Think No Evil: Inside the Story of the Amish Schoolhouse Shooting...and Beyond
Written by Jonas Beiler and Shawn Smucker
Narrated by Kelly Ryan Dolan
4.5/5
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About this audiobook
Jonas Beiler
Jonas Beiler grew up in a traditional Old-Order Amish family in the 1950s. He is the cofounder and chairman of The Angela Foundation. He is also a licensed family counselor and founder of Family Resource and Counseling Center and The Family Center of Gap, both located in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Jonas is married to Anne Beiler, founder and creator of Auntie Anne’s Soft Pretzels, an acclaimed international pretzel franchise.
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Reviews for Think No Evil
52 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Well written and presented account of the tragedy and the communities response to it. Offers a glimpse into a Amish community that I did not know much about and especially their practice of forgiveness.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What a lesson in forgiveness. I would have enjoyed more insight into the shooter
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Beautifully told story of a tragic event. I've long been interested in Forgiveness and found this very enriching.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book was such a good read in so many ways. I wanted to know more about the Amish people and this gave a wonderful insight into who they are included a brief background of their roots, which I really appreciated. The book also had an added bonus of thoughtfully exploring forgiveness, the need for it and the blessing that is received when it is extended to others.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Great easy listen. There is a bit of religon init but it tells a great story/lesson. I also now undetstand quite a bit more about the Amish. I highly recommend this book.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book was a great listen and made me feel a lot of emotions. I was awestruck by the Amish ability to forgive. I enjoyed the narration and never had a hard time following along. Thank you for bringing more awareness to this tragedy and telling the story with such empathy and kindness.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent book on forgiving those who have wronged you and why it is necessary for your life.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5What a book. What a story! I’m fairly certain I read a book years ago—maybe when I was 10 or 11—that told the story of the schoolhouse shooting. It was written from an Anabaptist perspective, and what I remember of it was good. Since then, I’ve thought of the story a few times, but when I saw that Shawn Smucker had a hand in the crafting of this book, I knew I wanted to read it. Not only did it have the potential to be a life-changing story; I appreciate the way he writes, so I knew I was in for a good reading experience.I wasn’t disappointed. What surprised me, though, was my reaction to the story. Since first reading about the Nickel Mines School shooting, I’ve experienced some tragedy in my own life, and watching the different community members respond to these precious girls’ deaths challenged me in my own responses. I tried to make the right choices at the time—I knew what could potentially happen if I did not—but watching these families walk through something so difficult, even in the few short chapters in this book, challenged my thinking and reactions. Does Jesus’ way of love, peace, and forgiveness really hold up in the 21st century? Yes, I believe it does—and after reading this book, I’m even more convinced that it does.This is a beautiful, moving, heartfelt read. I had to gulp down tears a time or two, but the overarching theme of hope and forgiveness left me awed as I finished the book, instead of depressed. I’d recommend this book to anyone who appreciates true, redemptive stories.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The nation—and much of the world—was shocked in October 2006 when headlines screamed the news of the shooting deaths of ten little Amish girls in their one-room schoolhouse in Pennsylvania. A day later, when the news got out that the Amish parents had visited the family of the shooter to offer forgiveness and reconciliation, the shock was even greater and the news spread even farther. How could such a horrendous act of violence against innocent children be forgiven? Jonas Beiler grew up in an Amish community. As a teenager, he chose to leave because of his incurable love of automobiles. Think No Evil is Beiler’s memoir of the shootings and the events that followed. Writer Shawn Smucker, whose mother grew up Amish, was Beiler’s professional guide in the writing. At the time of the events about which they write, both men were living in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where the shootings took place. It was more than an Amish tragedy; it was a tragedy for everyone who lived in the area. Beiler and his brother had operated an auto parts business until his brother’s accidental death. It was this death, as well as the death of his three-year-old daughter and a crisis in his marriage, that eventually motivated Beiler to found a counseling center. His status in the community as a counselor gained him access to the crime scene when others, even the parents of dying children, were kept behind the crime scene’s yellow plastic tape. Beiler’s story is a very personal one. He begins by describing the community where he lives as an “English” (the Amish term for non-Amish) and where many of his friends descend from families who have occupied the area for more than two hundred years—as far back as the earliest settlements, before America’s United States had come into existence. Amish farmers in the area sell their produce and crafts—exquisite quilts, beautifully fashioned furniture, home-baked goods, and more—at weekend markets, festivals, and by the roadside. Sometimes roadside stands are not attended. Buyers choose their produce and leave their payment in a box. It is in this atmosphere of trust and diligence that the unthinkable occurred. There is no way to describe the scene Beiler witnessed without a sense of horror—the sight of ten little girls, blood-covered and lying on the grass outside the schoolhouse, as the first two EMTs arrive and begin their work to save whom they can and urgently move on to the next when it’s too late or looks to be too hopeless. Beiler, though, tells it with compassion and quiet dignity. He does not exploit the terrible anguish of the situation, and never ventures into the seamy journalistic language of shock and terror to prey upon his reader’s emotions. The shooter was a local man. Charlie Roberts drove the milk truck that called on Amish farms to collect their day’s production to be taken to the dairy for bottling. They knew his face. They knew he had a wife and children who lived in the area. They knew he attended a local church. Nothing about it made sense. Beiler describes the wakes, the funerals, the Amish meetings with the Roberts family to share in their loss. He describes the tearing down of the schoolhouse where the shootings took place and the building of a new one, farther from the road, hidden safely behind trees. He tells us how things were a year later, about the picnic where he saw the five young girls who survived the shootings, how one of them who was expected to die now lives on in a wheelchair. When he completes his telling of the tale, Beiler attempts to answer the question that everyone has been asking, “How can they forgive?” and the question that he and others asked themselves, “What can we learn to help us more gracefully carry our own burdens?” His answers begin with a history of the Amish, their founding 500 years ago in Germany, their settlements in the New World, the forming and honing of their commitment to forgiveness and reconciliation. He tells of his own challenges—the deaths of his brother and daughter, the affair that nearly destroyed his marriage—and how they were overcome with the help of caring therapists and the practice of forgiveness. Whether you simply want to know the inside story of the Amish schoolhouse shootings, or you want to understand more deeply the practice of forgiveness that Beiler addresses in his last two chapters, this is a fine personal memoir of an event that captured the attention of millions across the globe—not because of its senseless brutality, but because of the nearly impossible-to-believe forgiveness extended by the victims. “The Amish will be the first to tell you they’re not perfect,” Beiler writes, “but they do a lot of things right. Forgiveness is one of them.” That is the story he set out to write, he tells us, “how ordinary human beings ease their own pain by forgiving those who have hurt them.”