Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship
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Mormon Studies Review

Authors

Titus Hjelm

Keywords

Finland, Finnish, immigrants, missionaries, religion

Abstract

Growing up in Finland in the 1980s, it was practically impossible to hear someone speak Finnish with an accent. In a time when immigrants were more or less nonexistent, it would have been difficult to imagine why anyone would bother learning the language spoken by five million people at the northern periphery of Europe. That is, apart from a handful of immaculately dressed and groomed American men. Although never as ubiquitous as Jehovah’s Witnesses knocking on doors, the Mormon missionaries and their perfect, if accented, Finnish left a deep impression on one young person, who later became a sociologist of religion.

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