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Apologetics & Social Issues


Amish responses to school children killings

From Australian NINE MSN website

Amish girl asked to be shot first

Saturday Oct 7 06:32 AEST

One of the girls who died in Pennsylvania's Amish schoolhouse massacre asked the killer to shoot her first in an apparent bid to save younger girls, a woman who spoke to the victim's family said.

Rita Rhoads, a nurse-midwife who delivered 13-year-old Marian Fisher and another victim, said Fisher appealed to Charles Carl Roberts to shoot her first because she thought it might allow younger girls to survive.

Rhoads said she did not know whether Fisher was shot first. Roberts shot 10 girls aged six to 13, killing five of them and then himself in Monday's rampage

Rhoads said she did not know whether Fisher was shot first. Roberts shot 10 girls aged six to 13, killing five of them and then himself in Monday's rampag

"Barbie has been talking and she said Marian said, 'Shoot me first,'" Rhoads said. "Apparently what she was trying to do was to save the younger girls."

Fisher's 11-year-old sister, Barbie, appealed to Roberts to shoot her next, Rhoads said. Barbie survived and was in Children's Hospital of Philadelphia recovering from shoulder, hand and leg injuries.

Barbie, who attended her sister's funeral before returning to the hospital, gave details of her ordeal to relatives including her grandfather, who told Rhoads, the midwife told Reuters in a telephone interview. "It was very courageous of the girls to offer themselves," Rhoads said. "God was really present to give the girls that kind of courage."

Roberts, 32, a local non-Amish milk truck driver, attacked the one-room schoolhouse at Nickel Mines, a farming community in Lancaster County about 100 km west of Philadelphia.

He allowed boys and adults to leave and then tied the legs of the girls before shooting them execution-style, police said.

Four of the girls including Marian Fisher were buried and a fifth funeral was scheduled.

The Amish, descendants of Swiss-German settlers, are a traditionalist Christian denomination who place particular importance on the Gospel message of forgiveness. They believe in nonviolence, simple living and little contact with the modern world. ©AAP 2006

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SOJOURNERS http://www.beliefnet.com/blogs/godspolitics/ Thursday, October 05, 2006 Duane Shank on the Amish School Shootings: The power of faith, the strength of community

Part of my job is to read a variety of news sources each morning, and summarize the top stories in our Daily Digest. I'll confess that there are times when the violence in our world - from Darfur to Iraq, Colombia to the Middle East - threatens me with numbness. Then, there comes a story that deeply affects me.

On Monday morning, the breaking news bulletins began to flash into my inbox of a shooting at an Amish schoolhouse near Paradise, PA, in the heart of Lancaster County. For me, that's home - I grew up in the county, and for 25 years my parents lived ten miles from that school. My wife's grandmother was Amish, and we both still have relatives in the area. As more details came in, the shock and grief grew. A heavily armed gunman, Charles Roberts, walked into a one-room country schoolhouse, ordered all the boys to leave, then tied up ten little girls and methodically shot them in the head before killing himself. News stories emerged of state troopers with their uniforms soaked in blood as they worked with medics trying to save lives. Five girls died, and five are still in hospitals in serious to critical condition.

Suddenly, the media discovered the Amish. A quiet, peaceful offshoot of the 16th century Anabaptist movement who have lived in Lancaster county since the early 1700s, living and farming for the last three centuries without the aid of modern technology. I know the countryside where this tragedy occurred. It's rolling farmland, with not a power line in sight and farmers with teams of horses working the fields. If you ignore the car you're driving on the back roads, it's easy to imagine you're in the 19th century.

I've been surprised at the news coverage. The reporters covering the story have understood and written about the Amish in a generally knowledgeable and respectful way. As I've read the news, and reflected on the events, two things struck me as having entered into the news cycle that we don't often see. One is the power of faith and forgiveness, the other the strength of community. In their quiet way, the Amish families and neighbors of these girls showed a witness to the world that it doesn't see very often.

The power of faith and forgiveness. A pastor who has been with the Roberts family - the gunman leaves behind a wife and three children - told a Lancaster newspaper of being in the family's home when there was a knock on the door. It was an Amish neighbor coming on behalf of the community. He put his arms around Roberts' father, and said "We will forgive you." The pastor concluded: "God met us in that kitchen."

Also reported was a statement the family of one of the girls gave to the press: "We don't know or understand why this happened but we do believe God allowed this to happen. The rest of us, our lives will go on. We will try to work together to support and help the families directly involved, knowing that the innocent children likely need help in dealing with this tragedy of their friends, neighbors, and schoolmates.'' The girl's great-uncle added, "There is sadness for everybody involved, including the man responsible for this tragedy.''

One of this morning's headlines reads: "Amish families hurt, but find way to forgive." It is a spirit that I don't often see in the news. A spirit in complete keeping with Jesus: "You have heard that it was said, 'You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.' But I say to you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you." (Matthew 5:43-44) And a spirit that is now being sustained by Jesus: "Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. . Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy." (Matthew 5:4, 7)

The strength of community. The Amish community is known for its self-reliance. They do not have property insurance, so a community-wide barn-raising is held to replace one downed by fire. They do not hold health or life insurance, relying rather on the community. The news reports this week have told of neighbors, friends and relatives coming to the homes of the families, bringing food and comfort. An AP story quoted a family counselor who was called to talk with the students who had run away: "There is a coming together. That's how they deal with everything. They come together." In a time of great grief, there is the strength of family and community.

It is a community that lives by the words of Paul to his churches: "Bear one another's burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ." (Galatians 6:2) "If one member suffers, all suffer together with it." (1 Corinthians 12:26) This week, the Amish community is demonstrating to the world the truth of those verses.

What can we do in response to this tragedy?

Pray. For the families and community of the girls who were killed, for the family and friends of gunman, for healing to the girls who were critically wounded, for our society that it learn the ways of peace rather than violence.

Donate. Members of the Amish community have established funds both for the families of those killed and wounded, and for the family of Roberts, who leaves a wife and three young children. Mennonite Central Committee and Mennonite Disaster Service are also coordinating support for those affected.

Duane Shank is Senior Policy Advisor at Sojourners/Call to Renewal.



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