{"id":3765,"date":"1983-01-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1983-01-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-64-no-1-jan-feb-1983-the-community-spirit\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:51:47","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:51:47","slug":"vol-64-no-1-jan-feb-1983-the-community-spirit","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-64-no-1-jan-feb-1983-the-community-spirit\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 64, No. 1 &#8211; Jan.\/Feb. 1983 &#8211; The Community Spirit"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The community is the heart of civilized                     society. In recent years it has suffered from a lack of care.                     In their concern for the quality of life, people lately have                     been rediscovering its value- and finding that their personal                     well-being and the community&#8217;s are one and the same&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> Nothing matters more to the mass of human beings than their                     need for one another. Our species would not exist, after all,                     if men and women did not mate. Beyond that, man is one of                     the few creatures to feel the need to mate for life and to                     gather his progeny around him in permanent families. Beyond                     that again, families have always answered a natural call to                     come together in groups.<\/p>\n<p>This social instinct is the bonding agent of what we now                     call the community. The community has its roots in the family,                     which it resembles in many ways. It consists of individuals                     with common interests, common problems, and roughly common                     values. But it is not just a big family. It depends much more                     on voluntary co-operation, and its members are free to choose                     whether or not to participate in it. The ties that bind it                     are looser and more fragile. It is more likely to go to pieces                     in the absence of conscious dedication, effort and care.<\/p>\n<p>The basis of a community may be territorial, religious,                     ethnic, professional, or what-have-you. The guiding philosophy                     in every case is that people are stronger together than they                     are apart. This should not be taken to mean that a community                     is merely a necessary evil. The origins of the word reflect                     its spirit: It comes from the Latin <em>communis<\/em>, which                     is composed of <em>com<\/em>, meaning &#8220;together,&#8221; and <em>munis<\/em>,                     meaning &#8220;ready to be of service.&#8221; &#8220;&#8230; Ready to be of service                     together&#8221; &#8211; that implies not only being in the same boat,                     but pulling in unison on the oars.<\/p>\n<p>Certainly in the modern democratic sense of the term, a                     community is purposeful and dynamic. It draws its strength                     from a willingness on the part of its members to work together                     towards commonly-agreed goals. Back of this is a basic <em>feeling                     <\/em>of community which transcends all the practical benefits                     to be derived from co-operation. Like all feelings, it is                     difficult to describe precisely, but some of its ingredients                     are comradeship, tolerance, thoughtfulness and generosity.                     Whatever it is, this feeling is the driving force behind the                     kind of progressive community we know in this country today.<\/p>\n<p>The most common form of community is that of a neighbourhood.                     Neighbourliness is fundamental to community life. But there                     is a difference between being a good neighbour and being a                     good member of the community. In a neighbourly relationship,                     you help the fellow next door on the understanding that he                     will help you if necessary. In your relationship with the                     community, you indirectly help everyone in it, and you do                     not expect to be repaid.<\/p>\n<p>The chances are that anything you do for your community                     eventually will reap its reward in one way or another. At                     the very least, it is an investment in having an agreeable                     place to live. But the fact is that no community could function                     without people who consistently give more than they get &#8211;                     those invaluable toilers in the vineyard who organize events,                     who take the initiative and the responsibility, and who urge                     on the rest to greater things.<\/p>\n<p>This readiness to serve and share is the badge of a civilized                     person. The opposite is selfishness, which is a distinctly                     uncivilized trait. In the primitive state of infancy, one                     of the first words a child will learn to say is &#8220;mine;&#8221; violent                     disputes over toys and trinkets are waged before babies are                     out of diapers. Most parents (not all, unfortunately) train                     their offspring out of their selfishness as they train them                     out of their other anti-social habits. No community is without                     the flawed products of this system &#8211; self-seekers who want                     everything their own way.<\/p>\n<p>For the most part, though, there is enough civility in the                     air to keep communities going. That the modern community exists                     at all represents a victory over the savage side of humanity.                     The earliest groups of human beings must have been much like                     packs of animals which were ruled by the strongest or most                     cunning members. The heirs to this tradition tried to take                     the curse off their crude extortion by claiming that, as superior                     beings, they were entitled to the lion&#8217;s share of other people&#8217;s                     production by God-given right.<\/p>\n<h3>Lighting the beacons of democratic                   life<\/h3>\n<p>This pretence found its fullest expression in the feudal                     system of the Middle Ages. It was the very antithesis of the                     concept of the community. In a community, the rich help to                     support the poor and the strong the weak; that order was reversed                     under feudalism. The common folk were held in bondage to their                     lord and master. Historians tell us that the modern democratic                     community was conceived when the traders and merchants of                     medieval Europe rebelled against this oppressive state of                     affairs.<\/p>\n<p>Merchants in the market towns known as &#8220;burgs&#8221; convened                     to write municipal charters setting out uniform rules governing                     trade and commerce. By so doing, they effectively stripped                     the feudal lords of their power. Once commercial order was                     established, civil order was not far behind; comprehensive                     penal codes were written. The burgs became oases of freedom                     and justice. In some, a serf could win his emancipation from                     bondage by staying a year and a day.<\/p>\n<p>It was only the barest start, of course. As Lord Acton wrote                     in his <em>History of Freedom in Antiquity<\/em>, &#8220;In every age                     [ liberty&#8217;s ] progress has been beset by its natural enemies,                     by ignorance and superstition, by lust of conquest and by                     love of ease, by the strong man&#8217;s craving for power, and the                     poor man&#8217;s craving for food.&#8221; Injustice and inequity continued                     to abound; the march of civilization was set back by wars,                     civil conflict, plagues and famines. Nevertheless, the seeds                     of some of the essential principles of modern community life                     had been sown.<\/p>\n<h3>A regressive community spins inward                   on itself<\/h3>\n<p>The overriding principle was that laws should be made with                     the agreement of those directly affected by them, and not                     by some detached autocrat acting by fiat. Implicit in this                     was the doctrine that there can be no proper authority without                     responsibility. If the laws were to be made by the people                     on the spot, they must be applied, administered and adjusted                     by those same people &#8211; or, in actual practice, by representatives                     answerable to them. Moreover, the laws must take account of                     local reality to the extent that the people subject to them                     were willing to abide by them of their own free will.<\/p>\n<p>The burgs and their satellite villages produced several                     other elements of the modern community. The division of labour,                     in which specialists took over tasks formerly performed in                     the home, made people realize how dependent on one another                     they were. It also helped to promote equality. Writing of                     this period, sociologist Amos H. Hawley explained: &#8220;If functional                     interdependencies are to be relied upon, all parties must                     be treated as equals, at least under the law.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The division of labour gave rise to another prerequisite                     of community life &#8211; standardization. The practical standards                     designed to facilitate trade were underpinned by ethical standards                     of fair dealing. A common understanding of what may and may                     not be done is imperative if people are to live harmoniously                     together. Where there is no code of conduct and no institutions                     to enforce it, there is no peace.<\/p>\n<p>The standards were set and policed by the merchants&#8217; and                     craftsmen&#8217;s guilds, the forerunners of our present service                     clubs and chambers of commerce. In a way these were communities                     in themselves &#8211; associations formed on the common ground of                     a particular trade. Their members were naturally concerned                     with establishing and maintaining orderly, prosperous conditions                     in their markets. Thus they began the first municipal works                     by undertaking such organized programs as cleaning the streets                     where they kept their shops.<\/p>\n<p>The guilds make an interesting study in the growth of the                     institutions which are the vital organs of any community.                     But perhaps the most interesting thing about them is where                     they went wrong. At their zenith, they were genuinely community-minded;                     while they acted primarily in the interests of their members,                     they did much to improve conditions for the general citizenry.                     Then they became obsessed with perpetuating their monopolies                     and privileges. When they lost their public spirit, they slipped                     into decline.<\/p>\n<h3>The limits of utopia are set by human                   nature<\/h3>\n<p>The object lesson of the guilds lies in the fact that they                     stopped caring about <em>all <\/em>the community. They came to                     act as factions, each fighting for its particular interest                     at the expense of everyone else. They went from being progressive                     to being regressive. A progressive community may be thought                     of as a spiral, spinning out concentrically in ever-widening                     circles. A regressive community has the same shape, except                     that it spins inward on itself.<\/p>\n<p>In a regressive community, the natural tendency to think                     in terms of &#8220;them and us&#8221; may be twisted into a mistrust &#8211;                     even a hatred &#8211; of others. The healthy feeling of pride in                     one&#8217;s own kind may be channelled towards destructive ends.                     In contrast, progressive communities find constructive outlets                     for their pride by trying to be more friendly or efficient                     or neater than the next place. In sports and other competitive                     activities, they challenge each other to prove which is the                     better at a given place and time.<\/p>\n<p>It is no accident that communities express themselves in                     acts of co-ordination such as a hockey team or a school band                     playing together. The ideal of teamwork is for everyone to                     perform his specialized part in conjunction with others towards                     a common cause; that is also the ideal of democratic community                     life.<\/p>\n<p>The ideal community, however, has proved to be as much of                     a will o&#8217; the wisp as the ideal hockey team in which the players                     never miss a pass or a scoring opportunity. The 19th century                     utopian communities in the United States and France failed                     ingloriously. If nothing else, these experiments proved that                     the limits of utopia are defined by what human nature will                     allow.<\/p>\n<p>An intrinsic part of that nature is what William James has                     called &#8220;the instinct of ownership.&#8221; In the utopian communities,                     everybody&#8217;s produce and property was pooled. Soviet communists                     subsequently extended this to the extreme of confiscating                     property and redistributing it throughout the population.                     By taking away the right of people to dispose of their own                     efforts and possessions as they saw fit, communism also took                     away the right to follow one&#8217;s conscience and to assert one&#8217;s                     individuality.<\/p>\n<p>The communist experience has demonstrated that the community                     spirit cannot be forced; it thrives only when free men and                     women think for themselves in arriving at a consensus as to                     what is best for the majority. The difference between a commune                     and a democratic community is that members of the latter willingly                     participate in it; a community in which people had to be coerced                     into giving blood or holding a bake sale would not be a pleasant                     place to live.<\/p>\n<p>Neither would a place in which all the good works were performed                     by professionals. Until recently, it looked as if this might                     happen in Canada as part of a centralization of social, educational                     and municipal services and the formation of regional and metropolitan                     authorities. Economics dictated that small-scale localized                     institutions be replaced by larger units operated by central                     bureaucracies. Lately, however, the economics have changed:                     necessary cutbacks in government spending have again assured                     that there will be plenty of vital jobs for volunteers.<\/p>\n<h3>The urban revolt and a fresh look at                   values<\/h3>\n<p>Centralization is only one of the trends in recent years                     that have threatened the survival of the progressive community.                     Quick, efficient transportation created &#8220;bedroom communities&#8221;                     whose commuter-inhabitants are detached from local concerns                     and activities. Television has tended to cut off contact among                     neighbours; the sort of people who once stood chatting on                     street corners may now be found glued to their sets in their                     living rooms. Commercial development has eradicated some urban                     neighbourhoods and left others as dilapidated areas with transient,                     rootless populations.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, the strong roots which once nurtured the sense                     of community have been eroded everywhere in Canada as well                     as in other western nations. In a highly-mobile society, families                     have been scattered all over the map. The cultural homogeneity                     which held communities together has been diluted. The community                     spirit can no longer rest easily on the safe ground of sameness.                     Cultural diversity has called upon people to rise above the                     simple ethos of the tribe.<\/p>\n<p>The pressures on the community are a direct cause of the                     psychological condition the experts call &#8220;alienation.&#8221; Its                     sufferers feel left out of the system of mutual commitment                     and support. This feeling swelled to mass proportions in the                     United States in the 1960s when urban dwellers went on the                     rampage to burn and loot their own neighbourhoods. It has                     been said that the urban revolt was really a revolt against                     the indifference and impersonality of 20th century western                     society. The authorities sought a solution in the strengthening                     of neighbourhood institutions: In other words, they tried                     to redirect a community that had turned destructive back onto                     a constructive road.<\/p>\n<p>The episode helped to bring about a reassessment of social                     values. This also took place in Canada, where many of the                     values are more or less the same as in the United States.                     Since then, the community spirit in both countries has slowly                     been reviving. The movement seems to be in touch with the                     new reality. It recognizes that, because of the many strong                     challenges to the community, ordinary citizens will have to                     try harder than ever to make their communities work.<\/p>\n<h3>The quality of life must begin at home<\/h3>\n<p>Communities have learned to check the heavy hand of centralism                     by asserting themselves sharply when their interests are in                     danger of being overlooked in a bureaucratic shuffle. Imaginative                     new forms of participation and service &#8211; &#8220;walkathons&#8221; and                     the like &#8211; have been devised. Cultural diversity has been                     turned to advantage to broaden the outlook and deepen the                     character of communities. Run-down neighbourhoods are being                     repopulated and attractively restored.<\/p>\n<p>The revival has drawn impetus from the current quest for                     a better quality of life. People are beginning to realize                     that the quality of life begins at home. It obviously depends                     to a large degree on how much they are willing to co-operate                     and share in the pursuit of common objectives. If they cannot                     co-operate and share more in their immediate neighbourhoods,                     then how can they expect to improve the quality of life world-wide?<\/p>\n<p>It all comes down to the community spirit. That spirit is                     made up of helpfulness, consideration, accommodation and mutual                     respect. If it could ever come to rule the conduct of human                     affairs, men and women might yet live to see peace on earth                     as a permanent condition. And if the millennium ever arrives,                     it will have started out in our own back yards.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[70],"class_list":["post-3765","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-70"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 64, No. 1 - Jan.\/Feb. 1983 - The Community Spirit - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-64-no-1-jan-feb-1983-the-community-spirit\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 64, No. 1 - Jan.\/Feb. 1983 - The Community Spirit - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The community is the heart of civilized society. 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