By Leonor Ayala
Reporter
NBC News
GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala - Clutching the Book of Mormon and dressed in a white starched shirt and neatly pressed charcoal colored slacks, Willy Guzman walked across the cracked sidewalks of Zona 6 in Guatemala City to the shiny, white church that rises above the modest and mostly shanty flats of the neighborhood.
As it neared 8:00 a.m. Sunday morning, the streets were bustling with men dressed in Western-style suits and women in skirt suits pushing baby strollers, all making their way towards the church.
“Everyone walks to church,” Guzman explained, “so as not to make anyone work on this day of worship.”
As he approached the Mormon church gates, Guzman was greeted by several church Elders, mostly Americans speaking in heavily accented Spanish. Being the church music director, they inquired about his music selection for the service and what instruments would play accompaniment.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5378318 I had a Mormon roommate for a few years. From knowing him and his friends, I have no respect for the Mormon Church if the people I met are a representative sample of their group. They give me the feeling of the rise of another Nazi army.