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48 posts categorized "Indiana Amish"

May 05, 2008

PA transplants: The Amish of Parke and Wayne Counties, IN

Amish_wayne_county_indiana
photo:  waynet.org

Indiana is an interesting place when it comes to Amish diversity. 

In the Hoosier state, you will find communities of New Order, Swartzentruber, 'Swiss', and of course, 'standard' Old Order Amish.

One relatively new influence in the state has been the presence of two settlements of Lancaster Amish, which both formed in the 1990's. 

The two settlements, on opposite sides of the state (Parke and Wayne Counties), number just a handful of church districts each. 

The most obvious tip-offs that you are not in a typical midwestern Amish community are the gray-topped buggies, the style of clothing, and the last names.  Stoltzfuses abound.

Lancaster Amish have typically formed daughter settlements closer to home, ie, in other parts of Pennsylvania, or in neighboring states like Maryland.

One attraction of Indiana is the relatively inexpensive farmland.

Conventional wisdom has it that a Lancaster farmer can sell his home farm and buy several similar-sized farms in these areas.  That is a big attraction for the highly farm-oriented Lancaster Amish.

Steven Nolt and Thomas Meyers' book An Amish Patchwork is an interesting look at Old Order diversity in Indiana.  It also examines the Old Order Mennonite presence in the state.  Recommended read.

April 10, 2008

An unusual crossing

Amish_buggy_in_water
Cindy Seigle snapped a few more photos of the Orange County, Indiana Amish a week or two back, after a shock of heavy rains that caused major flooding. 

Amish_buggy_water_crossing

Cindy says this carriage was floating around on the water as it gamely made its way across.

Hopefully the folks down there have their basements pumped out by now.  I recall a huge dumping of rain in the northern Indiana (Elkhart/Lagrange) community two summers ago.  The next day the settlement looked like a waterpark.  Didn't see any buggies-turned-boats but the place was a mess.

See more photos of this southern Indiana Amish community here and here, or direct from Cindy's site.

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.

                                                                                                                              

March 18, 2008

More Orange County, Indiana Amish photos

Indiana_amish_buggy 

A few more of Cindy Seigle's Orange County, Indiana Amish photos with a few of my own comments attached.

Again, we aren't 100% sure which of the two Orange County groups each particular picture is from, but apparently there are similarities between the two groups when it comes to dress and technology.

In this photo you can see obvious signs of a lower-order buggy--no SMV triangle, side-view mirrors, or windows.         

The father's bob-style haircut is typical of the Swartzentruber group, but again, as there are similarities in appearance between the two settlements, he could in fact be a member of the Paoli group.

Indiana_amish_school

Some Amish kids enjoy large playgrounds with softball diamonds.  Others make due with what they have.  Meyers and Nolt write that Orange County Amish schools are likely the most austere in Indiana.  Still looks like a lot of fun.

Amish_women_walking

Slowly but surely.  By foot is sometimes the simplest way to go.       

Some people express surprise at seeing more mainstream Amish in sneakers and tennis shoes.  Though I'm not sure that the lower-order groups in these photos would approve of such footwear, comfortable modern shoes are common in many Amish communities. 

In any case, the Amish do not avoid comfort for the sake of suffering.  Amish appreciate comfort as much as you and I do.  Technological restrictions and dress guidelines help to preserve community by serving as a symbolic separation from the world and hampering destructive outside influences. 

Amish_buggy_in_town 

Open-front buggies are also a sign of a more conservative Amish group.  Many Amish venture into town quite frequently to do shopping or on general errands. 

Do the Amish ever live in town?  In some communities, such as Topeka, Indiana, or Mount Hope, Ohio, a large percentage of a hamlet's residents are actually Amish.  Sometimes elderly Amish will move into town, and some will sell their horse if they become infirm or find they are able to manage without it. 

Amish_men_at_work

Steel wheels are par for the course for most Amish-owned farm equipment.  Rubber is used in some groups but is less common.  Steel wheels work fine in the fields, but are a bit 'unhandy' on asphalt, which is the point. 

I remember listening to a steel-wheeled tractor approach on a rural byway near Kalona, Iowa.  You could hear it quite a long way off.  Things are not always to quiet and peaceful in Amish America. 

Amish_windmill_2

Thanks again to Cindy for the great photos.

March 15, 2008

Where Amish scooters come from

Amish_scooter_4

'Sylvan', one of my Amish friends in Lancaster County, runs a scooter workshop in addition to milking cows.

In Lancaster County and related settlements, you rarely see bicycles--in Lancaster, for instance, there are only a few church districts I'm aware of that seem to allow them.

Amish_scooters_lancaster

I've also seen scooters in use among the Amish of Allen County, Indiana, and I'd imagine they'd be found in other areas that adhere to a somewhat stricter Ordnung.

At least part of the reasoning is that the scooter, with it's foot-on-ground system of propulsion, is a bit closer to walking than a bike would be.

Pink_amish_scooter  

Sylvan says that his pink line has never really taken off.  Come to think of it, I don't think I've ever seen a pink one on the road.  Green, red, and blue are the most popular colors.


Midwestern Amish in contrast to their Lancaster counterparts tend to be a lot more open to using bikes--the Amish around Arthur, Illinois and those in Lagrange/Elkhart counties come to mind right away.  The men there often use them to ride to jobs in the local garage door and RV plants.


I'm also acquainted with an Amishman in northern Indiana who manufactures the recumbent bike--the one that looks like a cross between a bicycle and a recliner.  This particular ride is a hit in a number of the more progressive settlements.  Sort of a luxury comfort ride on the spectrum of two-wheeled non-motorized transport.

March 13, 2008

Orange County, Indiana Amish reader photos

Amish_farmer_garden

Cindy Seigle has shared some interesting photos of a conservative Amish settlement in southern Indiana.

Amish_boys_and_wagon

In An Amish Patchwork, Meyers and Nolt explain that Orange County is home to two distinct Amish communities. 

Amish_farm_indiana

The newer of the two groups is comprised of ultraconservative Swartzentruber-affiliated Amish from New York and Ohio who began settling in the area in 1994. 

Amish_school_children 

The older of the two groups, which originated in other settlements in Indiana and Pennsylvania and is known as the Paoli group, is in many respects highly conservative as well.

Amish_girl_and_wagon

Meyers and Nolt explain that both groups observe similar technological restrictions--very plain dress, buggies without storm fronts or lights, and very restricted use of 'Amish taxi' providers, for example.

Amish_school_indiana 

But the groups are not identical, and in fact are unaffiliated with one another.  The authors explain the key difference:

'Yet in many ways unlike their tradition-minded Swartzentruber neighbors, the Paoli group has staunchly opposed older customs surrounding traditional courtship practices or adult smoking habits.' 

Amish_walking_to_school_indiana

'The Paoli settlement is notable for this combination of intentional traditionalism and intentional reformism.  Their refusal to compromise on issues they deem important has led them to not affiliate with any other Amish settlements in the state.'

Orange_county_amish_buggy

I am not sure which community Cindy's photos are from.

As the authors describe the two settlements as being adjacent to one another, the photos may very well be from both communities.

Barefoot_amish_boy

Click for more of Cindy Seigle's Orange County Amish photos.

February 26, 2008

The sporting Amishman, part 2


Amish Volleyball Tournament, originally uploaded by teacherholly.

Amish also enjoy competitive team sports. This photo, taken by Holly in Mount Hope, Ohio, illustrates one of the most popular.

Amish typically play sports as children and as members of the youth. On marriage and having kids, participation in sports tends to drop off markedly. It's also worth remembering that different groups of Amish may have differing opinions on the matter of sports.

Generally though, Amish do enjoy playing sports and even following pro teams. Softball is particularly popular, as an entertainment for children during breaks at school, and also with Amish teens, who play against non-Amish teams in competitive leagues.

You'll find a decent amount of Bears fans in the Amish settlement at Arthur, Illinois, though not too many that actually play football. One Amishman in southern Indiana has built a gymnasium on his property for pick-up basketball games in a nod to a sport that's particularly popular in his settlement.

Holmes County baseball fans tend to pull for the Tribe, though some may be tempted to root for the Pirates just over the state line in Pittsburgh. Lancaster County Amish enjoy hockey, skiing, and in warmer months, croquet. I haven't been able to find any Amish snowboard enthusiasts yet but I'm sure there must be some out there.

Most Amish who do follow sports manage to keep up with their favorite teams through the paper. But do the Amish ever get a chance to watch games?

An outing to the ballpark is uncommon, but does happen. Amish may also catch a game on the tube--perhaps at a non-Amish friend or relative's.

But don't expect to see too many bearded Plain guys crowded around piles of chicken wings at the local sports bar. You have to draw the line somewhere.

January 19, 2008

Feeling healthy, happy, and terrific

People often assume that the Amish, whom we think of as a people 'in tune with nature' and 'close to the earth' (which to some degree may be true, whatever those phrases actually mean) are strictly all-natural when it comes to the food they raise. 

In fact, on most Amish farms pesticides are put to use. Organic farming is something that is catching on in certain areas, but it's definitely a minority share of the Amish-produced milk on the market.  However, those that do take the trouble to go organic are rewarded with higher prices for their milk.  The supposedly healthier-for-you produce finds a slightly different market as well.  This sign is from the Amish community around Geauga County, Ohio.

Amish_organic_produce

To say that the Amish are into health supplements and alternative treatments would be something of an understatement.  Last time I was in Ohio, one couple I know fairly well was subtly promoting a new one for me, some sort of a pill which I believe contained an entire dried fruit, or at least all the vitamins and good things you'd find in one. 

I guess it was a time-saver thing, just pop one and avoid all hassle of eating a run-down-your-chin juicy peach or whatever it might be.  Actually these guys are still into eating regular fruits, I think the idea was more about upping the fruit intake without having to go through two bushels a day (which could potentially wreak major havoc on one's internals, so to speak).

Whenever I'm around, I usually pick up some sort of health supplements from a furniture maker friend in the same community, who sells them on the side.  Last time it was a Chondroitin-Glucosamine concoction that was supposed to fix up my bum knee.  Well, the bum knee went away as I used it over the summer.  Causality or coincidence, I cannot say.

In the Nappanee, Indiana community, as well as the Daviess County, Indiana community, a couple of Amish acquaintances run prospering health-goods and dietary supplements stores.  The new thing I've been seeing in Amish areas lately is Xango juice, a special brew made from the mangosteen fruit, and supposed to contain xanthones--'next-generation phytonutrients', with all sorts of intestinal, immune, and anti-oxidant benefits.  The stuff is potent, slickly-marketed, and expensive, at close to 40 bucks a bottle.

This photo, of an Amish Xango dealer's road-side sign, is also from Geauga County.

Amish_xango_juice

Why are the Amish so into the so-called alternative health market?  There seems to be some truth to the idea that the Amish go for things that tend towards the natural side.  I have detected a belief among some Amish that a lot of what modern medicine has given us to make us better actually may do the opposite.   Not a backwards-thinking mentality--the  typical Amishman when faced with a serious health issue is going to get in the taxi and get to the doctor--but perhaps more a healthy skepticism.  And I'm not one to knock that idea.

December 16, 2007

Buggy-friendly America

Across America in places where the Amish have set up shop, local businesses and government authorities have had to adapt some practices to accomodate the preferred Amish mode of transportation. 

Ohio_amish_buggy_holmes_county_road

Traffic Jam off County Road 77 in Holmes County, Ohio

Sometimes an Amish group showing up in an area can lead to disputes with locals over horse mess or hoof damage on roads.  The smarter businesses, or at least those that hope to attract more Amish customers, usually get a hitching post up in front as soon as possible to make themselves buggy-friendly.

Amish_walmart_ohio_millersburg

Wal-Mart in Millersburg, Ohio

Road signs warn drivers of the presence of buggies.  The designs of such signs are specific to state and even individual community.  Stephen Scott's Plain Buggies contains photographs outlining the differences in buggy warning-sign design in states such as Ohio, Delaware, New York, and Pennsylvania.  Generally they all consist of black silhouettes on a yellow background, but with different artists' renditions of the vehicle.  Why the difference?  Perhaps due to the fact that they are maintained by state and local authorities rather than a federal body which might be expected to produce more uniform signage.

Ohio_amish_new_bedford_open_cart

New Bedford, Ohio

In certain Amish communities, such as that of Allen County, Indiana, the buggy silhouette on local signs is a crude approximation of a topless carriage, as Allen County Amish use only this type.   

New_wilmington_amish_buggies

New Wilmington, Pennsylvania

Most Amish conform to law by utilizing some form of reflectorized material or lighting to warn drivers of their presence.  Most find this to be a sensible compromise--they allow their transportation to be adorned with a man-made symbol, yet benefit from increased safety, while promoting the safety of car-drivers as well. 

Swartzentruber_amish_sunday_buggy

Swartzentruber Amish, Wayne