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High oil switch Amish from oil to propane

Posted on Monday, December 21, 2009 at 12:39

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Driving the back roads near Dover, Delaware, I contemplate how to make my approach. In the six months I've spent traversing the nation, it has been rare to encounter reticence--no matter how abruptly my notebook and probing questions accost a person's normal routine. Given the insular reputation of the Amish, however, I'm nervous they won't respond as favorably. Thankfully, my naive assumptions prove incorrect.
 

 

Consumerism is a dominant force in mainstream American life. Consumer spending provides fuel for a vibrant economy, though an untrammeled consumption ethic can also lead to financial disaster. An insatiable desire for material goods has trapped too many Americans in a debtor's vise, drawn by the allure of a bigger house, nicer car, or flatter TV.

eliMary.JPGOur American Dream has abandoned philosophical roots deeply embedded in notions of liberty and self-determination by morphing into a set of glittering shackles formed of pins and links with names like MasterCard, Wells Fargo, and Fannie Mae. Handcuffs branded with the logo of this season's hottest designer have become most highly sought. Everyone wants a pair.

I've been thinking about the Amish because I wondered if their religious and cultural rejection of materialism had helped protect their communities from the harshest effects of the recession. As I learned talking to Eli and Salina Yoder at their home goods shop, Shady Lane Selections, Amish families may not have overextended themselves on credit, but they have not been immune to the recession's impact.

A little over a month ago, ministers of the nine Amish church districts in Dover brought their congregations an important matter for discussion. The religious leadership had been debating the high price of fuel oil the community has used to light and heat their homes for generations, and had ruled that it would be permissible to make a switch to more economical propane gas.

"The ministers get together to discuss and then every church district discusses the idea to give everyone a chance to voice their objections," Eli explains. "There really were no disagreements this time. Some had complaints because any kind of change is always a major thing. But if 80 percent decide in favor of the change, then it goes forward. I think this one was more like 90 percent."

newlight.JPGThe Yoders immediately hired a propane gas company to install the pipe work and sockets throughout their shop. "We have lights now," Salina says with a smile, pointing up to an L-shaped metal pipe capped with a mesh bulb. Their daughter Mary Ellen climbs onto a chair, touching the pipe's end with a small gas torch, heeding her father's warning to not turn the gas too high. A piercing white illumination banishes the darkness that had begun to set in as dusk crept across the room's skylights.

"We thought we had a bright light to begin with, but now we have an even brighter light," Salina says. The quality of light they will enjoy by transitioning away from oil lamps is made more brilliant by the money they will save on fuel. Eli reports that they usually paid $5.95 a gallon for Coleman fuel, but propane costs just $2 a gallon and only requires a slightly higher quantity of usage.

They haven't invested the money to put gas lighting into their house yet, but did install a gas water heater. The full renovation to add the gas pipes into the house may have to wait until economic recovery makes their finances more secure.

The Yoder's shop, which sells handmade quilts, crafts, wood furniture, cuckoo clocks, cookware and other various odds and ends, has had an 8% decline in sales this year--not enough to worry them about going out of business, but enough to feel the pinch.

Eli's carpentry business--Eli Yoder Construction LLC--has also taken a hit from the lack of demand for new building. "I've had to lower prices dramatically just so we can make a paycheck. We've pretty much stayed busy throughout all this, but it's been pretty stressful to keep it there." He hasn't had to lay off any of his six employees, which include his son and one son-in-law, but the margins have been tight.

With both the construction business and the family shop, the Yoders say things have started to pick back up in recent weeks, making them optimistic that economic recovery has begun. "I know it's going to get better," Eli says. "It can't get much worse."

SalinaEli.JPG



 

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Comments (18)

TouristLush

Well apparently these people are Mennonites and not Amish as the article states... Amish do not allow themselves to be photographed...none-the-less, of course they are hit by the recession.... who do you think they sell all of their items to? Saying they are self-contained in their own world is not quite the way they are.... Living in the Lancaster County PA region for years, I realize these people totally depend upon the "sinners" to buy their goods, wares, and nonsense. These people are capitalists from every angle.... don't let their dress and plain looks fool you. They molest children (look up Megan's law under Lancaster County, PA), they get DUI's while driving drunk (horse and buggy DUI in Lancaster week of Dec. 7th, 2009), they eat at the same restaurants as others, they shop at the same shops as others...etc etc. So why would any moran think that they would not be hit by the recession as well? When tourists are not coming in by the boatloads (in which in Lancaster they surely are not) then the Amish suffer. Oh well, guess they need to pray a little harder.

bill waugh (Replying to: TouristLush)

You are referring to "old order Amish". They do not want to be photographed. These however may be "Beachy Amish" or one of the other Amish groups who may or may not drive cars but do allow themselves to be photographed.

dwaysto (Replying to: TouristLush)

Lush,
My last name is Stoltzfus (Amish Name) and I am also from Lancaster. I grew up Mennonite and still have many Amish relatives. I wanted to address some of your accusations of the Amish. First, most Amish including "Old Order" Amish will allow people outside of the Amish church to take their picture, but they will normally not want to pose for a picture(these Yoder's are Amish and not Mennonite). Second, the goal of most Amish and Amish communities is not to completely withdraw from the "secular" world around them but to live simple and peaceful lives "in the world not of it". They also have no problem with free market capitalism. They actually have a greater understanding of this economic structure than most Americans since the Amish have the largest ratio of entrepreneurs out of any other American subculture (Millionaire Mind) and many are extremely wealthy. And Third, just like any other subculture (religion or race) the Amish have individuals within their group that commit crimes, get drunk, molest children but the overall crime rate among the Amish subgroup is less than 90% compared against the crime rate of the entire nation (sex offenders are also less than 90% compared to the entire nation). Lush, would it be okay for you to say this about other American subgroups like blacks or Jews saying that "they" "molest children". I think in the future you should think a bit more before spewing this type racial propaganda about something you seem to know little about regarding a group of people who are simply trying to do what they think is right.

postpunkletdown

You are annoying (TouristLush) and what makes you think that some Amish people may not be more modernized? BTW... the word is moron not moran. Yeah, Moran is a surname. It is a contraction of Morgan. Bye now.

playinghurt

Oh, you mean they're human...like us. Perhaps we should pray for each other.

Fall Creek

I live in an area of Southern Ohio heavily populated by all shades of Amish and Mennonites. What I have learned in the past fifteen years is that no assumptions can be made about what they find to be acceptable or not. We have conservative Amish, very liberal Amish who farm with tractors and have electricity in their homes, very conservative Mennonites who mostly do everything by animal or muscle power, and Mennonites who are very mainstream America except their mode of dress is a little "old" fashion.

What the article reports is very true of our local populations of Amish and Mennonites. Since they earn their incomes from a wide variety of means their talents and services depend heavily on the overall health of the general economy. If people aren't building new homes or remodeling existing homes, carpenters of any religious persuasion don't drive nails.

erikwesner/AmishAmerica

Nice article, and interesting to see another real-life example of how change occurs among Amish.

The photo question is interesting, but sounds like Eli and Salina are actually Old Order Amish. There is a variety of thought on photography among OO Amish, and this couple likely has a more relaxed approach to the issue. Some Amish are simply more open to photography, or at least don't mind their photos being taken, as long as they aren't obviously posing, or if they're taken in a situation where there is 'plausible deniability'. Though in the first shot, ole Eli here looks like he doesn't mind the photo one bit, which is also not unheard of. The book The Amish and the Media has an interesting discussion by Dirk Eitzen, or see a brief take on Amish and photos here: http://amishamerica.typepad.com/amish_america/2009/07/filming-amish.html

I was also interested to see Eli's approach to managing his firm during this slow period. It's not surprising that he is avoiding layoffs and trying to keep his employees busy, to the extent that he can. This is the typical approach among Amish entrepreneurs.

Roguespierre

Has anyone pointed out the sheer hypocrisy of these 19th century misanthropes? Isn't it enough to lead the good and gentle life while burning candles or adjusting your horse's diaper?

Allowing fuel oil, then propane gas? Oh my! What's next? The pure and holy atom? Tourist up, you colorful yet misinformed bit of Americana!

contagiousu4ia

I spent part of my childhood amongst Amish Mennonites in Hartley Delaware. They were curtious. They did not believe in being photographed as it represented idolatry but did not resist being photographed in passing.They had the same levels of extremes or lack of extremes in practicing thier faith as the rest of us. They had old timers who shunned modern marketing of goods for personal gain as the Yoders are doing. They did not use electricity. The Father was the priest of the home and held a regular sunday service with his own family but 1 sunday a month the whole commuinty would gather with the "BISHOP".
They used cash and traded and bartered amongst eachother and my neighbor's, Maddie and Alan Miller, raised pigs and sold them but still basically lived off the land. They allowed me and my twin brother to hang out at thier house as they did not have children yet. A clean shaven Amish man is still single. An Amish man with a beard is married.I wrote a letter once to "any amish bishop in Hartley Delware" I actually got a reply from A bishop named Daniel Koblentz. I was asking If they experienced any of the drama we experienced here in the outside world. I was referring to broken homes, divorces, family dysfunction, excuses echo, drama dungeon kind of stuff we get our selves into. He replied he had to get enterpreter to help him read my letter and also respond and said they do have their share of problems with rebellion within their own families and sects but nothing like what we encounter in the outside world, while we have the liberty to pea on someones leg and tell them it was raining in court and sue for divorces again and again etc.....They spoke mainly dutch and read a dutch bible. I was very mpressed that the rural mail carrier went that far to search out an amish bishop or get my letter to someone who would and Daniel Koblentz actually took the time to get an enterpreter and respond to me.

contagiousu4ia (Replying to: contagiousu4ia)

My Amish neighbors, Maddie and Alan Miller. I have very good memories of these people. They are taught to be curteous and always greet in passing. The Amish children were allowed to go to public school with us until 8th grade at which time the county had agreed to allow Amish parents to homeschool after eighth grade because it was the Amish belief that 8th grade and o;der were too impressionable and could be heavily influenced with worldly ways beyond 8 th grade If they continued public school beyond that.

debnran

I don't know those people Christina wrote about, but most of the Yoders in the Dover area are Beachy Amish. My question is how much did she know about the Amish in the area before she wrote the article? I ask this because when I helped my mother and father do the Census in the 1990's, several of the Amish we visited to get Census information already were using prophane. In fact, one lady took my mother and I into her house and showed us prophane lamps, prophane refrigerator, and stove, among other objects. My grandmother (father's mother) was Amish and left the religion many years before her death in the 70's, and we have made it a point to learn about the religion, and the culture.

Some Old Order Mennonites and Amish do allow photos to be taken (mostly those that work closely with or for the English - as they call non-Amish) - although most will get permission from the Bishop before an article or news broadcast is done. Some photography is done without permission, although in this case, it was obviously with permission. TouristLush, don't assume what someone is only by a photo or article. Your ignorance is showing. Also, the Amish and Mennonites in Dover do not rely on tourism - in fact, there is very little tourism in the Amish area around Dover. I think Byler's just started a horse & Buggy tour of the Amish farms - and that's about it. I'm not sure who is doing that tour - might not even be Amish or Mennonite.

Ban-Comments

Truthfully, I don't know why they allow comments from the likes of TouristLush. Because of those kind of comments, there shouldn't be any comments allowed on these sights. This is the second time I have ever commented on an article of any kind. Every article I read that has comments available has some bozo like TL giving useless comments. I feel that all these comments should be cut off, and if you feel so inclined to comment, you can do it the old fashioned way and send a letter to the editor.

Bill Davis (Replying to: Ban-Comments)

This IS the letter to the editor.

Everyone is entitled to their opinion, just like the Amish are entitled to follow the peculiar tenets of their religion, regardless of whether or not it makes sense to other observers.

As for the Amish, I find it strange that they are willing to use the products that are produced by the very things they prohibit in their lives (like electricity to build propane refrigerators, or well-educated people making decisions about how to produce the refrigerators), but so long as I don't have to live that way, far be it for me to decide how others should live, or learn to swallow their particular set of contradictions. There does seem to be a strain inherent in all religions, that one must deny oneself one thing to have another (materialism vs. spiritualism), and I'm of the opinion that they really doesn't work, and that it's an exercise in futility to continue on that path, but I'm grateful that others are carrying out the experiment so I can see how I don't want to live. For an interesting documentary on at least one aspect of their lives, and in particular how they cope with coming of age in a modern world, see The Devil's Playground: ( http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0293088/ ).

mateloi


wow people...if you don't have anything nice to say then just keep it to yourself. I don't care what race you come from...just leave people alone to do their own thing. I suggest that you worry about your own family and how to take care of them in this financial crisis time because I bet that's what the Amish people are doing right now while we are yapping here how to leave their life and what not what kind of gas they should use...and else we have still have our own bills to pay and what not...and the Amish are not paying for it.

lilgoatlady

I don't always agree with the Amish and Mennonites on some theological issues but I deeply respect the fact that they've had the guts to go against our culture in order to protect what they deem most valuable (religion, family and community.) While many Americans are led along like SHEEP by the media and advertising agencies into pointless consumerism, debt and family-and-health-destroying lifestyles, these people have the backbone to say "no" (or "whoa" perhaps.)


From my readings, some of the orders didn't refuse to modernize just to be quaint tourist attractions, but in order to maintain their culture and family-centeredness. They aren't scared of hard work (which often can't be said of the rest of us, who'd rather pay $$$ to a gym rather than do productive work) and they are willing to give up the "good" for what they consider to be the "best" in life.

I think it was a little naive of the author to think that the recession hasn't touched the Amish or Mennonites. What would be interesting is how their deep faith, family and community-centeredness has helped them emotionally and practically during this time of economic trial. I'd certainly doubt that few if any of them succumbed to the glittering temptations of predatory lending and their kids would probably not fuss because they can't now afford a $100+ pair of sneakers.

As I said before, I don't always agree with them theologically and some of the ordnungs may now defeat the purposes for which they were created, but I respect these people's backbone.

truthful1

hey debnran

what is prophane? you seem to mean propane, yet spell it wrong each time, so not a typing error. unless you mean profane, which is for this article post, out of line and also ironic. prophane IS an another and earlier version of profane. hard to believe the government has hired you for anything when you are so daft.

the amount of people who post, need to get a life and do more than just this. and maybe in doing so, they can also learn how to spell. i decided to do post only because i read some of the comments after the article and couldn't resist saying something about this 'prophane' poster.
now back to real life.

truthful1

and my computer which caused an error above, was not intentional. sorry..
therefore:
prophane IS another and earlier version of profane.

justsaying

Wow! People on here can be vicious! I only wanted to say that I thought the article was interesting (or was going to be, whichever the case) or I wouldn't have "clicked" on to read it! I wish I had of stopped with the article and not read the comments, (and HERE I am posting one, arrrghhhhh). I just wanted to say, it can be amusing or annoying at times for someone to comment on an article such as this and start attacking those who commented before them! We all do have a right to our opinions and such, but I'm "justsaying" that to pick someone else's comment apart for spelling and such like "truthful1" did to "debnran", you might FIRST want to make sure that you are using punctuation, grammar and such correctly. I mean if you're criticizing another post for spelling, it just looks odd when you aren't using proper punctuation and even leaving out capital letters with your beginning word to a new sentence. Please do not bombard this site because I commented on the previous post and have mistakes myself, I'll be the first to admit I'm not perfect and may have errors! I also realize that by commenting, you might think I'm doing the same. No, I'm not "attacking" the previous people's comments, I'm "just saying" before you criticize someone else's comment for errors, you MIGHT want to check your own comment, if the errors are what have peeved you! NOW...to the author, the Amish fascinate me, don't ask me why, they just do, I found the article very interesting. Thank you for writing it! Have a GREAT day!

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