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At no time in history have so many people lived communally and never has there been such a variety
of forms of communal living. The following is an attempt to clarify the major forms of such
communities. The classic, more extreme form of communal living is the commune. There is no authoritative definition of the term. One dictionary gives the following: "A relatively small, often rural, community whose members share common interests, work and income and often own property collectively". Internationally recognized researcher of the history of communes and kibbutz member, Prof. Yaacov Oved, defined the term as "an autonomous community whose members have agreed, by free choice, to live a life of sharing by the principle 'from each according to his ability, to each according to his need". Press here for a fuller discussion of the term commune. ![]() The 55th birthday cake of the New Zealand commune, Riverside (with thanks to Chris Palmer) Kibbutz is the unique Israeli form of commune, born out of the special conditions of the country's rebirth. Press here for a comparison between kibbutz and other communes. For information about kibbutzim, press here. Intentional Community is an inclusive term covering communes, eco-villages, co-housing, residential land trusts, student co-ops, urban housing cooperatives and other related projects and dreams. The Fellowship for Intentional Community website www.ic.org is packed full of information. For a detailed explanation, press here An eco-village is an urban or rural community whose members try to provide a high quality lifestyle without taking more from the Earth than they give back. Eco-villages attempt to integrate a supportive social environment with a low-impact way of life. To achieve these aims, eco-villages typically build on various combinations of three dimensions: community, ecology and spirituality. Eco-villages are communities in which people feel supported by and responsible to those around them. They are small enough that everyone feels empowered, seen and heard. For more information, look up http://gen.ecovillage.org/ Co-housing is the name of a type of collaborative housing that attempts to overcome the alienation of modern subdivisions in which no-one knows their neighbors, and there is no sense of community. It is characterized by private dwellings with their own kitchen, living-dining room etc, but also with extensive common facilities. Usually, co-housing communities are designed and managed by the residents themselves. The typical co-housing community has 20 to 30 single-family homes along a pedestrian street or clustered around a courtyard. Residents often have several optional group meals in the common building each week. See www.cohousing.org/resources/whatis.html to learn more about co-housing. A housing co-operative looks like any other townhouse complex or apartment building. The difference is that each one is both a business and a community, jointly owned by the people who live there. Membership means: shared responsibility, not-for-profit housing, democratic control, open membership (to people of different cultures, ages and incomes) and community living, offering the safety and security of small village life in the midst of cities and towns. Co-ops are usually family-oriented, mixed-income communities. See www.coop.org/ica/ica/sb/housing.html for more information. ![]() Co-operative housing scenes from the website of the International Co-operation Alliance (with thanks) Economic Communality. Here and there around the world, regions and townships are organizing to free themselves from the shackles of the global economy and to create an economic community of their own. These are run by the rules of the capitalist market place, but with foundations of communal solidarity and less alienation and competition. The classic example of this is the city of Ithaca in New York State. Network Communality. Already a new kind of communality is sprouting, based not on territory, but on the world wide electronic web. Presumably, a bright future lies ahead for this interesting development. |
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The vast number of books, publications and articles about communes, intentional communities and communal living in general, reflects the wide-ranging interest in the subject. For example, Communities Directory 2000, brought out by the FIC, has over 100 book entries on communal living! Accordingly, we have had to limit ourselves only to those which are somehow connected with this site. Disappointed browser, please accept our sincere apologies. As compensation, try the FIC website: www.ic.org/resources/. In Israel, many of the publications on the subject are available at the library of Yad Tabenkin at Seminar Efal, the staff of which is always ready to be of assistance. Alternative sources are the libraries of Givat Chaviva and of the University of Haifa (with its Institute for Research on the Kibbutz and the Cooperative Idea). http://directory.ic.org/ Shared Visions, Shared Lives: Communal Living Around the Globe, Findhorn Press, 1996. Two Hundred Years of American Communes, Transaction Books, 1988, 2nd ed. 1992. Distant Brothers: History of the Relations between the Bruderhof and the Kibbutz, Yad Tabenkin, 1993. The Witness of the Brothers: New Brunswick Transaction Publishers, 1996.
Volume 1 - Middle Eastern Religions Communities
(Christian, Jewish & Islamic) - 88 umbrella organizations and networks,
representing about 2,845 individual communities. They bring together about
194,600 men and women. The grand total: Some 200 umbrella organizations and networks, about 3,900 individual communities and 327,000 people living together. Note: Some groups are described in Vol. 1 as well as in Vol. 3. |