Difference between revisions of "Sheri L. Dew"

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[[image: Sheri L Dew Mormon.jpg|200px|right|alt=Mormon Sheri L. Dew| Mormon Sheri L. Dew]]'''Sheri L. Dew''' was born in Ulysses, Kansas in 1954, to Charles and JoAnn Peterson Dew, and grew up on a large farm. She received a bachelor of arts degree in history from [[Brigham Young University]] and attended BYU Graduate School. She is a former [[Relief Society]] general board member, [[Stake]] [[Relief Society]] president, counselor in stake Relief Society presidency, ward Relief Society president; vice president of publishing at [[Deseret Book Company]], previously director of publishing and associate publisher, ''This People'' magazine, and assistant editor for [[Deseret_Book_Company#Deseret_Book_imprints | Bookcraft]]. On March 13, 2002, she became president and chief executive officer of Deseret Book Company. (Deseret News 2001-2002 Church Almanac, 115) She is currently executive vice president of Deseret Management Corporation and the CEO of Deseret Book Company. She also serves on the National Advisory Council of BYU's Marriott School of Management.
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[[image: Sheri L Dew Mormon.jpg|200px|right|alt=Mormon Sheri L. Dew| Mormon Sheri L. Dew]]'''Sheri L. Dew''' was born in Ulysses, Kansas in 1954, to Charles and JoAnn Peterson Dew, and grew up on a large farm. She received a bachelor of arts degree in history from [[Brigham Young University]] and attended BYU Graduate School. She is a former [[Relief Society]] general board member, [[Stake]] [[Relief Society]] president, counselor in stake Relief Society presidency, ward Relief Society president; vice president of publishing at [[Deseret Book Company]], previously director of publishing and associate publisher, ''This People'' magazine, and assistant editor for [[Deseret_Book_Company#Deseret_Book_imprints | Bookcraft]]. On March 13, 2002, she became president and chief executive officer of Deseret Book Company. (Deseret News 2001-2002 Church Almanac, 115) She is currently executive vice president and chief content officer of Deseret Management Corporation. She also serves on the National Advisory Council of BYU's Marriott School of Management.
  
 
== Basketball ==
 
== Basketball ==
She wanted to be a college basketball player. Perhaps there was no place, besides a chapel, that she was more comfortable or confident than on a basketball court. There, the girl who longed to be petite and pretty discovered her 5 foot 10 size was no longer a curse, but a blessing. She was a star player in basketball-crazy Kansas at a tiny high school in Ulysses (population 4,000), averaging 23 points and 17 rebounds a game. She had a hook shot, a post-up move, a jump shot, and she could move under the basket to get free for shots.  
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"She wanted to be a college basketball player. Perhaps there was no place, besides a chapel, that she was more comfortable or confident than on a basketball court. There, the girl who longed to be petite and pretty discovered her 5 foot 10 size was no longer a curse, but a blessing. She was a star player in basketball-crazy Kansas at a tiny high school in Ulysses (population 4,000), averaging 23 points and 17 rebounds a game. She had a hook shot, a post-up move, a jump shot, and she could move under the basket to get free for shots."[https://www.deseret.com/2002/10/28/19781488/sheri-dew-living-the-unexpected-life]
  
 
== Relief Society ==
 
== Relief Society ==
She served as second counselor in the General [[Relief Society]] from 1997 to 2002, the first non-married woman ever to achieve such a high position in the [http://Mormon.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. After a 1999 trip to Ghana, Dew began to spearhead a humanitarian program to send children's books to impoverished areas of the world. The first shipment of 6,500 books was sent to Ghana and Fiji in July 2005. In March 2003 the White House appointed her as a member of the U.S. Delegation to the Commission on the Status of Women at the United Nations, and she advocated abstinence and monogamy to combat AIDS and other global ills.
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She served as second counselor in the General [[Relief Society]] from 1997 to 2002, the first non-married woman ever to be called to such a high position in the [http://comeuntochrist.org The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]. After a 1999 trip to Ghana, Dew began to spearhead a humanitarian program to send children's books to impoverished areas of the world. The first shipment of 6,500 books was sent to Ghana and Fiji in July 2005. In March 2003 the White House appointed her as a member of the U.S. Delegation to the Commission on the Status of Women at the United Nations, and she advocated abstinence and monogamy to combat AIDS and other global ills.
  
 
She also penned ''Something Extraordinary'', which celebrated the Relief Society Sesquicentennial.
 
She also penned ''Something Extraordinary'', which celebrated the Relief Society Sesquicentennial.
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== The Family ==
 
== The Family ==
Dew might be better known more for what she doesn't have — a husband — than by what she does have — a dual career, brains, surpassing talent as a pianist, writer and speaker (and, umm, Game Boy player). This is a woman who has accomplished great things while waiting for love to come along, but she is still famous for her marital status, largely because she helped lead a church that is centered on marriage and family. Nevertheless, she is a staunch defender of the family:
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"Dew might be better known more for what she doesn't have — a husband — than by what she does have — a dual career, brains, surpassing talent as a pianist, writer and speaker (and, umm, Game Boy player). This is a woman who has accomplished great things while waiting for love to come along, but she is still famous for her marital status, largely because she helped lead a church that is centered on marriage and family."[https://www.deseret.com/2002/10/28/19781488/sheri-dew-living-the-unexpected-life] Nevertheless, she is a staunch defender of the family:
  
 
<blockquote>
 
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== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==
* [http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,375015072,00.html ''Living the unexpected life''] Deseret News, Sunday, March 10, 2002
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* [https://www.deseret.com/2002/10/28/19781488/sheri-dew-living-the-unexpected-life ''Living the unexpected life''] Deseret News, Sunday, March 10, 2002
 
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheri_Dew Sheri Dew] Wikipedia article
 
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheri_Dew Sheri Dew] Wikipedia article
 
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* [https://www.churchhistorianspress.org/at-the-pulpit/part-4/chapter-48?lang=eng "Knowing Who You Are—and Who You Have Always Been" 2001 Women's Conference]
 
[[Category:Church Leaders: Past]]
 
[[Category:Church Leaders: Past]]
 
[[Category: Women in Mormonism]]
 
[[Category: Women in Mormonism]]
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Latest revision as of 15:53, 21 July 2023

Mormon Sheri L. Dew
Sheri L. Dew was born in Ulysses, Kansas in 1954, to Charles and JoAnn Peterson Dew, and grew up on a large farm. She received a bachelor of arts degree in history from Brigham Young University and attended BYU Graduate School. She is a former Relief Society general board member, Stake Relief Society president, counselor in stake Relief Society presidency, ward Relief Society president; vice president of publishing at Deseret Book Company, previously director of publishing and associate publisher, This People magazine, and assistant editor for Bookcraft. On March 13, 2002, she became president and chief executive officer of Deseret Book Company. (Deseret News 2001-2002 Church Almanac, 115) She is currently executive vice president and chief content officer of Deseret Management Corporation. She also serves on the National Advisory Council of BYU's Marriott School of Management.

Basketball

"She wanted to be a college basketball player. Perhaps there was no place, besides a chapel, that she was more comfortable or confident than on a basketball court. There, the girl who longed to be petite and pretty discovered her 5 foot 10 size was no longer a curse, but a blessing. She was a star player in basketball-crazy Kansas at a tiny high school in Ulysses (population 4,000), averaging 23 points and 17 rebounds a game. She had a hook shot, a post-up move, a jump shot, and she could move under the basket to get free for shots."[1]

Relief Society

She served as second counselor in the General Relief Society from 1997 to 2002, the first non-married woman ever to be called to such a high position in the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. After a 1999 trip to Ghana, Dew began to spearhead a humanitarian program to send children's books to impoverished areas of the world. The first shipment of 6,500 books was sent to Ghana and Fiji in July 2005. In March 2003 the White House appointed her as a member of the U.S. Delegation to the Commission on the Status of Women at the United Nations, and she advocated abstinence and monogamy to combat AIDS and other global ills.

She also penned Something Extraordinary, which celebrated the Relief Society Sesquicentennial.

Author

She is also the author of the biographies of President Gordon B. Hinckley and President Ezra Taft Benson and the inspirational books No Doubt About It, Women and the Priesthood, No One Can Take Your Place, and Amazed by Grace. Dew wrote the biography of President Gordon B. Hinckley mostly between the hours of 3 a.m. and 7 a.m. “People ask me, 'Is it hard to write a biography?' I say, 'No, I did it in my sleep,' ” she says, smiling at her joke.

The Family

"Dew might be better known more for what she doesn't have — a husband — than by what she does have — a dual career, brains, surpassing talent as a pianist, writer and speaker (and, umm, Game Boy player). This is a woman who has accomplished great things while waiting for love to come along, but she is still famous for her marital status, largely because she helped lead a church that is centered on marriage and family."[2] Nevertheless, she is a staunch defender of the family:

“Before this era is over, every living human being will have chosen. Every living human being will have lined up in support of the family or against it. Every living human being will have either opposed the onslaught against the family or supported it, for if he tries to make no choice that in itself will be a choice. If we do not act in behalf of the family, that is itself an act of opposition to the family.” (Sheri L. Dew, Defenders of the Faith, Interfaith Conference on Defending Marriage and the Family: By Faith and by Reason, Washington DC, 28 February 2004.)

Africa

There have been worse ideas than turning such a keen, sensitive heart and mind loose in the world to meet diverse people, to connect with them, to learn and observe, to extract life's truths and pass along to a church at large. In her trips to Africa, for instance, she observed poverty, abuse, disease, starvation — but not the depression that's so prevalent in the United States. The people told her they were happy because of their belief in their religion. “And we have everything here except sometimes happiness,” says Dew. “I wonder who the Lord is really worried about — us or them? I have never heard people pray or sing as the people did in Africa. When it was time to fly home, I didn't want to leave. I was wiping tears all the way home.”

For all the disappointments, Dew is living a rich life and she knows it. “I love my life,” she says. “I'm happy about my life.”

Bibliography

  • Sharlene Wells, Miss America. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1985
  • Ezra Taft Benson: A Biography. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1987
  • Go Forward with Faith: The Biography of Gordon B. Hinckley. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1996.
  • No Doubt About It. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2001.
  • God Wants a Powerful People (Compact Disc). Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2004.
  • No One Can Take Your Place. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2004.
  • If Life Were Easy, It Wouldn't Be Hard: And Other Reassuring Truths. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2005.
  • Living on the Lord's Side of the Line(Compact Disc). Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2006.
  • Saying It Like It Is. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2009.
  • Famous Last Words (Compact Disc). Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2004.
  • 4 Things That Will Wreck Your Life and 4 Truths That Will Save It (Compact Disc), Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2010.
  • Women and the Priesthood. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2013.
  • Amazed by Grace. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2015.
  • Worth the Wrestle. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2017.
  • Oh, How We Need Each Other. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2018.
  • Insights from a Prophet's Life: Russell M. Nelson. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2019.

External Links