ANOTHER
AMERICA
Robert Weingarten
Hardbound, 9.5" x 11.75",
240 pages
80 duotone illustrations
2004 Steidl Publishing
Edited by Garrett White
Essay by Robert A. Sobieszek
From the Publisher:
For four years, Robert Weingarten photographed
Amish communities in Indiana, Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
and Wisconsin. In 80 photographs, Another America captures
the beauty and simplicity of a way of religious life that has
been sustained for more than three centuries. Descendants of the
followers of Jakob Ammann, a Swiss Mennonite bishop of the 17th
century, the Amish came to America in the early 18th century in
search of religious freedom. The Amish have their roots in the
Mennonite community. Both were part of the early Anabaptist movement
in Europe, which took place at the time of the Reformation. The
Anabaptists believed that only adults who had confessed their
faith should be baptized, and that they should remain separate
from the larger society. They uphold basic Bible doctrines, believe
strictly in following Christ’s example of nonviolence, and
stress humility, family, and community. Many early Anabaptists
were put to death as heretics by both Catholics and Protestants,
and others fled to the mountains of Switzerland and southern Germany.
Here began the Amish tradition of farming and holding worship
services in homes rather than churches.
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