Foundation for Intentional Community
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Location | Rutledge, Missouri, US |
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Revenue | 315,186 United States dollar (2021) |
Total Assets | 116,363 United States dollar (2021) |
Website | www |
The Foundation for Intentional Community (FIC), formerly the Fellowship of Intentional Communities then the Fellowship for Intentional Community, provides publications, referrals, support services, and "sharing opportunities" for a wide range of intentional communities including: cohousing groups, community land trusts, communal societies, class-harmony communities, housing cooperatives, cofamilies, and ecovillages, along with community networks, support organizations, and people seeking a home in community.[1] The FIC is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization in the United States.[2]
Activities
[edit]The FIC currently publishes the Communities Directory,[1] and the Intentional Communities web site. It also sponsors and presents periodic Community gatherings, including annual gatherings at Twin Oaks Community and other community-related events online and in various locations around the US.[3]
Organizational history
[edit]2019 – Present
[edit]The summer 2019 Communities magazine issue reported a second name change for the FIC, this time to the "Foundation for Intentional Community." A new logo was created, an executive group of co-directors was instituted, and the FIC agreed to transfer Communities magazine to the Global Ecovillage Network – United States (GEN-US), a fellow GENNA Alliance member organization. With the Covid-19 pandemic beginning that year, most in-person community networking meetings ceased.[4][non-primary source needed][5][non-primary source needed]
While the 1st Fellowship relied upon Community Service, and the 2nd Fellowship relied upon the Federation of Egalitarian Communities, the Foundation soon grew to be self-supporting through income from its own programs, especially the registrations for its online workshops, webinars, and trainings. The 2nd Fellowship had paid some staff members, yet with increasing income since 2020 the Foundation has been able to increase its staffing, providing improved and additional movement services.
Online community movement networking continued through the pandemic and after, and the new FIC began a series of virtual events, connecting people in community with each other, and connecting with those not in community who are interested in the lifestyle. The 2020 FIC Annual Report stated that the FIC’s online workshops and trainings attracted over 3,500 people paying sliding-scale registrations. Nearly a half-million people visited the FIC’s free online directory at IC.org, which presented over 1,000 intentional communities. 10,000 copies of free FIC e-books and guides were downloaded, and 1,500 books were distributed worldwide.[6][non-primary source needed]
In 2020 the FIC created the BIPOC Intentional Communities Fund to encourage and support Black, Indigenous, and People of Color in joining or forming intentional community. Ten-percent of unrestricted donations to the FIC have been contributed to the fund. A BIPOC Council of interested persons was created to carry on outreach, and to set criteria for managing the fund and for granting awards. The Council began its first funding round in July, 2021.[7][non-primary source needed][8][non-primary source needed]
The 2021 FIC Annual Report states the organization’s mission as, "We uplift, connect, and empower all those venturing to join, grow, and learn from intentional communities." And its vision as, "We envision a just, resilient, and cooperative world where everyone has the opportunity to thrive in community." That year the FIC began a series of very successful five-week courses on intentional community, which provides the largest amount of revenue of all the FIC programs, accounting for half of the organization’s income.[9][non-primary source needed]
July, 2021 the FIC’s BIPOC Intentional Communities Fund began awarding grants to groups that have land or are ready to purchase land.[8][non-primary source needed]
The FIC hosted over 100 online events in 2021, including webinars, workshops, trainings, courses, and networking, with over 10,000 attendees. Over 2,000 books, e-books, and videos were sold.[10][non-primary source needed]
The 2022 FIC Annual Report states that the FIC added 109 new listings to the online Intentional Community database, and offered On-Demand Courses involving over 100 people, while 6,500 people participated in all of the FIC online events. The FIC sold 7,000 books in 2022, the Intentional Community Discussion Forum involved 1,000 users, and the Community Podcast presented 15 episodes, played 20,000 times for listeners in 51 countries. The BIPOC Intentional Communities Fund granted $15,000 to three BIPOC community projects in 2022.[11][non-primary source needed]
1986 – 2019
[edit]While the First Fellowship was begun by and largely sustained by Community Service and members of The Vale community, the Second Fellowship was largely sustained by the Federation of Egalitarian Communities (FEC) founded in 1976, especially its largest member groups: Twin Oaks and East Wind. Both Community Service and the Federation devoted money and personnel to network the larger communities movement, for one decade in the case of Community Service, and for three decades in the case of the FEC.[citation needed]
When Charles Betterton undertook to reorganize the Fellowship ten years after the founding of the Federation, the Federation was well established and organized, and had been considering how to engage with the larger communities movement. The FEC was always and remains a small network of communities, with from 200 to maybe 250 people at the most. With both community-owned businesses and domestic reproduction integrated in a communal, gender-equal, labor-sharing, time-based economy in each community, the FEC contributed significant resources of time, money, and skills on a stable, long-term basis to the new community networking organization, the 2nd Fellowship.[citation needed]
Stelle Community in northern Illinois was started in 1973 with the intent of being a center for the survival of the human race beyond the disaster prophesied for the end of the millennium. One member of the community, Charles Betterton, began looking beyond Stelle to the idea that intentional community is important to the survival and growth of humanity, and thus began working for the intentional communities movement, looking to network existing organizations rather than form a new one.[citation needed]
During the years 1983 to ’86 Charles Betterton took a number of initiatives to build an inclusive community networking organization. Among them, he advocated the networking of existing intentional communities at academic conferences of the National Historic Communal Societies Association (NHCSA), now the Communal Societies Association (CSA), and negotiated with Twin Oaks Community to begin managing in 1984 Communities magazine, the movement journal that had been created at the 1972 Twin Oaks Communities Conference from a merger of three pre-existing publications: Communitas, named after the 1947 book by Paul and Percival Goodman, published in Yellow Springs, Ohio; Communitarian, a project of the Walden Three community in Providence, Rhode Island; and Alternatives journal, produced by the Alternatives Foundation or Alternatives Northwest at Limesaddle Community in Northern California. Alternatives was related to Richard Fairfield’s Modern Utopian newsletter and book. Several people at Stelle and elsewhere were attracted to Charles’ vision, working together to help realize it.[citation needed]
Charles Betterton attended the spring 1986 combined FIC/CESCI meeting at Tanguy Homesteads in Pennsylvania, also attended by: Herb Goldstein of Common Ground, VA, School of Living (SoL), Inter-Communities of Virginia (I-CV), and Community Educational Service Council (CESCI); Harvey Baker of Dunmire Hollow, TN; Allen Butcher of Twin Oaks, VA; representatives from the Camphill Village communities; and others. Charles announced that he would incorporate the FIC autumn of that year at Stelle, asking for interested persons to attend and form a board-of-directors. Allen suggested to Laird Schaub of Sandhill Farm, MO and the FEC that the Federation support the new FIC, and invited Dan Questenberry of Shannon Farm, VA and the newly reestablished I-CV, first active in the late 1960s and early '70s, to also support the new continental community networking initiative.[12][non-primary source needed]
Five people attended the autumn of 1986 FIC incorporation meeting at Stelle and signed on as incorporators of the renewed FIC: Charles Betterton of Stelle Community; Allen Butcher of Twin Oaks Community, the School of Living, and I-CV; Laird Schaub of Sandhill Community and the FEC; Dan Questenberry of Shannon Farm in Virginia and I-CV; and Donald Pitzer of NHCSA and the Center for Communal Studies (CCS) at the University of Southern Indiana. One more FIC meeting was held at Stelle (spring 1987) before the Fellowship board was to go on the road, scheduling meetings to be hosted by different intentional communities. Charles Betterton soon dropped out of the FIC, later joining an Emissary community in Indiana called Oakwood Farm, and a four-person FIC administrative committee was created in his place.[citation needed]
At the 1988 Green Pastures, NH meeting a set of "Community Visit Report Guidelines" was created for FIC board members to make written reports of communities they visited as representatives of the FIC, with the intent of writing the report to be communicated to the group prior to the visit, assuring their right to review and respond.[citation needed]
Larid Schaub of Sandhill Farm, or simply Laird Sandhill, invited a number of community activists to the FIC board-of-directors, including Geoph Kozeny of Purple Rose/Stardance in San Francisco, Caroline Estes of Alpha Farm in Oregon, and Betty Didcoct of Linnea/Turtle Island Earth Stewards in Washington state, all three of whom had been active in the West Coast regional Earth Communities Network (ECN). Thus, the Fellowship for Intentional Community realized the ideal of a nation-wide representation of intentional communities in its organization.[13][non-primary source needed]
Caroline Estes was a group-process trainer and consensus facilitator, Betty Didcoct lived in and was active in the community land trust movement, and Geoph Kozeny became the lead organizer for the 1990/91 Communities Directory, and created a two-DVD set of videos about intentional communities he had visited, titled "Visions of Utopia." The first volume published in 2004 presents an historical overview of intentional communities with profiles of seven contemporary groups, and the second volume published posthumously in 2009 by the FIC presents eleven more contemporary intentional communities.[citation needed]
Charles Betterton had taken out a CESCI loan to fund his publishing of Communities magazine, and was now in default since the publication could not obtain a sufficient circulation of paid subscriptions. By 1989 the FIC wanted to publish a new directory of intentional communities, since directories typically generated a positive cash-flow, yet did not have the money. At a CESCI board meeting Allen Butcher proposed making another loan to the FIC to print a directory. As soon as the proposal was approved, Dan Questenberry exploded with an incredulous expression of the group’s total lack of respect for orthodox business sense in our pouring of more money into something that had already lost a couple thousand dollars. Herb Goldstein’s smile at Dan’s faked protest expressed the sentiment that the group was doing absolutely what needed to be done. The FIC printed a succession of directories: 1990/91, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2010, and 2016, all of which generated a positive cash-flow.[citation needed]
Gradually the FIC took on more and more movement activities, including publishing Communities magazine. Charles Betterton and staff at Stelle and elsewhere produced the magazine for eight years, until the FIC agreed to take it on, with Laird Sandhill serving as the Managing Editor, beginning with the fall/winter 1992 issue number 79.[citation needed]
The FIC organized a six-day, national conference called the "Celebration of Community" at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington in August 1993, attended by about 800 people. The Celebration offered panel discussions, 160 workshops, and nine plenary presenters: Caroline Estes, Kirkpatrick Sale, Dorothy Maclean, Debra Lynn Dadd-Redalia, Corine McLaughlin, Gordon Davidson, Dr. Noel Brown, Patch Adams MD, and Catherine Burton. The event did a little better than break even.[14][non-primary source needed]
In 1994 Elph Morgan (unrelated to the CSI Morgans) of the FIC acquired an Internet domain name, at IC.org, when it was still possible to get a two-letter domain. Along with Communities Directory book sales, the FIC created in 2004 an online, free, searchable database of intentional communities, supported by selling advertising on the website.[15][16][non-primary source needed][17][non-primary source needed][18][non-primary source needed]
The FIC also took on management of the CESCI revolving loan fund, and took on the FEC's Community Bookstore, selling books online and at conferences of various community organizations. In 1997 the FIC began conducting a series of "Art of Community" weekend educational and networking gatherings.[citation needed]
Laird Sandhill reported an awareness in 2006 on the part of the Communities magazine staff of a significant change in the communities movement. Previously, there had been an assumption that most intentional communities were nonprofit organizations, including land trusts and communal societies. However, there was a growing movement of communities organized as forms of for-profit organization, especially cohousing communities using the condominium legal structure, which comprised about one-third of all the groups in the 2010 Communities Directory. Another form of for-profit community is those in which the land is owned by one person, a couple, or a small group of members with others as renters. Data analysis of the 2010 Communities Directory shows that twenty-percent of the listings were of the owner/renter type, with the largest example being Ganas Community on Staten Island, NY. A name in use for this type of community is "class-harmony community," indicating that the group has both an owner class and a renter class. About half of all the groups in the 2010 Communities Directory were some type of for-profit organization: about 30% cohousing and 20% class-harmony communities. In 2006 the Communities magazine editors decided to "publish at least one article every issue that highlighted efforts to develop a sense of community independent of commonly held property."[19][non-primary source needed]
Over the years there were many people who were part of the FIC's Administrative Committee, the Executive Committee, the Oversight Committee, the Board-of-Directors, and many work groups. Faith Morgan served on many of them, as did her mother Jane Morgan before her. Faith commented that she had been attending FIC meetings since she was a child.[citation needed]
A steady stream of people serving the Fellowship were from Federation communities, both current and former members. Among them the person with the longest and most involved contribution, besides the Community Service folks, is Laird Sandhill, who wrote … "After a long run (28 years before the masthead [note: since 1987]) I stepped down as FIC’s main administrator at the end of 2015, and retired from active involvement in the organization …"[20][non-primary source needed]
The next Executive Director of the Fellowship was Sky Blue. Sky had been a child member of Twin Oaks, left with his parents, then returned as an adult member. Sky Twin Oaks served until the restructuring of the FIC in 2019. In addition to being an effective administrator, often traveling to represent the FIC at various events, Sky expanded the FIC’s definition of "intentional community" to include Transition Towns,[citation needed] with a listing for the Transition Headquarters appearing in the 2016 Communities Directory. This expanded definition ended the roughly 66-year consensus held among many people in the communities movement upon the definition of "intentional community," first established in 1949 and presented in the following section on the First Fellowship as: "Location – The group should share land and housing or be other-wise close enough together geographically to be in continuous active fellowship and be able to work out effectively the total way of life to which they are dedicated."[citation needed]
For many years there had been various efforts to form some type of formal working relationship between the FIC and various newly arising ecovillage networks and other related organizations. In 2018 six organizations formed the GENNA Alliance. The name comes from the Global Ecovillage Network – North America (GENNA), involving an ongoing network of about twenty networkers.[21][non-primary source needed]
"We envision a world of interdependent cooperative communities stewarding the conditions of regeneration, justice, peace, and abundance, in order to realize the full potential of flourishing for all life, for all generations to come." – GENNA Alliance[22][non-primary source needed]
1949 – 1986
[edit]The founding of the original Fellowship for Intentional Community (FIC or First Fellowship) was inspired by Arthur Morgan. While Morgan was preoccupied with other endeavors, his son Gris along with Al Andersen and Art Wiser took on the development of the organization.[citation needed]
Arthur Morgan (1878-1975) served a term as the vice president of the American Unitarian Association, was the first president of the Progressive Education Association, and vice president of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Morgan was appointed by Franklin Roosevelt as the first chairman of the Tennessee Valley Authority.[23][non-primary source needed][24]
Morgan created an association for the advancement of the small village-like community through which he believed that people could best enjoy "good will and mutual confidence [as] the very life-principle of society." Community Service, Inc. was created in 1940 to advocate for the resurgence of the idealistic small-town family life, while the later Fellowship of Intentional Communities was created as an association of the full range of communitarian societies, including: secular or religious communities, communal societies, co-operative communities, and other groups, including what later became called community land trusts (CLTs). Before those two associations were begun Arthur Morgan had already created Celo Community, a large and successful community land trust, although that term was not in use at the time.[25][non-primary source needed]
Celo Community was founded in 1936 at Burnesville, North Carolina, and a significant source of support and of members for the forming of Celo came from the Quaker social service organization called the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), and other anti-war pacifists. The irony is that the financing for the 1,250 acre land purchase came from a wealthy Chicago industrialist. William Regnery believed in the ideal expressed in earlier times of the "Roman citizen-soldier" and of the "Jeffersonian landed yeomanry" as the foundation of a democratic republic. The form Celo was to take was that created by Ralph Borsodi (1886-1977) who founded the School of Living,[26] advocating the community design of homesteads leased from a nonprofit association that owns the land. Because of this land tenure design, and the longevity of Celo Community, Celo is considered to be the first community land trust, although more often New Communities Inc.[27] of Albany, Georgia founded in 1969 is called the first CLT.[28]
Arthur Morgan had two sons, Ernest (1906-2001) and Griscom (1912-1993). Ernest and his wife Elizabeth lived at Celo in North Carolina. Gris and his wife Jane founded The Vale community in 1946 on forty acres, two miles south of Yellow Springs, Ohio. The Vale incorporated in 1960, and in 1980 the land was donated to the Community Service, Inc. Land Trust, growing to eleven families or about twenty people, some of Quaker orientation, along with some Community Service, Inc. (CSI) assistants and Antioch College students in residence.[citation needed]
Gris and Jane had two children, Faith who was active on the boards of CSI, FIC, and CESCI, and John who lives at Raven Rocks community, founded in 1970 near Beallsville, Ohio. Raven Rocks was described in the fall 2015 issue number 168 of Communities magazine (p. 53) as having been purchased "to protect 850 acres of Appalachian forest and ravines from strip mining," and in the winter 1993 issue number 79 of Communities magazine (p. 12) as having its own concrete business for building passive solar, earth bermed or underground houses.[29][30][31][non-primary source needed]
Arthur Morgan founded Community Service, Inc. (CSI) in 1940, and a description of Morgan’s intention for CSI is printed in a quote in Mildred Loomis’ book Alternative Americas, although she does not credit the source.[citation needed]
"Community Service undertakes to increase knowledge of community life and the concern for it. Those who see the limiting and depressing qualities of small community life seldom have the vision of what a good community can be, how it can meet the fundamental needs and cravings of a human spirit. Community Service seeks to clarify a vision of community and to help many people to share it, so that work for community betterment shall not consist of patchwork efforts, but shall lead to the fulfillment of a truly great concept of community life."Author unknown[32]
The anonymous quote above shows that Community Service has a unique orientation to the communities movement, somewhat closer to the small town or Transition Town "circumstantial community" than to the more deliberate intentional community like The Vale. Richard Fairfield, who traveled among and wrote about intentional communities in the 1960s, noted the difference from reading the CSI newsletter saying, "I felt that the ideas it expressed were very much out of touch with the newly developing movement."[33]
Robert Fogarty was a professor at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, OH, very familiar with the Morgans and CSI, although in his 1972 book American Utopianism he does not mention them, while describing the 1960s-‘70s era communities movement as follows.[citation needed]
"Since the mid-sixties there has been a dramatic resurgence of interest in communitarianism. A revolt against the Vietnam War and a technocratic society coupled with a widespread use of drugs combined to produce dropouts who sought an alternative culture. There is no single coherent philosophy – as with [19th century] Owenism or Fourierism – but an amalgam of attitudes and ideas that are pacific and egalitarian."[34][self-published source?]
While the mission of Community Service, Inc. was primarily for the promotion of family life in small towns, Timothy Miller states that, "Morgan’s interests had always included communal settlements." This can be seen in the programs which soon grew out of CSI. While Arthur Morgan promoted small-town life in regular conferences at Yellow Springs, a person in attendance who was associated with Tanguy Homesteads in Pennsylvania, Alfred Andersen, recommended that CSI expand or change its scope to include communitarian groups.[35][non-primary source needed][24]
Alfred Andersen explains in an article in the winter ‘97 issue of Communities magazine (#97), titled "Fellowship Roots," that while he was in prison serving time as a conscientious objector to military service during World War Two, his wife Dorothy and their son lived at Tanguy Homesteads in Glen Mills, PA, and that soon after his release the three, … "headed for Yellow Springs, Ohio, to renew my acquaintance with Arthur Morgan … to help Arthur and Griscom Morgan’s work at Community Service, Inc. While doing research in the communities movement I had come across descriptions of the scattered and struggling "cooperative" communities, so I suggested that Community Service host representatives to a gathering in Yellow Springs following its annual Small Community Conference."[35][non-primary source needed]
The implementation of Andersen’s suggestion resulted in a sufficiently successful event that Community Service, Inc. then formed an association during 1946 and ‘47, for the barter exchanges of agricultural products and crafts between communitarian settlements called, "Inter-Community Exchange" (I-CE). Other types of exchanges and mutual aid facilitated at least in part with the help of the I-CE are presented in CSI’s 1988 Guidebook for Intentional Communities. These include the Highlander Folk School taking on Koinonia’s summer camp when the latter community was being attacked by the Ku Klux Klan, and The Vale giving its own water supply pump system to the newly immigrated Bruderhof, when the town of Yellow Springs provided access to city water for The Vale. Tim Miller writes that through these exchanges, and through meeting representatives of other communities at CSI meetings and conferences, some members of various communities began expressing interest in visiting some of the communities in the network being created by CSI.[35][non-primary source needed][24][36][non-primary source needed]
In his 1997 Communities magazine article Andersen explains the vision and the contrary reality of Inter-Communities Exchange. … "Our hope was that we could develop an entire alternative economy of trading among cooperative communities. … It was only after a year or two that we realized the main thing we had to exchange was fellowship."[37][non-primary source needed]
In the 1988 Community Service, Inc. publication titled, Guidebook for Intentional Communities, revised from the earlier 1978 CSI publication titled, An Intentional Community Handbook, Gris Morgan edited an article titled, "Some Basic Concepts for Intentional Communities," saying that at the 1949 Community Service Conference attended by sixty people from four continents, a subgroup was delegated the task of "defining and naming the common subject of shared interest."[38][non-primary source needed]
The term "intentional" was chosen to emphasize the basic characteristic of intent, purpose and commitment. Other words such as "cooperative," "experimental" or "utopian" lacked that connotation.[38][non-primary source needed]
The date of the founding of the new organization is sometimes given as 1948, such as in Dan Questenberry’s 1990 article, "Residential Land Trust Organizing," in the 1990/91 Directory of Intentional Communities, although in Gris Morgan’s and CSI’s 1988 Guidebook the event that took place in ‘48 is referred to as a "pre-organizational meeting," with the official founding of the Fellowship being in 1949, after a year of community networking. It was in that year that the term "intentional" was used for the new name of the expanded Inter-Communities Exchange.[citation needed]
The term "exchange" had been used extensively during the Great Depression to refer to many different, and often very large urban labor exchanges, some operating production facilities and businesses without the use of money. Today, similar exchanges are often called "Mutual Aid Networks."[citation needed]
At the 1949 Community Service Conference the Inter-Communities Exchange then became the "Fellowship of Intentional Communities" (FIC). Timothy Miller gives Art Wiser, a member of the Macedonia community in Georgia which later joined the Bruderhof network of communities, much of the credit for evolving the Inter-Community Exchange into the FIC.[24][36][non-primary source needed]
Gris Morgan explains in the Guidebook article that meetings of the Fellowship of Intentional Communities were held around the Mid-Western and Mid-Atlantic States at locations including: Antioch College’s Outdoor Education Center called Glen Helen, the Highlander Folk School in Kentucky; and the Pendle Hill Quaker Center in Pennsylvania. The extent of the Fellowship can be somewhat gauged by the report in the March 1960 Fellowship newsletter that during the previous October a 250-piece mailing was sent out asking for contributions to the newsletter, with replies received from 125 individuals and five communities in twenty-eight states, Canada, Mexico, Holland, and India.[39][non-primary source needed]
Also in the March 1960 FIC newsletter, Griscom Morgan explains that in 1959 he conducted an outreach effort to a number of different Native American tribes.[citation needed]
"I visited with tribal leaders of six tribes, as well as talking among a number of others, exploring their interest in fellowship with non-Indians holding some of the same values and concerns in intentional community, land-holding, and mutual respect between cultures. Some of the Indians were keenly interested, saying that this was the kind of fellowship that would make possible the opening [of] the door of deeper contact as compared with the strained relationship with the prying, curious, or "scientific" … Some of these were younger men who are now deeply fired with the challenge of bearing the Indians’ "testimony" in the world … So the leading older traditionals are not the only ones who are vigorously bearing the Indian heritage.[citation needed]
"… some of our intentional communities … might do well to cultivate fellowship with some of the tribal groups, to reinforce each other in our distinctive ways, to learn from each other, and to help each other from our diverse assets of competence and circumstance. For example, the Cherokee of North Carolina have a form of landholding similar to that at Celo. Each has difficulties in maintaining it and is surrounded by another culture. … Similarly, among some tribes and Pueblos, the traditional reliance upon "sense of the meeting" as compared with voting is under attack by those who assume that the conventional reliance upon voting is the only way of conducting a meeting democratically. We could strengthen these people by our contact and fellowship with them and they could do the same to us."[40][non-primary source needed]
A list of nineteen communities in the U.S. associated with the Fellowship of Intentional Communities in its first decade includes: Bruderhof, Rifton, NY; Bryn Gweled, Clarksville, PA; Canterbury, Concord, NH [Quaker group that acquired land from the Canterbury Shakers]; Celo, Burnsville, NC; Gould Farm, Great Barrington, MA; Hidden Springs, Neshanic Station, NJ; Kingwood, Frenchtown, NJ; Koinonia Farm, Americus, GA; Macedonia, Clarksville, GA; May Valley [later Teramanto], Renton, WA; Parishfield, Brighton, MI; Pendle Hill, Wallingford, PA; Powelton Village, [location of one of the MOVE houses in University City] Philadelphia, PA; Quest, Royal Oak, MI; Skyview Acres, Pomona, NY; St. Francis Acres [with the Libertarian Press, printing Cooperative Living newsletter], Glen Gardner, NJ; Tanguy Homesteads, West Chester, PA; The Vale, Yellow Springs, OH; and Tuolumne Co-operative Farms, Modesto, CA. Other intentional communities attended Fellowship events over the decades.[41][better source needed][42][43][44]
Timothy Miller explains that this network of communitarian groups included "fully communal" societies, along with economically-diverse communities like community land trusts "in which family finances were largely private" while the land is owned in common. Some of the FIC-associated communities were secular, many of them were religious groups, and some were multi-faith. While some of the religious-identified communities were composed of members with mainline or liberal Protestant backgrounds, the primary denomination represented was Quaker.[45]
Along with inventing a term for describing their gifting and sharing lifestyles, the original or First Fellowship also defined what they meant by the term "intentional community," identifying the basic aspects of communitarian theory and organization. This material was first printed by Community Service, Inc. in The Intentional Communities 1959 Yearbook and Newsletter, later in CSI’s An Intentional Community Handbook printed in 1978, and then in CSI’s Guidebook for Intentional Communities published in 1988, which Robert Fogarty then presented in his 1972 book, American Utopianism. The following is edited from these sources:
- Size – minimum size should be three families or five adults.
- Organization – The group should be sufficiently organized to be a recognizable social entity acting with responsibility and effectiveness.
- Location – The group should share land and housing or be other-wise close enough together geographically to be in continuous active fellowship and be able to work out effectively the total way of life to which they are dedicated.[46][self-published source?][36][non-primary source needed]
Robert Fogarty presents a list of seven "basic concepts" and six "principles" of "each of the communities belonging to the Fellowship." For a sampling:
1. Community means mutuality and sharing in a whole way of life, in all its values and all its responsibilities.
2. The essence of community is spiritual, that is, the feeling of mutuality, the practice of mutual respect, love and understanding. No physical forms or practices will create community, but forms, methods and practices will grow out of the spirit. …[47][self-published source?]
It was during the 1954 Fellowship meeting at the Quaker community at Pendle Hill in Philadelphia that a gift of $30,000 was made to the FIC to set up a revolving loan fund to aid intentional communities. The Homer Morris Fund was named after the person who contributed or acquired most of the initial seed money. Homer Morris had been active in the Quaker charity organization, the American Friends Service Committee, aiding the development of the AFSC’s Depression era unemployed resettlement colonies.[48][non-primary source needed]
One of the most successful of the resettlement colonies was Penn-Craft near Uniontown, Pennsylvania, begun in 1937. "Craft" in the name of the colony refers to the Craft family farm which was acquired for the community. Much of the money for starting Penn-Craft was donated by the U.S. Steel Corp. which had reduced its mining operations in the area, resulting in a rising local unemployment rate. Two members of the near-by Division of Subsistence Homesteads colony, named "Norvelt", left their government project to help build Penn-Craft. It had fifty home sites on two-hundred acres, with a cooperative store, the beginnings of a business in the form of a "knitting mill," and many social service activities. Penn-Craft was so successful that adjacent land was acquired in 1946 for an additional fifteen homesteads.[49][50]
Gris Morgan coordinated the Homer Morris Fund for many years, and unfortunately the fund dwindled rather than grew. $2,500 loaned to the Toe Valley News, a newspaper serving the area around Celo Community, was reported delinquent in the March 1960 FIC newsletter, after the Toe Valley News went out of business.[citation needed]
When tax-exempt status was acquired from the IRS in 1975, the Homer Morris Fund’s name was changed to the Community Educational Service Council, Inc (CESCI), emphasizing its primary intent of education and service, with its most active board members residing at Tanguy Homesteads, most notably Rubin Close who served as incorporator when the Fund received its tax-exemption. While a number of the Fund’s loans were never repaid, Dan Questenberry reports that the fund completed its 100th "community business loan" about 1990, slowly rebuilding its assets back up to and over its original endowment. From 1975 to when CESCI was acquired by the 2nd Fellowship, the Fellowship and CESCI held combined weekend meetings, with the technical CESCI business meetings held on Sunday morning after the Fellowship's social events held Saturday evening.[41][better source needed][40][non-primary source needed][31][non-primary source needed]
After about ten years of mutually rewarding communitarian fellowship, the beginning of the end of the First Fellowship began with the story of the coming to America of the Bruderhof.
The story of the Bruderhof begins in Germany with the life of Eberhard Arnold (1883-1935), who as a teenager experienced an intense Christian epiphany, then becoming an activist in the German Christian Student’s Union, which Timothy Miller describes as a, "broad-based revolt against entrenched tradition in German religious bodies and other social institutions."[51][52][53]
The youth movements in Germany before and between the two World Wars merit consideration in part because there are parallels between them and the American youth movement of the 1960s, and perhaps among some young adults of all generations. There are also general lessons regarding the dynamics between the alternative and the dominant cultures that can be deduced from understanding early 20th century German history. John de Graaf identifies some of these lessons in his article, "The Wandervogel" (meaning wondering birds or Free Birds!), appearing in the Fall 1977 issue of The CoEvolution Quarterly.[citation needed]
John de Graaf quotes Stanley High’s 1923 book The Revolt of Youth, stating that among German youth of his day, "Nothing is so roundly hated as the imposition of conventional authority and nothing so loved as nature." High explains that among German youth, "there is an inexplicable reaction against conventional Christianity," and that, "Always the members stood against any political alignment … [while] great spiritual forces [were] on the ascendancy." Stanley High, 1923[54]
The Industrial Revolution came to Western Europe in the early 19th century, after its beginning in England, and it had much the same reaction against it in Germany as elsewhere. People left the agrarian lifestyle of the countryside for the urban lifestyle of crowded housing and polluted air and water to become part of the prosperous German middle class, or at least the comfortable working class. While industrialization was somewhat less oppressive to the workers in Germany than in comparison with other industrializing nations, the technological and social changes it brought about were still antagonistic to the sensibilities of their children.[55]
"In 1896, the Wandervogel youth movement was formed, with the children of suburban Berlin setting off for the woods in retreat from a life which, however prosperous, had lost its meaning. These youths, many with long hair, were joined by various other groups of young Germans who sought in some way to protest the staid and boring life of their parents."[55]
German writers like Hermann Hesse tapped into this cultural angst with popular books like Beneath the Wheel published in 1906, and Steppenwolf published between the World Wars in 1927. Expressing the sentiments of the alternative culture, Hermann Hesse wrote about his own thoughts that, … "The less able I am to believe in our epoch and the more arid and depraved mankind seems in my eyes, the less I look to revolution as the remedy and the more I believe in the magic of love." Hermann Hesse[56]
With the German defeat at the end of World War One the entire culture, and especially German youth, was fraught with despair, and many turned to mysticism in a manner similar to how the surviving Native Americans on their reservations turned to the mystical Ghost Dance after their defeat in the Plains Indian Wars.[citation needed]
After 1919, John de Graaf writes, communal colonies were established by German youth in the countryside as a means of escaping industrial society, while students formed cooperatives to provide for themselves housing, food, and other necessities. As in Denmark and Spain, the German youth movement advocated educational reform as the "Folk School" movement, found in the U.S. among progressive schools such as Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio and the Highlander Folk School in Kentucky, now called the Highlander Research and Education Center. "The German Free School Association battled the ‘Prussian spirit’ of authoritarian rote learning which prevailed in the public schools."[57]
The paramilitary Hitler Youth organization begun in 1922 subverted all other youth organizations, oppressing their members and imprisoning their leaders, as they did even the cooperative movements and any other association that opposed control by Hitler’s Nazi Party.[58]
John de Graaf makes the point in his "Wandervogel" article that it was the non-political orientation of the early German youth movements that resulted in their naiveté with regard to politics, setting up young women and men for manipulation by and submission to the fascist disaster of Nazism.[58]
Into this scene came Eberhard Arnold, earning a Ph.D. in theology in 1909, while becoming a Christian Socialist. He and his wife, Emmy, rented a farmhouse in Sannerz, Hesse, Germany in 1920, inviting friends to live with them to create a Christian commune. This religious orientation was contrary to the main stream of the German youth movements of the day, which is quite similar to how the Christian "Jesus Freak" communalists were a minority of the 1960s American, European, and other communal movements.[52][53]
In the 1973 book, Children in Community, Emmy Arnold explained the beginning of her and her husband’s lives as Christian communitarians. "In Germany after the First World War, the Youth Movement arose and was very much alive in our Christian circles. My husband, Eberhard Arnold, and I were closely connected with this movement for many years. We were part of a group of people who often met in our home in Berlin in a search for a new, genuine way of life. A few of these people felt together the very strong urge to build up a life in truthfulness, simplicity, and poverty, as opposed to the life we saw everywhere around us.[citation needed]
"In the year 1920 this community life came into being; a very simple life in complete sharing was begun by a little group in Sannerz, Hesse. This life in community has continued for over fifty years. We have gone through sorrow and struggle, yet we have known deep joy and enthusiasm.[citation needed]
"A life shared in common is a miracle. People cannot remain together for the sake of traditions. Community must be given again and again as a new birth."[59]
Arnold’s group purchased a farm in the Rhon mountains and adopted the name, "Rhon Bruderhof" or "Rhon Society of Brothers", in 1926. Two years later Arnold and friends learned of the history of the Hutterites in Europe, founded in 16th century Germany as an Anabaptist group during the Protestant Reformation, and that they still existed in America and Canada. Appreciating the similarities between his community and the Hutterites, Arnold contacted them, and he and Emmy traveled to the Hutterite colonies in the U.S. and Canada in 1930. Some Hutterites also visited the Rhon Bruderhof.[52][53]
With the rise of the Nazi state in Germany in 1933 the pacifist Rhon Bruderhof saved its young men and women from conscription into the military first by relocating to Liechtenstein, creating the Alm Bruderhof there, then as the German army was invading European nations, they relocated again to England between 1936 and ‘38. All, that is, except Eberhard Arnold who died in 1935 after an unsuccessful surgery. In England the Bruderhof gained many converts, yet now the threat was from the English policy of interning German citizens after England’s declaration of war against Germany. The Bruderhof requested immigration to Canada and the United States, yet were refused by both. They applied to many different countries, finding that only Paraguay in South America would accept them, perhaps due to the Paraguayan’s familiarity with communal groups, resulting from their Jesuit and the indigenous Guarani community history of the 17th and 18th centuries. 350 Bruderhof members moved to Paraguay in 1941, purchasing a 20,000 acre ranch they named "Primavera." By 1950 there were 600 people in three separate colonies or "Hofs." After World War Two the Bruderhof began its immigration to the United States, beginning with visiting various intentional communities.[60][53]
Some of the Hutterites at the Forest River Colony in North Dakota appreciated the Bruderhof form of Christian community and invited the Bruderhof to join them. A teenager at the Forest River colony in 1955, Ruth Baer Lambach, later wrote that the Bruderhof came into Forest River "like a hurricane." They were a "patchwork community of eccentrics, intellectuals, dissident seekers of truth, and creative practitioners of radical Christianity." They ran up huge phone bills calling their other Bruderhofs, annoyed the Hutterite leadership, and caused a schism at Forest River, with those loyal to the Hutterite leadership leaving their home to join other Hutterite colonies. Most of the Bruderhof left Paraguay, settling in 1954 in the Woodcrest Bruderhof, just founded the previous year near Rifton, New York, and the remaining Forest River Hutterites left their remote North Dakota colony to purchase land nearby in Farmington, Pennsylvania, creating the Oak Lane Bruderhof.[61]
Due to the demise of the Forest River Colony, relations between the Hutterites and the Bruderhof were formally ended in 1955, then reinstated in 1974 after the Bruderhof sent a mission to the Hutterites to apologize for having destroyed the latter’s Forest River Colony. The Bruderhof now adopted the name, "The Hutterian Society of Brothers," although that did not entirely smooth over all their differences, and in 1990 two of the three main Hutterite branches, the Leherleut and the Dariusleut ["leut" pronounced loy-t meaning people] revoked their union with the Bruderhof.[51][61]
The practice of "commune raiding" by one group carrying off members of another group to increase the population of their own society was evidently a conscious and deliberate intent upon the part of the Bruderhof, which earned them much criticism within the communities movement, not just among the Hutterites. This practice is not unique to the Bruderhof, as members have historically left one group and joined another, and such realignments of membership can be considered to be a good thing as it tends to create more inter-personal connections between members of different communities, resulting in the cross-fertilization of ideas between communities and movements. Rarely, however, does this involve the destruction of an entire community or colony as at Forest River. Yet it happened again when the Bruderhof visited the Macedonia Cooperative Community near Clarksville, Georgia.[citation needed]
Macedonia existed from 1937 to ‘58, founded by Morris Mitchell, "a liberal southern educator who believed," as Tim Miller writes, "that communitarianism could solve many of the problems of modern society." Members of the multi-faith community were mostly of liberal Protestant backgrounds, while others had a pacifist Quaker orientation. The community grew to a population of fifty adults in the early ‘50s, creating for themselves something that few homestead land-trust communities could build, a successful business for making themselves increasingly self-reliant, which was a cottage industry making wooden toys.[62]
Staughton Lynd writes about the impact of learning about the Bruderhof upon the thinking of members at Macedonia in his August 1994 letter to Ramon Sender’s "Keep In Touch" KIT Newsletter. "During the time [my wife and I] were at Macedonia [1954-57], the community was forever defining and redefining itself in relation to the Bruderhof. The Bruderhof had lasted much longer than our community; it seemed more experienced, more sure of itself, immune to the uncertainty, groping experimentation and catastrophes experienced at Macedonia. The Bruderhof appeared to have a direct ‘hot line’ to God."[63]
Initially about half of the members of Macedonia left to join the Bruderhof, and the other half joined later. Along with nearly all their members, the Macedonian’s also brought to the Bruderhof their successful business of wooden children’s toys, called "Community Playthings." Macedonia’s cottage business was expanded by the Bruderhof to become their primary source of income, selling expensive wooden toys and children’s furniture to nurseries and day-care centers, many of them funded by federal and local government 1960s era War-on-Poverty programs. By about 2010 the Bruderhof had expanded the business to focus upon building motorized wheel chairs for children with physical disabilities, manufacturing all of the components including metal frames, molded plastic, and upholstery, except for the batteries, and motors.[64][65][non-primary source needed]
The year before the Bruderhof settled at their Woodcrest colony near Rifton, New York in 1954, they had sent a delegation with a slide show of their history and colonies in Paraguay to visit communities around America and as Timothy Miller says, "prospect for land and support." Miller goes on to explain that the delegation was, "warmly received at several intentional communities, some of whose members joined their ranks." Both their membership and their number of colonies increased, to about 1,500 people and nine colonies in five countries by 1956.[64]
In a letter of February 25, 1988 to Dan Questenberry at Shannon Farm (VA), Ernest Morgan wrote from Celo Community (NC) about the Bruderhof’s impact upon communities in the U.S. "As you may know, the Bruderhof recruited the entire Macedonia Community, including their block business. This business, by the way, became one of the Bruderhof’s major economic activities.[citation needed]
"A delegation from the Bruderhof … did visit Celo … in the early or middle 1950s. As a result of this meeting, several Celo families decided to move to the Bruderhof. ... It was my impression, at the time, that there was a considerable amount of unhappiness in the intentional community movement with regard to the Bruderhof.[citation needed]
"This exodus was the direct cause of Elizabeth and myself becoming involved with the Community. ... We felt that [Camp Celo for children] was too valuable a project to be allowed to die. … Dave Salstrom later left the Bruderhof and returned to Celo. In balance, the exodus to the Bruderhof may actually have been, indirectly, a boost to Celo Community."[66][better source needed]
In addition to raiding the Forest River Hutterite colony, Macedonia, and Celo, Timothy Miller reports that most of the seven members of the Kingwood Community near Frenchtown, New Jersey, a "Quaker-dominated enclave," joined the Bruderhof in 1953.[67]
Alfred Andersen commented upon the Bruderhof’s FIC network affiliation and recruitment strategies in his 1997 Communities magazine article, explaining that it was at the Fellowship meeting at Pendle Hill in 1958 that Bruderhof representatives, "sent word that they would no longer participate." "A major factor in this estrangement may have been the feeling, on the part of one participant especially, that the Bruderhof was draining other communities of their leadership. … I saw no indication that there had been any coercion involved in these moves. Basically, the Society of Brothers offered a life of deeper commitment, and people who wanted that responded."[35][non-primary source needed]
Alfred Anderson, President of the FIC in 1961, wrote the following about the Bruderhof’s ending of their association with the FIC in 1958, in his "Fellowship Roots" article in the winter 1997 issue of Communities magazine. "When the Society of Brothers withdrew from the FIC, there were those who felt that FIC should be allowed to quietly die. But some felt that something precious would be lost thereby. … The sparse participation at this last conference [at Bryn Gweled, PA in 1960], plus the failure of those responsible to follow up, convinced us that FIC has reached a peaceful end."[68][non-primary source needed]
Andersen explained further in his 1991 letter that the Bruderhof announced that, "since their commitment was not to community as such, but to their particular religious way of life, centered upon the life of Jesus, that they felt they couldn’t justify putting further energy into FIC."[41][better source needed]
Beginning in 1960 there was very little Fellowship activity; the FIC being reduced to a social event accompanying the meetings of the Homer Morris Fund, incorporated as the Community Educational Service Council (CESCI) in 1975. A list of some of the communities which borrowed money from CESCI, compiled from CESCI records prior to 1990, include: Association of Light Morning, VA; Down Hill Farm, PA; East Wind, MO; Heathcote Center, MD; Plow Creek Fellowship, IL; Twin Oaks, VA; and Walden Three, RI. CESCI has also aided several community-oriented publications which evidenced its educational aspect, including: The Community Market Catalog; Source Catalog; Communities; and Mark Satin’s New Options.[69][non-primary source needed][better source needed]
The Bruderhof had taken from the Second Fellowship what they could, evidently draining enough of its lifeblood that the attractions of networking and fellowship no longer generated sufficient interest and energy among communitarians for traveling to attend events. Only the need to manage the money held by the movement, in the form of the Homer Morris revolving loan fund, sustained the Second Fellowship through the 1960s, ‘70s, and the first half of the ‘80s, along with personal networking by various individuals.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Sreenivasan 2008, p. 144.
- ^ "Details about Fellowship for Intentional Community Inc., EIN: 35-1856776, Rutledge, MO, United States". 403 | Internal Revenue Service. Retrieved June 30, 2019.
- ^ "FIC Projects and Services". The Fellowship for Intentional Communities. Archived from the original on September 2, 2011. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
- ^ FIC 2020, p. 1.
- ^ Tina 2019, pp. 4–5.
- ^ FIC 2020, p. 2.
- ^ FIC 2020, p. 3.
- ^ a b FIC 2021, p. 9.
- ^ FIC 2021, pp. 4, 8.
- ^ FIC 2021, pp. 13, 15, 16, 20, 21.
- ^ FIC 2022, pp. 10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19, 20.
- ^ Ringrose & Brown 1990–1991, pp. 132–5.
- ^ Schaub 2022, p. 53.
- ^ Didcoct 1994, pp. 5, 18–32.
- ^ Didcoct 1994, pp. 18–47.
- ^ FIC 2020, p. 7.
- ^ Schaub 1992, p. 2.
- ^ Schaub 2015, p. 6.
- ^ Schaub 2022, p. 52.
- ^ Schaub 2015, p. 53.
- ^ Tina 2018, pp. 14–15.
- ^ Tina 2018, p. 15.
- ^ Morgan 1942, back cover.
- ^ a b c d Miller 1998, p. 163.
- ^ Morgan 1942, p. 9.
- ^ "School of Living: A Non-Profit Educational Network". The School of Living. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
- ^ "New Communities Inc". New Communities Inc. Retrieved April 15, 2023.
- ^ Miller 1998, pp. 156–7, 231 n.100.
- ^ Fairfield 1971, p. 20.
- ^ Miller 1998, p. 169.
- ^ a b Questenberry 1990, p. 119.
- ^ Loomis 1980, p. 123.
- ^ Fairfield 1971, p. 21.
- ^ Fogarty 1972, p. 150.
- ^ a b c d Andersen 1997, p. 13.
- ^ a b c Morgan 1988a, p. 10.
- ^ Andersen 1997, p. 12.
- ^ a b Morgan 1988a, p. 9.
- ^ Morgan 1960, pp. 7–8.
- ^ a b Morgan 1960, p. 8.
- ^ a b c Andersen 1991.
- ^ Miller 1998, pp. 164–71.
- ^ Morris & Kross 2009, p. 101.
- ^ Veysey 1973, pp. =39-40.
- ^ Miller 1998, p. 164.
- ^ Fogarty 1972, p. 151.
- ^ Fogarty 1972, pp. 151–2.
- ^ Morgan & Crumrine 1984, p. 1.
- ^ Fairfield 1971, p. 22.
- ^ Miller 1998, p. 137.
- ^ a b Huntington 1997, p. 343.
- ^ a b c Miller 1998, p. 173.
- ^ a b c d Oved 1988, p. 361.
- ^ de Graaf 1977, p. 14.
- ^ a b de Graaf 1977, p. 15.
- ^ de Graaf 1977, p. 17.
- ^ de Graaf 1977, pp. 16–7.
- ^ a b de Graaf 1977, p. 18.
- ^ Society of Brothers 1973, p. 173.
- ^ Miller 1998, pp. 173–4.
- ^ a b Oved 1988, p. 362.
- ^ Miller 1998, pp. 158–9.
- ^ Lynd 1994, p. 2.
- ^ a b Miller 1998, p. 174.
- ^ Morgan 1988a.
- ^ Morgan 1988b.
- ^ Miller 1998, p. 167.
- ^ Andersen 1997, p. 15.
- ^ Andersen 1975.
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