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Think no evil : inside the story of the Amish schoolhouse shooting-- and beyond / Jonas Beiler ; with Shawn Smucker.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Howard Books, c2009.Description: vii, 213 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 1416562982 (alk. paper)
  • 9781416562986 (alk. paper)
Subject(s):
Contents:
Gates wide open -- Nickel mines, asleep -- Converging on an Amish school -- Point of no return -- "Shoot me first" -- My heavenly home is bright and fair -- Remembering Angie -- Think no evil -- Godly examples -- "Maybe I should forgive, too" -- Contend valiantly -- From forgiveness to friendship -- Why forgive? -- Edit your history -- Let the new grass grow.
Fiction notes: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 364.1523409 B422 Available Water damage throughout 33111005706888
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

An insider's look into the events surrounding the nickel mines amish schoolhouse shootings--told by the counselor who was called upon to come to the farmhouse where the families met on that fateful day.

On October 2, 2006, Charles Roberts, a local milk-tank truck driver, bound and shot ten young girls in an Amish schoolhouse before committing suicide. Five girls died. Five others were severely injured and left in critical condition. In the aftermath of the massacre, the Amish community shunned the media. But they requested that Amishraised counselor Jonas Beiler come to the scene to offer his moral and spiritual support.

In Think No Evil , Beiler offers his first-person account of the events, as well as of those who were closest to the scene: the surviving children, the volunteer fireman Rob Beiler, the local counseling center director Brad Aldricha, and Vietta Zook, aboard the first ambulance to arrive. Beiler poignantly describes the Amish families' responses to this horrific violence as they reached out to the shocked family members of the killer, offering unconditional forgiveness.

The story didn't end on that horrible day with the deaths of those five little girls. Think No Evil follows the ongoing story of this gentle community having faith in God's design, of truly demonstrating Christian values, of responding with resilient love in the face of evil, of demolishing the scene of the murders and rebuilding the schoolhouse, and of determining to move forward in living out their faith in peace.

Includes bibliographical references.

Gates wide open -- Nickel mines, asleep -- Converging on an Amish school -- Point of no return -- "Shoot me first" -- My heavenly home is bright and fair -- Remembering Angie -- Think no evil -- Godly examples -- "Maybe I should forgive, too" -- Contend valiantly -- From forgiveness to friendship -- Why forgive? -- Edit your history -- Let the new grass grow.

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