Mennonite Weekly Review - December, 2003
Obituaries are emailed to MennObits before MWR is printed. Wording may vary in printed version.
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Diener, Truman Leroy
Truman Leroy Diener, 82, of Hillsboro, Kan., died Oct. 26, 2003,
at Hillsboro Community Medical Center. He was born May 15, 1921,
to Harry and Amanda (Seltzer) Diener in Yoder.
He accepted Christ as his Savior when he was 12 and was baptized
by his father at Yoder Mennonite Church. At age 14 he was teaching
children in the church.
He graduated from Hesston Academy in 1940 and from Kansas State
University with a degree in agriculture education.
In 1943 he was drafted and served as a conscientious objector
in Civilian Public Service in Terry, Mont., doing waterway
construction;
in Denison, Iowa, performing farm labor; and in Poughkeepsie,
N.Y., working in a mental hospital. There he met his future wife,
Venora Wiebe, who was a volunteer.
After CPS he served as a Mennonite Central Committee relief worker
in Ethiopia from 1946 to 1948. While there he completed the conversion
of a cotton mill into Haile Mariam Mammo Hospital.
Upon his return from Ethiopia, he and Venora Wiebe were married
Sept. 10, 1948.
His first public school teaching experience was in Miltonvale.
In 1955 they moved to Hillsboro, where he taught vocational agriculture
for 34 years and was adviser for the Hillsboro FFA chapter. In
1967 he completed his master's degree at Kansas State University.
He retired from teaching in 1989.
At Trinity Mennonite Church, he served as a Sunday school teacher
and a deacon. He enjoyed caring for horses and horseback riding
with his children. He liked Elderhostel programs and Great Plains
Seminary classes.
Survivors include two sons, Tim and his wife, Donna, of Hillsboro,
and Glen and his wife, Sharon, of Newton; a daughter, Ann Kopper
and her husband, Bryce, of Garden City; four brothers, Edward
of Archbold, Ohio, Clayton and Paul, both of Hesston, and Herman
of South Hutchinson; and six grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Venora; a daughter, Nannette;
and three brothers, Harold Glen, Willard and Daniel.
Mennonite Weekly Review -
December 8, 2003 - 81st Year, No. 49 - p. 8
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Nikkel, Abraham J.
Abraham J. Nikkel, 66, of Versailles, Mo., died Oct. 26, 2003,
due to a massive brain hemorrhage suffered Oct. 7. He was born
June 7, 1937, to Jacob P. and Eva Unrau Nikkel at Bethesda Hospital
in Goessel, Kan.
He attended grade school at Maple Hill, southwest of Lehigh. He
graduated from Goessel High School in 1955 and attended Bethel
College in North Newton before serving an 18-month term in 1-W
alternative service at Fitzsimmons Army Hospital in Denver, Colo.
He married Kathryn Marie Hilty of Versailles on Oct. 1, 1960,
at Bethel Mennonite Church in Fortuna, Mo.
He was a member of Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church of rural Goessel
prior to becoming a member at Bethel Mennonite Church. He was
active in various aspects of the church and community for the
past 30 years. He worked as a builder, farmer, dairyman and truck
driver throughout his professional life.
Survivors include his wife, Kathryn; a daughter, Julie Goering
and her husband, Russell, of Hutchinson, Kan.; a son, James P.
Nikkel of Newton; five sisters, Josephine Voth of Newton, Doris
Schmidt of Hutchinson, Arzella Dirksen of Denver, Orletta Goering
of Gresham, Ore., and Joyce Christopher of Olathe, Kan.; and two
granddaughters.
He was preceded in death by a daughter, Alice Rebecca.
Funeral services were held at Bethel Mennonite Church of Fortuna.
Burial was in the church cemetery.
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Thiesen, Anna Kroeker
Anna Thiesen, 84, of Hesston, Kan., died Nov. 6, 2003, at
Schowalter
Villa. She was born Aug. 2, 1919, to John Jacob Kroeker and Katherine
(Janzen) Kroeker in Spat, Crimea, Russia.
Due to the Russian Revolution, the family fled when she was 3
months old, settling in Germany for six years. They moved to Chicago
in 1926, then to Newton, Kan., in 1936. She graduated from Newton
High School in 1938 and became a U.S. citizen in 1940. On May
23, 1946, she married Walter Thiesen.
She was a bookkeeper and insurance clerk, working for several
insurance companies in Newton and Wichita and 25 years for an
Oldsmobile-Cadillac dealership. In the 1950s she was involved
in an organization for women in business, Credit Women's Breakfast
Club, and was state president in 1955-56. She was a notary public
for many years. In the mid-1970s, she returned to insurance-related
work for Doctors Park medical office. She retired in 1983.
All through her working years and into retirement, she did independent
work in bookkeeping for small businesses and in tax preparation.
In retirement she was treasurer of the Bethel College Women's
Association, working on fund-raising projects for the college.
She joined First Mennonite Church of Newton on May 16, 1937. She
taught Sunday school for about 50 years and loved music, singing
in the church choir and community choral groups for many years.
She enjoyed attending classical music concerts. Her interests
included quilts, collecting teacups and reading. A memorable vacation
was to Europe in 1978, meeting uncles, aunts and cousins, some
of whom she hadn't seen for 50 years.
Survivors include her husband, Walter; a son, John and his wife,
Barbara, of Newton; a brother, Jake Kroeker of Wichita; and a
grandson, Andrew Thiesen.
Services were held at First Mennonite Church. Burial was in Greenwood
Cemetery.
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Burkhart, Lydia
Rebecca
Lydia Rebecca Burkhart, 78, of Alanson, Mich., died June 13, 2003,
at Bortz Health Care of Petoskey. She was born Jan. 3, 1925, to
Eli and Elizabeth (Brubacher) Burkhart in Brutus.
She attended Woodland School of Brutus, Eastern Mennonite College
of Harrisonburg, Va., and Riverside School of Nursing in Newport
News, Va.
She taught school for about three years in Calico Rock, Ark.,
Russian Mission, Alaska, and Harbor Springs, Mich. She then went
into nursing, working for a short time at Little Traverse Hospital
in Petoskey and then for 21 years with Mennonite Board of Missions
in Ghana in Africa as a registered nurse.
She was a lifetime member of Maple River Mennonite Church of Brutus.
Survivors include two sisters, Ann Batchellor of Alanson and Mattie
Sauder of Petoskey; and two sisters-in-law, Mary and Ruth Burkhart
of Brutus.
She was preceded in death by two brothers, Menno and Jonas Burkhart;
and two brothers-in-law, Jacob Sauder and Edmond Batchellor.
Memorial services were held at Maple River Mennonite Church.
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Banman, Frieda Schmidt
Frieda Schmidt Banman, 98, of North Newton, Kan., died Nov. 24,
2003. She was born Dec. 29, 1904, to John J. and Elizabeth Rempel
Schmidt near Goessel.
She was baptized at Alexanderwohl Mennonite Church.
She married Arthur Banman on Aug. 26, 1926, at Alexanderwohl. They moved to a small farm, where their early years of marriage were difficult during the Depression.
Beginning in 1936, for 15 years she and her husband were custodians
at Alexanderwohl. In 1952, they moved to North Newton and began
employment at Mennonite Press. They joined Bethel College Mennonite
Church.
She was a faithful member and active in the women's circle. For
many years she was chair of the funeral committee. She enjoyed
volunteer work, and with her husband served at the Mennonite Central
Committee relief sale and the Et Cetera thrift store in Newton.
In 1962, they served a two-year term with MCC in Congo, managing
a guest house, working with building projects and relief concerns.
In spite of a serious bout with hepatitis that almost took her
life, and the tribal war around them, this was a wonderful time
in her life. She was a creative homemaker, cook, rug maker and
quilter. She enjoyed having guests in their home. They loved to
travel, visiting Europe, Mexico, Canada and Paraguay.
Survivors include three daughters, Lela Trewett of Shawnee, Marjorie
Neufeld of Goshen, Ind., and Joan Wiebe of North Newton; three
sisters, Wilma Unruh of Goessel, Elisabeth Stretch of Del Ray
Beach, Fla., and Irene Janzen of Salida, Colo.; two brothers,
Herman Schmidt of Reno, Nev., and Gerald Schmidt of Hilton Head,
S.C.; 12 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren and two
great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Art; a daughter, Elaine
Ruth; and five brothers, Herbert, Orlando, John, Alfred and Raymond.
Memorial services were held at Bethel College Mennonite Church.
Burial was in Greenwood Cemetery.
Mennonite Weekly Review - December
15, 2003 - 81st Year, No. 50 - p. 12
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Wenger, Howard
Howard Wenger, 85, of Adair, Okla., died Nov. 24, 2003. He was
born Aug. 19, 1918, to John E. and Lucy (Kauffman) Wenger at
Goshen, Ind.
He lived in the Clinton community and attended Millersburg High
School in Goshen. During World War II he served in Civilian Public
Service for two years at Greystone (N.J.) Mental Institution and
two years at North Fork Camp in California.
He was a farmer and dairyman. He was a faithful member of Zion
Mennonite Church of Pryor. While he lived in Indiana, he served
as superintendent of the Sunday school in the Mennonite Church.
He was church chorister in Indiana, a position he also held at
Zion.
He married Miriam Naomi Yoder on Jan. 1, 1947, in Elkhart, Ind.
He spent most of his life farming, a work he enjoyed very much.
Survivors include his wife, Miriam; three sons, Rex and his wife,
Ruth, of Harrisonburg, Va., Ron and his wife, Rebecca, of Adair,
and Roy of Grove; two daughters, Rhea Miller and her husband,
Dean, of Middlebury, Ind., and Rose Troyer and her husband, Mark,
of Lititz, Pa.; a sister, Dorothy Miller of Goshen; 12 grandchildren
and a great-grandchild.
He was preceded in death by a brother, Stanley Wenger.
Funeral services were held at Zion Mennonite Church of Pryor.
Burial was in the church cemetery.
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Jennings, Alice Groff
Alice Louise Groff Jennings, 99, of Glendale, Ariz., died Nov.
8, 2003, at Glencroft Care Center. She was born Sept. 20, 1904,
to Jonas and Hattie Ebersole Groff in Sterling, Ill.
Her early education was at East Science Ridge School in Sterling.
On Aug. 9, 1923, she married Ervin B. Jennings. They traveled
to California on their honeymoon and stayed.
She was a homemaker. She and Ervin lived in Upland, Sacramento
and then 40 years in Fresno. In addition to being a mother, she
traveled with her salesman husband and was responsible for much
of the bookkeeping.
In 1984, after the death of her husband, she moved to Hubbard,
Ore., to be near a daughter. The last 15 years she was a resident
of Glencroft Retirement Center, Glendale, Ariz.
She loved music, especially church vocal music. She was a social
person. Friends and friendships were important to her. She kept
a table full of photographs and albums full of pictures of her
family and past events to share with anyone who stopped by her
apartment.
She was a lifelong member of the Mennonite Church. Her religious
roots gave meaning and stability to her life.
Survivors include two daughters, Lois Yearout of Fresno, Calif.,
and Ellen Davidhizar of Sun City; a son, Ernest Jennings of Cottonwood,
Idaho; a brother, Robert Groff of Colorado Springs, Colo.; nine
grandchildren; 17 great-grandchildren and three
great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Ervin; an infant son,
Carl Ervin; a brother, Lawrence; and sisters Myrtle and Ella.
Services took place at Glencroft Community Church Chapel. Burial
was in Fresno (Calif.) Memorial Gardens.
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Yoder, Paul Emanuel
"E.M."
Paul Emanuel (E.M.) Yoder, 87, of Wellman, Iowa, died Nov. 20,
2003, in Parkview Manor following a lengthy illness. He was born
March 16, 1916, in Vestaburg, Mich., to John and Nancy (Hershey)
Yoder.
He was baptized in his youth at Mount Pisgah Mennonite Church,
Cherry Box, Mo. He graduated from high school in Leonard, Mo.,
and attended Hesston (Kan.) College.
He married Helen Slaubaugh on June 6, 1946, at West Union Mennonite
Church, rural Parnell, Iowa.
He farmed in the Wellman and North English area from 1945 to 1979.
He was an ordained minister and served as pastor of Parnell Mennonite
Church, 1954-79.
After retiring in 1979, he and Helen served in Mennonite Voluntary
Service in Brownsville and San Antonio, Texas, 1980-84, and in
Quito, Ecuador, 1987-88, before returning to Wellman.
He volunteered at the Crowded Closet in Iowa City and worked many
hours at Crooked Creek Christian Camp south of Washington. He
was a member of Wellman Mennonite Church.
Survivors include his wife, Helen, of Wellman; two daughters,
Kathleen Erteld and her husband, Roger, of Moundridge, Kan., and
Christine Falcon and her husband, Rafael, of Goshen, Ind.; two
sons, Phil of Kalona and Orie J. and his wife, Linda, of Williamsburg;
two brothers, Jesse L. Yoder of Sarasota, Fla., and Vernon T.
Yoder of Memphis, Mo., seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by two sisters, Mary Hathaway and Barbara
Nice; and two brothers, Daniel M. Yoder and Jonas S. Yoder.
Services were held at Wellman Mennonite Church. Burial was in
West Union Cemetery.
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Harder, Anna M.
Anna M. Harder, 85, of
Mountain Lake, Minn., died Dec. 4, 2003,
at Good Samaritan Village. She was born May 17, 1918, to Peter
B. and Marie (Derksen) Harder at the family farm home near Bingham
Lake.
She received her education at a country school near her home.
On May 16, 1937, she was baptized upon confession of her faith
at First Mennonite Church in Mountain Lake, where she remained
an active member.
She married Harry T. Harder on Oct. 8, 1940, at First Mennonite
Church. They made their home and farmed together in the Mountain
Lake area.
In 1956, she went to Paraguay with Harry while he was serving
there with Mennonite Central Committee, and they were there until
1963. They also served in Brazil from 1965 to 1967.
She enjoyed gardening, reading, traveling, cooking and entertaining.
She was active in her church and as a volunteer at Good Samaritan
Village and Care & Share Ten Thousand Villages in Mountain
Lake.
Survivors include a daughter, Margaret Janzen and her husband,
Jack, of Minneapolis; a son, Martin Harder and his wife, Mary,
of Minneapolis; four grandchildren and a great-grandson.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Harry; a daughter, Elaine
Marie Harder; and four brothers, Peter M. Harder, Sam M. Harder,
Henry M. Harder and infant brother Peter.
Services were held at First Mennonite Church of Mountain Lake.
Burial was in Mountain Lake Cemetery.
Mennonite Weekly Review - December
22, 2003 - 81st Year, No. 51 - p. 8
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Landis, Howard
Howard Landis, 82, of Sterling, Ill., died Nov. 10, 2003, at
Sterling
Pavilion Nursing Home. He was born Jan. 11, 1921, to William and
Bertha (Kaiser) Landis near Sterling.
He was a graduate of Sterling Township High School in 1938 and
also attended Brown's Business College. He served in Civilian
Public Service camps in Denison, Iowa, and Barto, Fla., and with
Mennonite Central Committee in Akron, Pa. He also worked in Puerto
Rico in health projects.
He married Erma Keim on Nov. 25, 1950, in Sugarcreek, Ohio. They
farmed north of Sterling for 35 years.
He was a member of Science Ridge Mennonite Church in Sterling.
He served on the church board, as church treasurer for 21 years,
as Sunday school superintendent and as a church council member.
He and Erma served in several volunteer projects, including with
MCC in Pennsylvania and California. He enjoyed reading.
Survivors include his wife, Erma; two sons, Mark and his wife,
Corina, of Dixon, and Keith and his wife, Lois, of Sterling; two
daughters, Beth of Woodland, Texas, and Lois Oyer and her husband,
Clifford, of Goshen, Ind.; a brother, Gerald of Goshen; nine
grandchildren;
two step-granddaughters; a great-granddaughter; a step-great-grandson
and a step-great-granddaughter.
Memorial services were held at Science Ridge Mennonite Church.
Burial was in the church cemetery.
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Jantzen, Henry E.
Henry E. Jantzen, 78, of Beatrice, Neb., died Nov. 29, 2003, at
a hospital in Lincoln. He was born May 4, 1925, to Henry B. and
Margaret (Ensz) Jantzen in Beatrice.
He grew up in the Plymouth area. He was baptized May 24, 1942,
and became a member of First Mennonite Church, where he remained
a member for the rest of his life.
During World War II he was a conscientious objector and received
a farm deferment. In 1945, the U.S. government and United Nations
needed farmers to take care of horses and donkeys being shipped
to Europe. He cared for a load of horses sent to Poland and a
load of donkeys to Greece. In 1949, he entered Mennonite Central
Committee service, working at Akron, Pa., and Shillman, N.J. He
went to Europe in May 1949 and served until September 1951. Returning
to Beatrice, he took over the family farm.
He met Gretl Ott while she was an MCC trainee at Mennonite Deaconess
Hospital in 1953. They were married Dec. 15, 1955, in Germany.
They hosted 17 MCC and three FFA trainees. He served as church
chairman, Sunday school superintendent and Sunday school teacher.
He was involved in starting Mennonite Disaster Service in Nebraska
and served as the first chairman. In the county he was on the
elevator board, school board and active in Farmers' Union. He
worked with the Jefferson County crop program for many years.
He donated more than 13 gallons of blood to the Red Cross and
was a member of Nebraskans for Peace. He retired in 1993.
Survivors include his wife, Gretl; four sons, Vern and his wife,
Dolores, and Glen and his wife, Linda, all of Plymouth, Mark and
his wife, Alice, of Newton, Kan., and Eric and his wife, Joelle,
of Overland Park, Kan.; a daughter, Sarah Peters and her husband,
Tim, of Silverton, Ore.; a sister, Emma Jantzen of Beatrice; 10
grandchildren and a great-granddaughter.
He was preceded in death by a brother, John Jantzen; two sisters,
Sarah Jantzen and Margaret Grund-man; and a grandson, Luke Peters.
Memorial services were held at First Mennonite Church of Beatrice.
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Kurtz, Chester I.
Chester I. Kurtz, 69, of
Lancaster, Pa., died Nov. 11, 2003, at
Essa Flory Hospice Center after a long illness. He was born to
Christian J. and Elsie Stoltzfus Kurtz in Elverson.
He studied at Eastern Mennonite University and at seminary.
He was pastor of Landisville Mennonite Church from 1974 to 1988.
For the last 15 years he was an interim pastor in eight Pennsylvania
Mennonite congregations, most recently at Ephrata Mennonite Church.
He also taught industrial arts and science, worked part time as
a carpenter and was a teacher with Eastern Mennonite Missions
in Somalia for 11 years prior to becoming a minister.
Survivors include his wife of 44 years, Catherine E. Good Kurtz;
two daughters, Marianne Yoder and her husband, Randy, of East
Petersburg, and Jewel Wood and her husband, Jay, of West Orange,
N.J.; two sons, Eric and his wife, Kim, of Goshen, Ind., and Eugene
and his wife, Fumie Sakai, of Tokyo, Japan; four brothers, Elam
of Jefferson, N.C., John of Snow Hill, Md., Paul of Elizabethtown
and Calvin of Elverson; two sisters, Lena Carpenter of Metter,
Ga., and Caroline Plank of Breman, Ohio; and nine grandchildren.
Mennonite Weekly Review - December
29, 2003 - 81st Year, No. 52 - p. 8
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Klassen, Lloyd Neal
Lloyd Neal Klassen, 63, of LaVerne, Calif., died Nov. 26, 2003,
at Ember Health Care Center of Pomona due to an ataxia called
Machado-Joseph Disease. He was born June 27, 1940, to George and
Leah (Leppke) Klassen in Patterson.
He graduated from Immanuel High School of Reedley in 1959 and
attended Tabor College in Hillsboro, Kan. He graduated from Fresno
State College in 1962 and received his master's degree from Cal
State at Los Angeles in 1970.
He was a business teacher at Berean Academy, Elbing, Kan., from
1962 to 1965 before becoming a high school teacher in Baldwin
Park, Calif., and Rio Hondo Community College in Whittier.
He was active for many years at Grace Church of Glendora, serving
in leadership roles there.
Survivors include his wife, Kathy; three children, Manley of Ventura,
Douglas of Atlanta, Ga., and Janelle of San Diego; three brothers,
Robert of Arlington, Va., Victor of San Jose and Roy of Fresno;
and six grandchildren.
Memorial services were held at Grace Church of Glendora.