Alberta Adventist News

Page 58

Planting Seeds:

MEANS & MEANING DID YOU KNOW? “In Memory” and “In Honour Gifts” are one way of honouring the life of someone who had a positive impact. Such gifts are recognized by The Alberta Conference by stories, such as those in this issue about Richard Ferguson’s gift, and the Means & Meaning column in the AAN September 2021 issue about the anonymous gift given to remember the 215 unmarked graves of Indigenous children discovered near Kamloops, BC this summer. FAMILY INPUT In addition, the Planned Giving program provides a forum for the family of individuals who have left a gift to the Conference in their will to suggest a use that is dear to the family or that may have been important to the donor if no particular use is specified in the will. “Where most needed” designations in a gift by will or an “In Memory Gift,” such as Richard’s, allow flexibility for needs and uses that arise after a will is made or a gift is given to honour the life of a dear one.

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Alberta Adventist News

Honouring The Giants in Our Lives with Good

Richard’s “In Memory Gift” not only honours his compassionate and caring mother. It also advances the values she pointed him toward.

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eorgenna Ferguson was a nurse who spent many years working at Baker Memorial Sanitarium in Calgary—a TB sanitarium. Most of the patients were First Nations, and it was at the sanitarium that Ed Dejarlais, a young Cree man, first encountered the Adventist message and made it his mission to establish a school and Adventist presence in Maskwacis (then known as Hobbema). It was the beginning of the Adventist Church’s biggest Indigenous outreach in North America, with 232 students now enrolled at MANS. Georgenna and Ed may or may not have met, but Georgenna’s son Richard

MARCH 2022

LYNN McDOWELL Ferguson remembers his mother’s compassion for her First Nations patients. Her stories made them feel like familiar people rather than “outsiders”—a gift Richard still prizes. Richard and his family have followed the news and videos about MANS for many years, and when Richard recently received his inheritance,* it didn’t take him long to forward a gift for MANS in his mother’s memory. “I really appreciate the culturally-sensitive attitude at MANS,” says Richard, who has followed and supported MANS since its years in a condemned school at Pigeon Lake, prior to


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