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In the 1960s they shared Marxist goals,
houses, meals and even love. Today's communards are more likely to be
sharing their profits
Financial Times House & Home, July 7,
2007
They were the perfect homes for the hippy movement. Loosely structured
and easy-going, communes in the late 1960s and early 1970s offered young
people shelter, warmth, food and company without any of those annoying constraints
of the nuclear family and suburban life. In a commune you could get up late,
spend the day doing whatever you wanted and even sleep with your best friend's
partner, all in the name of rejecting conventionality. And it hardly cost
you a penny.
Well, at least that was what the view was from "straight" suburbia
and it provided plenty a pursed lip and sharp intake of breath around the
dinner tables of provincial Britain and middle America.
In fact, the explosion of communal living that spread across
the UK, Europe, the US and Australia at the beginning of the 1970s turned
out to be a fascinating experiment in what it means to call somewhere "home".
Although the revolution the communards dreamt of never really came to be,
there are still plenty of communes around and the effects of their experiment
can be felt today.
When the movement got going, between the summers of love
and the Reagan/Thatcher eras, commune living was pretty synonymous with
anti-capitalism. Money was pooled, vegetables were grown and everything
possible was done to avoid being part of the process of supply and demand.
So it might come as a surprise to learn that some of the communities functioning
today look a lot like corporations.
"
Since the 1980s we have gained in complexity," says May East, chief
executive officer of Cifal Findhorn, one of the many offshoots of the quasi-religious
Findhorn community, set up by Peter Caddy and his wife Eileen on a caravan
site in Morayshire, Scotland in 1962. "We have diversified into 50
business initiatives, from a community store to a bakery, a wind farm, a
record company, a factory that makes solar panels and so on and so on." And
these are not all small undertakings. One of them, the Findhorn Foundation,
has an annual turnover of Pounds 1.6m from its training and consultancy
work.
Just over 250 miles south, in Dumfries and Galloway, Laurieston
Hall, which began life as a radical community in 1972, is now a thriving
conference centre doing a nice line in environmental and spiritually oriented
retreats. "Laurieston has been in the conference business for a long
time," says Chris Coates, one of the editors of Diggers & Dreamers,
the UK directory of intentional communities, as communes now prefer to be
known. "They got serious and used it as an income stream. Some of the
early conferences were very anarchic. Now they are very organised."
There's no doubt that many of the early communards would
find places such as Findhorn and Laurieston Hall astonishing, with their
eager embracing of income streams and cost centres. Andrew Rigby, one of
the early chroniclers of the movement, wrote in 1974 about a commune that
made a small income by baking and selling fruit loaves, every so often giving
away a batch because they were uncomfortable about making a profit. Marx's
principle of "from each according to his abilities, to each according
to his needs" seemed to be designed to eradicate differences in wealth
or income. And, in 1970, a run-down big house in the British countryside
could be bought for Pounds 2,000, a sum easily within reach of a few people
and an inheritance or two.
Inevitably, ideology came up against reality. Between the
1960s and 1980s, the developed world saw a significant rise in standards
of living and people's aspirations rose with them.
"
The ideas of a 'good life' change," says Lucy Sargisson, associate
professor of politics at the University of Nottingham, who has made a study
of "utopian" communities. "People don't want to give up having
a car, having a nuclear family. Maybe idealism is always doomed to fail.
It runs up against the real world and people's changing needs. It needs
to compromise and that can be hard."
Many communes, built on sincerely held beliefs, collapsed
when faced with the tempting reality of the "straight" world.
While communities in the US, New Zealand or Australia could cushion themselves
from the rest of the world by setting up in the middle of nowhere, in the
UK and Europe most communes were in or on the edge of towns and villages.
Their members were able to compare their own standards of living with those
of the people around them and found them wanting. When that happened it
took a lot of glue - the kind that binds a religious community, for example
- to keep the communes together.
In his book Communes in Britain Rigby describes many incidents
of people leaving communes, fed up with the privations the lifestyle entailed.
Today it is the religious groups, such as the Bruderhof communities in the
US,Germany and the UK and the Hare Krishna-run Bhaktivedanta Manor in Hertfordshire,
north of London, that are expanding. Belief, it seems, goes a long way in
helping human beings co-operate.
An important exception is Findhorn, one of the UK's longest
surviving communities. Although it was founded on a belief in Eileen Caddy's
ability to channel the word of God, Findhorn has always avoided a single
ideology. "One of the reasons we have survived for four decades is
that we have never had a dogma," says East. "We are a laboratory
of human emotions. We have kept updating the experiment."
Critics of communal living are quick to seize on words such
as "laboratory" and "experiment". And they have a point.
Communal living challenges the way modern liberal values prioritise the
individual over the group and that is not always to everyone's comfort.
In a commune there are usually pressures over money (in short supply), work
(pooled and not everyone doing their fair share) and, perhaps most important
of all, privacy, which can sometimes be non-existent. Many of the communes
that started so optimistically in the 1970s fell when faced with these very
human problems.
"
I am very jealous of my privacy," says David Michael, a former communard
who is now part of the UK's growing co-housing movement. "I lived in
a commune in Bradford-upon-Avon. At first it was a community but gradually
we made our own private spaces. I am beginning to think there is a human
need for privacy and a human need for communality. People vary in how much
of one or the other they want."
Michael is now managing director of The Cohousing Company,
which has set up the UK's first purpose-built co-housing community in Stroud,
Gloucestershire. The project has about 85 residents spread across 35 houses
and flats and common facilities such as a dining room and a meeting hall. "In
communes there was an enforced communality," he says. "Here we
have regular evening meals in the common house but you don't need to go
to them."
It is likely that Michael has hit upon one of the fatal flaws
of much early communal living, the rejection of privacy, either in terms
of space or as private property. Even now at The Farm, a 36-year-old community
in Tennessee which is now essentially a high-tech environmental think-tank,
visitors can still find themselves sometimes using toilets without doors
or partitions, a hangover from the time when walls meant prisons and keeping
to yourself meant you had something to hide.
Yet, as any alumnus of a British boarding school can tell
you, lack of privacy can erode the soul and sometimes the only way to get
away from the scrutiny of your fellow communards was to leave the commune.
Rigby found many examples of people leaving communes once they had found
a partner, the reason they gave being that they needed some space of their
own in which to bring up children.
Sargisson agrees. "There are people I have met who lived in intentional
communities in the 1970s and are still living a communal lifestyle but it
is less intensively communal than in the 1970s. You don't find a lot of
communities with everyone under the same roof."
Another early illusion of the communards was that there was
no need to create a formal decision-making process, that if you worked hard
enough at it decisions could be made by consensus. The impulse against decision-making
was essentially an anti-authoritarian one, of course, fuelled by a fantasy
that, as long as people all got on, in the end they would find a way to
agree.
In fact, the opposite has turned out to be the case. While
the original founders of communes tended to be people who already knew each
other, were fairly like-minded and understood each other's idiosyncratic
ways of resolving problems, once communes grew, making decisions turned
out to be more difficult.
"
The first decision a group has to make is to decide how they
will decide," says East. "At Findhorn, we have continually adapted
our ways of deciding."
Each of the community's businesses has a different way of
making decisions, depending on its structure and the number of people involved.
Mostly the choice is between consensus and what East calls "deep democracy".
"
Say you have 100 people and they have to decide what we spend
a new grant on - a new windmill or some eco-homes," she says. "Ninety-eight
people want one thing and two want the other. In deep democracy, we give
those two people time to say why they are opposed and to go back to the
drawing board to try to find a way of bringing the two proposals together.
You want to involve the people who originally voted against the decision.
And you want to avoid doing what simple democracy does and creating 49 per
cent potential saboteurs."
East admits that Findhorn's decision-making process takes
much longer. "But," she says, "once a decision is made, it
is much faster to implement as everyone is behind it."
"
You do need to have a decision-making structure in place," agrees Sargisson. "Dealing
with change is always difficult in life but particularly difficult with
people who have a commitment to the 'good life'. Most groups who have succeeded
over time have a decision-making process, often a very elaborate one. They
spend a lot of time in meetings."
Problems with money, ideals clashing with the real world,
lack of privacy, difficulties making decisions - there are plenty of reasons
why commune living should not survive. But in the UK, Europe, the US, Australia
and New Zealand, there are plenty of intentional communities that are thriving.
They are learning from past mistakes and adapting to new times.
In one important sense they remain true to their roots. The
more radical of the early communes saw themselves as having an evangelical
role - they would change the world by example. "Look how we live," they
said, "and do the same." It was unlikely that many in the developing
world would heed the early communards' strongly anti-capitalist message,
especially when their neighbours where buying new cars and colour televisions.
But today the agenda has moved from an anti-capitalist one to a pro-environmental
one and representatives from the likes of The Farm and Findhorn find themselves
speaking on the subject to United Nations committees.
Their message is already affecting how the rest of us choose
to live. This month in London apartments go on sale in a new luxury development
on the north bank of the Thames. Prices begin at Pounds 300,000 for a studio,
rising to Pounds 1m for a three-bedroom flat. Too much for your average
communard, certainly. But the combined water and heating system, which can
burn biomass fuel such as switchgrass, hemp and biodegradable waste, would
make them feel right at home. |