Kourou Branch, French
Guiana
Submitted by Elder John McAdam
In 1981 in French
Guiana two older members of the church, Charles Fortin and Rosiette Fauvette,
both previously baptized in France, began to hold meetings periodically
in either Cayenne, the capital, or in Kourou, a smaller city an hour's
drive away. Soon two member families moved to Kourou from France to help
form the nucleus of the church in French Guiana. The group met in one
of the member homes. Then another family came from France. By 1988 Elder
Charles Didier of the Seventy came and assisted in establishing the church
in French Guiana.
The Kourou Branch
was officially orgaized that year with Bro. Pratique as president of the
little branch. Later that year the Bonniot family of four were baptized
as the first converts in French Guiana. The first missionaries, a senior
couple, Elder and Sis. Wortham, stationed in Cayenne, served in Kourou.
Sis. Jacqueline Wortham was herself a convert years before in Belgium.
The first meeting
in Cayenne was held in July, l989, splitting off from the branch in Kourou.
In November of that year Elders Hammond, Rector, and Didier of the Seventy
established the branch in Cayenne.
In Kourou more convert baptisms followed. In February 1990, Elder M. Russell
Ballard of the Twelve officially dedicated French Guiana for the spreading
of the gospel. The first young missionaries, Elders Richards and Hooker,
were assigned to Kourou.
By then meetings were
being held in a special room constructed by the Fauvette family, but the
branch moved to a rented house in 1991.
More baptisms, more
missionaries came and left, and the little branch in Kourou was thriving.
After Bro. Pratique left a succession of young elders and senior couples
served as branch presidents. The Sunday School, Relief Society, and Primary
were orgaized, though they had few members in each. Regular visits by
the mission presidents helped sustain the little branch. District meetings
of the branches at Cayenne and Kourou were held in Cayenne periodically.
The branch at Kourou
then began to have difficulty surviving because a number of active families
moved away. There were enough baptims to keep the branch going, but even
some of them dropped into inactivity. There were few Melchizedek Priesthood
holders, and sometimes only one. The branch continued to rent one house
after another, never having enough members to warrant bulding their own
chapel. During the same period the branch in Cayenne prospered and soon
had their own building.
In 2001 mission Pres.
Don Van Noy considered closing the branch in Kourou, but sent a senior
couple, the McAdams, as a last effort to sustain and build the branch.
In April,2002, in spite of a few baptisms, the numbers were reduced by
several excommunications. Pres. Van Noy checked with Elder Gene R. Cook
of the area presidency about closing the branch. Elder Cook then gave
him a challenge. If they could find, convert, baptize, and ordain an adult
male to become the branch president all within 60 days, then the branch
could remain. Otherwise the branch would be closed and the members would
attend the branch in Cayenne. This challenge was passed on to the McAdams,
the young elders, and to the branch members.
The young elders went into acction and persuaded a longtime investigator,
the middle-aged son of Sis. Fauvette, to make a decision. He did, and
was baptized, ordained, and made a counselor to Pres. McAdam of the branch
presidency, all within two weeks of the challenge. The branch was saved.
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