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Kraybill, who was a sociology professor at Elizabethtown College at the time, delved into the intriguing Amish culture, ...
The Amish way of life is intriguing and sometimes puzzling to the outsider. In 1989, WGAL interviewed author Donald Kraybill, ...
Kraybill recalls one journalist from South America wanting to know why, since Amish lived on reservations, how a man with a gun gained access to the school. Kraybill was consulted for the making ...
Donald Kraybill has spent 40 years researching, writing about and teaching college-level sociology classes about the Amish. But with his latest book, the Elizabethtown College professor emeritus ...
Donald Kraybill became a leading expert on Amish life the same way he would do anything else in life: He made friends. “Because of my farming background, I could walk into an Amish farm and talk ...
When Eastern Mennonite University commissioned scholar Donald Kraybill to write a book about the school’s first 100 years, he said he wanted poetic license to look at the history through ...
Donald Kraybill, senior fellow at the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown (Pa.) College, said both the degree of traditionalism and the size of the community will ...
Donald Kraybill, known worldwide as a premier expert on Amish culture, is retiring from teaching. On Good Day PA, he busted a few Amish myths.Kraybill began working at Elizabethtown College in ...
Elizabethtown College professor and Amish scholar Donald Kraybill will deliver what is being billed as "his last major address before retirement" on Monday, April 20.
You could say Donald Kraybill owes his belief in God to an apricot, and Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz owes her master’s thesis to a neighborhood conflict. Kraybill, a retired Elizabethtown College ...
: Donald Kraybill, professor emeritus and senior fellow at the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College. : Discussion about Amish and Old Order Mennonite spirituality.
Kraybill said Mullet, who was born Amish, was a loner who did not affiliate his group with other Amish congregations. "He was a lone ranger and was basically independent," Kraybill said.