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BY: Herman Bontrager
Through my work with the National Committee for Amish Religious Freedom, I help Amish leaders resolve conflicts they experience with governmental regulation and with American culture. We believe our work protecting Amish religious beliefs contributes to preserving religious liberty for everyone. All Americans who cherish this ideal will find this Ämish "reality" show offensive.
Growing up Amish, I learned that unpretentious, honest living of one's faith in all areas of life, not just on Sunday, is paramount. Amish assume truthfulness in all things--thus, they do not present themselves in any manner that is not real. Amish belief in this idea is so strong, for instance, that they object to swearing of oaths because they are committed to speaking truth always, not only under oath.
This belief in reality is also one reason Amish do not approve of photographs. Photos are not real. They are only an imitation and one often used to present oneself as better than one really is--which produces excessive pride. They also take the "no graven image" text in Exodus literally.
This means that, for the Amish, there is no way you can use television to present a "real" image of their lives. TV is not reality, so you don't utilize it.
Beyond these objections to the UPN program are other problems. First, our consumer culture emphasizes that an individual's choice is all that matters. As a result, individuals can choose to make spectacles of themselves on "reality" shows. UPN apparently has determined that matters of religious faith are in the same category as all other individual "consumer" decisions. But faith is not in this category, and "Amish in the City" steps over the bounds of respect for religious faith.
Second, to use an individual's decision to subject herself to public ridicule as a way to make fun of an entire minority group is a form of discrimination. Participants in this "reality" show are not representative of the Amish community. They are simply dissidents (probably only temporarily) who decided to go on a lark, or to make a few bucks.
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