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Black and Indigenous Communities Create Intentional Living Spaces Across US

People of color are establishing communal living arrangements from California to Alabama, focusing on land stewardship and shared values.

Synthesized from 2 sources

Black Americans and Indigenous people are forming intentional communities across the United States, establishing small groups of people who live in shared areas based on common values and vision. These communities take various forms, from rural ecovillages to urban co-housing arrangements where residents maintain individual units while sharing communal spaces.

One example is Black to the Land, an ecovillage located in Boonville, California, situated on 189 acres about 115 miles north of San Francisco. The community houses six Black residents who live off the grid, using well water and solar power exclusively. The property features redwood, Pacific madrone and oak trees, along with dozens of fruit trees and gardens growing squash, cucumbers, tomatoes, beans, corn and peppers.

Zappa Montag, one of the residents at Black to the Land, described the effort as an attempt to "reverse-gentrify the country." The community operates as stewards of the land, maintaining the property's natural features including a small stream that runs through a valley surrounded by hills.

Intentional communities represent a growing movement among people of color seeking alternative living arrangements rooted in environmental sustainability, cultural traditions and mutual care. These communities span from California to Alabama, reflecting a nationwide trend toward communal living spaces that prioritize shared responsibility and land stewardship over traditional individual property ownership models.

Sources (2)

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48Moderate Trust

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