The False Beliefs Of An Amish Utopian Society

1285 Words6 Pages

The false belief of an Amish Utopia A utopia is a society in which all conditions are near to fully perfect for its residents. While the argument over the possibility of a utopians existence is still up for debate, it is a concept many scholars argue today. Nevertheless, the concept of a utopian society remains an imaginary motivator in which our societies strive for. The Amish are a society of functioning individuals embarking on a journey towards heaven. Their belief is that their lives are a portion of a greater journey towards heaven. As a result, many Amish still follow the same basic lively hood that were the way of our four fathers. With its distinctions from our own society, some are able to speculate the Amish may have developed a …show more content…

However, the integration of technology still has a presence amongst this society, as members of the community have found it to be a very important factor in sells, lively hood, and as a progression towards a more productive society. There are many different examples of how the Amish have begun to involve technology into their everyday lives. Whether it is from Amish entrepreneurs utilizing the internet to promote their business or the use of a refrigerator for milk, many Amish people have slowly began involving technology into their lives. This is a prime example of the durability and flexibility of Amish culture. If the demands of society were more valued than income, then the idea of implementing technology into their culture would have either been overlooked or never considered in the first place. But arising from this level of acceptance develops a question of how far a community is willing to incorporate an idea into their belief without dissolving the foundation of its …show more content…

It’s because it has the capability of grabbing a viewer’s attention. We feel an emotion of grief and sadness when it comes to the circumstances of rape and identify it as a major issue still within our own culture today. Yet, in cultures that lack this foundation, the display of rape victims is often seen in a much more different light. The Amish do not fall within the circumstance. The victimization of young women in Amish culture is a too well and rightfully regarded for desecrations and downright disrespect of rape victims. However, women like Torah have made it a determined goal to abolish the true face of Amish rape. Having been a rape victim herself, Torah has expressed the wicked and vile ways the Amish try to mask the situation of rape. “The Amish attitude towards sexual assault is so bad that when a female is raped, she is punished for being too tempting to the male and is required to ask the male attacker’s forgiveness for having tempted him (Simms, Huffpost, Survivor Speaks Out).” This is only a fraction of what Torah speaks on when describing the different issues that she and potentially many other girls face in Amish society. To think that a society that can mask the dominance of others as equality, when in actuality they are far from it, is a fabrication of a falsehood that results in the subjection of an unheard voice in a culture that desires for it to remain so. The Amish are and always will

More about The False Beliefs Of An Amish Utopian Society