Because
of the publicity that I’ve received for both my memoir and the PBS American
Experience film “The Amish” that I was featured in, I occasionally receive
emails from people who have read or heard my story and want to let me know how they’ve
related to it. Very often these people have an Amish or Mennonite background.
In
September I got such an email from Henry Troyer. I thought his story was
inspiring, and so I asked him if he would write a story for the Amish Descendant Scholarship Fund blog.
Henry
grew up in Holmes County, Ohio. His intellectual curiosity was bubbling up from
within, so that even the long-standing traditions of the Amish were not enough
to confine it. He pursued higher education with a voracious enthusiasm.
Henry
Troyer left his Amish family in 1958 to do his I-W service in Cleveland, He
went to Goshen College and graduated in 1965 with a B.A. in Biology. After that, he graduated from West Virginia
University with a Ph.D. in Anatomy. He taught anatomy at three American
universities, two African universities and at a medical center in
India. He is now writing a book on the connection between the Ohio
Swiss Cheese Industry and the Holmes County Amish. When that is finished,
he hopes to publish his memoirs. He and his wife (also former Amish) are
both retired and live on a little farm near Springfield, Missouri.
Here are two excerpts of his story:
"During the four months of summer vacation, I longed
for access to those books. Yet,
the schoolhouse was locked up all summer.
However, I learned that one of the windows could not be locked, and I
could enter whenever I wanted to.
No one else seemed to know about the unlocked window, or perhaps they
simply did not care. I did not often “break” into the schoolhouse during the
summer to get to the books, but when I did, I tried to do so discretely so that
no one else knew. Yet, the word
got around that I had a way of getting into the schoolhouse, and it earned me
something of a reputation – in today’s lingo I would have been a nerd."
"Going to Goshen College upset my parents very much.
My relations with them was so strained that I just didn't go home again. That was a VERY difficult time. During holidays, all the other students
went home to their families, but I had no family to go to. I was usually allowed to stay on
campus, but it was so lonely. I
became very depressed during those times.
And there was nothing to do about it but just tough it out."
Please visit the Amish Descendent Scholarship Fund blog for more of Henry Troyer's story. You will be glad you did.
The courage needed to take just the first step away from everything you've ever known is just unimaginable to me.
ReplyDeleteWhat I can identify with, however, is the thirst for knowledge you and Henry both shared.
Thanks for a great post!