao Yang 朝陽.  朝陽 is the son of our Dad's eldest brother.  Since Dad is the youngest of the Song brothers (except for the youngest one who died serving in the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II), he and 朝陽 were about the same age and grew up together.  ChiMei has a frozen food division and served up very nice foods.  It was a western food style eatery and they have very good lunches.  Shi Ying paid the bills for our meals.

A Visit to ChiMei Museum:  Since our cousin Richard is the Chairman of the Board of ChiMei, we decided to pay a visit.  Besides, Chi Mei Museum is one of the finest museums in Asia.  According to its website -

     
It was a wonderful trip!  We are so thankful that our family members came to visit us.  We are grateful for the safety and for all the people who make it possible for us to take this trip.

Pictures will be posted later as we are having problems with the blogspot uploader.

Here is a copy of the itinerary for future references for us and for others who may be contemplating a visit here.