Amish Books

Rumspringa: To be or not to be Amish

Rumspringa: To be or not to be Amish

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

How I Got To Know The Amish

How I Got To Know The Amish

Update: below is the back-story of how I came to know the Amish. I’ve been long “retired” from selling books in Amish communities, but starting in 2004, this was my intro to Amish life. Over the next several years, I visited thousands of Amish homes in five states, including the four largest Amish settlements. Inspired by the experience, I started this website as a basic…

Amish trivia

Amish folks, like the rest of us, enjoy hearing the odd bit of trivia or unusual fact.  Hence, three tidbits of Amish trivia, taken from Brad Igou’s compilation The Amish in their Own Words: 1.   Quilts. The Amish are well known for their proficiency in the quilting realm.  Some of their pieces fetch upwards of $1000. The average quilt takes around 250-350 yards of thread. …

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English in the Country

Amish tourism did not begin with Witness. That 1985 film just made it worse (or better, depending on how you look at it, I suppose). David Luthy, writing in The Amish Struggle with Modernity, tells us that the first Amish-themed novel came out in 1905 (wait a minute–back when many of us English were still riding around in buggies!), the first Amish postcards around 1915,…

The Amish Church Directory

The Amish Church Directory

I just picked up my 2002 Indiana Amish Directory for Elkhart, Lagrange, and Noble Counties, and flipped to a random page. Here are the last names of the Amish in the 40 households in the district I landed on, in order:   Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontrager, Bontreger, Bontreger, Eash, Gingerich, Hochstedler, Hostetler, Jones, Lambright, Lambright, Lambright, Lambright, Lambright, Lambright, Lehman, Miller, Miller, Miller,…

Why do Amish wear beards (but no moustache)?

Why do Amish wear beards (but no moustache)?

Amish men wear beards, but no mustache. Why? An Amish friend shared his answer that question (see that below). But first, Stephen Scott gives possible reasons in Why Do They Dress That Way? “Evil-looking” European soldiers used to wear curly mustaches. Amish shaved theirs to set themselves apart. The mustache has been considered unclean. An Amish friend explained the reasoning behind the beard, which overlaps…

The Nebraska Amish

The Nebraska Amish

The Nebraska Amish find themselves on the ultraconservative edge of Amish society. “Nebraska” is something of a misnomer, however. This group is found mainly in Mifflin County, Pennsylvani, in the diverse Big Valley region. A second, smaller group is found in northeastern Ohio. The Nebraska tag comes from the origin of the group’s founding bishop, Yost H. Yoder.  Today there are a number of subgroups…

Amish in the Jungle?

Amish in the Jungle?

A link (no longer online) to some nice photos of Anabaptist-related peoples in South America, by Jordi Busque. Jordi says that the family in An Amish family in the jungle moved to Bolivia from Tennessee in the mid-1990’s. Apparently they identify themselves as Amish. Jordi adds that there is another family like them, about an hour’s walk away. Is this family in fellowship with any…

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Amish dating, Amish smoking: ‘Old’ and ‘New’ perspectives

‘The typical English guy looks at one of us and just sees an Amish person.  Actually there can be a lot of difference.’ So said a Holmes County Amishman, commenting on the diversity in his area. Compared to the Old Order Amish, the so-called New Order Amish are a curious mix–one which we might term technologically more liberal, but in some ways culturally more conservative….

Little Boy Blue

Little Boy Blue

Convicted murderer Eli Stutzman, formerly of the Amish of Wayne County, Ohio, has died. His death has been ruled a suicide. The father of “Little Boy Blue”, suspected in three other deaths in addition to that of his son, killed himself in a Fort Worth, Texas apartment last week. Gregg Olsen, who chronicled the case in Abandoned Prayers, says the story might not be over. “I…