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  2. Anti-Amish sentiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Amish_sentiment

    Claping (pronounced "clay-ping") refers to hate crimes and harassment directed against Amish people. Non-Amish hooligans may try to force Amish horses and buggies off the road, throw firecrackers at the horses of Amish people, throw stones at Amish people, or otherwise engage in acts of petty vandalism, harassment, and violence.

  3. Ordnung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordnung

    The Amish have few written explanations why certain things are regulated by the Ordnung. Non-Amish are not allowed to attend their council meetings, and most Amish are hesitant to discuss the details with outsiders, therefore the precise reasons are difficult to explain. They formulate their rules with two interconnected goals in mind.

  4. Amish way of life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amish_way_of_life

    Amish make decisions about health, education, and relationships based on their Biblical interpretation. Amish life has influenced some things in popular culture. As the Amish are divided into the Old Order Amish, New Order Amish, and Beachy Amish, the way of life of families depends on the rule of the church community to which they belong.

  5. Amish youth experience a rite of passage called Rumspringa ...

    www.aol.com/people-wrong-rumspringa-amish-rite...

    The Amish are described by some historians as an ethnoreligious group, meaning their identity is tied to both their religion and their common culture and ancestry.

  6. Rumspringa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rumspringa

    Rumspringa (Pennsylvania German pronunciation: [ˈrʊmˌʃprɪŋə]), [2] also spelled Rumschpringe or Rumshpringa (lit. ' running around ', [3] from Pennsylvania German rumschpringe ' to run around; to gad; to be wild '; [4] compare Standard German herum-, rumspringen ' to jump around '), is a rite of passage during adolescence, used in some Amish communities.

  7. Amish religious practices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amish_religious_practices

    The Amish's willingness to submit to the "Will of God", expressed through group norms, is at odds with the individualism so central to the wider American culture. The Amish anti-individualist orientation is the motive for rejecting labor-saving technologies that might make one less dependent on the community.

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  9. Subgroups of Amish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subgroups_of_Amish

    New Order Amish split away from the Old Order Amish in the 1960s for a variety of reasons, which included a desire for "clean" youth courting standards, meaning they do not condone tobacco, alcohol, or the practice of bundling, or non-sexually lying in bed together, during courtship. [21]