 Click for larger image.
Group Lifestyles Vary
Deeply devoted to their religious beliefs, they hold church every
other Sunday at a different house in their church district (usually
consisting of 25-30 families). The approximately three hour services is
followed by lunch and several hours of socializing.
In this way, too, they are able to monitor the lifestyle of each
family to assure compliance with the rules of the church. Those who do
not are confronted. If they refuse to comply, they are shunned until
they either do so or are excommunicated from the church. Amish youth
usually join the church in their early twenties. They can do so earlier
but must do so before they marry. They are not forced to join; however
most usually do because of their strong faith in the Amish lifestyle.
“Rules of order,” or the Ordnung, are set by the local church
district Bishop. The rules which govern the Amish community cover
almost every aspect of their lives. They include types of buggy wheels,
length of hair for men (the women do not cut their hair), width of hat
brims, etc. This explains the variances found between Amish variances.
 Click for larger image.
Some groups allow a more tolerant lifestyle than others. The
clothing rules in Indiana are not as strict as those of Holmes County,
Ohio.
Amish men wear beards based on a biblical passage which states that
they should not mar the hair on their face (Leviticus 19:26).
Young men are encouraged to grow beards as early as possible but
must do
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so, unless they are physically incapable, upon marriage. Old
Order wear their beards longer while the New Order keep them neatly
trimmed. Because the European soldiers who persecuted them had mustaches and used large buttons on their uniforms, the pacifist Amish avoid any resemblance to the military. Amish men neither grow mustaches nor use
buttons on their coats.
Lifestyle Seemingly Paradoxical
A number of paradoxes seemingly exist as the Amish strive to
maintain their simple lifestyle in the 21st Century.
While horses pull things with wheels, some groups use gasoline
engines to power agricultural implements and other equipment. Rubber
wheels are replaced with those of steel and the drive shaft, designed
for connection to a tractor, is fitted to a small engine by way of a
pulley and belt.
 Click for larger image.
Although Amish people cannot own or drive vehicles, they do travel
by train or bus and ride in cars and trucks driven by others to visit
friends and relatives or to take vacation trips to scenic areas.
Neither electrical appliances nor telephones are found in Amish
houses. They will use (public or friends’) telephones to make doctor
appointments, hire drivers (of vans) to take them for a doctor’s
appointment at a distance or to visit friends and relatives beyond a
buggies’ range.
They are also snow birds. There is a retreat for the elderly
members in the Pinecraft area of Sarasota, Florida, where they go
usually during the winter. The plain people see no problem with this
since most of those who visit Pinecraft are the older, retired people
who maintain the same lifestyle as back home. Besides, it allows them
the opportunity to visit with others -- one of the basic pleasures
enjoyed by the Amish.
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 Click for larger image.
Amish Population Gaining in Numbers
What about the future of the Amish? It seems secure. Despite the
few who leave the faith each year, their population has been gaining in
total number. This is due chiefly to increased longevity common to the
general American population and families that average seven children.
While most immigrants are assimilated into America’s culture, the
Amish remain a religious community forming a subculture almost three
hundred years after their arrival.
Although the Amish are seemingly a paradox in 21st Century America,
they live a lifestyle that allows them to comfortably and peacefully
follow their religious beliefs.
About Photographing The Amish
Care has been taken to provide these photographs for America’s
Amish Country, many of which contain pictures of the Amish people,
through non-obtrusive photographic means. We believe that it is
important to show the Amish as they are, a group of people peacefully
living their chosen lifestyle much like any other people, just
different, in some of the most scenic country in America.
See the Amish Buggy
Copyright Information: All text and photography are Copyrighted by
Leslie A. Kelly and/or Doyle Yoder. America’s Amish Country was first
published in 1992 by America’s Amish Country Publications, Berlin,
Ohio. Use herein by Amish.Net has been granted by Leslie A. Kelly and
Doyle Yoder. Text and photography may not be copied or used in any website, book or magazine, with the exeption of brief quotations in critical articles or reviews. |