Amish Roots: A Treasury of History Wisdom and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies)
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About this book
It isnt the way of the Amish to write about themselves. But John A. Hostetler author of the best- selling Amish Society has put together a delightful anthology in which they do just that. More than 150 rare and unusual letters and journal entries poems and stories riddles legends and bits of family lore offer a uniquely authentic view of Amish life from colonial times to the present. Illustrated with 25 pages of full-color illustrations this is the Amish story as told by the Amish themselves by their friends and neighbors and by others who understand Amish ways. Hans Nussbaum a nineteenth-century Swiss immigrant writes to friends of a rough Atlantic crossing and a hard life in the Ohio Valley suggesting that his "sleepy and lazy" cousins stay home in Europe. Virgil Detweiler tells of an ancestors arrival at the port of colonial Philadelphia with personal baggage that included 5 copper stills 30 stoves 596 scythes and 8 flutes. (He lost it all to King Georges alert customs men.) In 1863 Amish bishop Daniel Beachy faces down a company of Confederate cavalry who try to steal his horse on a muddy Maryland highway. And an Amish teen- ager writes of life in a Pennsylvania prison after refusing military service during World War II. But Amish Roots is more than an anthology of Amish history. Here Amish men and women speak out. On America. The decline of the family. Health and home remedies. Farming. They offer three centuries wisdom on issues ranging from raising a barn to raising children from getting along with neighbors to breaking in a team of mules. They tell whats wrong with public schools and share strategies for coping with government officials aggressive reporters and tourists. Converts to the faith tell their story. Those who leave the faith describe life among the "English." Throughout the Amish deal with the modern world in ways that often temper outright rejection with quiet compromise. In 1850 newly arrived Amish immigrants are astonished at the sight of the Mississippi sidewheeler that will take them from New Orleans to their new home in Illinois. More than a century later an Amish tourist in Europe offers a first-hand account of crossing the English Channel by Hovercraft.
