The 10,000 residents are Mennonites of Prussian and Dutch background. The ancestors of these Mennonites originated in the Dutch speaking
Low Countries and lived in
Vistula Delta region of
Poland until the end of the 18th century, in the
Black Sea region of
Ukraine until 1874 and in
Manitoba, Canada, until 1926, before settling in Paraguay.
Loma Plata with a population of about 3500 is the largest town within the colony and is the administrative centre. The emigration from Canada to Paraguay was a reaction to the introduction of universal, secular
compulsory education in 1917 requiring the use of the English language, which the more
conservative Mennonites saw as a threat to the religious basis of their community. A second impetus was the Canadian settlement act, which prevented the form of
cooperative farming that was practised in Russia. In 1919 a delegation was sent to South America to find a new home. The Paraguayan state was interested in opening the vast undeveloped Chaco to industrious
settlers and made a considerable number of concessions to the delegation. Concessions included
freedom from military service, the right to run their own German language schools, a far reaching guarantee to autonomously manage their own affairs within the jurisdiction of the colony without government interference, absolute
religious freedom and an open immigration policy allowing more Mennonites settlers. The Mennonites bought the necessary land at an inflated price from the Argentine firm Casado, one of the largest landholders in the Chaco. 1743 settlers came to Paraguay from Canada in 1927. In the 1950s, there was an exodus back to Canada because of unfavourable living conditions and in response to the conservatism of the colony. In the past decade, Menno has had a rapidly developing economy and good public image. Canadian Mennonites are returning and the colony is also an attraction to Paraguayans outside the Mennonite colonies. == Economy ==