A6 COMMUNITY East Oregonian Tuesday, January 4, 2022 Desmond Tutu’s visit to Eastern Oregon remembered By DICK MASON The Observer COVE — A leather fi sh- erman’s cap worn by Angli- can Bishop Desmond Tutu saved the day for a party he was traveling with on Inter- state 84 in Baker County four decades ago. The South African was riding in a car with Rustin Kimsey, then the bishop of the Eastern Oregon Diocese of the Episcopalian Church, and his wife, Gretchen, on a hot August day in 1983. The three had left the Ascen- sion School Camp in Cove a half hour earlier. They were bound for the airport in Boise, where they were supposed to pick up Tutu’s daughter, M’Pho, before returning to Cove where Tutu was making presentations during a week-long confer- ence. The trip to Boise was going well until the car over- heated because of a malfunc- tioning radiator. The vehicle was stranded on the side of Interstate 84 and the situ- ation looked bleak before Tutu spotted a drainage ditch below the road. “Undaunted by the steep- ness and while wearing his leather fi sherman’s cap, he scampered down the ravine, dipped his hat into the drain ditch and brought enough water to our overheated radi- ator to cool it. Soon we were on our way again,” Gretchen Kimsey said. The three, after a stop in Baker City for repair work, made it to Boise to pick up Tutu’s daughter and soon returned to Cove. Gretchen Kimsey has fond memories of that day and of Tutu. Kimsey’s husband, Rustin, had become a good friend of Tutu’s after getting to know him at inter- national meetings of Episco- palian church leaders. Tutu, who had just attended a meet- ing of the World Council of Churches in Vancouver, B.C., had come to Cove to speak at the Ascension School Camp at Rustin Kimsey’s invita- tion. ‘He spoke straight to the heart’ The Kimseys were among about 70 people who attended the 1983 conference Tutu spoke at. Tutu, who died Dec. 26, 2021, at the age of 90, was well known but not yet in the international spot- light in 1983. He was a year away from being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent opposition to apartheid in South Africa. Tutu, on the verge of major celebrity status, was able to move about freely in North- eastern Oregon. “He was not well known yet. I think it was fun for him to be anonymous,” Gretchen Kimsey, who lives in The Dalles, said. Kimsey marveled at Tutu’s ability to connect and communicate with people using plainspoken brilliance at the conference in Cove. “He never spoke in complex terms. He spoke Ascension School Camp/Contributed Photo Churchill Pinder is ordained as a deacon in the Episcopal Church by The Most Rev. Desmond Tutu, left, and The Rt. Rev. Rustin Kimsey at the Ascension School Camp in Cove in 1983. straight to the heart,” she said. Kimsey was also struck by Tutu’s sense of humor, which he displayed during his visit to Northeastern Oregon and throughout his life. “He brought laughter to a lot of people’s lives, and we There’s no place like home for the holiday album all know how healing laugh- ter can be,” she said. Kiimsey said her husband shared Tutu’s sense of humor. “That is what drew them together,” she said. A great spirit Jim Hayes, of Joseph, then an eighth grader, was among the younger people who attended the 1983 confer- ence at the Ascension Camp in Cove. Hayes said he was struck by the sense of happi- ness Tutu exuded. “He was joyful, a great person,” he said. The Wallowa County resi- dent grew more impressed with Tutu following the conference when he learned what he had endured while fi ghting apartheid in South Africa. “I didn’t understand how, after what he had gone through, he could have such great spirit,” Hayes said. The Rev. Churchill G. Pinder, of the Episcopal Church, who then lived in Baker City, was impressed with stories Tutu shared of his life in a close-knit setting. “We all had the privi- lege of sitting at the feet of Desmond as he shared his experiences with the strug- gles in South Africa as well as his journey of faith,” he said. “I clearly remember him describing his experi- ences of being very sick as a young child in a hospital and the impression he had when an Anglican priest came and visited him and prayed with him. Desmond shouted with glee, ‘For me. What a wonder God’s love is.’” Pinder said the magnitude of the experience is hard to put into words. “How can I explain the wonder of enjoying all the activities of Family Camp including playing softball, singing around the camp- fi re, and eating meals with Desmond Tutu and his family and many of the members of the Diocese of Eastern Oregon,” he said. Pinder was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church at the Ascension School Camp during a cere- mony conducted by Tutu and Rustin Kimsey. Sarah Moore, a former reporter for The Observer, who attended the conference, said that Tutu was always accessible. “It was such an inti- mate setting. Everyone had access to a famous person. He was always willing to sit down and talk at meals and outside,” said Moore, who now lives in Orcas Island, Washington, with her husband, David, who was the rector of St. Peter’s Episco- pal Church in La Grande 40 years ago. Moore said Tutu accepted the invitation to come to Cove because he knew Rustin Kimsey so well. “His friendship with Rustin Kimsey is what made it happen,” she said. Rustin Kimsey died in 2015, and Tutu was among those who attended his service in The Dalles. Tutu came unannounced, Gretchen Kimsey said, because he did not want to take away attention from his friend. “We were so happy to see him,” Gretchen Kimsey said. “It was such a wonder- ful gesture.” Lovely weather for sledding for two By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — In the era of COVID-19, a group is trying to keep a Pendle- ton holiday tradition alive by turning an annual concert event into a recorded album. On Thursday, Dec. 23, the Pendleton Jazz Club released its “Holiday Pageant (The Album) Vol. 2” a collection of local musical acts sing- ing a combination of Christ- mas classics and seasonally appropriate deep cuts. The album is meant to evoke the spirit of the Holi- day Pageant, an event that usually occurs the Sunday before Christmas at the Great Pacifi c Wine & Coff ee Co. While the Holiday Pageant album is related to the hiber- nating live event, it’s origins stretch back to a different holiday: St. Patrick’s Day. The album is officially credited to “Jazz Club & Friends,” a reference to the fraternal organization that contributes signifi cantly to the album and the group that will benefi t from the record’s proceeds. Jazz Club member J.D. Kindle said the Jazz Club was founded in the 1960s as a private club where local musicians could congregate, practice their craft and enjoy each other’s company. True to their name, they mostly played jazz and big band songs. “It was a place to get together, smoke, drink and get away from the wives for a while,” he said. As time went on, members gravitated toward more contemporary genres like rock, but the aim of provid- ing space for Pendletonians to play music, either privately or for an audience, stayed the same. Kindle said the Jazz Club’s main fundraiser each year is organizing a day-long concert during St. Patrick’s Day at the Rainbow Cafe. But in 2020, St. Patrick’s Day arrived just as the onset of the coronavirus pandemic spurred the state to shut down indoor dining. With their main source of income on hold, the Jazz Club began to explore how to replace the revenue March 17 usually brought in. The pandemic proved resilient in 2020 and when Great Pacific canceled its Peter Walters/Contributed Image Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian The Pendleton Jazz Club released “Holiday Pageant (The Al- bum) Vol. 2”, a collection of local musical acts singing a com- bination of Christmas classics and seasonally appropriate deep cuts. Danny Mize, left, age 11, and Haezin Mize, 12, have some fun in the snow at Aldrich Park in Pendleton on Wednesday, Dec. 29, 2021. Holiday Pageant, “Holiday Pageant (The Album)” was born, with the money gener- ated from the album sales used to help the Jazz Club pay its bills. Addison Schulberg, a Jazz Club member and a manager at Great Pacific, said the Holiday Pageant was meant to be welcoming to all kinds of performances, including rock bands, string quartets or spoken word poems. The Jazz Club wanted to preserve that eclectic spirit on the album and began calling their friends. Schulberg said assem- bling the musicians, record- ing them and then mixing and mastering their perfor- mances was a great deal of work, but the sales from the resulting album kept the Jazz Club in the black and the group had enough fun that they began planning Volume 2 after Christmas 2020. The second volume features some holdovers from the previous year. Kindle returned to play “Cold, Cold Heart” by Hank Williams with a country band and “The First Noel” with a cello accompaniment. Another second timer was Ian Summerfield and his 7-year-old son, Harry. Summerfield has been playing in the Holiday Pageant since he was in high school. Whether it was with friends or solo, Summer- fi eld said he loved how the pageant’s audience was always warm and support- ive, regardless of the perfor- mance. In recent years, Summer- fi eld had begun incorporat- ing his young son Harry into performances. Harry loved Christmas music but would also suff er from stage fright. When the pageant moved to a pre-recorded format, Summerfi eld and Harry got another shot at performing together. Father and son followed up “Last Christmas” and “12 Days of Christmas” in 2020 with “Angels We Have Heard on High” and “Up on the Housetop” in 2021. Summer- fi eld said many of the songs aren’t his personal favorites, but it’s been a bonding expe- rience between the pair as they learn how to put their own personal spins on the venerable material. Summerfield said he’s trying to share his love of music with Harry with- out imposing it on him, and although he would love to perform with him again once live music returns at the GP, he only wants to do it with Harry’s approval. Even if Harry eventually loses inter- est, Summerfi eld may have another young partner to play with. Summerfi eld said his 1-year-old son, August, is already starting to show an early love for music. “Holiday Pageant (The Album) Vol. 2” is available for download at thejazzclub. bandcamp.com. COMMUNITY BRIEFING Gubernatorial candidates forum on hold due to weather PENDLETON — The Umatilla County Republican Party is postponing its forum of Republican gubernatorial candidates due to weather. The party planned to host the event Monday, Jan. 3, at the Pendleton Convention Center. But Suni Danforth, Central Commit- tee chair, in an email announced the decision to postpone because of the latest onslaught of snow and cold temperatures. The local GOP does intend to reschedule the forum, she stated. For more information about the local Republican party, contact Danforth at 541-215- 9389, ucrpchair@gmail.com or search www. facebook.com/groups/85685613647. — EO Media Group TRUCKS IN STOCK! PLENTY ON THE WAY! INQUIRE TODAY! 1740 Washington Baker City, OR 97814 1-800-399-3912 399 www.bakercitygmsales.com