Thursday, September 11, 2025

Mongolia Mission Week 43 - News of the week and more news!

 Mongolia Mission Week 43

Our hope with this blog is to share highlights with our family and friends about our exciting opportunities and awesome responsibilities in Mongolia. It's an impossible task, though, because it's hard to condense everything into a few words and pictures. So ask us individually if you'd like to know more about anything! You can contact us by email (jrose219@gmail.com or krose213@gmail.com), Facebook messenger, or you can text Kathy's phone (515-537-3273). 

You may think that all we do is run around visiting festivals, but one of our big responsibilities here (and the reason we have visas) is teaching English. This is the way the Lord wants His work to proceed in this country: we are here to do good through humanitarian efforts of different sorts.

During the summer, we taught high schoolers at the American Corner, which is sponsored by the American embassy. We continued our conversational English classes at the church and added an IELTS (International English Language Testing System) class for adults and advanced high schoolers who want to take the IELTS proficiency test. It made for long nights at the church (2.5 hours in the evening three nights a week), but we enjoyed meeting some wonderful new friends. Now the American Corner classes and the IELTS classes have ended just in time for our high school and medical school classes to begin. 

The start of school means school uniforms on the streets.

Our IELTS class - a serious group. They're
not really playing on their phones. They
are doing research for a class assignment.

We got home to a nice surprise one night. 
The sisters decorated our door!

For the final p-day (preparation day) before transfers, we invited the young volunteers over for enchiladas (we found green chilies in the capital!!!), churro cheesecake (to keep with the tex-mex theme), and games of Dalmuti and "Poetry for Neanderthals." 

This game involves bopping your opponent
if they use words of more than one syllable.



Elder Jonon sporting our goat horns
we found in the desert.

Daisy Hess was the only one of the three young volunteers to get transferred. Some of her young friends presented her with cute little gifts. 

She accepted gifts with 2 hands, Mongolian style

Sister Rose got a gift, too. A hand-made
bracelet.

A group hug for a good-bye. It's 
so hard to say goodbye!

Several of us met at the train station to see the two
sisters off to the city and give a final farewell.  

Sister Hess was replaced by Lindsey Fish, freshly arrived in Mongolia on Thursday and then in Sainshand on Saturday. Here she is, arriving after flying halfway around the world and taking the train from Ulaanbaatar - ready for a full day of activities on Saturday!

Lindsey Fish arrives - with a brand new pillow.

On Saturday, we had separate Young Men and Young Women activities. The boys had been wanting their own special activity ever since the girls went to Young Women's camp. So we hiked to the top of Wish Mountain (Officially Khan Bayanzurkh Mountain, it's where many Buddhists make special wishes.). We had 8 boys and 4 adults participate on a beautiful but very windy day.


Great views of the Gobi from Wish Mountain.

Buddhists decorate things with colorful scarfs when
they worship.


Found some wildlife, also decorated 
with a colorful scarf.

Stupas are memorials for the dead and can symbolize
the way to enlightenment.

For big celebrations, a very large fire can be built
in the big, decorative copper basket.

On the way back, we built a little fire to make s'mores
- a very new experience for the boys.



Meanwhile, the young women met at our apartment to learn how to make rice crispy treats - and see how many marshmallows they could stuff in their mouths!

Sister Fish, on the right, immediately fits right in.

The cereal also became a way to play a game
that is trending on TikTok.

We ended our Saturday with a welcome dinner for Sister Fish. There's a new restaurant in town called Gobi Nomads. It's very nice and has good food, except they were out of (or not making) pizza, salads, and milkshakes. Not uncommon. But she got to eat a couple of the main Mongolian foods, tsuivan (a noodle dish) and khuushuur (fried meat pies). 


We are so grateful to serve with these young volunteers. They are dedicated to serving God wherever they are called and however they are needed. That includes paying their own way to leave family, friends, school, and interests behind to come to a remote part of the world to teach English. They also get to serve in our local church congregation by helping with youth activities, teaching Sunday School, speaking (a lot! we don't have many members!) in meetings, translating for their poor senior people who don't seem to learn much Mongolian, and wherever else they are needed. Like cleaning the church every week. Everything with a willing smile. They are amazing examples of dedication and selfless service and we love serving with them! They add so much to our lives and this work.

And to end this week's blog - exciting news! Elder Neil L Andersen and his wife will be in Mongolia next week! He is an apostle of Jesus Christ. We will all get to go to the city for a special devotional and mission conference. Check back to learn more about his visit to Mongolia!




4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What a great blog again Elder and Sister Rose! You two are so amazing! What a great example for those young people❤️

Anonymous said...

Above comment from Pat Brooks

Kristina said...

Sometimes I play a game where I try to guess who is the one writing the blog. Using words like "bopping" strongly suggests that mom wrote this one. But it's not a guarantee...

Kayla said...

Love reading these! And I figured out how to get my name on here. I am so proud of yall!