Andy's Amish Web Site
Welcome to Andy's Amish Web Site
Your Amish Voice on the Web!
Growing Up Amish Now, I don't want to say where I grew up. There's still a strong Amish community there, and I wouldn't want to see any backlash against them. Suffice it to say, it was in a large urban center, in a downtown, disadvantaged section. Picture the toughest neighborhoods of New York or Philadelphia, and you'll get the idea. My neighborhood was home to the sorriest collection of thieves, pimps, drug runners and gang members anyone has ever seen. Everyone was into some kind of crime or another, except me and my family - Amish in the Hood.

I was not allowed out of the house until I was seven. The first time I was sent out, it was to milk our cow, Rebeccah. Now, having never been outside the house before, I was both excited and afraid, yet determined to do the milkin' right, and make my Pa proud. I headed towards the barn, ignoring the cat calls and thrown beer bottles from next door. Opening the barn doors, I gasped when I saw poor Rebeccah. Neighborhood vandals had spray-painted slogans all over her hide. Instead of a proper black and white color, Rebeccah was a mish mash of colors, painted slogans, and profanity.

Over the years, I would see similar treatment myself. Any time I went outside, there was a very good chance neighborhood bullies would grab me, strip me naked, and spray paint profanities all over my body. Believe you me, if you think its a sin to say some of those words, its even worse to have them written across your chest in red spraypaint.

Over and over again, I and my seventeen brothers and sisters would beg our parents to move us out of the Hood, and away to someplace the Amish were meant to be, like Pennsylvania or Maine. Pa refused, saying "If the Lord God had wanted us to move to Pennsylvania, we would have been born Dutch." I had some definite thoughts on that matter, but what with having to honor thy mother and father, I really can't say them out loud.


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