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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Hawaii
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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Hawaii : ウィキペディア英語版
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Hawaii
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) was established in the Hawaiian Islands in 1850 following the Edict of Toleration promulgated by Kamehameha III, giving the underground Hawaii Catholic Church the right to worship, and at the same time allowing other faith traditions to begin establishing themselves.
The first LDS Church missionaries to have success among the Hawaiians was George Q. Cannon. Among his earliest converts were men well-versed in the Hawaiian language, such as Jonatana Napela and Uaua. After the construction of the Hawaiian Temple, the Latter-day Saints founded Church College of Hawaii, now Brigham Young University Hawaii, which now includes the associated Polynesian Cultural Center, the state's largest living museum, and an entertainment center;〔(Polynesian Cultural Center Official Site ). Polynesia.com. Retrieved on 2010-12-22.〕 it draws a million visitors annually. The Mormon population in Hawaii continued to increase, and the Kona Hawaii Temple, a second LDS Church temple for the islands, was completed in Kailua Kona on the island of Hawaii in 2000.
As of January 1, 2011, there were in Hawaii 69,872 Latter-day Saints organized into 15 stakes, 124 wards, and 10 branches, and there was one mission. In addition there were 25 Family History Centers, used for genealogical research and study.〔(USA-Hawaii ), Country/State profiles, LDS Newsroom, LDS Church〕 Hawaii has the highest concentration of Latter-day Saints of U.S. states that do not border Utah.
==History==
The first ten Mormon missionaries departed San Francisco for Hawaii during the California Gold Rush on the ship ''Imaum of Muscat'', arriving on December 12, 1850, in Honolulu Harbor of what was then known as the Sandwich Islands.〔.〕 With Hiram Clark presiding, the missionaries included Elders Henry Bigler, Hiram Blackwell, George Q. Cannon, John Dixon, William Farrer, James Hawkins, James Keeler, Thomas Morris, and Thomas Whittle. A day after their arrival the group climbed a hill above Honolulu (Pacific Heights), constructed a small, makeshift altar and said a prayer. A week later, nine missionaries received their assignments: Farrer and Dixon headed to the island of Kaua'i, Cannon, Keeler, and Bigler to Lahaina on the island of Maui, Blackwell and Hawkins to the Big Island of Hawaii, with Morris and President Clark staying behind in Honolulu. This group formed the basis of the Sandwich Islands Mission. The first Church congregation in Hawaii was established on the island of Maui in 1851.〔.〕 Among the early converts of Canon were three prominent Native Hawaiians, Jonathan Napela, Uaua and Kaleohano who would later serve as prominent missionaries and leaders in the LDS Church.〔''LDS Church Almanac'' 2010 Edition, p. 331〕
Missionaries lead a group of Hawaiian Latter-day Saints in establishing a colony on the island of Lānai in 1854.〔.〕 In 1857 the American missionaries left due to the Utah War. No new missionaries came until Walter Murray Gibson arrived in 1861. Gibson instituted irregular activities such as selling the priesthood. Some local leaders such as Napela sent letters to Salt Lake City asking for Gibson to be replaced. In response Ezra T. Benson and Lorenzo Snow of the quorum of the 12 were sent to take over the leadership of the mission with the assistance of Joseph F. Smith who had been a missionary in Hawaii for much of the 1850s. Most of the membership followed the 12 and Smith, but in the process ownership of the property on Lanai was lost. A new colony for Hawaiian Latter-day Saints was established in Laie.〔''LDS Church Almanc'' 2010 edition, p. 331〕
In 1889, Iosepa, Utah was founded as a colony for Hawaiian Latter-day Saints. This colony functioned until 1915 when the saints there were encouraged to return to Hawaii in anticipation of the building of a temple there. The first stake in Hawaii was organized in 1935.〔''LDS Church Alamanc'', 2010 edition, p. 331〕
In 1937, the Japanese Mission was organized in Hawaii to focus on teaching the ethnic Japanese in Hawaii. This mission existed until 1950 when it was merged into the Hawaiian mission.〔''LDS Church Almanac'', 2010 edition, p. 331〕

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