Latino Mormons: The LDS Church’s Fastest Growing  Group
Monica Campbell ("The World," October 22, 2012) 
Mitt Romney’s presidential run has brought attention to the Mormon church.  
But there is a side to the religion that breaks from mainstream references 
like  Broadway’s “The Book of Mormon” or HBO’s “Big Love” series. It’s 
the church’s  international mix, especially fueled by its presence in Latin 
America and,  especially, Mexico, which ties to Mitt Romney’s own family 
ancestry. 
In Provo, Utah, one man, Fernando Rogelio Gómez, has created a small museum 
 solely dedicated to this small Mexican slice of Mormon history. It started 
when  he found a trunk full of documents buried inside his aunt’s house in 
Mexico. Old  books, relics and photographs. 
“These are some of the early members,” Gómez says, pointing to weathered  
black-and-white photographs, now displayed in the museum. One features a man 
 named Narcizo Sandoval, who Gómez called one of the “most prolific 
missionaries  that Mexico has produced.” 
What Gómez discovered at his aunt’s house, and what he has collected over 
the  years, is now a trove of history about the Church of Jesus Christ of the 
Latter  Days Saints in Mexico. It has convinced Gómez, a 72-year-old 
retired engineer  and devout Mormon from Mexico, to create two museums 
dedicated 
to Mexican Mormon  History, one in Mexico City and a new one here in Provo, 
Utah, Mormon  heartland. 
On a recent weekday afternoon, no other visitors around, Gómez, polite and  
soft-spoken, served as a personal guide. His collection houses maps 
detailing  the treks in the late 1800s, when Brigham Young first sent 
missionaries 
to  Mexico. Gómez also prizes housing some of the oldest, original copies of 
the  Book of Mormon sent to Mexico and some of the earlier Spanish 
translations of  the book. “It was in preparation of the first missionaries,” 
he 
said. “So  they’re probably 125 years old now.” 
Also on display, maps tracing the Mormons’ fast rise in Mexico. Gómez 
points  to a map showing where some of the first branches were organized. The 
map 
also  shows the church’s presence today, with nearly 30 missions, more than 
220 stakes  and 12 temples, with a new building under construction in 
Tijuana. “You can see  it from that picture, that was the whole of Mexico back 
in 
1946,” said Gómez.  “In 60 years we have over a million members. So it’s 
really a fantastic  history.” 
Mexican Mormons migrating north brought their faith with them. Gómez 
compares  being a Spanish-speaking Mormon in Utah in 1964 to today. “It has 
exploded,” he  said. “There was only one small branch, but today there’s 
probably 
35, 40 units  just in Utah county.” 
Across the road from the museum, at Brigham Young University, Ignacio 
García  is a history professor and a Mexican-American who has also served as a 
Mormon  bishop. He explains that Latinos are drawn to Mormonism for it’s 
tight-knit  culture, a contrast to an increasingly distant Catholic Church. And 
he adds  another reason why Latinos are drawn to Mormonism. “They still catch 
on to the  pioneer stories, the meaning of a people leaving, escaping from 
a place in which  they are oppressed. It’s a way to escape mob violence,” 
García said. “In the  Book of Mormon, there’s a mention where people come to 
this land through the  hand of God. I hear it often, you know, we’re here 
because God wants us to be  here. This is home.” 
And there was a time when more American Mormons considered Mexico home, to  
proselytize, create colonies and practice polygamy, outlawed in the US And 
here  is where Mitt Romney’s heritage enters the scene, when his forefathers 
helped  set up colonies in northern Mexico. 
Gómez hauls out two large books on US Mormon genealogy in Mexico. He points 
 to an entry about Miles Park Romney, who lived from 1843 to 1904, and then 
to a  map of Chihuahua state in northern Mexico . “This is Colonia Juárez, 
where the  Romneys were as early as 1884. Educated and hard-working people.” 
Romney’s dad, George, was born in northern Mexico in 1907. Romney’s  
grandparents were polygamists who fled the US government and its ban on plural  
marriage. But in 1913, Mexico’s Revolution and its violence drove many of the 
 Romneys back to the US. 
But not all left. Several of Romney’s distant relatives still live in  
northern Mexico today. “And they’re still there, there’s still a presence of 
the  Romneys in the colonies.” If another path had been taken, if Romney’s 
father  decided not to leave Mexico, life might’ve been far different for Mitt 
Romney.  As novelist Héctor Tobar wrote recently in Smithsonian magazine, 
he might have  “been born in Mexico, and might be living there today raising 
apples and  peaches.”

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