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Life - Faith & Values

Saturday, Nov. 08, 2008

Spreading Gospel behind greasepaint

CLOWNS: Quilters didn't laugh at first

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Sid Teske's role as Turnip the clown is a far cry from his previous career as an industrial psychologist.

"I worked for the federal government doing hiring, training, efficiency consulting, employee problems, some career counseling," he said this week in a phone interview from his home in Minnesota. "I did a lot of personnel research to project the cost of various salaries and benefits, and potential employee reactions to changes in management.

"In '93, I told somebody that my left brain was all I had used for 40 years. I was wondering if there was anything left in the right side."

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  • SEND IN THE CLOWN



    Turnip the clown will perform at 6 p.m. Friday at Calvary Lutheran Church, 547 Rose Ave., Modesto. Refreshments will be served after the free performance. For more information, call 524-2192.

    BREAK OUT YOUR BIG SHOES



    A clown training class will be held Feb. 13-21 at the church, with a show at the end and an optional opportunity to travel and use the clowning training in mission work. For information about the seminar, call 524-2192.

The answer was yes. A friend took a clowning class and told Teske, then 50, that he needed to take one, too. Fifteen years later, he's taken his Christian clowning skits around the world -- to Poland, Russia, Latvia, Germany and Mexico, besides many stops in the United States. He plans to add Argentina and the Ukraine in 2009.

He'll be in Modesto on Friday for a clown performance and also give some information about his clowning ministry.

The 65-year-old is amazed at how many doors have opened to him since he first put on the red nose and white makeup.

"It's been much, more more than I ever imagined," he said. "I'm enjoying it more than I can explain. The incredible power of serving others and the amount of joy that comes back to me brings tears to my eyes. I can't be more grateful. It's been an incredible ride. I have no pride

in all of this; it's all God's grace and love that shows through."

Teske's connection with Modesto dates back to 2005 when pastor Dan Stime of Calvary Lutheran Church saw a clowning booth at his denomination's annual convention in Ohio. He found out there was a need for clown costumes, so he brought back a couple of patterns, thinking that the women of his congregation, big on quilting and other sewing projects, would be happy to participate.

Wrong.

"When he came back and told me, I stood there grumbling, 'We have enough to do without this! I don't want to meet this man,' " said Betty Polack, who helps lead the quilting group. "The pastor kept pushing us, and I didn't want to do it. I prayed, 'Lord, if you're wanting me to do this, you'll have to make me willing, because I don't even want to meet Sid.'

"Well, I met Sid. He came to Modesto to visit with Dan and meet us on one of the days when we had quilting. I was totally won over. He was so positive, so upbeat. I went shopping with him that day to get fabric," she laughed. "The Lord works in mysterious ways."

Polack, along with about 10 other women in the church, have made between 75 and 100 clown outfits, which Teske distributes around the world.

"In Eastern Europe, they don't have the (money) to buy the fabric or even the thread to sew the outfits," she said. "That's what we do. It's very engaging. It's grabbed me, I'll tell you. I don't have the desire to be a clown, but we make the clothes. I'm a total convert."

The international ministry began in 2001 when Teske and several other Christian clowns were invited to Germany and Poland.

"We performed in churches and in the streets," he said. "We performed first in Poland and the Lutheran bishop came to the performance. He showed up at every performance we did. By the third time, we're thinking, this is interesting. At our last performance, he came up and said, 'You must come back to Poland and teach us how to do this, because we've forgotten how to laugh.' "

So the group did. It has trained clown troupes in each of the countries, which then perform the biblical skits in their native languages.

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