Our walk to the office might take 5 minutes tops, depending on how long we have to wait for the elevator (we live on the 10th floor). Once we are in the office, we log into our computers, read our emails, make and answer phone calls and attend meetings. Every other week we have a humanitarian project review and approval meeting referred to as an Area Humanitarian Committee Meeting. Those who attend this meeting are ourselves, Elder and Sister Davis (Area Welfare Specialists for Refugees), Chrisitan Otter (Welfare Self Reliance Department Manager), Gilles Francois (Humanitarian Project Manager), Celia Diez (Welfare Self Reliance Administrative Assistant) and Hannah Ashby (our intern). This meeting is where we discuss the projects which the humanitarian couples in the Europe Area have submitted for approval. When the meeting is over we go to work notifying the various missionary couples if their projects have been approved and what they might need to do to implement their projects.
Gary's day is working with the couples so that the projects they submit get approved. He asks the hard questions and then helps the couples to write the information into the request so that the project has the best chance of approval. The biggest part of our day is spent in solving problems. For instance, a new couple has arrived in country - no missionary name badges and missing 3 suitcases, or the couple has to pay for a humanitarian project related expense with their church issued credit card and the transaction is declined. We try to help them solve their challenges. Much of the work is simply letting them know we are there for them.
Each month we conduct Zoom Video Calls (similar to Skype) with our couples. We like to connect three couples at a time because we find the couples can and do offer solutions to each other's challenges and problems.
We also travel to the different humanitarian missionary couples and provide on site training. Sometimes we use Uno cards to teach various "color-coded" Humanitarian Principles. In the picture below we taught these principles to our management team - Christian, Gilles, and Celia - an assignment from Sister Sharon Eubank.
In addition to our mission call assignment we have an additional assignment from the Senior Missionary Zone Leaders. We help coordinate the Senior Missionary Family Home Evenings. Our duties are to schedule the lesson presenters, coordinate the refreshments, and schedule potluck dinners for departing missionaries. The picture below shows one of the potluck dinners. Family Home Evenings are held twice each month. In our Welfare office we also help celebrate staff member birthdays.
So we actually do "work" during the week - but the on the weekends, especially on Saturdays we try to go somewhere and learn about Germany. The country is the size of Montana and has a population of 83,500,000. There are so many little towns and hundreds of castles that need to be explored. When we were preparing to go to New Zealand on our previous mission, Elder Glen L. Rudd told us to not be "knuckleheads" and sit in our apartment. "Go out on the weekends; see and learn about the country." We are following his counsel. Now the big question - Where should we go next weekend?
"The ways in which couples can serve are virtually limitless, From mission office support and leadership training to family history, temple work and humanitarian service - there is an opportunity to use almost any skill or talent with which the Lord has blessed you." Robert D. Hales, Couple Missionaries: A Time to Serve, April General Conference 2001

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