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Yoni Birnbaum

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Yoni Birnbaum,

Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

When the rabbi talked tech with the Amish

How do we wrestle with our faith in the 21st century, asks Rabbi Yoni Birnbaum - who has recently taken his family to see how the Amish live in Pennsylvania

February 1, 2018 11:19
Amish in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
3 min read

There’s a well-known story of a modern, smartly dressed Jewish man who sees a gentleman with a full beard and hat, dressed in old fashioned clothes walking down a New York street. Sidling up to him, he remarks: “Don’t you think it’s finally time to join the 21st century? You embarrass the rest of us walking around in clothes like that.” The bearded man responds, “Actually, sir, I’m Amish”. “Oh”, says the first man, turning red, “I’m so sorry, please forgive me. I think that the way you preserve your traditions is wonderful!”

We may not be of the Chasidic variety, but my family and I have long been fascinated by the Amish, a religious enclave of 19th-century farmers living in rural America, who eschew modern technology and still use horses and ploughs. So, as we are currently in Boston on sabbatical, we decided to spend the night on a genuine Amish dairy farm near Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

After a very long drive, we arrived at our hosts, Anna and Ben. An elderly lady wearing a black shawl came scurrying out of the house to meet us. When we told her that we had booked to stay the night at her guest cottage, she looked surprised. “You want to stay the night? No one told me!” Our first introduction to life disconnected from technology. Our hosts rely on a middle man who does the online booking and Anna had somehow forgotten to write down when we were coming.

The problem was quickly solved though, and Anna rushed inside to light the solitary gas stove that would heat the cottage in the frigid January weather. To our kids’ disappointment, however, we discovered that the cottage did in fact have electricity. But there was a twist. In line with other local Amish farms, the entire place was off-grid. Instead, they power a generator through the milking process every morning and evening which provides light at night. If the charge runs out, they sit in the dark.