According to John, 39, a resident of Lancaster, Pennsylvania, there are currently over 300,000 Amish people pursuing their old-time lifestyle in the U.S. They avoid using digital devices including TVs, computers and mobile phones, and they travel by horse-drawn carriages. They self-produce most of what they need in an attempt to ensure that external forces don’t create distance between themselves.
Nhi was working for a project helping poor children in Cambodia when they met. John found himself interested in what Nhi was doing as he had been supporting children in need through charity organizations for years. It was through her friendship with John that Nhi first learned about the Amish community. After getting closer as friends, every time John traveled, he sent photos to Nhi. "We got so close we trusted each other with our deepest secrets, pains, and hurt," Nhi recalls.
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Ms. "Nguyen Yen Nhi" is John's wife |
Sometime in early-2019, John confessed: "I thought of you as a friend, but as time passed by, I grew to have feelings for you. Do you want to be my girlfriend?" Nhi never thought about marrying a foreigner, as she wanted to stay in Vietnam to take care of her parents and older brother. But John was the first man that made her feel safe and secure. "John burst into tears when I said I agreed," she says. John arrived in Vietnam a month later.
Throughout the same year, he visited Vietnam five more times before the couple held an engagement ceremony. Nhi came to the U.S. and the couple then had a simple, intimate wedding party in February 2020.
They moved to the town of Crossville in Tennessee a year after their wedding. Their land was in the middle of a primeval forest and the couple had to do everything from hunt food to chop firewood. The now husband-and-wife cut down the trees, built their house, planted vegetables, dug a pond, and made a water tank on their own. Their isolated lifestyle also helps the couple better appreciate each other.
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They moved to the town of Crossville in Tennessee a year after their wedding. |
To Nhi, John is an admirable husband, as he always thinks about her and their son David, even if that means he has to drive 10 hours straight to get to his company from their house. "Many have asked me how we could be so confident staying in a build-it-ourselves house," she says. "But I trust him,’ Nhi says of her husband.
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Mr. John Lapp with his son |
From John’s point of view, Nhi is a talented, hardworking, and strong woman. She sells things at her counter at the local market during the day and takes her time to clean their house and retouch photos and videos for their social media channels at night.
The American-Vietnamese couple says they will maintain Amish rituals that they still value, including family-oriented beliefs, consumption of self-produced food, and traditional medicine. "Amish people don’t apply for allowances from the government," John shares. "We will pay our taxes if we have stable income in the future, but we will not receive government allowances."
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John Lapp's family is happy. |
Amish culture also prevents its people from getting divorce, and thus, John and Nhi have never mentioned that since their marriage, even in cases of discord.John has also introduced Nhi to his mother and siblings. Nhi says when they first met shortly after she came to the U.S., her mother-in-law seemed not too fond of her because of Nhi’s manicures. But their relationship improved after David was born. John’s mother now follows her son and daughter-in-law’s life with the help of social media and an American neighbor.