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  • To educate and entertain while promoting the spread of accurate information on the Amish and related peoples.

28 posts categorized "Amish Books"

April 27, 2008

Hypochondriac diseases will prevail...

Amish_calender
I may have missed this before, but this is the first year I've seen the Calender printed in an English version as well as in the usual high German.

The bulk of the 88-page pamphlet, produced by an Ohio Amish printer, is a more-or-less comprehensive listing of Old Order Amish church districts along with their respective ministers.

The Calender/Almanac also contains a curious mixture of folk wisdom, Christian teaching, and astrology.

Astrology?  Sounds strange, especially for the Amish, but it seems to be the case.  For example, on the back cover, one finds a chart entitled Anatomy of Man's Body, As said to be governed by the twelve constellations.

                                                                                                                                 

Making Predictions

The 2008 Almanac also informs us that 'Jupiter is the Reigning Planet this year' and gives the prognosis for a range of topics:   

FISH.  Will everywhere be moderately abundant.

DISEASE.  In the Autumn headaches and hypochondriac diseases will prevail.

GRAPE CULTURE.  In the course of twenty-eight years it happens scarcely once--as the ancients say--that in one year of that series a good vintage will take place, and mostly but an ordinary wine will be produced.


The booklet also lists important days for the 2008 calendar year, including church feasts and the beginning and ending of the summer 'dog days', a listing of church readings and hymns, and Christian-themed poetry. 


It's curious to see the Amish distribute a guide with such a sizable dose of zodiac-infused 'wisdom'.

Though certain Amish may have had a history of buying into 'suspect' sources of wisdom--practicioners of the more 'hokey' medical practices come to mind--I'm not so sure the Amish take the astrological bit of the Calender so seriously, if at all. 

Since its much earlier incarnations, the almanac has typically contained folklorish bits of knowledge, good chunks of both astronomy and astrology, weather divination, and the like, and that tradition seems to have carried over into today's Calender.


Finally, the Calender/Almanac contains a fair dose of humor.  Here's a bit from this year's edition:

The mother of a 6-year old met him as he got off the bus and asked, "How was your school day?"

"Mom," he replied, "today our teacher asked me whether I had any brothers or sisters, and I told her I was an only child."

"And what did she say, dear?"

She said, "Thank goodness."



March 27, 2008

An Amish America Q-and-A with Rumspringa author Tom Shachtman

Rumspringa: To be or not to be Amish got a lot of attention when it was released in the spring of 2006, with media such as the Wall Street Journal calling it a 'wonderfully rich portrait and history of the Amish as a people and a faith.'

                                                                                                                           

Rumspringa is also, and primarily, an on-the-scene look at a crucial period of Amish adolescence.

                                                                                                                           

Tom Shachtman was kind enough to share some of his thoughts recently with the blog.  Look for his answers to Rumspringa-related questions below.

                                                                                                                              

Tom will be appearing at the Moravian Bookshop in Bethlehem, PA on May 17th for a Rumspringa signing and discussion.  If you're able, I would definitely swing by--would be a great chance to learn more.

                                                                                                                            

I hope you enjoy the Q-and-A and thanks again to Tom for taking the time.

Tom_shachtman

photo:  Mark Connolly

Amish America:  You've written on a wide range of topics over the years, from the stock market crash to the science of cold to the R.J. Reynolds tobacco dynasty.  Was your general approach to this work on the Amish different, and if so, how?  Where there any challenges unique to writing Rumspringa?

                                                                                                                           

Tom Shachtman:  The book of mine that is closest in character to Rumspringa is Around the Block, a study of a single block in Manhattan over the course of a year.  For it, I interviewed a lot of people who had never been interviewed before, and they told me a great deal about their lives; I carried that approach over to Rumspringa.  In everything that I write about, I try to find ways to convey my own interest in, really fascination with, my subject.  My task with Rumspringa was to make the Amish and their experience relevant to and understandable by people who are not Amish.

                                                                                                                               

AA:  In your interview of March 15, 2006 with Publishers Weekly, you were asked if anyone in the Amish community would read Rumspringa.  You answered 'probably not.'  Have you in fact, gotten any feedback that members of Amish society, in particular baptized adults, have read Rumspringa?  If so, do you have any idea of their reaction to it?

                                                                                                                           

TS:  I have had very little feedback from the community of baptized adults, and while I did not expect much, I nonetheless took it as my task to do what I would have done if (as with the interviewees of Around the Block) all the Amish were to read it, that is, properly represent their society to the wider public.  To do so was the unvoiced quid pro quo of their granting me access to their lives and thoughts, and therefore a promise I needed to keep.  One small example: some young interviewees were intent on peppering their conversation with obscenities – and in the finished versions in the text I deleted the expletives so that I wouldn’t offend any possible Amish readers.

                                                                                                                               

I would hope that those baptized Amish who did read the book would conclude that I presented them and their views fairly.

                                                                                                                               

AA:  In Rumspringa, you focused primarily on the three largest settlements--northern Indiana, Lancaster County, and Holmes County, Ohio.  What were the primary differences you noticed between these communities, if there were any?  In which community did you find local Amish most open and cooperative to what you were doing?  If there was a difference, do you have any insights as to why?

                                                                                                                               

TS:  The Pennsylvania communities were perhaps the most suspicious of outsiders, which I attribute to them being the most visited (and perhaps the most exploited); I was welcomed in all three areas, for the most part because I had introductions – people who more-or-less vouched for me -- but also because I did my homework, so that my interviewees didn’t have to tell me things about their lifestyle and their beliefs that I already knew.  My experiences varied also because I had different types of people introducing me in the several communities.

Rumspringa

AA:  In another interview that you did with National Public Radio in June of 2006, a caller named Melvin raises the issue of Amish kids in Rumspringa dying while engaged in risky behaviors such as driving or experimenting with drugs.  I spent the summer of 2006 in the northern Indiana community and recall one particular incident where a young Amish driver attempted to pass in an area where he clearly shouldn't have, resulting in a head-on collision and his and the other driver's deaths.  These are the types of incidents, perhaps not uncommon in the general population, that capture a disproportionate share of the public's attention and draw criticism to the practice.

                                                                                                                                 

TS:  You are absolutely correct on that.

                                                                                                                           

AA:  Among the communities you visited, did you notice significant anti-Rumspringa counter-currents among the adult population?  I'm thinking of things like, for example, the New Order Amish emphasis on clean living (i.e. 'no bundling' (bed courtship), tobacco use,etc.)?  Did you sense animosity between individual families or churches that perhaps took differing stances on the issue?

                                                                                                                           

TS: I certainly wouldn’t call it animosity.  There are differences between Beachy and New Order and Old Order and various Mennonite groups, and as in all religions where differences exist – doctrinal or in lifestyle -- those are the points that are emphasized as a way of separating group A from group B, often with thunder from the pulpit; but in general, in the communities I visited, there is a ‘live-and-let-live’ attitude toward the Old Order.

                                                                                                                              

On the obverse side, I had a long discussion with one Old Order elder who worried about the children who were leaving the church, worried about their religiosity; I pointed out to him that the apples were not falling far from the tree, that the drop-outs or opt-outs were in large measure becoming Baptists whose allegiance to a Protestant theology was quite similar to that of the Old Order.  He should not be so worried, I said, at least not on the point of the childrens’ religious beliefs.

                                                                                                                              

As the percentage of Old Order Amish who are involved in farming and in the rural life shrinks, it will become apparent to new generations of Old Order Amish that they can maintain their religious base and their purity and a good deal of their lifestyle while accepting some more aspects of modern technology, which may bring them, in effect, closer to the points of view of the Beachy and New Order.

                                                                                                                           

AA:  Certain elders and adults spoke with you and offered their input on the book, as well as numerous youth.  How difficult was it to win their trust, particularly that of the adults?  How did you overcome the possible fear that you might portray Rumspringa in a sensationalized manner--which in fact the book clearly does not do?

                                                                                                                            

TS:  Everyone who spoke with me was taking a gamble that I would be as good as my word, that I would portray them honestly.  I was refused interviews by several adults (to whom I had introductions from friends) who feared that I would be as exploitative as the ‘Amish in the City’ program – but this was a minority of adults whom I approached.  Most of the youth were quite vocal.

Rumspringa_buggy_2

AA:  I'm thinking of one particular Ohio church district I know of where the numbers we often hear—with 80-90% of Amish youth choosing the Amish path--actually ran the other way, as over a number of years in this district the vast majority chose not to be Amish. This was quite a large amount of youth, and I do not have an explanation as to why, but imagine that there may have been some significant event that precipitated this trend.

                                                                                                                               

You speak of the risk that Amish parents face in allowing their children a Rumspringa period, but also point out that it is a certain type of inoculation—a taste of the world, 'the vaccine of a little worldly experience' as you put it.  Did you come across any localized instances where, let's say, things 'backfired', Rumspringa-age youth left the faith, and by their example took a lot of others with them?

                                                                                                                           

TS:  In order for a young Rumspringa person to leave the fold completely, he or she needs a mentor and path-finder on the outside.  Older siblings, cousins, the grown-up children of neighbors perform this function – and where there are a great many of these, the losses can be considerable.  I’m thinking of one family in particular where the oldest child insisted on going to high school and then on to college, and he set the mold for most (though not all) of his younger siblings to leave and not come back.

                                                                                                                              

AA:  Finally, it's been my observation that the most impassioned critics of the Amish tend to be those that live nearest to them—in terms of physical proximity or, for example, among those that are spiritually 'close', coming from theologically-related but at least nominally different religious groups—for example members of other Anabaptist-rooted groups.

                                                                                                                              

TS:  True enough.

                                                                                                                              

AA:  On the other hand, it seems that those that observe them from a distance tend to be the ones most likely to romanticize the Amish culture, and less likely to see a problem in certain cultural practices.  Do you find this observation to be true?

                                                                                                                            

TS:  Also true.  Romanticization is a bad basis for relationships; rose-colored glasses are more opaque than they need to be.  You can admire the Amish – heck, you can admire anyone – and still find aspects of their lifestyle or being that you don’t like.  Being an admirer even gives you better license to politely disagree – because your disagreement is not taken as a general attack.

                                                                                                                           

I disagree with the Amish on education, which I feel they could expand without losing control of their children.  I had some very good discussions on this point.

                                                                                                                              

AA:  Did you notice a lot of 'kickback' or ill feeling regarding the Amish among non-Amish locals while you were researching Rumspringa?

                                                                                                                               

TS:  Some non-Amish neighbors have felt that their natural sympathies for the Amish have been exploited by certain Amish taking advantage of them, e.g., for phone calls or transportation, and other non-Amish have felt some intolerance coming from their Amish neighbors.  It’s not a big problem, but it does exist.  Such clashes may be inevitable in a people who believe, in general, that their way of life is the only true path, and that those who do not follow it are wrong.

                                                                                                                              

Being neighborly takes work.

                                                                                                                     

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Tom Shachtman's next book, The Forty Years War:  The Ascendancy of the Neocons, From Nixon's Fall to the Invasion of Iraq, written with Len Colodny, will be published by Harper Collins in November, 2008.

                                                                                                                           

Visit Tom Shachtman's site here.

                                                                                                                           

Click to read an Amish America review of Rumspringa.

                                                                                                                              

February 11, 2008

Reader photos and links

I've been getting some interesting photos and information from you guys and am really enjoying it--keep it coming!

On the ongoing topic of Amish phone booths, here is a photo of one from Wisconsin, sent in by Eric:

Wisconsin_amish_phone

Eric says that phone booths in his area of Wisconsin tend to be larger than ones in places like Pennsylvania, with room for a bench and a small writing desk inside.  He also points out that the booths in his area are never found on Amish property, but always on a neighbors'.  That is interesting.  This one is apparently nearly invisible from the road during summer.

Eric also writes that an Amish family he buys wood from was busy harvesting ice on the day he sent this in.  It's apparently a bad season for ice in his area--the ice on the ponds is apparently on the thin side.  Some Amish get ice in this way, or have it delivered by the ice-man.

Scott shares a picture of a new Amish buggy in Wayne County, Ohio:

New_amish_buggy_ohio_2 

Scott points out that these newer buggies are more modern than those of yesteryear and incorporate conveniences such as LED lighting.  Lighting on buggies actually originated in some Amish communities pre-WWII, though a number of Amish groups still refuse any sort of electric illumination, using basic oil lamps when traveling in the evening.

And John points us to an article of a few weeks ago which included mention of an 'Amish keynote speaker', David Kline.  I was pleased to read this as I know David and his family and had a very enjoyable talk with him in Ohio last September. 

David's books--Great Possessions: An Amish Farmer's Journal, and Scratching the Woodchuck: Nature on an Amish Farm are supposed to be good reads--though regrettably I haven't had a chance to dig into them yet.  David is big on sustainable agriculture and spends a lot of time writing about it and discussing it.  He's not your typical Amishman, as you might guess.

Thanks to everyone and feel free to send in anything of interest you find out there in Amish America to my email address, would love to hear about it.

October 28, 2007

The no-school blues

Amish_buggy

The Amish commitment to restricting schooling to eight grades is well-known.  But what happens with those individuals who are driven to go further?

In Amish Society, John Hostetler examines the issue. 

'Before the Amish operated their own schools, more Amish youths were exposed to the possibilities of higher education and to teachers who inspired them to continue their education than is the case today.  To become a committed Amish person, a boy or girl who likes school for its own sake must learn to be indifferent toward it.'

Hostetler goes on to look at the stories of three Amish-born individuals who had a profound struggle with their culture's restriction on learning.



Rebecca's story


One of them, 'Rebecca', 'at the age of eighteen turned from her Amish background without having been baptized.   "I read a great many books and anything I could get my hands on.  I tried to persuade my father to let me go to high school.  But he would not.  After grade school I was Amish another six years and this was a very difficult time in my life.  My dissatisfaction began to show in physical ways.  I had no energy, I was anemic.  Nothing interested me.  I didn't fit in with the Amish young people and I sort of despised them for their lack of learning.  I made attempts to be popular among the Amish and dated a few times, but I didn't like it very much.  I was the oldest of eight, and mother kept on having children, and this tied me down and I was constantly resenting this.  I was always running away to read, and I hid books.  When mother was not watching I would read everything I could.'

'When I was eighteen, I thought mother had reached the age when she could have no more children.  Finally, I thought, I could begin to see daylight, have a little more time to myself, and to keep the house neat without working so hard.  Then I learned that mother was pregnant again, and this was the last straw.  I simply could not face this.  I went to the basement and just cried.  I told father I had had enough, I was leaving.  While I packed my suitcase, mother became very upset.  Father knew that mother needed my help.  So we worked out a compromise.  Father said if I would stay until the baby was born, the next year I could go to Bible school.  This was enough for me;  then I could get away and go where there was a library and read.'

Buggies_lined_up
Hostetler finishes the tale:  'Rebecca went to college and left the Amish way of life.  Later her brothers and sisters followed her example, and after several more years the whole family left the Old Order Amish faith and joined a Mennonite group.  It is not uncommon for one or two children in a family to break with the tradition with the result that the parents do so later.'



Personally I'm of two minds on this issue.  I lean much more strongly towards the idea that the Amish are doing the right thing with the eighth-grade limit.  As a whole the society produces productive, content individuals.  In many ways they are model citizens.  And if getting to heaven really is the most important task we are engaged in on this planet, well, maybe cutting out some questionable influences is not such a bad idea.

On the other hand, for the ones that truly love learning, I imagine it must be an agonising position to be in, or at least one that doesn't lend itself to an easy resolution.  To choose the Amish path and try to blunt your instincts, to leave or never join and cut yourself out of your cultural base, or to become Amish and hopefully try to figure out acceptable ways to quench your desire for education--it doesn't seem an easy choice.


(Photos today of Lancaster Amish courtesy of Mylene.  Thanks Mylene!  I hope you all keep them coming, also if anyone has a link they would like me to include, feel free to mention that as well.)
 

October 16, 2007

Listen to Levi: Amish Children and Obedience

Two_amish_girls_randall_persing_pho

photo: Randall Persing Amish photography

If you were looking for a single book that explains how the Amish tick, you wouldn't go wrong with Amish Society by the late John A. Hostetler.

Although it's a bit dated, the reason I'd choose this one first, over, say  Donald Kraybill's The Riddle of Amish Culture is that it tends to take a broader view of the Amish, while Kraybill tends to be Lancaster-centric. 

Amish Society was the first book I ever read on the Amish and I am continually re-reading bits and pieces.

I thought I'd share a few  with you, like this bit on the kiddos:

 
'The relationship between authority and responsibility is learned very early.  Although the younger chldren must obey the older ones, the older children may not make arbitrary demands on the younger.  The four-year-old is expected to hand over his toy to a younger child if he cries for it, but in the absence of the parents the younger one must obey the older.'

Two_little_amish_brothers_bill_cole

photo:  Bill Coleman Amish photography
 

As an older brother, I must admit I've been guilty of 'arbirtrary demands' inflicted on little (not-so-little-anymore) Alex while we were growing up.

I find it fascinating that the Amish inculcate this hierarchy of obedience to elder siblings, especially when the 'elder sibling' may be a mere five or six-- and with an even younger sibling hoisted onto one hip while mom works on dinner.


Bonus:  With the little ones left in charge, do the Amish really care about their children's safety?  Well, of course.   Though it might not always seem that way...

October 02, 2007

Book Review: The Happening by Harvey Yoder

Today marks a year since the Nickel Mines School shooting.  Ten girls were shot.  Five perished.  Five lived on.  A community was rocked by an unthinkable loss.  The world watched and learned a rare lesson in forgiveness and grace.

The_happening_amish_shooting_book 

'The happening' is the name local Amish attached to the event, and The Happening is author Harvey Yoder's attempt to reconstruct, order, and make sense of the goings-on of that day and of what followed.  Told from the perspective of a student shot that day, 'Rebecca Sue', the work weaves elements of a few girls' factual experiences into the story of an eighth-grader who, wounded herself, also lost a little sister that day.

Why is this a good read?  Shouldn't we move on, as local Amish have implored the media and onlookers to allow them to do?

Yoder has done an excellent job of respectfully telling a story that, as is evident from the telling, some have a deep need to discuss and detail and grieve over, but which others instinctively avoid engaging.

The Amish portrayed here are simply trying to repair themselves, the best they know how.

Much of the work is on that healing process.  Lessons are learned, by English and Amish alike.  Forgiveness is not something that happens one time.  The happening, in essence, does not necessarily refer to one day's events.  The happening is something that continues to happen. 

Nightmares and fear plague the families affected, and not just the ones directly affected:  "The teacher from the Crossroads School said she couldn't understand why one of her third-grade girls did not want to go to the blackboard to do her lessons like usual.  Then she remembered the girl is Miriam's cousin and realized that she's afraid to turn her back to the school door.'

All this underscores something that should be obvious by now:  the Amish are living, breathing human, just like the rest of us.  They forgave--and yes, it was quick--but it wasn't a one-off thing, and it certainly wasn't easy.  They had to do it over, and over, and over again

Over time, all the same questions anyone else would have popped up in their minds--they whys and the wondering and the regrets.  Christian teachings of acceptance and faith temper the emotion.  Some feel deeply for the one who caused all their pain, as Rebecca Sue's brother Benuel says:  'For me, I sorrow most of all for Mr. Roberts' soul.  I think of the terrible place where he is now.'

Did the event open the Amish up to outsiders, and vice versa, as some have said has been one unforeseen blessing?  Yoder finds evidence for it here.  A local officer who carried the wounded out of the school that day describes the unity while visiting with Rebecca Sue:  'There were no differences between us.  It did not matter who was Amish or non-Amish.  We were all one, trying to pull ourselves together.'

Cimg8113

One year on, the community continues to mend.  Books on the happening were to be expected;  this is one of at least three that have been published so far.  Hopefully this will be one that keeps the lesson of forgiveness alive, and that helps some to continue to heal as well.  As the people in this book discover, holding it in may not be the best way to deal with it.  Going over it all again may just help. 

Rebecca Sue describes one episode of a kindly Mennonite woman's visit to her home, and her outpouring of tears, for the umpteenth time, over the loss of her little sister:

'It was then that I found out how healing tears can be.  Yes, I had cried before, especially at night.  I had cried tears that had bound me all up inside.  This time it was different.  Something opened up within me that day that I had not realized I had been holding back.  When, minutes later, my sobbing had almost stopped, I think the first thing I realized was that the weight inside me was gone.  I heaved a sigh of relief--a great, huge, shaky sigh.'

Get the book at Harvey Yoder's site, harveyyoderbooks.com.

August 27, 2007

Book Review: Tom Shachtman's Rumspringa

I winced when I saw the cover.  I was sure this book would be another lightweight voyeuristic Hollywood look at the Amish.

Tom_shachtman_rumspringa_2

Yet Shachtman seems to reserve judgment and present the Amish even-handedly throughout Rumspringa:  To be or not to be Amish.  He seems to have a heart for the kids involved, presenting their tales with compassion and respect.         

At the same time, like a good documentarian, he largely avoids outright condemnation of the 'other side'.  Shachtman calls a spade a spade and gives the Amish culture its due, as when he points out the miniscule rates of divorce, unemployment, and substance abuse among Amish adults.

 

Thoughtful analysis

Rumspringa: To be or not to be Amish is not just an 'Amish in the City'-like  freakshow peek into these kids' lives;  Shachtman attempts to analyze the myriad issues at work in the mind of an adolescent during Rumspringa by examining the cultural aspects of the Amish.

He shows how things like shunning, the reverence held for farming as a traditional occupation, formal education (or rather, lack of it), faith issues and a number of other subjects all play into the typical Amish youth's decision whether or not to join the church.

The voices of the kids and the concerned adults stand out above all...they could belong to any suburbanite mother-father-teen combination, as you listen to them voicing their concerns, moms worrying who their kids are running around with, teens trying to act 'cool' and fit in with peers.

I was pleasantly surprised by the work, and would recommend it for anyone who is interested in learning more about the background of the Amish as well.  Shachtman seems to have gotten his facts right, relying alot on scholarly sources as well as his own observations and interviews--you can tell he's done his homework.

 

In examining a touchy subject for the Amish, Shachtman chooses analysis over exposition, and readers gain as a result.  A lot deeper than what it's shock-value cover intimates, it's a book worth checking out.  And it is a page-turner--I knocked it out in three days.

July 08, 2007

Family Time

If you knock on a random door in any of a number of Amish communities across the country, there's a decent chance the home might contain a set of books called the Family Bible Library. 

Originally published in 1971, it is a perennial hit among the Amish, who appreciate the vivid illustrations, easy-to-understand text, and solid scriptural reference.

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I'm selling these among the Lancaster Amish this year, as I have in other communities in years past, and it has been a hit here as well.  I happened to get what I believe was my most enthusiastic reception ever yesterday, when one mother nearly shouted when I pulled out a sample book of the set.  'I wish my mother could see this', she said.  'It brings back so many memories'.

Many Amish adults fondly recall using these and other Bible story books during childhood.  I look at Bible story sets like this and others as fulfilling a role for the Amish that television now does for the modern family.  It's a focal point for family time, an activity to share during down time, at the end of the day or on the weekend. 

I realize that's a crass comparison--I doubt there's the same amount of spiritual benefit in the television diet of the typical American family--yet I mean it in the sense of families coming together.  Work, church meals, reading--it's one of those things the Amish do collectively as a form of recreation just as we go to the ballgame or check out Spider-Man 3 on family night out at the cinema.

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I feel very fortunate to be able to do this job again this summer.  It has given me a chance to see a cross-section of Amish America and to gain friends and acquaintances whom I'd otherwise have never had. 

At the same time it can be difficult.  The Amish get a lot of salespeople--some unscrupulous and pushy--and in turn some of the Amish can be rude, just like any other people.  When I sell, I am extremely laid-back and non-pushy.  I have a policy of always treating 'no's' the same as the 'yes's'--with courtesy and good humor--but it can still be tough. 

But I feel good knowing that people appreciate what I'm doing.  That more than makes up for the refusals and long hours.  That and everything I get to see and learn.  (A little example--this week I've been on more dairies than in any other community I've visited--Lancaster has a higher percentage of them--and now I know how to pick out a Hereshire cow and how many pounds of milk a milk truck can hold--62,000 in this particular case.  And I've begun to perfect what I call 'running the gauntlet'--making it from one end of the barn to the other, in between two rows of 4 dozen cows being milked--all of whom happen to have the wrong end pointed in your direction.  Yea, I've already taken a couple of indirect hits but that's what the Handi-wipes in my truck are for).

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It's especially worthwhile when you run into the reaction that I did yesterday.  To know that families often pass the sets down to the next generation, and just seeing kids' reactions when I bring the books back at the end of the summer is almost worth it by itself.

 

Vivid recollection

Along the way I've also noticed that some of the Amish have uncanny memories.  The Amish as a whole tend to make careful markings of events and happenings, often inscribing names and dates in books and on gifts upon receiving them.  Amish genealogies are extensive and well-documented.  Amish homes often have framed embroidered hangings noting marriage dates and listing birthdays of all the children in a family.

Last summer in Elkhart County, Indiana, I ran into a bishop who had purchased the Family Bible Library set around 36 years ago, in what was likely the first year it was published.

He recalled the day the student salesperson who sold it to him delivered it--a delivery date which happened to fall just after the date of the funeral of one of his sons.  The bishop recounted how the kid was moved to tears when learning of the boy's passing. 

A few other Indiana Amish uncannily recalled the name of another student who'd sold them sets back in the early 80's--without having to think twice about it.  All of them seemed to remember him fondly, as an animated, funny fellow.  The guy must have made an impression--I can hardly remember the name of three people I met last week.

Yea, I've definitely got a cool job--this past week I visited a 'non-puppy mill'--a couple English bulldog moms and seven of the cutest and happiest-looking (and at $1450 a pop, most expensive) pups you've ever seen, stuffed myself with homemade Amish pizza twice, and learned 'boy it's really hot' and 'come eat' in PA Dutch.  And I got a few Amish guys speaking some Polish in return.

After a few more weeks of this, I will be returning to Holmes County, Ohio, for an entirely different experience, to work in an Amish shop.

June 18, 2007

Joe Mackall's Plain Secrets

Joe_mackalls_plain_secrets Thanks to Gina for pointing out a link to an NPR piece on a new book on the Swartzentruber Amish.  I have not read the full book yet but did read the excerpt on the site.  It seems pretty good.

Mackall brings up the famous Amish position against formal insurance. 

It reminded me of a recent chat I had with an Amish friend (Old Order, not Swartzentruber) in Holmes County.  'No, I don't have insurance, but I do have assurance--assurance of a God that loves me, assurance that my church will help me out if my shop burns down'.

Assurance not insurance.  Not exactly a novel concept, but perhaps one our increasingly fragmented society has gotten too far away from.