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Journey to Jumbun and Murray Falls

July 30, 2021 by Trudy Juriansz

A small team from GEN Australia travelled to up to far north Queensland in June 2021, to visit Jumbun Community and to facilitate a 3-day ecovillage workshop for Jumbun community members, their stakeholders and surrounding Indigenous communities.

3-day ecovillage workshop, held at the Murray Falls National Park near Jumbun Community

We explored the ecovillage framework and 32 principles of social, ecological, culture and economy, integrating into whole systems design, which helps to create pathways to transition to being a thriving community. We had space not only to learn about a design system that aligns with indigenous culture and values, but also to hear Jumbun’s story from the eyes of elders, to listen to each other and the current issues we are facing and how we can address them collaboratively into the future. An important aspect that became visible is that Jumbun is rich in land and culture and the possibilities to regenerate their community are vast. 

The Jumbun elders and GEN Australia team also visited the local school, Murray Upper State School before the workshop, so the elders could engage the children and form stronger bonds with them. The elders shared openly and lovingly, their knowledge and wisdom with the children, of tree and plant species that have both medicinal values and are and have been bush tucker for many generations before. 

Jumbun Elders, Aunty Phyllis & Uncle Abe with children from Murray Upper State School

We had the opportunity to have a representative from Permayouth, a youth-led network and the founder of AI.AM Naturals, an ecological and ethical enterprise making home and self care products, hold mini-workshops with the students and teachers from Murray Upper State School at the Murray Falls National Park, where the workshop was held, a few kilometers away from the Jumbun community.

Maia Raymond sharing about Permayouth & Sion Zivetz doing a soap making demonstration

Next steps & broadening outreach

Through this workshop, many opportunities have emerged for Jumbun and the network. A few key projects have emerged from the process and Jumbun, GEN Australia, Permayouth and other stakeholders are exploring the next steps and are co-designing the initiatives.

The ecovillage design framework is a broad design system that can be applied to any type of community, as it is diverse yet easily adapted to any local context or country. The framework and design principles have been distilled over 25 years from thousands of communities (intentional, traditional and indigenous) worldwide and are constantly informed by the people and communities who choose to use it as a guiding tool. The approach we take in the workshop is interactive, yet intimate, sitting in circle, listening and sharing stories, while allowing the space also to connect to the broader global systems and issues and the state of the world. 

GEN Australia uses a set of ecovillage cards (areas of regeneration and principles) and mat that are laid out on the floor so you can see the principles (words and pictures) and reflect on how that relates to our community. Jumbun is currently in discussion with GEN Australia about developing a project to adapt the cards with pictures and words that could be more relatable to Aboriginal communities.

If other Aboriginal communities are able to step into ownership of their pathways to self-reliance and sustainability, the opportunities for peer-to-peer exchange, knowledge transfer and collaborative work grows immensely. 

We will share more stories like this as our connection and relationship deepens with Jumbun and other indigenous communities in Australia

Filed Under: ecovillage transition, event, first nations, indigenous communities, network

Future Plans for GEN Australia 2020

November 1, 2020 by Trudy Juriansz

A group of volunteers at the Emergence Convergence in 2019 were keen to bring about steps forward for GEN Australia. Several action groups formed early in 2020 and the Sociocratic governance style was used by a small highly experienced ecovillage team forming the General Circle to create an organisational structure with connected circles as shown in the diagram below. Since then, three have evolved: the Management Circle, Education Circle and Communications Circle. Diving in with these wonderful people helped me better understand more about GEN, sociocracy, ecovillages, the connection with GAIA Education and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) and the educational programs offered.

2019 Emergence Convergence Maleny, Queensland, Australia
GEN Australia Emergence Convergence, Maleny 2019

In March 2020, I took my vision of participating in a social media program for not for profits to the GEN Australia Management Circle because the Education circle had plans for an Australian flavoured Ecovillage Design Education program. So, then the Management and Communications circles trundled through COVID lockdown to kindle GEN Australia’s evolving vision.

November was the time in 2020 that the AGM was held and new office bearers of GEN AU voted in. Then in December, Jason Hilder stepped up as Chair, Shane Sylvanspring continued as Treasurer, and I, Tanya Mottl, volunteered as Secretary, knowing that would be how I’d learn more. From that, monthly meetings have continued the momentum of regenerating our national network.

The GEN AU team has revised the strategy and clarified the Mission, Vision and Aims and are aligning with GENOA to co-ordinate the 2020 Regional Gathering Coming Home: A Gathering for Restoration and Renewal to be held on 27th & 28th November. Working interstate and internationally over Zoom has been wonderful. I’ve felt so privileged working with GEN Australia – Jason Hilder at Crystal Waters while he’s finished his PhD in Ecovillages; Shane Sylvanspring, Public Officer, as he’s been working with his own community, Sue Gilbey and her podcast The Adelaide Chronicles and JJ Blake, a font of wisdom and a Transformation Game facilitator. I’ve come to see what a critical role Trudy Juriansz has played in her role as Network Director in GEN, her volunteering in GENOA and in GEN Australia. We’ve been blessed to have all these people. I was thrilled to do Ambassador peer to peer support work aka “communities in practice” with Alice Güntert, Ambassador with GEN Africa and Amena Bal, winner of the Hildur Jackson Award, at TI Ecovillage in Bangladore, for their multifaceted ecovillage project and look forward to further great outcomes.

GEN Australia - workshop
GEN Ambassadors, Communities in Practice – Tanya, Amena, Alice

GEN Australia and GENOA recently put out a call for volunteers to help with the Regional Gathering. Next step will be funding and partnerships. We look forward to growing the network. I feel this an exciting and crucial time to be involved in ecovillages, sustainability and regenerative actions? Don’t you? There will be some great programs coming using the GEN and GAIA Education resources. If you feel that drive to take action, GEN AU and GENOA welcome your registration to volunteer.

There are many ways to participate. Being involved is a great way to learn about ecovillages, meet the people involved, build meaningful relationships and be part of the regenerative movement. I invite you to connect with our newsletter, Facebook page and other social media channels and websites listed here… it’s an exciting time!  

We’re all looking forward to celebrating GEN’s 25th anniversary on 5-11 February 2021 GEN International Online Summit ‘Ecovillages as Sanctuaries of Life’ – showcasing how ecovillages contribute to the mitigation of climate crisis in the face of multiple crises and function as resilient communities of practice under the conditions of environmental breakdown.

Register via email to: [email protected]

Filed Under: network

My Journey into ecovillage-ism

October 16, 2020 by Tanya Mottl

As a newcomer to the world of ecovillages, and a passionate member of GEN Australia, I’m noticing many changes and great opportunities unfolding. Let me share those with you.

        While living in Prague and teaching English for four years, I’d focused on environmental lessons and I thought that Australia was quite environmentally progressive. On returning to Australia in early 2019, I wanted to explore ecovillages and ecologically sound lifestyles… friends pointed me to Narara. Due to an imminent hip replacement, fulfilling my dream of going to Findhorn Foundation (the renowned ecovillage in Scotland) wasn’t happening soon I felt it best to look at Plan B – Australia!

        Narara Ecovillage Open Day in May 2019 was sticky and hot. Loads of welcoming people and the foundations of great buildings underway, yet, being a sailor, I noted no ocean breeze. Although I was satisfied to realise this part of my dream, I wasn’t feeling great physically nor did I like the sweat. Could I consider living “so far” from the sea without a cooling Nor-East summer breeze? Yes, yes, first world issues!

         Why was I here? I was becoming increasingly agitated about what we humans were doing to our planet and wanted to find out how I could contribute to regeneration by reinventing and transforming my skills – and joining. The Impact Assessment Survey of Ecovillages by GEN had prompted me to learn more. I resonated with the presentation by Narara’s founder Lyndall Paris and that their vision was to be a ‘demonstration ecovillage’. I was also very excited to discover a Training of Trainers experiential training program was being run the next month and registered. What a treat I was in for!

Just a month after the first Open Day at Narara, I was grateful to observe the village in another season. It seems I was starting to use Permaculture Principle #1 – Observe and Interact! Sailors do that instinctively!

    So began a remarkable five day immersive program… and the beginning of my own transformation; reconnecting with my country of birth and the growing recognition of the knowledge and custodianship of First Nations people to the land. No matter our backgrounds, participants were able to relate to the dimensions of sustainability – ecology, economy, social and cultural.

We explored many ways to have meaningful conversations utilising the GEN Ecovillage Design Cards and what they meant to us in our own bioregions. Most importantly, we looked at solutions and ways to partner with other organisations.

   

GEN Australia workshop - Kosha

I enjoyed watching Kosha Joubert, former GEN CEO, (far right in photo) Trudy Juriansz, (3rd from left) Networking Director GEN & GENOA, and Shane Sylvanspring (2nd from left), GEN Australia, all experienced in the facilitation of ecovillage design education programs. All the participants had something rich to contribute. Seasoned permaculture teachers Morag Gamble and Paula Paananen shared about their work in developing countries and what environmental degradation these colonised countries were facing as a result of industrialisation.

 

 

The Narara Ecovillagers were all so welcoming, helping to create a participatory learning and community space. From the training and diverse experiences in the room, I started to realise that actually Australia wasn’t so environmentally progressive after all – despite our enormous resources readily available!

Wendy Armstrong, a participant from Tasmania, spoke about GEN Australia being a national network, part of the region of GENOA and part of the growing Global Ecovillage Network… sharing that GEN’s purpose is to catalyze communities for a regenerative world through initiatives that bridge cultures, countries, and continents. I liked this!  So, I then dived into the Network meetings from the next month to find out more and expand my learning from the week.

       

 My attendance of the Narara workshop entitled me to apply as an “Ambassador”… AND I had a vision! These fabulous design cards and the experiential processes would be excellent resources for training in sustainability and regeneration in schools, businesses and communities. The time to take action was ripe! 

        Then, in 2019 and beyond, those horrific bushfires, flooding, unbroken drought in some rural areas, and from March 2020 the COVID-19 pandemic has been shocking to say the least. The call to take action was echoing louder!

        I liked that GEN Australia was made up of passionate and experienced, as well as novice, ecovillagers who draw upon the resources of the wider GEN network, permaculture principles and the alliance with GAIA Education.

        I was learning about how the organisation was growing from people who had connected with GEN in Findhorn and were expanding the network here in Australia since 2011. They had gathered in 2016 at the Tasman Ecovillage.

        The founding team were – Wendy Armstrong from Tasman Ecovillage, Andrew Olivier, a GEN Board member based at Narara, Shane Sylvanspring from Balaya Buyul Community, Sue Gilbey from Christie Walk – also supported by John Talbott who has acted as advisor and mentor with his 25 years experience at the Findhorn Foundation. From that early strategic meeting, GEN Australia was registered and a constitution formed.

        I started to learn of the early elders – Max Lindigger, co-designer of Crystal Waters, QLD, Australia, who actually set up GENOA, and Helena Norbert Hodge who spent time in Ladakh and saw how western “development” destroyed principles that had functioned perfectly for centuries in economy, building, farming and social and cultural interactions too. I’d seen her too in 2040, Damon Gameau’s popular documentary about localisation.

        Of course, others participated in community building and carrying forward the vision of GEN and strengthening the links with GENOA. Peter Gringinger also instigated GEN Australia’s involvement at events such as Melbourne’s Sustainability Festival in 2017, Chris Gibbings was a vision Councillor for GENOA. >>> https://www.genaustralia.org.au/home/bios/

        Global Ecovillage Network in Oceania and Asia (GENOA) is a regional body which promotes ecovillage living throughout the region where people live together in a sustainable way, with dignity, and in harmony with each other and with nature. Since 2011, representatives of GEN Australia have been working with and attending GENOA gatherings.

The last regional event was in 2018 at Wongsanit Ashram in Thailand. This gathering held space for 75 people from 14 countries. The next GENOA regional event was due to be in 2020 in Auroville, India however that has turned into an online event.

GENOA Gathering 2018 - Photo by Eugénie Dumont
GENOA Gathering 2018 at Wongsanit Ashram, Thailand

Filed Under: ecovillage, experiential learning, network

Growth of the ecovillage and intentional communities networks

September 17, 2019 by Shane Sylvanspring

With the growth of the intentional communities, land-sharing communities and ecovillages in Australia, the need to have a network organisation to support communities on the ground emerged in the 1980s and has become stronger in the last 10 years.

PAST NETWORKS

There have been loose networks in the past in Australia such as the Intentional Communities Conference (ICC) network and PAN in the 1980’s. The ICC ran for a number of years organising bi-annual community conferences in Australia with the last one held at Moora Moora Co-operative in 2013 and was attended by representatives from over 40 communities.

PAN was developed in the 1980’s as primarily a political lobby group to assist Land-sharing Communities in Northern NSW in relation with the government and was disbanded in 1990 when the need waned.

Intentional Communities Conference, Moora Moora, 2013

Emergence of GEN AUSTRALIA (2014 – 2019)

GEN Australia registered as a not-for-profit incorporated association in 2014 to support ecovillages and intentional communities in Australia. GEN International was however founded in 1995 at Findhorn Ecovillage in Scotland, with some of Australia’s ecovillage elders, including Max Lindegger (Crystal Waters), Helena Norberg Hodge (Local Futures) and John Talbot (Narara Ecovillage).

A small group of Australian ecovillages saw a need for GEN presence in Australia, in addition to the regional branch, GEN Oceania and Asia (GENOA). Shane Sylvanspring (formerly Bruns Ecovillage) and Andrew Olivier (Narara Ecovillage) had previously learned about and experienced GEN at Findhorn and in other parts of Europe and felt excited to start the Australian chapter. A few others also interested in creating a national network joined to create the core team, including Wendy Armstrong (Tasman Ecovillage), Sue Gibley (Christie Walk) and Peter Gringer (Gaia Education). Chris Gibbings (Bellbunya) also was active in the GENOA network as the Australian representative.

GEN Australia has met every month for the last 5 years, networking and discussing issues with communities here in Australia primarily with the founding committee members. A small but tight network has developed as a result.

Planning at Tasman Ecovillage Conference, 2015

Significant things were achieved:

The Tasmanian Ecovillage Conference in 2015 hosted by GEN Australia

This brought together around 20 communities at Tasman Ecovillage and the future of a national network was discussed. A loose agreement for a group represented by Co-housing Australia, Co-operatives Australia and GEN Australia were to form to continue intentional community conferences into the future. This never eventuated due to lack of resources and time commitments.

Regional Gathering Nth NSW and SE Qld at Currumbin Ecovillage 2018

A gathering for communities in the SE QLD and Northern Rivers area. A intimate group gathered from various communities and networks, with learnings, exchanges and networking taking place.

Representation at The Sustainable Living Festival (VIC) and other various festivals and events

Throughout the years various members representing GEN at events and festivals.

Members including Shane, Andrew and others have also brought GEN Ecovillage Design Education (EDE) programs and GEN principles into their work developing and supporting communities.

Other Similar Networks 

Recently there has been an emergence of networks and groups that include intentional communities and ecovillages in Australia.

Fellowship of Intentional community has an online directory with many communities in Australia registered.

Welcome to FIC

Co-housing Australia – a volunteer group representing cohousing in Australia. Constitutres are mainly from South Australia and Victoria

Alliance of Intentional Communities Australia (AICA) – A South Australian group that has no projects and is unclear of its intentions. Founded by Ed Wilby.

Co-operative Living Australia – primarily established by Mark Snell from Moora Moora and specifically interested in communities that established as a co-operative.

http://www.equilibrium.org.au/coophousing

Ecovillages Australia – Established by Andrew Mclean and Clare Odgen – recently purchased first property in Maleny to establish an eco-community. They do however want to be a larger network.

Polkadot Ecovillages – founded by Jimmy Hirst to raise awareness of tiny homes and ecovillages.

Filed Under: intentional communities, network

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