Somehow This Blog Ended up Being about War
Somehow this blog ended up being about war.
We are two weeks away from coming home. We have done a marathon sprint for four months to finish
up humanitarian projects and start new projects. This last week we got three new projects approved,
and we are ecstatic. All of our projects have been in the Netherlands and Belgium. We fully
acknowledge the Relief Society stake presidency members who jump started the humanitarian work in
the Netherlands and Belgium. Thanks, especially to Shaynah, Rachelle, and Sheila. You are amazing
women.
The French take their holidays seriously. Today is May 8, and most everything is closed except the
local bars/restaurants. The French and other Europeans are celebrating the end of WWII, a day
certainly worth celebrating. Of course, the people love holidays that land on Thursday because they
take a bridge day off on Friday too.
War has ravaged France many times, and the French have been the attackers (Napoleon) and the
attacked (World Wars).
Here are pictures of our recent Normandy visit with our son Rob and his family. Notice the boats
purposefully sunk in the ocean in Arromanches right after D-day to create a makeshift harbor for allied
forces to bring ships close to shore and unload. These sobering places remind us of the horrors of war
and the evils of those deciding to conquer other countries.
Think of Napoleon. Think of Hitler. Think of all leaders who try to take over other countries, especially
today.
Here is our son Rob on top of a German bunker. And here is a family of our grandchildren who I hope
will never have to fight in a war.
Of course, France, and Paris in particular, have a history of civil unrest, often because of the rich
getting richer (especially the crown, the aristocrats, and the church) and the poor staying poor. Think of
Les Miserables, the great French novel by Victor Hugo, which you all know well because of the French
musical that was translated into English.
Isaiah 58:10 And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy
light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noonday:
11 And the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones:
and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.
We have a prophet who reminds us constantly that we should be peacemakers. We hope that
followers of Jesus Christ take peacemaking seriously worldwide and require our leaders to go forward with no bullying. Just publish peace. As missionaries, we publish peace, publish
salvation, and bring good news of happiness.
May we bring peace and goodness to our neighbors and family and to neighboring countries and to all
people in all countries, no matter their wealth or influence.


Dear and wonderful Snyders, What a mighty work you have done/are finishing. Best to you in the home stretch.
ReplyDeleteOn the May 8 commemoration theme, it is a double landmark in our family. My dad, Douglas James Lindley, was in the infantry in WWII, arriving in France a few months after D-Day. He fought in the Battle of the Bulge, was among the first troops of Americans to cross the Rhine at Remagen, and he was given an unexpected "morale boosting" leave to the French Riviera early in May of 1945. That's where he got the news of the German surrender. (It's also where he saw bikinis for the first time). He died on May 8 in 2015, may something like Thomas Jefferson and John Adams passing away on July 4.
It will be wonderful to see you in person again! And, best wishes in farewells to your mission friends.
Wow, what a life your father led. The Battle of the Bulge was brutal. Of course, D-Day was too. I am happy he lived through it all to raise a family, and how fitting that he passed on the very day the Germans surrendered 80 years later. What a life!
DeleteThanks for the sobering yet uplifting message. There is peace in Christ--the only source we can truly count on anymore.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes as you frantically try to finish everything you've been working on and say au revoir to all you hope to see again. We'll have to get together next time we visit Utah.
Thank you, Nancy!
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