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Illinois Tells Mormons It Regrets Expulsion

April 8, 2004
 By MELISSA SANFORD 



 

SALT LAKE CITY, April 7 - Illinois officials came to this
predominantly Mormon city Wednesday to apologize for the
expulsion of the faith's earliest members and the killing
of its founder. 

"The murder of Joseph Smith and the expulsions of the
members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
was a time we are not proud of," Representative Daniel J.
Burke of the Illinois House said in a meeting with Gov.
Olene S. Walker of Utah and Mormon leaders at the church
administration building. 

The meeting was held in a room with towering columns,
marble walls and gilded molding. There, Illinois's
lieutenant governor, Pat Quinn, presented church leaders a
copy of House Resolution 793, which expressed "official
regret" for the violence and state-sanctioned condemnation
that caused the Mormons to leave in 1846 on the trek that
led them to Utah. 

An earlier draft of the resolution asked the Mormons for
their "pardon and forgiveness," but the language was
weakened at the behest of Illinois lawmakers who said they
could not ask forgiveness for acts they had not personally
committed. 

The events that led to Wednesday's meeting began in 1839,
when the Mormons, having fled persecution in Missouri (and
before that in New York and Ohio), founded the Mississippi
River town of Nauvoo, Ill. The town prospered, but its
rapid growth and strong voting power, along with further
religious bias, drew outsiders' antagonism. 

Smith was also besieged by dissension within the church. As
mayor of the town, he ordered the suppression of the
dissidents and, when violence resulted, called out the
Nauvoo militia. The Illinois authorities arrested him and
his brother Hyrum on charges of treason and conspiracy, and
jailed them in the town of Carthage. A mob stormed the jail
on June 27, 1844, and killed the brothers. Expulsion
followed two years later. 

The idea for the new resolution dates from a ski trip that
Anne Burke, an Illinois appellate justice who is the sister
of Representative Burke, took to Utah. At a dinner party
there, she chatted with Governor Walker's husband, Myron,
who told her his great-grandfather had been expelled from
Illinois because of his religion. Justice Burke had never
heard of the expulsion. 

"I could not get over that this kind of religious
persecution happened and this was not so long ago," she
said in an interview after Wednesday's ceremony. "Myron
Walker knew his great-grandfather." 

When Justice Burke returned home, she learned that Illinois
had never issued an apology to the Mormons. She contacted
her brother, who co-sponsored the resolution with
Representative Jack D. Franks. 

"For somebody to hear my great-grandfather's story and pick
up on it in the manner she has is very meaningful to me,"
Mr. Walker said. "I'm overwhelmed by a feeling of good will
that has been extended by the people of Illinois." 

Illinois is now home to 50,000 Mormons. They rebuilt their
Nauvoo temple in 2002, and more than 300,000 people a year
visit the town. Thomas Monson, a leader of the church, said
that with this resolution, he expected even more tourism
there. 

"We are going to see an epic trend of people making the
reverse trek to Nauvoo," Mr. Monson said. 

The church's president, Gordon B. Hinckley, did not attend
the ceremony; his wife of 67 years, Marjorie, died Tuesday
evening. He was represented at the gathering by Mr. Monson
and another church leader, James Faust. 

"We view this resolution," Mr. Faust said, "as an
affirmation that Nauvoo is a place of peace and an
affirmation that Latter-day Saints will always have a place
in Illinois." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/08/national/08APOL.html?ex=1082468165&ei=1&en=7e20640045e783e8


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