Each holiday, Rick Rutt ’84 and his family add an ornament from Ten Thousand Villages to their Christmas tree. This year, 14 ornaments from different countries hang from its branches, a sign of Rutt’s commitment to the business and its values. When Rutt purchases gifts for himself and his family, he has a special affinity for Indonesian crafts. He spent his childhood there while his parents, Helen and Clarence Rutt ’53, served with Mennonite Central Committee.
Ten Thousand Villages, too, has mission roots. It was founded in 1946 by Edna Ruth Byler, wife of an MCC administrator, during a trip to Puerto Rico. Still a nonprofit partner of MCC, the company is a fair trade organization that brokers artisanal crafts from disadvantaged people around the world.
Working mainly with inventory and accounting systems, Rutt customizes both to meet the business’s changing needs. He designs reports and extracts data, as well as providing troubleshooting services.
“A tremendous amount of information is needed to import goods from 30 different countries and then distribute them to almost 80 branded retail stores and other wholesale accounts,” Rutt said. “We would not be able to do what we do without computers and the programs that run on them.”
He is one of eight people in the company’s IT department (see page 18 for a profile of alumnus LeVon Smoker, who was the first IT employee for SELFHELP Crafts of the World, as the organization was known until 1996).
Rutt actually had little computer training at EMU, arriving on campus when the technology was in its infancy in the early 1980s. Attracted to the rigor and discipline of the hard sciences, Rutt double-majored in chemistry and math (his non-Euclidean geometry course was what really taught him to “think outside the box,” he remembers). His two computer courses were electives in an otherwise busy schedule.
But when doing voluntary service with Eastern Mennonite Missions at University of Alabama in Birmingham, he began handling and extracting data for research projects and when his year of service ended, he was hired at UAB, eventually becoming a programmer. “They were glad to have someone who understood the nature of the research, even though I didn’t have a degree in programming.”
Six years later, he was still at University of Alabama when he met future wife, Michelle, also working on a voluntary service assignment. Together, they ran a Ten Thousand Villages Festival Sale each December for five years.
In 2000, wanting their two children closer to both sets of grandparents, the Rutts moved back to Lancaster County and Rutt began work at Ten Thousand Villages. Both daughters attend Lancaster Mennonite High School. Katie, 17, is a senior and Joy, 14, is a freshman.
The Rutts attend Landisville Mennonite Church. Rick, a former Sunday school teacher and superintendent, recently began serving as assistant treasurer.