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While most Old Order Amish and Mennonites are of Swiss ancestry, nearly all speak Pennsylvania Dutch, an American language that developed in rural areas of southeastern and central Pennsylvania during the 18th century. Most German-speaking emigrants to colonial Pennsylvania were from the cultural region of Central Europe known as the Palatinate (Pfalz), thus Pennsylvania Dutch resembles most strongly the German dialects of this area.
Throughout the 19th century, most Pennsylvania Dutch-speakers lived in rural areas of Pennsylvania and were of Lutheran or German Reformed affiliation. With the dramatic demographic changes of the 20th century, leading especially to greater mobility and the loss of rural isolation, maintenance of Pennsylvania Dutch declined sharply. Back to the Wisconsin German Dialects Page Last Updated: April 18, 2007 |
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Some "nonsectarian" Pennsylvania Dutch, virtually all of whom live in rural southeastern and central Pennsylvania, have attempted to counteract the shift to English monolingualism by creating
institutions to promote the language. The most prominent of these are
the Most speakers of Pennsylvania Dutch have been literate in English only. Amish children, for example, learn to read and write in English in their parochial schools, though they also develop passive knowledge of High German for use in religious worship. Recently, though, the New Testament has been translated into Pennsylvania Dutch, and a collection of children’s Bible stories in the language (Vella Laysa—Let’s Read) is now available. As with the Groundhog Lodge program, English spelling conventions are usually observed in written Pennsylvania Dutch.
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