Amish
beliefs about modern ideas and innovations
Although the Amish look
like they stepped out of the rural nineteenth
century, in fact they do change. Their lives move
more slowly than ours, but they definitely are
not stuck anywhere. They choose to examine change
carefully before they accept it. If the new idea
or gadget does not assist in keeping their lives
simple and their families together, they probably
will reject it. Each church district decides for
itself what it will and will not accept; there is
no single governing body for the entire Old Order
population, but all follow a literal
interpretation of the Bible and an unwritten set
of rules called the Ordnung.
Old Order groups all drive horses and buggies
rather than cars, do not have electricity in
their homes, and send their children to private,
one-room schoolhouses. Children attend only
through the eighth grade. After that, they work
on their family's farm or business until they
marry. The Amish feel that their children do not
need more formal education than this. Although
they pay school taxes, the Amish have fought to
keep their children out of public schools. In
1972, the Supreme Court handed down a landmark
unanimous decision which exempted the Old Order
Amish and related groups from state compulsory
attendance laws beyond the eighth grade. Many
Mennonites and progressive Amish do attend high
school and even college.
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