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Read Oral History #165. Available in English.

I know that when I was younger, we had a family who lived across the street from us and they were oh I can’t even remember which religion they were, I can’t remember now, but their family was really religious and really dedicated to the things that they believed in. And I guess that was – I’ve always had more friends who are not LDS than who are LDS, but it was cool to see a family while I was growing up who are still, like we all know people who are genuinely good people who aren’t members of the church, they’re everywhere and there’s always people trying to do what’s right and so I haven’t actually – I used to attend like activities and things with them. I haven’t actually attended – I think I’ve attended one service that wasn’t an LDS service before and it was for religious studies classes, I attended it and then wrote a paper on it.


And so I don’t have much experience, I don’t know I’ve always been taught LDS doctrine and it’s always made sense to me and I’ve read things like about other churches and studied a little bit about other churches, but this has always been the doctrine or the teachings that make the most sense to me and have been the most applicable to me and helped me the most I guess. But I’ve had lots of experience just volunteering or just doing other random things with other churches like in high school we used to always do a food drive with the Salvation Army and then in Calvary there is a big they call it like the interfaith food drive or something like that, where it’s just a whole bunch of people who get together in the city and collect food and it’s like a really huge city-wide kind of thing that they do every year. But yes, I’ve only had kind of outside of religious meetings and outside of doctrine and stuff experiences with other churches.