There are - as I have pointed out ad nauseam in previous columns
- many similarities between 'developing' a community and making a garden.
Communities are things that grow spontaneously and are, if left to
their own devices, self-organising. So are gardens. Communities require,
and instil, humility in their leaders. The best gardeners approach their
gardens with the same sense of humility. Good gardeners are very 'umble
people, Mr Copperfield.
If you approach a garden with a prepared awareness, you can learn a
great deal - principally about yourself. The same is true of a community.
Advertisement
The question arises: Where do we start? How and where do we sow those
first seeds, how do we engender that first sense of 'community'? What to
do if the 'soil' is bare, if there is no community 'ground' prepared?
We know where we want to get to: we want a mature, self-organising,
self-tending community. One that fully participates in its own destiny;
that positively buzzes with the activities and links that sustain the
social fabric, which (to put it in today's words) 'build social capital'.
We want a community that makes us feel an integral part of the whole. But
how to begin?
First, set yourself your primary goal, which must be "to work
myself out of a job".
Gardening - and community 'development' work - is not like other work,
it's essentially self-therapy; and the first thing you will need to
conquer in yourself is the desire to be needed. Remember humbleness?
That's what it means: to not feel that you are, or need to be, at the
centre of things.
What am I talking about?
Well, the role of a 'community developer' or a social worker, or a
'change agent', or a gardener for that matter, is to act as a catalyst -
and then to stand back and watch the result, the reaction, the combining
of elements, the growth of the system. Without interfering.
Advertisement
Communities grow, and develop, and mature, and change, all by
themselves. They simply need a start, that initial combination of elements
that starts the process. It's a bit like the ancient art of alchemy - the
refining of base metals (people) into gold (community). And a lot like
gardening.
If the 'community development' worker continues to (attempt to)
'manage' the community, there's a very good chance that they are being
paternalistic. "You should be going this way!" Not so - if the
community wants to run off a cliff, that's their affair, not yours. Let
'em go - after making sure that there are signs to more positive
'outcomes'.
The principal job of the community development worker is to set up the
community 'structures' that allow the members of the community to act
effectively within and outside the community - and then to stand back.
Discuss in our Forums
See what other readers are saying about this article!
Click here to read & post comments.