Guest guest Posted January 17, 1999 Report Share Posted January 17, 1999 [incidentally, if your temple wants to purchase a community grain grinder, you might have more luck at Cumberland General Store. They sell a Diamant hand-powered grain mill for $520 -- and have not been advertised in the Wall Street Journal!] Wall Street Journal 18 December 1998 IN AMISH COUNTRY, A STORE IS SWEPT UP IN YEAR 2000 PANIC by Thomas Petzinger, Jr. KIDRON, OHIO This crossroads town of about 300 has never seen so many big trucks. They roll in full of wood stoves, solar radios and other accouterments of nonelectric living. Then they roll back out with deliveries to families in fear of the year 2000 computer flaw. This is Amish country, where people have been buying nonelectric gear at Lehman Hardware & Appliances for 43 years. But these days Lehman's is inundated with out-of-town orders from Y2K survivalists, religious fundamentalists and normal folks taking a few prudent precautions. The store is staggered. "We've run out of room for this stuff," says founder Jay Lehman, marveling at boxes piled high in an outdoor lot. In the shop, an Amish mechanic assembles hand-powered grain mills; there are 700 on back-order. Jay Lehman and his son Galen are uneasy over the windfall. They refuse to install more phone lines, though every line is jammed. They won't even promote themselves as a Y2K vendor. Why their resistance? The answer involves, culture, community and commitment to the long term. The Lehmans are Mennonite, a Christian sect from which the more conservative Amish split three centuries ago. Jay, now 69 years old, made it only halfway through high school but has led church sessions the world over. Galen, 38, spent his first decade in Africa and now runs operations here, aided by siblings Kevin and Glenda. (A fourth, Wendy, is a Christian peace activist. Mennonites don't resist progress as staunchly as the Amish, but many are selective in their adoption of advances. Galen sends e-mail, for instance, but raises eggs and uses oil lamps at home. "We're not carefree with technology," he says. This ambivalence is evident in the business as well. In the catalog operation, where a dozen attendants take orders through headsets, computers are essential. But in the retail store, where many items sell only once or twice a year, computers would only create work. The Lehmans have no interest in tracking inventory or the profitability of products; that information is meaningless when the larger purpose is facilitating a way of life. Thus, when someone needs a grating for a pot-belly stove, say, or a replacement planter wheel, the Lehmans will try to hunt it down if they don't have one in stock. Failing that they'll search for the casting molds and hire someone to make it. If necessary they'll build it themselves. Jay searched the world for a gasoline-powered refrigerator before discovering a Swedish version during a 1983 church mission to Sudan. Today he sells them by the truckload. Galen is reverse-engineering a kerosene-powered chick incubator in hopes of creating a production model. With more people asking for carbide lamps, the store found a small shop to produce about 200 a year. "It'll be years before we make money on that," Galen notes. Yet the Lehmans go to such lengths out of commercial impulse as well as cultural conviction. "In the end it pays," says Jay. "We built a business on people saying, 'If you can't find an item anywhere else, go to Lehman's.'" His patience with a payback is evident in his own backyard, where nearly 20 years ago, he planted 5,000 walnut trees for the hardwood. "They'll be ready in another 50 or 70 years," he says. Over the decades Lehman's has attracted an increasingly secular clientele, first as the energy crises of the 1970s triggered an earlier run on wood stoves, later as tourrists overran Amish country. (A store brochure implores visitors not to gawk at the Amish.) In late November, the week before my visit, the guest book registered visitors from 18 states. This popularity has driven the store through some 20 haphazard additions, now encompassing an acre of floor space. For one expansion, Jay disassembled an entire Amish barn, vintage 1830, and rebuilt it as part of the store, the ax-hewn beams locked together without nails or pegs. The store displays antiques from an era in which quilting bees and barn-raising defined a sense of community, when "people were dependent on each other and their own skill, not on their wealth and technology," says Galen. In the store balcony, the side pieces of a cattle manger serve as a security railing, the spindles worn thin by a century of cows nuzzling between them for hay. But nothing has been the same since June, when word sped over the Internet that Lehman's was the place for Y2K survival gear. Now, the undersized warehouse is a blur of Mennonite women stuffing boxes and stacking air bills. In the catalog phone center, Y2K callers require special hand-holding. ("You mean I need a chimney for that stove?") Galen resists hiring additional employees he'll only have to lay off later. Jay constantly frets bout forcing Amish and other loyal customers to wait behind one-shot buyers. Jacking up prices is no option, either. For one, panic has no price point. For another, that too would hurt long-time customers, who use Lehman's products not to isolate themselves but to deepen their reliance on each other. Says Galen,, "We're here to support a lifestyle, not a fad." Though indeed short-lived, the Y2K challenge is a huge and hideous problem demanding deep attention in the year remaining. But as we scramble to fix the problem, maybe we should pause to regard the technology itself. Driving from Amish country, passing the horse-drawn carriages in the afternoon twilight, I wonder: If we can make things faster and more powerful, can't we also make them more reliable? And cant' we use them for bringing us together instead of driving us apart? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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