Reading Group Guide
Discussion Questions
Rolling Down Black Stockings: A Passage Out of the Old Order Mennonite Religion

1. As a child, Ayers is ashamed of her real life and tries to emulate the lives of her classmates. Discuss reasons a child does this? Does she exhibit this same behavior as a teenager and adult? Cite instances.
2. Discuss the educational trauma Ayers and her siblings are forced to undergo. How detrimental is this to them as young children, and how hobbling is it to them when they move out of the religion? Since Old Order Mennonite children once again attend one-room schoolhouses, do you think the Supreme Court ruling is good or bad for education of these children?
3. Chapter 1 relates, in story form, an example of a religious doctrine that is designed to separate members from the world. Ensuing chapters relate numerous examples. Discuss these separation doctrines.
4. Does Ayers give you the feeling that fear keeps members from leaving the religion? What other factors keep members from leaving?
5. Old Order Mennonites are pacifists and believe it is wrong to ever take another person’s life. As such, they are exempted from military service. What do you think would happen in this world if everyone believed in non-violence?
6. Ayers states that Old Order Mennonites require their members to live in the past. Can religions rule this way without oppressing their members? What other religions and governments can you think of that require their members to live in the past?
7. Ayers voices deep anger and deep love for her mother in a seesaw fashion. Why do you think she voices such opposite feelings? What does Ayers eventually realize about her mother?
8. Ayers has a depressive breakdown when twelve. Discuss the event that led to this breakdown. What leads to her healing?
9. As a child, Ayers regularly visits junkyards. What does she find there? Why does she find this so uplifting?
10. Many people like to visit Old Order Mennonite and Amish communities in Ohio, Indiana, Pennsylvania and other states. Does this book help you understand these people?
11. Old Order Mennonites require their members to “live behind a wall of separation” and try to keep the world from knowing much about them. Are they successful in doing this? What did you learn in the book that surprised you?
12. When Ayers’ mother moves the family out of the religion, Ayers is finally allowed to participate in worldly affairs. Yet she finds herself unable to do so, and resorts to lying. In what ways does Ayers behave similarly to children who have experienced abuse?
13. Old Order Mennonites are quite self sufficient and frugal. Name ways you spent money in the past week that an Old Order Mennonite would not have spent money for.
14. Old Order Mennonites separate themselves from secular government. As such, they are exempt from paying Social Security, and do not receive Social Security and Medicare payments. Neither do they receive welfare, food stamps, or any goods and services provided by the government. Instead, they take care of their own. What are the negative and positive issues in living this way?
Rolling Down Black Stockings: A Passage Out of the Old Order Mennonite Religion
- Publication Date: March 30, 2005
- Paperback: 172 pages
- Publisher: Kent State Univ Pr
- ISBN-10: 0873388283
- ISBN-13: 9780873388283