{"id":4053,"date":"1970-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1970-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1970-vol-51-no-11-on-being-community-minded\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:51:13","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:51:13","slug":"november-1970-vol-51-no-11-on-being-community-minded","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1970-vol-51-no-11-on-being-community-minded\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1970 &#8211; VOL. 51, No. 11 &#8211; On being Community-minded"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Community is the realm within which                     the life of an individual is realized. We are nonentities                     at birth, and we only become persons when we acquire status                     in a group and a conception of our place among our associates.<\/p>\n<p> The good community is one which provides an environment                     permitting and encouraging and making it possible for the                     individuals composing it to grow to full maturity, and one                     which puts to use for social betterment the maturity available                     in its ranks.<\/p>\n<p>St. Augustine&#8217;s definition is brief and comprehensive: a                     group, large or small, of people united by agreement as to                     the things they love. Such a group will set up standards to                     be aimed at, choose leaders to give point to its actions,                     debate plans, collaborate, co-operate and participate.<\/p>\n<p>One great benefit in belonging to a community is that we                     are not alone. From the beginning of life the human being                     seeks to belong, to be enfolded, accepted, made a member of.                     Though a man were so self-centred as to seek only his own                     good, he must admit nevertheless that the interests of the                     community are his own interests.<\/p>\n<p>Even Henry David Thoreau, sometimes extolled as an example                     of a man living alone, needed help. A neighbour loaned Thoreau                     an axe with which to cut trees for the house he built on another                     man&#8217;s land; some loaned him tools to mortice and tenon the                     logs; others helped him to raise the frame; another gave him                     seed corn for his first planting; he &#8220;dined out occasionally&#8221;                     with his neighbours.<\/p>\n<h3>What is a community?<\/h3>\n<p>A community may be briefly defined as a society in which                     the ideal life of all its members is promoted as efficiently                     as possible. It is a way of life, not merely houses, stores                     and streets. Its people enjoy feelings of security, pride,                     self-respect and hope. It has many different interests: spiritual,                     cultural, political, business, industrial, educational and                     social. It may have a number of problems, like shabby housing,                     inadequate street lighting, overcrowded schools and hospitals,                     and low health standards, but the good community is correcting                     these through re-development, conservation, industrial expansion,                     rising standards of living, racial harmony, and ever-widening                     ideals of what may be. It takes the wants and aspirations                     of its people and writes them in terms of action.<\/p>\n<p>What is needed to build a community of this sort? People                     must be eager and willing to work co-operatively toward solving                     their common problems; they must make use of the potential                     resources existing in the community; and they must learn together                     how to use these resources to their greatest advantage.<\/p>\n<p>Being community-minded is not a folksy experiment. It is                     mature collaboration with like-minded people who are determined                     to lead happy social lives.<\/p>\n<p>There is no fact in life more definite than this: man is                     a gregarious animal, dependent for life and well-being upon                     mingling with others of his kind. This need is met in various                     ways, in the family, in the apartment building, in the street                     of adjoining houses. In a small way, the community spirit                     is displayed by the children who do not care who is marble                     champion of the world but are excitedly interested in who                     is the best marble shooter on the block.<\/p>\n<p>There is real personal meaning to be found in community                     activities like meetings that get things done or provide information,                     sports or crafts groups that provide an outlet for skills,                     study programmes that enlarge minds and broaden horizons,                     and special events that help people to know their neighbours                     better. In a community you learn the fun of living a normal                     self-expressing life, and you do not feel the need for jet-set                     jollities.<\/p>\n<h3>A sense of progress<\/h3>\n<p>A healthy community does not remain static. Changes in environmental                     conditions, changes in aspirations, and changes in the people                     making up the community require modification of plans and                     sometimes change of objectives. &#8220;One of the things that you                     learn from history,&#8221; said Frank Underhill in <em>Values in                     Conflict<\/em>, &#8220;is that every generation of men is always going                     through a period of painful, critical, and destructive transition.&#8221;                     The art of community living is to maintain a basic code and                     to be fearless in revising it so as to serve enlightened reason.<\/p>\n<p>People who are wholly absorbed in maintaining a status they                     believe is necessary to their lives do not contribute meaningfully                     to community living. They are, like hens, too busy observing                     the pecking order in which each bird is pecked by those above                     her and pecks those below.<\/p>\n<p>Social status in a community is a crude measure by which                     to judge the worth of citizens, and no one should be distressed                     by its shallow appraisals. We recall the advice of Epictetus:                     &#8220;Is anyone preferred before you at an entertainment, or in                     confidential intercourse? If these things are good, you ought                     to rejoice that he has them; and if they are evil, do not                     be grieved that you have them not.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>To belong to any class, to move in any rank of life, is                     not a very exclusive distinction or test of refinement. It                     is well if a man can enhance his reputation by the splendour                     of his house, but the master ought to bring honour to his                     fine house, and not the fine house to bring honour to its                     master. Ideally, the community will judge a person on his                     individual accomplishments, his demonstration of responsibility,                     and his personal worth.<\/p>\n<p>Enterprise is needed to build and preserve the community                     in which people can realize their highest ambitions. The quiet,                     stable pattern of the small community has been severely shaken                     by the increase in mobility and the expansion in communication.                     The back-and-forth tide of hundreds of thousands of persons                     to work makes people discontented with the emptiness of life                     aboard commuter trains and buses and in crowded streets and                     buildings. But in his community a man leaves the anonymity                     of the city and becomes a person, intimately associated with                     his neighbours and keenly sensible of his dignity and worth.<\/p>\n<h3>Community problems<\/h3>\n<p>There are some disruptive problems that interfere with good                     community living. Many of these have not yet made themselves                     felt in Canada, because our citizens realize that the Canadian                     people have come from many different lands, and that the future                     of Canada as a good place to live depends upon all of them                     working together.<\/p>\n<p>People who are making the most of community living will                     have respect for human personality unprejudiced by qualities                     of race, colour, class, creed or national origin. The same                     yearning is expressed in the folk and patriotic songs of all                     the more than thirty ethnic groups represented in Canada&#8217;s                     population: for peace and for better living. The words and                     music may differ, but the longing for personal fulfilment                     and the desire for rewarding association with neighbours run                     through them all. Every one has something to contribute to                     the enjoyment and cultural development of all.<\/p>\n<p>Why should not every community have flags of all the nations                     from which its residents come, to fly at the municipal hall                     on anniversary days? This would recognize the diversity of                     the contribution made by all citizens, Canadians now, but                     with varied backgrounds.<\/p>\n<h3>Social control<\/h3>\n<p>It is not sufficient that the members of the community be                     conscientious in seeking to do what is right: there must be                     rules clearly defined and well observed. The exhortation &#8220;Love                     thy neighbour as thyself&#8221; is so broad, and is apt to seem                     so vague, that it has to be supplemented, for practical daily                     living, by more particular rules of conduct. If certain laws                     were not spelled out and enforced, society would soon revert                     to the jungle and anarchy.<\/p>\n<p>The essence and foundation of the community is the fact                     that every member voluntarily renounces his freedom in certain                     directions in return for the advantages which he expects from                     association with the other members of his community. He joins                     with his neighbours in appointing judges, policemen, and others                     as if to say: &#8220;When I am difficult, please kick me into line.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Laws are necessary so that people can live and work in reasonable                     harmony and gain the benefits of co-operative action. Citizens                     have rights, but every right<\/p>\n<p>brings an obligation with it. This is true not only in the                     obvious sense that when one man has a right other men are                     under an obligation to respect it, but also in the more subtle                     sense that when a man has a right he is thereby laid under                     obligation to employ it for the general good.<\/p>\n<p>In a paper entitled &#8220;Defiance of Law&#8221;, Leonard E. Read,                     President of the Foundation for Economic Education, New York,                     has this to say&#8221; &#8220;Man is a social as well as an individualistic                     being. An agency, representing the social side of man ( government                     ( is, to my way of thinking, an absolute necessity. It is                     unthinkable that the social phase of human beings can be attended                     to by each individual acting as his own gun-toting constable,                     each a law unto himself, nothing over and beyond personal                     caprice&#8230;. I have been cast into a dual role, an individual                     within society, be that society good, bad, or indifferent.                     And its problems are no less mine that anyone else&#8217;s. To run                     away from social responsibility is as devolutionary as to                     renounce self-responsibility.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Community institutions<\/h3>\n<p>Social control is exercised by numerous agencies whose chief                     object is other than to regulate society generally. They help                     to fashion ideas on social matters and to mould the lives                     of people according to patterns that are generally approved.                     In this list we find families, churches, lodges, clubs, and                     countless others. These institutions furnish the individual                     with a routine of life, patterns of expected behaviour by                     which he will be judged, and objectives and ambitions toward                     which he may strive.<\/p>\n<p>Members are usually attracted to an institution because                     its stated objectives have meaning for them. Any institution                     will function effectively only in so far as it provides the                     possibility of participation by individual members and the                     possibility that they may experience some satisfying consequences                     of their own action through group participation.<\/p>\n<p>The institution of the family has undergone change in recent                     years as more and more of its functions have been taken over                     by groups outside the home, and the diversity of interests                     increasingly available leads parents and children in different                     directions. Yet the family unit still provides the opportunity                     for sharing a wide variety of experiences and for developing                     the discernment of values and the sagacity that children need                     as they widen and diversify their contacts in the community.<\/p>\n<p>Our religious institutions are powerful forces for developing                     goodwill in the troubled world. All the great faiths teach                     the dignity of the human soul and set up ideals which profoundly                     influence people and help them to practise the simple virtues.                     Their beliefs and their emphasis upon trust, hope and love                     are strong assets toward the development of good citizenship.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to law and the institutions we have convention                     and custom to make life comfortable. The effective functioning                     of a community depends upon the presence of patterns for reciprocal                     behaviour between individuals and groups. Good Canadianism                     includes the practice of the simple courtesies, those social                     amenities which make life run more pleasantly; those niceties                     which enable us to show respect, deference, appreciation and                     goodwill.<\/p>\n<p>Conventions are traditional generalities concerning right,                     wrong, duties, privileges and taboos handed down in society                     as an aid to living comfortably together. There is a fable                     about certain porcupines who huddled together for warmth on                     a cold day, but as they began to prick one another with their                     quills they were obliged to disperse. The cold drove them                     together again, when just the same thing happened. At last,                     they discovered that they would be best off by remaining at                     a little distance from one another. In human society, those                     who transgress the code of politeness and fine manners are                     told to &#8220;keep their distance.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>About participation<\/h3>\n<p>One of the finest experiences in living is liking people                     and wanting to share actively with them in the human enterprise.                     When we worship with others, or feel compassion for others;                     when we meet to enjoy music; when we join with neighbours                     to reason things out, to pursue ideas, to help the weak, to                     honour the noble, to co-operate in building a better world,                     our behaviour is worthy of our status as human beings.<\/p>\n<p>The most useful community activities are those which keep                     individuals in the stream of life. This stimulates continual                     learning, so that the accumulated wisdom of advancing years                     will be strengthened by a growth in concepts suited to changing                     social, economic and political conditions. It is the horror                     of emptiness, of lack of purpose, far more than any economic                     privation or political injustice, that drives people to seek                     revolutionary change.<\/p>\n<p>One way to pool the experience and thinking of citizens                     is to gather them together to explore possibilities and discuss                     plans. Those who participate and make suggestions will feel                     a responsibility to ensure appropriate action. But the proposed                     programme must have a purpose clearly stated and understood.                     Only people who feel involved will give up their favourite                     television programmes to attend a meeting.<\/p>\n<p>To be effective, a community-building meeting must make                     sure that it gives justice and courtesy to all who participate.                     It must show willingness to consider the point of view of                     minorities while having respect for the decisions of the majority.                     To discuss a thing means more than just talking about it.                     It means to examine it in detail, to debate, to sift. Tossing                     an idea around in group discussion helps to formulate it clearly,                     so that the group can decide with some assurance whether this                     is a solid project for the community, whether it can be handled                     at this time, whether the citizens can deal with it or should                     refer it to some authority, and what its priority is.<\/p>\n<p>Every project needs a leader, and everyone in the community                     has a practical stake of the most concrete kind in whatever                     leadership exists. Ideas about leadership have become blurred                     because so many people insist on accepting the superficial                     signs of leadership rather than the proved evidence of ability.                     They take the pompous manner, the blustering voice, or other                     platform trappings, as evidence that the possessor of these                     characteristics has the more basic requirements also. Competent                     leadership raises group thinking to a level above the average.                     Its true function is to bring out people&#8217;s best thought and                     effort, and to unite their activities in a common purpose.<\/p>\n<h3>Co-operation<\/h3>\n<p>To accomplish anything worthwhile, people must work together                     with similar principles and objectives. Marcus Aurelius, the                     philosopher-king, wrote: &#8220;We are made for co-operation, like                     feet, like hands, like eyelids.&#8221; True co-operation is such                     harmony as makes all the particular parts, different as they                     may seem to us, to concur in the general welfare of the community.<\/p>\n<p>Discussion and planning lead to action. Man&#8217;s mission is                     to live with all the ardour of which he is capable.<\/p>\n<p>Action is expressed along many lines. It may foster and                     aid movements which aim at enhancing culture; it may stimulate                     a genuine spirit of democracy and tolerance; it may give to                     youth the hope and confidence in life that have been shaken                     by the present world disorganization; it may restore the sense                     of belonging to people who live in an age of specialization                     and consequent isolation.<\/p>\n<p>At the heart of the small community are the many voluntary                     organizations which devote themselves to service. Their members                     are inspired by the maxim that life means contribution. They                     believe, with Dr. William W. Mayo, that a man with unusual                     physical strength or unusual intellectual capacity or special                     skill owes something to the people. He should put at his neighbours&#8217;                     disposal the fruits of his knowledge, the results of his studying,                     his talent and his skill.<\/p>\n<p>In a large society many people are going to get hurt through                     no special fault of their own, and it is a duty, not a charity,                     for the more fortunate to do what they can to help. There                     is something valid in <em>noblesse oblige <\/em>( &#8220;my position                     demands it of me&#8221;. No worthy citizens wish it to be asked                     of them accusingly in the words of the prophet Jeremiah, &#8220;Is                     it nothing to you, all ye that pass by?&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The good citizen<\/h3>\n<p>Membership in a community involves a measure of commitment.                     We can never escape from our role as members of the human                     race, not even by pleading helplessness; not by saying that                     nothing we can do will make any difference; not by pleading                     that our moral responsibilities are limited because after                     all we are only the evolutionary culmination of a line of                     apes that chanced to descend from the trees; not by moping                     in our private corner as Homer tells us in the Iliad that                     Achilles did, sulking in his tent until a battle was nearly                     lost and his friend had been killed.<\/p>\n<p>If the risks of becoming involved in action for the community                     welfare are great, so are the rewards, for it is one of the                     basic facts of human life that the un-given self is the unfulfilled                     self.<\/p>\n<p>The good citizen will get to know his neighbours and take                     part with them in the life of the community; while aiding                     and supporting the religious institution of his choice, he                     will give people of another religion the same consideration                     as he expects; he will have self-respect, and will live in                     such a way as to enjoy the respect of other people; he will                     get to know the important problems that face his representatives                     in municipal, provincial and federal governments, and use                     this knowledge when he goes to vote; he will try to make his                     home a credit to the neighbourhood.<\/p>\n<p>Citizen knowledge, interest, and action are the lifeblood                     of our democratic society. A well-informed citizen will not                     be misled into supporting shoddy causes; he will avoid the                     credulity and short-sightedness of mob thinking which are                     the beginning of mania, panic, fanaticism, delusion and violence.<\/p>\n<p>Those in authority in the community and its institutions                     owe it to the citizen to provide him with information about                     their purposes and plans. It might be feasible to transplant                     the Ombudsman idea to the community by setting up a central                     service providing information about where to apply for help                     in solving problems, coping with crises and starting something                     designed to improve the community.<\/p>\n<p>The schools could be made centres of intellectual stimulation.                     Adult education should be one of the chief interests of every                     community. It will enlarge the thinking ability and the capacity                     for rational action of citizens. It will give them a realistic                     understanding of what the Canadian way of life is and how                     it can be lived in such a way as to yield the greatest benefits.<\/p>\n<p>A citizens&#8217; council has been found by many communities to                     be an effective instrument to provide a way for citizens to                     participate in the shaping of community life, to promote co-operation                     among organizations and institutions, to enable the entire                     community to marshal all of its forces toward confronting                     and solving problems, to interest, develop and prepare citizens                     to take their place as community leaders, and to provide the                     machinery through which people can speak out for constructive                     change.<\/p>\n<h3>The good community<\/h3>\n<p>The good community is more than the sum of its members.                     It can be the author of ideas that the same people acting                     alone would never think of. Members of the good community                     develop sympathies with one another. They weave together many                     small threads of interest in a fabric of relations which tends                     toward the ideal life for everyone.<\/p>\n<p>Here are some points by which to judge whether a community                     is fulfilling its function with respect to the individuals                     in it. If it is failing in any, that gives the good citizen                     an opportunity to initiate a movement toward improvement.                     The community structure should provide: the possibility for                     personal development; the certainty of a reliable environment,                     free from anxiety and menace; the opportunity for a citizen                     to extend the range of his experience through co-operative                     effort directed toward the better life; and the assurance                     of the respect and affection of neighbours.<\/p>\n<p>There is no doubt concerning the trend toward disintegration                     of modern society. It is assailed on one side by all sorts                     of ideological propaganda, while on the other it is unsure                     of itself, vague about its goals and uncertain about how to                     go about remedying the situation.<\/p>\n<p>As the atomic scientists have told us, it must be one world                     or none. It must be a peaceful world with people helping one                     another or it will eventually cease to be a decent place in                     which to live.<\/p>\n<p>The world community is the sum of all its small communities,                     and it cannot be created unless we conserve the values of                     the intimate neighbourhood.<\/p>\n<p>These values include the affection that comes only with                     the intimacy of working together in a good purpose, the appreciation                     of personality, the supremacy of integrity, and the sense                     of interdependence.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[50],"class_list":["post-4053","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-50"],"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>November 1970 - VOL. 51, No. 11 - On being Community-minded - 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\/november-1970-vol-51-no-11-on-being-community-minded\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1970 - VOL. 51, No. 11 - On being Community-minded - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Community is the realm within which the life of an individual is realized. 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We are nonentities at birth, and we only become persons when we acquire status in a group and a conception of our place among our associates. 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