Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Jake's Talk - minus the grand finale he was planning


Jake's Primary Talk Age 4 (CTR 4):

I like to build buildings with my blocks.
Sometimese my buildings are tall like Temples.
But Temples are different and special, and beautiful.
Temples are the House of God.
The Temple is a place where we make promises with Heavenly Father.
If we keep our promises we can live with Him again.
I am preparing to go to the Temple by also preparing to be baptized.
And when I am 12 and I am worthy, I can go to the Temple to do work and fee the Holy Spirit.

and to this point it was going REALLY WELL!
and then he grabbed the microphone....I felt like it was in slow motion....I saw his mouth stretch WIDE OPEN and his nose scrunch and he took a deep breath....do you see what he was planning?
I felt my hand fly up and clamp over his mouth and I said "Amen" and "helped" him down....sigh...we ALMOST made it throught the talk :)

July 5, 2011

Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
July 5, 2011


The 4th of July is well celebrated here in the birthplace of the constitution. We considered going downtown to the big parades, reenactments, and crowds but then chose to go local and watch a parade in our township. We left out any photos of what seemed to be hundreds of fire trucks.











The costumes are pretty wild on the two groups that must be part of the ‘Mummers Parade’ later on this year in Philadelphia.

Stake President Corbitt, from the Cherry Hill New Jersey Stake was our speaker in summer seminary today. He came and had lunch with the kids, joked around, and got to know them a little. Then he left and came back dressed up as Joseph Smith. His costume was great and it really grabbed the kid's attention. Then he played a game where the kids took their new scriptures and could look up and read any verse in the Doctrine and Covenants and he had to guess the section. If he missed they got a point and if he guessed the section correctly he got a point. First to five wins. The rule was also that he could ask them to read the verse before and the verse after if necessary. He won 5 to 3. Then he went back into character and recited section 1 as if the Prophet was dictating it to a scribe while we read along. The kids loved it.

June 27, 2011

Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
June 27, 2011

Last week we went to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir concert here in Philadelphia. It was at a covered outdoor arena and Nancy and I had seats in the balcony “nose-bleed” section. One poor woman sitting behind us went into acrophobic hysterics. Her husband kept telling her with no success that she was okay and to quiet down. Some kind people took pity on her and helped her leave. To Nancy’s credit, she held her fear of heights in check.

The Choir has become quite diverse in the music they present. This isn’t your grandmother’s church choir anymore. The African number with many bongo drummers came as a surprise. Some of the leaders who went on and on about music with a primitive beat when Nancy and I were teenagers may have rolled over in their graves over that one. Our favorites were the Negro Spirituals with Alex Boye as soloist. Go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nvslgRx2sE to see Alex Boye.

During the concert I sat next to a man who generously filled me in on much of the sports, popular music artists, and politicians in and about Philadelphia. This fellow and I come from different worlds so I learned a lot, or at least I pretended I knew what he was talking about.

Summer seminary started well with 5 boys. Four of them are African, Liberians I think, and the other African American. We have a hard time understanding them so we just smile and shake hands a lot. We took this week off because of Scout Camp and we are promised 5 additional students starting next week. We are contacting Via Sikahema, the sports caster to be one of our afternoon speakers. We’ll have to remember to take our camera and get some photos to show.

Monday, June 20, 2011

June 16, 2011

Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
June 16, 2011


Mixed Metaphors:


To enter the synagogue I had to cover my head with the Jewish cap called a kippah or yarmulke. Honestly, that doesn’t sound like what the woman called it but Wikipedia has never failed me before. Anyway I got to keep the hat as part of the $10 tour fee.


Nancy may turn violent and hurt someone if the AC doesn’t get fixed in our apartment. One can just imagine the headline: “Missionary Momma Slays Husband in Hot Apartment.” We have been assured that we are ‘on the list’ to get things fixed. On the roof of our apartment building there are some large refrigeration units that cool water which is then pumped through the heating system. Ours and the Elders in the apartment next door haven’t worked yet. “Da pump no worka, gotta geta new pumpa, I tella my boss,” according to Frank, the Italian maintenance man, after he bled out more buckets full of thick sludge this week. We got a couple small AC window units from the mission office but they blow the breakers if we run them together. Fortunately the weather has turned pleasant again.


We watch fireflies shoot up like tiny bottle rockets from the grass as we walk in the evenings. This is a lovely country. We continually appreciate the beautiful foliage of the trees. Everyone has trees in their yards that are gigantic by Nevada standards. The trees and thick shrubbery shield homes from the noise of traffic. Almost immediately after stepping off the busy streets it becomes quiet and pleasant.


We are looking forward to attending the Mormon Tabernacle Choir concert next week. We will be taking the Elders from the apartment next door.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

June 7, 2011

Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
June 7, 2011

This week’s journal entry is a story. It is more about “It’s not where you go so much as who you meet when you get there.”

Sister R____ and two of the Three Nephites

There is no evidence that God loves the rational person more than the rest of us. Each of us is subject to periods of varying shades of insanity during the different periods of our lives. Surely, we all have looked back over some event in our lives and thought, “What was I thinking?” A similar phrase, “What were you thinking,” was sometimes accompanied with a cuff to the side of the head when I was an errant boy. And if any of you think you have always been a perfectly rational person, your parents can probably recall periods of temporary insanity during your adolescence.

Sister R____ is in her mid-60’s. She is short and heavy. She wears a brace on one knee, and sweat band on the left wrist under her watch. Her hair, always appears freshly washed and still wet, is combed back. Her piercing eyes are a color of light gray and they seem to bore a hole through your chest when she fixes them on you. Think of a picture of Wilford Woodruff and you have a good likeness. In her younger days she drove big rig trucks. Now she totters back and forth a bit as she maneuvers her wheeled walker along the hallways at church, shoving it along in front of her. In one’s imagination it isn’t hard to replace the walker with a grocery cart to see how she looked nineteen years ago when she was a homeless person on the streets of Philadelphia. Of her faith after becoming a member, Sister R____ once said she had wanted to pay her tithing. Lord, she said, helped her remember where bits of money were hidden around the house.

Sister R____ is a woman without guile. Bluntly honest, she tells the truth with persistence that makes ‘normal’ folks squirm a little. “Dear God,” she volunteers to pray each week in Sunday School, “Bless these people to answer the teacher’s questions today so I’m not the only one” [who responds in class.] Or to Sister Blattman, “You forgot your name tag.” Sister B. mumbles something about she forgot but hoped that no one would notice. “I noticed,” said Sister R____ loudly, “You need to wear you name tag all the time.” A glance at Sister R____ ‘s quadruple scripture combination shows it to be tabbed with little pieces of tape and well-worn from frequent use. Indeed, her answers given in Sunday School class show she knows well what the scriptures say and her answers, like those who people read to learn rather than are taught, are not just the typical Mormon-speak but show a real understanding.

So, Sister R____’s story of meeting two men who she claimed may have been two of the three Nephites piqued my interest. I’ve heard and read a lot of stories over the years that left me more skeptical than Sister R____’s account. You see, her story simple: She ran into two men who said and did nothing out of the ordinary, but the encounter, she said, “Made my heart leap in my chest.” It was the same feeling she had in a similar experience near the time that she joined the church nineteen years ago.

It was the morning of the Broad Street Run, and annual event. The North Philly church where Nancy and I attend is on Wyoming (Wyoming is a Pennsylvania name by the way) and Broad Street. We had to park on the wrong side of Broad Street and wait while 30,000+ people ran past, or most of them anyway, so we could at last thread our way between the less fit and gasping lagging runners without fear of being trampled. That morning, Sister R____ said she had to take three different busses to get to church -a considerable struggle to negotiate with her walker and bad knee. At one bus stop, two men approached her and asked, “Sister, what church do you attend?” She replied, “The Broad and Wyoming Chapel.” The men kindly wished her well. She labored onto the bus. When she turned back they were gone. That’s it! These were her angelic visitors.

She described the men as very old, dressed in heavy old coats, and they both had deeply lined faces. “But their eyes!,” she said, “Their eyes were bright! And when I looked into them my heart leaped in my chest. I knew they were messengers from God!” She needed no more affirmation, she simply knew who they were.

An old woman was moved to grateful tears by kindly passing remarks made by two old men at a bus stop in inner city North Philadelphia. North Philly is a place where as Nancy and I drive along and gape at so many disheveled persons hobbling along the sidewalks, we often remark about how many people we see limping. It is a place of row houses, asphalt, and trash; of poor people, people with canes, walkers, wheel chairs, and what looks like an abundance of hopelessness. What more likely place would angels come to lighten the heart of a faithful old woman?

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

May 28, 2011


Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
May 28, 2011


After working at the library we walked on down the road past our apartment building to the Beth Shalom Synagogue. The admission was $10 each but, hey! you only live once! So, after watching a film that we were told that everyone wants a copy of after viewing we were taken on a fascinating tour of the only synagogue designed by Frank Loyd Wright. The building is an amazing combination of triangles built over a floor that simulates great cupping hands holding the congregation of about 1000. We were told that one could also imagine a great tent over gently sloping sand dunes. The sand colored carpet gives an additional effect of the Tabernacle carried by the Children of Israel in the Sinai Desert.


When Dan & Kim were here we looked through the window and wondered at the red lights. Those red lights are the perpetual flames over the ark of the covenants (center of photo on right) where their Torah scrolls are stored. At the end of our tour conducted by one of the rabbis we got to see and even touch a Torah scroll. The velum that the Torah was written on was bright white and soft like thick paper The lettering, all hand done, was perfect. They were each wrapped in velvet and covered with a silver breastplate. We were as impressed with the Torah scrolls as with the building.
Saturday evening we went to see The Damnation of Faust, by Hector Berlioz in Verizon Hall at the Kimmel Center in downtown Philly. Thanks Joe & Negin for the tickets. It was really something. The music was beautiful. In addition to the Philadelphia Orchestra there was a big choir and at the end even a boys choir that filed in to sing the finale. As you may have guessed, we borrowed both the photos of the Beth Shalom Synagogue and the Kimmel Center from the internet.
Just before the program started a short and plump little man came rushing in and sat beside us. He threw his cane down across two seats and tossed his canvas purse onto one of them and plopped his ample backside into the other. Starting from his feet, he was wearing tan and red saddle shoes, stripped stockings the color of Neapolitan ice cream, bright blue and white striped trousers, a black vest, pink shirt, and purple tie. The conductor (a rather odd man himself) turned to him and smiled before the performance. Nancy thought he might have been a music critic. If so, I hope his taste in music is more discriminating than his taste in clothing.


And today, (you all probably are thinking that we goofing around all the time and aren’t doing any missionary work), our director took us to the museum of the Academy of Fine Arts. Our director did his graduate work there and taught classes so he was still on the faculty there and he got us in free. It was a treat to go to a great museum of fine art with an art history professor as a guide. A fair amount of it went right over our heads but we did get to appreciate some beautiful paintings. Again, thanks to Google, I’ve clipped a couple some the great works there that we saw. I thought these were interesting because I’ve seen some of them in history books. The first is Walt Whitman, the second is called Hailing a Ferry, and then Ben Franklin and George Washington.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Jim and Nancy Blattman Family cookbook

I want to organize and get a Jim & Nancy Family Cookbook printed. I looked and I think I can get them printed for about $7 a book.
I wanted to include sections like:
Grilling
Camping recipes
Family Heritage recipes (from all lines of our family and in-laws)
and also the standards:
sides and salads
breads
main dishes
desserts
If you like this idea leave a comment and begin compiling your recipes! You can send to me via email!
Loves,
Sarah

Monday, May 30, 2011

Remembering on Memorial Day

we were able to get to the Mountain View Cemetary today and put some floweres on the name markers for Grandpa and Gramma Markham, Ward and Gramma Dee. I think Pam and Grant may have also been there because there were some lovely flowers already there. It was a nice warm day and sunny. It was quite impressive and inspiring to see the waves of flags placed on the veterens graves.
We searched for Benny's gravestone also but I could not find it. I hope to return this week and try again. So many markers were grown over and I am sure it is there, I just need to look harder.
If you have a good memory of our loved ones, please share it in comments!

Friday, May 27, 2011

May 21, 2011

Elder and Sister Blattman’s Missionary Weekly Journal
May 21, 2011


6:00 (Family Radio’s Rapture Event deadline)has come and gone. Even accounting for Daylight Savings Time we are still earthbound. The jokes will continue through tomorrow, I’m sure. “Never thought I’d see you still here on the day after Rapture,” sort of thing. So what’s our lesson about for Monday? The End of the World. Naturally. Fortunately, as Mormons, we understand it to be the end of the wicked, that is: the end of the worldly, so we won’t have to account why we are all still here.
We took an hour or so off during the time we were inspecting missionary apartments for bedbugs and mold yesterday to check out Penns Landing. It’s the Delaware River dock area reminiscent of Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco. We checked out a clipper ship turned into a restaurant, a submarine (subs are tough to turn into anything more interesting than long black cylinders of death), and a Teddy Roosevelt era Navy Cruiser. Then we watched tugboats bring the USS Kaufman up the Delaware, turn it around in front of the Ben Franklin Bridge, and dock it right next to where we were watching. Then a thunderstorm drenched us so we ran back to the car. Sorry, no photos of Nana next to some handsome sailor in a white uniform.
Nana got to shake hands with Julie B. Beck, the General Relief Society President last night. Sister Beck came to speak at a fireside. She seemed a very kind and unpretentious person. There was no fire and brimstone – little use for that on the day before Rapture- only a kindly question and answer session with about 500 people attending. That woman was brave to let the microphone wander through the audience to let them ask and comment as they pleased.
People of our age always remark about the weather. It is wet. It seems like it is always wet here. Just out of the blue, well out of the grey anyway, the sky seems to suddenly dump buckets of water. Other days when it’s not pouring from the sky it has been foggy and misty, but the rain hasn’t missed a day for weeks. With the rain has come more green that we’ve ever seen in our long senior missionary lives. Even many of the rocks and sidewalks are covered with green moss and or tinged with algae. The lovely flowering dogwood trees gave way to the sweet smelling locusts and also the bright azaleas have now been trumped by the rhododendrons. We walk a mile or two most mornings and again in the evenings through the suburban rainforests of Jenkintown. I’d say it was like walking through the Garden of Eden but the doves are gray and we are far from innocent. Unreasonably, some days we crave the lone and dreary world of home where the rain is infrequent and dirty, our skin is dry, and the wind sometimes blows sand in our eyes.

Monday, May 23, 2011