Amish Traditions – Shunning

2010 July 24
by


The threat of being shunned must be a driving dread in the life of anyone who belongs to an Amish convergence. The Amish are brought up to speak German in the home, even if they also learn English in their schools. Meidung basically means to be ousted or shunned. The Amish have certain tradition based terms such as ordnung, meidung, and rumspringa that are spiritual concepts and physical manners essential to their way of life. The ordnung is the chief one – it is, in completion, the rules, traditions and basic beliefs of their convergence. Ordnung basically means “order” in German.

The “rumspringa” is the right and tradition of every Amish teenager. This tradition provides that a teenager may be able to explore the outside world before committing themselves completely, as an adult to the convergence. And lastly, the topic of this condition is what the Amish refer to as meidung – banishment, or being shunned by the convergence to which they belong. Not returning to the Amish culture after a “rumspringa’ will result in shunning. In the practice calculated to help a teenager make a private, spiritual choice, one of the considerations must be rotary everlastingly away from all the teenager has ever known.

All communication and friend with anyone in the convergence is forbidden for someone shunned from the Amish culture. Meidung, by my speculation, has to be the most feared potential aspect of the life of an Amish individual. As a matter of fact, the practice of shunning is a factor in what separated the Amish from the Mennonites in the year 1693. Marrying outside of the faith is one, automatic reason to shun an Amish man or woman. If not, being banished is usually followed by a certain number of honest warnings. Some Amish communities are, of course, more lenient than others in terms of their limits that when breeched by an individual will necessitate his or her meidung.

Anne Clarke writes copious articles for websites on farming, parenting, make, and home decor. Her social class includes instruction, farming, and make. For more of her articles on the Amish, please visit amishretail.com, supplier of high quality Amish Office Furniture and Amish Made Quilts.

Author: Anne Clarke
Condition Source: EzineArticles.com
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