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How President Ballard has impacted the lives of Latter-day Saints throughout Canada

President M. Russell Ballard greets Ruby Sookhoo. She and her family joined the Church while President Ballard was president of the Canadian Mission. If the family missed Church, President Ballard phoned their home to make sure they were well.
President Ballard greets his grandson, Elder Brigham Ballard, who is serving as assistant to President Jeffrey L. Shields, Canada Toronto Mission President. Elder Ballard’s father, Craig, is the youngest child of President and Sister Ballard and was with
President Ballard greets Terry Kemp, a classmate of his daughters in the 1970s in Brampton, Ontario. Terry was one of the youth who often came to the Canadian Mission home to hear President Ballard teach the gospel. He now serves as the elders quorum pres
President M. Russell Ballard greets Rose Sutton, who joined the Church during President Ballard’s mission, and Sister Patricia Shields, whose husband, President Jeffrey L. Shields, presides over the Canada Toronto Mission, during a gathering held in the C
President Ballard greets his grandson, Elder Brigham Ballard, who is serving as assistant to President Jeffrey L. Shields, Canada Toronto Mission President. Elder Ballard’s father, Craig, is the youngest child of President and Sister Ballard and was with
Ruby Sookhoo and her family joined the Church while President M. Russell Ballard was president of the Canadian Mission. If the family missed Church, President Ballard phoned their home to make sure they were well.
Joseph Willmott served as a counsellor to President Ballard and they have kept a close relationship ever since. He and his late wife, Gladys, raised a family of Church leaders in Ontario. Recently, his son, Russell, was called to the Toronto temple presid
Several converts who joined the Church during the Ballard’s mission 44 years ago, attended the event. Back row, Rudy Sookhoo, President Ballard, and Sandy Vanderkolk, front row, Ruby Sookhoo, Rose Sutton, Barbara Fischer, Diane Vanderkolk and David Cormac
Priesthood leaders, converts and friends pose for a photo with President M. Russell Ballard, Elder Robert C. Gay, Elder David P. Homer and Elder Alain L. Allard in the Creditview cultural hall of the Brampton Ontario Stake.
Painting by Brian Turner captures what Churchill, Ontario, might have looked like in the early 1830s.

President M. Russell Ballard served as president of the Canadian Mission with his wife, Sister Barbara Ballard, and their family from 1974-1977, but to the friends who gathered from as far away as Alberta to see him at the Creditview Chapel in Brampton, Ontario, on Friday, May 4, it seemed like it was yesterday.

President Ballard, now acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, still remembered their names as he greeted them and what they had accomplished in the Church since they had first met when President and Sister Ballard and their family arrived in Ontario 44 years ago.

When President Ballard saw Terry Kemp and David Cormack on May 4, he greeted them with “There’s my old converts from my mission” and gave them hugs. Both men had been high school classmates of President Ballard’s daughters, Tammy and Stacey Ballard, who accompanied their parents to the mission field.

Kemp said President Ballard taught them about God and religion and they were all profoundly influenced by his words. Later at a youth conference, he said, President Ballard’s words were some of the most impactful he had ever heard. “It was life-changing. He called us to repentance. It was my first experience with the influence of the Spirit and a defining moment in my life,” said Kemp, who baptized two of the other young men in the group, with all serving as leaders in the Church today.

Both men had warm memories of the Ballard family. The children were a positive influence on their circle of friends, and Sister Ballard welcomed them on their frequent visits to the mission home.

Priesthood leaders who had served at the same time and members who joined the Church during the Ballards’ mission had waited with excitement to see their friend. A severe windstorm hit the Toronto area just when President Ballard’s plane was to arrive, and Pearson International Airport suspended operations for about two hours. Happily, the plane with President Ballard and Elder Robert C. Gay and Elder David P. Homer, both General Authority Seventies, was able to land just before the shutdown, and they were able to drive through the fierce winds to get to the chapel in West Brampton for an evening with Elder Alain Allard, an Area Seventy, and old friends of the Ballards before a busy weekend of training meetings with stakes in the area.

The cultural hall overflowed with love as handshakes and hugs were exchanged with every person in the room. Joseph Willmott, seated beside President Ballard, had served as his counselor in the mission presidency. They reminisced about 13-hour drives to district conferences in Northern Ontario and the hazards of winter driving and airplane travel. One of their favorite treats was the English trifle Sister Gladys Willmott often made them, and they were both delighted when Anna Willmott replicated her late mother-in-law’s memorable recipe for the evening’s dessert.

One of the joys of the evening for President Ballard was to have his grandson at the meeting, Elder Brigham Ballard, who serves as assistant to President Jeffrey L. Shields, president of the Canada Toronto Mission. Elder Ballard’s father, Craig, was a young boy when his parents served in Ontario.

When President Ballard spoke to the group, he talked about good times with old friends as well as about ministering and its message of joy and love. “Love is the key word. Be as close to the families around you as you are with your own family.”

Every family had a special memory of kindness and love to share. Julia Sookoo and her husband joined the Church during the Ballards’ tenure, having recently immigrated from Guyana when the missionaries called on them. Within three weeks of the first discussion, all seven of their family were baptized — their descendants have served nine missions since.

Sookoo said after she was baptized, if she didn’t come to church, President Ballard would phone her, ask how she was and encourage her to come out the next week. Because they weren’t good at reading English, Joseph Willmott’s son Russell, who was serving as their bishop, came to their home every Monday night and read them the Book of Mormon and explained it to them.

Said Bishop Michael Finnigan: “Here we sit with the acting president of the Quorum of the Twelve, who has taken time out of his busy schedule to spend time with us. We rejoiced that he was here, but he talked about how wonderful it was to be with us and that he was proud of us. He mentioned us by name and what we had done. He was personal, warm and kind. He has maintained relationships in an extraordinary way and is a natural minister. His decision to meet with his friends on such a busy weekend is an example of ministering.”

Lawrence Fuller added “how much it meant to all of us to see him again and feel his love.”

Bradley and Nancy Miller remembered President and Sister Ballard as wonderful examples who “took us to a new level of what we could be.”

Sister Ballard was a role model and inspiration who was kind, loving and almost regal, said Nancy Miller. “She taught me how to be a mother. I wanted to be just like her,” she said. Years after the Ballard family returned to Utah, Kenneth Shoesmith was serving as stake president when he was diagnosed with cancer. President Ballard was presiding at another stake conference in the area and asked that Shoesmith come for an interview. When he did, President Ballard said, “I hear you’ve got a problem,” and he gave him a blessing. Now, years later, Bishop Shoesmith serves as bishop of the downtown Hamilton Ward and is still inspired by the counsel he received from President Ballard

Bruce and Dolina Smith recalled the outings their two families went on when the Ballards were in Ontario and the friendship that has continued over the years.

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