Renaissance Community

Brotherhood of the Spirit: Warwick, Mass. 1970.

The Brotherhood of the Spirit (renamed Renaissance Community in 1974) was one of the largest and most enduring communes in the northeast United States and as such was a distinct link between the commune phenomenon of the 1960s and the current New Age movement. In existence from 1968 through 1988, its rise and fall mirrored that of its charismatic and mercurial leader, Michael Metelica.[1] The Brotherhood of the Spirit underwent several distinct identity changes during its 20-year history.[2] The Brotherhood of the Spirit was reported in the Wall Street Journal, Look, Family Circle, and Mademoiselle magazines. They had also been featured on 60 Minutes and the David Frost show.[2]

In 1974, the Brotherhood became the legally-recognized Renaissance Church Community and moved its operations to the mill town of Turners Falls, MA.

Resentment and Metelica's increasing abusive behavior due to drug and alcohol addictions led to eventual migrations of members out of the community until 1988 when the few remaining members paid Metelica to leave and never return.

The Aftermath: 1988–2006

Reunion, 2002.

In 1988, the Renaissance Community as a recognizable communal entity came to an end. The commune's property was cleaned up and cooperatively managed. The various houses were sold off to private ownership or converted and renovated into separate apartments. Several contracting businesses based in Gill still exist, along with regular seminars dealing with meditation and spiritual practice. Former and current members attend reunions and discuss the community's controversial legacy. In May 2006, former member Bruce Geisler produced a documentary film about the community entitled Free Spirits: The Birth, Life and Loss of a New Age Dream.[3] https://www.ic.org/whatever-happened-to-the-renaissance-community/

References

  1. ^ Gorni, Yosef; Oved, Iaácov; Paz, Idit; Ṭabenḳin, Yad (1987). Communal life: an internat. perspective; [lectures delivered at The Internat. Conference on Kibbutz and Communes, May 1985, Yad Tabenkin-Efal, Israel]. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books. p. 201. ISBN 9780887381508.
  2. ^ a b Sreenivasan, Jyotsna (2008). Utopias in American history. Santa Barbara, CA, US: ABC-CLIO. pp. 330–334. ISBN 9781598840520. OCLC 213444815.
  3. ^ "Free Spirits movie. Michael Rapunzel, Renaissance Community commune". acornproductions.net. Retrieved 2018-04-27. For DVD, Free Spirits : the birth, life, & loss of a New Age dream in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XLIhybMQGsw https://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/search/commonwealth-oai:np194j877 https://www.gen-us.net/whatever-happened-to-the-renaissance-community/ https://www.gen-us.net/we-left-our-community-but-our-community-never-left-us/ https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1971/08/07/vibes http://scua.library.umass.edu/brotherhood-of-the-spirit/ https://archive.org/details/mademoiselle7374julnewy/page/n1369/mode/2up?q=open+the+shutters+and+let+godforce+through

External links

  • "Daniel A. Brown Photograph Collection". Special Collections and University Archives – UMass Amherst Libraries. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  • Devine, Tom (2009-05-22). "Valley Guru". The Baystate Objectivist. Retrieved 2018-04-27.

42°38′36″N 72°29′26″W / 42.6432°N 72.4906°W / 42.6432; -72.4906