Dobroho dnya! (February 28, 2007)

Hello again everyone! We've had a fantastic week this time around. As I may have hinted about earlier, our area has been really, really slow; we've been excited to get more than three or four phone numbers from people on the street or from tracting a week. However, this past week things are turning around quite nicely. On Saturday, our Zone Leaders told us that one of their investigators actually lives in our area, so we've taken over teaching him, and he has a baptism set for March 17; there's this really cool guy named Serhiy who lives across the street from us that we committed to think and pray about preparing for baptism on March 24 (we should find out for certain tomorrow, because he invited us to go roast shishkabobs with him and his family in the forest outside of Kiev--our apartments are right on the very edge of town, and literally across the street is a forest); and last Monday I contacted a man named Danyil who took a Book of Mormon and said, kind of dismissively, "Yeah, I'll come to church," before walking off, seeming very uninterested. But, lo and behold, he and his wife were there at church, and when we talked to them he said, "I started reading in the Book of Mormon and really liked it. So I read a lot of it out loud to my wife, and we both agree that it's a very special book."
So, things are starting to heat up in our area, which is ironic because things have really started getting cold weather-wise. It snows probably every two or three days, and the sidewalks are fairly treacherous with black ice. There's a little game in the mission where the missionaries count how many times they slip and fall ("fall" as in you end up entirely on the ground--the scores are counted more like golf...). I've only fallen twice so far--the first time being the worst because there was a great deal of packed down snow on the ground one evening when it started to rain, and the rain froze into ice that coated everything--not ideal for staying upright. However, I've been doing better than most; one elder in my district had a week where he fell every single day. But, the fun thing is, when you slip and fall it doesn't hurt at all, and it makes for a funny story afterwards. (I've been fortunate also in that I've only slipped to the side--the worst is falling flat on your back). But, before you start worrying, I've only felt cold once here, and that was one night when it was about 20 below Celsius, the wind was blowing, and this tiny, sharp snow was falling. Other than that, I've actually been really comfortable outside.
I'm excited for my birthday, but more for the fact that I'll be turning 20 than for anything that'll be happening on that day (as it looks now, it probably will indeed involve a good deal of tracting). Thanks to everyone who sent me emails and e-cards! As it turns out apparently, I can indeed get cards through the pouch mail (wish I'd found that out earlier), as long as there's no money in them--they're cracking down heavily on that; every letter we get is opened and resealed because they check them for money. As for packages, here's the information:
There's two ways to send packages to our mision that are recommended. These are through two companies, Roxolana and Meest-America. There info is as follows:
ROXOLANA
19 w. 21st St.
Linden, New Jersey, 07036
Telephone: (973) 763-8778
888 725-8665
Fax: (973) 763-5425
MEEST-AMERICA
609 Commerce Road
Linden, New Jersey 07036
Telephone: 800 288-9949
1 800 361-7345
I'm not sure how the process works--the website probably says far better than I could speculate--but the address here in Kiev is this:
Elder Brett Hurst
Puhkinska 2-4/7 Apt 43
Kiev, Ukraine 01034
It's really important to NOT put "Ukraine Kiev Mission" on the package, because I guess the government would consider it a business package and would slap a rather hefty tariff on it.
All right, I hope that's helpful. There's absolutely no need or anything to send packages whatsoever, I just wanted to include the information.
Well, other than that things are going pretty well. My companion has 18 days before he goes home, so that's been a bit of an extra challenge in our work, but not much of one. Well...yet. We suspect that once he reaches 10 days he'll be more of a burden than anything...
Well, that's how things have been going! Thanks again to everyone who's sent me emails or letters. I hope you all have a good week, and Renee, tell Alli and Mary that I miss wrestling with them too.
Love,
--Elder Brett

P Day Again

Hello again! Things in Ukraine have been going well this week. We have our Zone Conference tomorrow, so that should be fun. I always like seeing people from my MTC group. My companion, Elder Hanson, goes home at the end of this transfer (March 19, to be exact), so he's unfortunately getting pretty homesick (or "trunky," in missionary language). Our area's starting to produce more new investigators, but unfortunately our progressing investigators are still nonexistent. But, we're going to be working even harder now because President Davis challenged Elder Hanson to have a baptism before he goes home. (He also hinted that I'm going to be in the Voskresensky area for a while...looks like I'll get to know my way around this part of Kiev pretty well).
A funny thing happened this week while I was on a bus. This lady saw my nametag and asked me, in accented English, "Do you speak English?" I said, "Yes, I do. I'm from America." She nodded, then said, "Do you speak it well?"
One of the things we've been doing here a lot has been helping this family near our area build a house. The dad is an American, and the family speaks english pretty well, so it's kind of nice to get to talk to people and understand them completely every now and then. So, we've been doing a lot of construction work, and at first I thought, "I think I know a few family members who'd enjoy this." However, as it turns out, I should have thought "I think I know a few family members who know waaaay more about construction than this guy." I've never heard the phrase "That looks good enough" used so freely.
Well, as usual, I'm entirely out of time too quickly. I love you all, and have a good week!
--Elder Brett

S'ohodni u mene yeh poslannya pro misiyu moyu! (2/14/07)

Hello again everyone!
This past week was a good one for us. We met with this woman we found tracting a week and a half ago and had a lesson with her that went very well, even though it seemed like it shouldn't have. We arrived, and she invited us in and had us sit down. The room we were in just happened to be the one with the TV in it, so she had to shoo her husband away and turn it off so we could have our lesson. We began and taught her about our heavenly father, families, prophets and dispensations, Christ's earthly ministry, the great apostasy, and the Restoration, when her thirty-something daughter came in, drunk, and started yelling about how she wanted to watch TV but we were hogging the room. The woman we were teaching--Anna--told her to be patient and wait, and the daughter left. We started going again, and were right about to finish when Anna's son came in and decided that he'd sit in on the lesson as sort of a "counterpoint" against us. We retaught some of the lesson so he could hear, but he--also a little tipsy--kept telling us that his pastor told him not to trust Mormons. We were having Anna read out of our copy of the Bible, so he stopped us and grabbed his copy, not trusting ours (we found out when he got back that we had the same Bibles; he wasn't happy). Finally, he stood up to leave, then turned to Anna and said, "Babushka, you can't let these men confuse you." She looked at him and said, "These men have explained the Bible much clearer than you or our pastor have! Maybe they've come to help my sinful soul!" It was amazing; you could feel the difference between when we taught with the spirit, and when her son taught from his own understanding, and I know Anna could feel the difference too.
Anyways, that's my spiritual thought for the week, now here's my culture lesson. In Ukraine, or at least in Kiev, McDonalds restaurants are everywhere. And the food they serve tastes far better than its American counterpart. The hamburgers are far bigger and better tasting, and the french fries are really good. The food is slightly cheaper than America too, although they recently changed their dollar menu (well...the "five gryven menu") to be slightly more expensive. The restaurants themselves are nice too, with these big plasma TVs hanging from the ceiling playing music videos. The funny thing is, because they're so nice, they've become the example of a good restaurant. If someone here goes to a restaurant they don't like, they say "Well, it wasn't McDonalds."
All right, I've run out of time unfortunately, but I love you all, and I hope you have a good week!
--Elder Brett Hurst

Hello Again! (February 7, 2007)

Happy P-Day everyone! It's sounds like things are going well with you all (y'all, for Adam). I've had a pretty interesting week this week.
Well, we've started tracting a lot more, which means that we've been meeting a lot more strange people in their homes, where they seem more willing to be even stranger. On Sunday we went to an apartment building near ours and started knocking it down when we reached this one little hallway where the light was broken. This isn't anything new in Ukrainian buildings; about half of the apartment buildings are missing lights right as you enter, and since for some reason they don't find windows necessary in their buildings, they're pitch black. So, in this particular hallway, there was a light down on the other side of the hallway, but a door was kind of blocking it, so we had to keep pushing it open every now and then. We knocked on the apartment door nearest this other door and a short, squat Russian man answered. It was my turn to start us off, so I started talking and got about halfway into my second sentence when he cut me off and started cursing at us in Russian so much that his wife started yelling at him from another room to close the door and leave us alone. Thankfully, I don't know any Russian swearwords, so it didn't really affect me, but my companion was really mad and about ready to head home when we decided to do one more door. This lady answered and invited us in, and long story short, we have a lesson set up with her tonight; so, you never know what'll come next when you're a missionary. Like when we were riding on a trolleybus a few days ago and the radio started playing "It's Raining Men."
Something else that happened this week was when on Saturday we got on a bus to head to the church building when we saw an older man get on with...something...I don't know what, but something on his face. It was like a mask that only covered one part of his face, around one of his eyes, only the mask was part of his face, and it was black and thick and hairy. It was like a giant, black mole that stuck out of his face. It was incredibly gross.
And I'm getting really fed up with drunk people. They're everywhere, and all they do is stumble around, swearing and smoking and, in general, just getting in everyone's way before passing out on the sidewalk. And I'm getting really fed up with seeing kids younger than 10 smoking and drinking. I think that if people wanted to make effective anti-smoking or anti-drinking ads, they'd just need to videotape the people at your average Ukrainian metro stop for about two hours. I know I never want to do those now.
So, that's the highlights of my week. As usual, my time's running short, so I love you all, and I'll write you again next week!
--Elder Brett Hurst