My family moved from the city to the country.
Part of the reason for the relocation was to move 'to where the need was greater'. I loved our new home - I was free to roam the woods and fields, enjoy the wildlife, work in our garden and feed the chickens. I had new friends in our new congregation. These kids were transplants to this 'paradise' for the same reasons. We were a tight bunch. Our families associated together inside and outside of the hall. We all stuck together at school. We all had romantic crushes on each other. Field service was an honest attempt to teach the people in our territory about the Bible. Service had a light side with lots of laughing and picnic lunches under a roadside shade tree. It wasn't just about 'getting in our time'.
The first summer we build a new Kingdom Hall - by ourselves. I was happy (and proud) to be part of this group. Everything we believed was based on the Bible. We weren't like the religions of Christendom. We had real love among us - regardless of race, income, education or background. We were one big happy family. Being a Jehovah's Witness meant being free of man made religious traditions, free from religion's 'fleecing of the flock' and the 'collection plate'.
Our contributions took care of the basic necessities of the hall - the bills and maintainence. We knew that religion was "a snare and a racket". We didn't have big church buildings. We didn't have paid ministers or a clergy that demanded recongnition and obedience.
We were just a group of honest hearted people doing our best. We weren't suspicious of each other. We didn't have 'arrangements' for anything - we took care of each other because we wanted to.
Looking back after 40 years, I realize that we were all naive. And BOY how things have changed !
ginger