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| The modest women of Spring Prairie Colony
share a quiet moment in the early morning sun on a trailer behind
a tractor headed for a cucumber field northwest of Hawley, Minnesota. |
Spring Prairie Colony
A life centered on faith, family, farming
By Nichole Aksamit, The Forum, Staff Writer
Published in The Forum, Fargo, North Dakota, November 14, 1999,
page A
You have probably seen them at least once in your life - at the
doctor's office, perhaps, or at Wal-Mart, where their handmade clothing
is an anomaly.
You probably wondered for a moment who they were - the bearded
men in black jackets and wide-brimmed hats, the kerchiefed women
in ankle-length skirts and aprons, the ruddy-cheeked children in
caps and bonnets.
Perhaps you assumed they were Amish.
Chances are, you didn't know you had glimpsed a few of the roughly
38,000 Hutterites now living in North America, a devout people who
for more than 450 years have been trying to live like Christ's apostles.
Chances are, the reason you didn't know about them is because,
in their efforts to keep worldly influences outside the periphery
of their communal Christian colonies, they have kept a great deal
to themselves.
Their lives - unencumbered by radio, TV, crime and politics - focus
instead on faith, family, farming and communal living.
In agricultural communes along the dusty backroads of five Midwestern
states and four Canadian provinces, they pray, work and eat together
and follow a biblical directive to have "all things common."
Enveloped in a unique Germanic culture, their Puritan way of life
and their reasons for it serve as indelible barriers between them
and the outside world.
Unlike their Amish counterparts, many of whom still farm by horse
and shun modern conveniences like electricity, Hutterites have incorporated
technology to stay afloat in the modern farm economy.
But, in many ways, the Hutterites remain a world apart.
You'll find a rare glimpse of that world in The Forum this week
in a five-day series exploring the apostolic undercurrents of everyday
life at Spring Prairie Colony, a few miles northwest of Hawley,
Minn.
This colony and its people trace their roots in America to Bon
Homme Colony, founded near Yankton, S.D., in 1874.
Hutterite crews began working the land and building homes at Spring
Prairie in 1977.
Thirteen families from the White Rock Colony near Rosholt, S.D.,
agreed to settle there in 1980.
And today, 125 souls live in three- and four-plexes on the equivalent
of two city blocks and collectively farm the 3,000 acres surrounding
Spring Prairie Colony.
They eat together in a communal dining hall. They attend church
every day and twice on Sunday. They are managed by an elected board
of elders and share a single bank account.
Faith and family are forces that bind their community.
At Spring Prairie, the basic way of life remains simple, and the
emphasis is always on hard work and faith in this life, rest and
reward in the next.
Our series, "A World Apart," begins in today's Metro
& State section.
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