Paul Jones and William Field Purdue University

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Paul Jones and William Field Purdue University Farm Safety Issues in Old Order Anabaptist Communities: Unique Aspects and Innovative Intervention Strategies

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Farm Safety Issues in Old Order Anabaptist Communities: Unique Aspects and Innovative Intervention Strategies. Paul Jones and William Field Purdue University. The Anabaptist/Agriculture Connection. A primary means of economic survival A primary means of cultural survival. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Paul Jones and William Field Purdue University

Page 1: Paul Jones and William Field Purdue University

Paul Jones and William FieldPurdue University

Farm Safety Issues in Old Order Anabaptist Communities:

Unique Aspects and Innovative Intervention Strategies

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The Anabaptist/Agriculture Connection

• A primary means of economic survival• A primary means of cultural survival

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The Information Gap• Though the Old Order Anabaptists

have a distinctly agrarian culture, centralized statistics regarding agricultural safety have been sparse in regard to this population.

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Potential Reasons for Sparse Information

• Desire to remain separate from the world• Resistance to higher education and

impractical information• Unwillingness to participate in many

government programs• Reporting procedures often do not

distinguish “religious preference”

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The Old Order Anabaptists as a Subculture

• Religious• Historical• Geographical• Social• Economic

– Kreps, et.al.

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Impact of Religious Beliefs on Agricultural Behavior

• Largely ignored or dismissed as irrelevant by researchers

• The few studies done indicate a link• Possible relationship between Old

Order beliefs/behaviors and those of the larger farm population

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Basic Anabaptist Beliefs

• Knowing basic spiritual and cultural principles is important for understanding and working with the population

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Anabaptist Beginnings

Early 1500s: movement began in Switzerland

Early 1700s: came to America to escape persecution in Europe

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Basic Beliefs

• Literal obedience to the teachings of Christ and the Scriptures

• Adult “believers” baptism (Anabaptist means “re-baptizer”)

• The ban (shunning)

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Basic Beliefs (cont.)

• Social separation from the world• Rejection of violence• Refusal to swear oaths• Church as covenant community

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Gelassenheit

• Submission/obedience• Yielding to a higher authority• Resignation to God’s will• Humility

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Ordnung (Ott-ning)

• Unwritten rules of conduct• Discipline• Ordering of one’s life

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What Does it Mean to be

Old Order?• Selective Use of Technology• Distinctive Dress• Gemeinde or Redemptive Society• Strict Adherence to Basic Beliefs

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Churches that hold Similar Beliefs

• Old Order Amish• Old Order Mennonites• Hutterite• Beachy Amish• New Amish• German Baptist

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Growth

• 1890 - 22 Old Order congregations and 2,038 baptized adults

• 1992 - 898 districts and 145,000 population

• Current estimates - up to 250,000

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Distribution of Amish Communities -1991

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Socio-religious Characteristics Relevant

to Understanding Farm Safety Issues

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Selective Use of Technology

• Modern conveniences used with reticence (cultural preservation)

• Not anti-technology; instead, “negotiated cultural compromises” (Kraybill)

• Heavy reliance on and contact with animals

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• 21.8% of Amish couples have 10 or more children with the average of 7 children per family

• Doubling of population every 20-22 years

Amish Family Size

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Other Unique PopulationCharacteristics of Amish

• Half the proportion of people over 65 in comparison to the rest of the rural population

• Twice the proportion of youth under 20 in comparison to the rest of the rural population

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Attitudes Toward Child Labor

• Economic: helps family/community• Social: learning value of work• Spiritual: stewardship of creation

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Beliefs About Death

• God’s sovereignty• “Thy will be done”

– gelassenheit

• The best is yet to come

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Summary of Farm-related Fatalities within Old-Order Anabaptist Communities

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7

1 24 1133

14

2

Number of Fatalities from Reporting States

•No buggy fatalities•Performance of farm work or in farm environment

21

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0123456789

10

Age in Years

Tota

l # o

f Dea

ths

63% = 15 Years or Younger

Fatalities: Age

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MALE

FEMALE

UNKNOWN

80%

18 % 2 %

Fatalities: Gender

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05

10152025303540 Run Over

Direct AnimalCrushedFallsEntanglementDrownStruckSuffocationFire/ExplosionHeat StrokeFirearmsTractor RolloverOther

Fatalities: Source of Injury

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NON-ANIMAL

DIRECT ANIMAL

INDIRECTANIMAL

17%17%

66%

Fatalities: Animal Behavior

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0

5

10

15

20

25JA

NFE

BM

AR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

Fatalities: Month

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0

5

10

15

20S

UN

MO

N

TUE

WE

D

THU

FRI

SA

T

Fatalities: Day of Week

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Developing Effective Intervention Strategies

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Factors in Working with Old Order Anabaptists

• “Primary, face to face social ties” (Kraybill)• Knowledge of Ordnung• Two kingdom worldview

– Separation from the kingdom of the world– Separation of church and state

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Establish Northern Indiana Family Safety Committee

• Representatives of Amish Community

• Cooperative Extension Educators• Purdue ASH Program• Local law enforcement• Local EMS/fire-rescue

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• Agricultural safety• Fire safety• Foods and canning safety• Electrical power safety• Substance abuse information

Conducting Family Safety Days in Church Districts

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Implement Buggy Safety Initiative

•SMV Emblems•Reflective Tape•Safety Brochure for Tourists

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Conferences for Professionals working with Anabaptist Communities

• 1998: Shipshewana, Indiana• 2001: Holmes County, Ohio

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Additional Interventions

• “Amos and Sadie’s Farm: A Pathway to Safety”

• Indiana State Police initiatives