
Give the Gift of Choice!
Too many options? Treat your friends and family to their favourite stores with a Bayshore Shopping Centre gift card, redeemable at participating retailers throughout the centre. Click below to purchase yours today!Purchase HereHome
A Community of Memory: MY DAYS WITH GEORGE AND CLARA
Coles
Loading Inventory...
A Community of Memory: MY DAYS WITH GEORGE AND CLARA in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $27.50


By None
A Community of Memory: MY DAYS WITH GEORGE AND CLARA in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $27.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
In this fascinating series
of narratives, many voices of Jeff Gundy's Amish and Mennonite forebears
trace their paths and chronicle their lives. Women and men speak in these
pages, telling their stories and linking themselves to each other, the
past, and the present. Gundy demonstrates that who he is--who we all are--is
shaped by a past peopled with those who worked, loved, dreamed, and died.
By sharing his community of memory, he makes us desire to seek out our
own.
Using family photos, records,
recollections, and historical research, Gundy follows seven generations
through time and space: from Bavaria and Alsace to Ohio to Illinois in
the 1830s; from frontier dwellings with dirt floors to homes with refrigerators.
He also follows them intellectually, from a strict to a broader interpretation
of religious doctrine in the 1870s, which led to a schism within the already
small Mennonite community; from a long-standing position on pacifism and
conscientious objection to some questioning of this stance during World
War II.
In this fascinating series
of narratives, many voices of Jeff Gundy's Amish and Mennonite forebears
trace their paths and chronicle their lives. Women and men speak in these
pages, telling their stories and linking themselves to each other, the
past, and the present. Gundy demonstrates that who he is--who we all are--is
shaped by a past peopled with those who worked, loved, dreamed, and died.
By sharing his community of memory, he makes us desire to seek out our
own.
Using family photos, records,
recollections, and historical research, Gundy follows seven generations
through time and space: from Bavaria and Alsace to Ohio to Illinois in
the 1830s; from frontier dwellings with dirt floors to homes with refrigerators.
He also follows them intellectually, from a strict to a broader interpretation
of religious doctrine in the 1870s, which led to a schism within the already
small Mennonite community; from a long-standing position on pacifism and
conscientious objection to some questioning of this stance during World
War II.

















