Berkeley
Daily Planet May
25, 2001
by Peter Crimmins
Experiences
vast for Camphill filmmaker
Many people call them retarded. In
Russia, developmentally disabled people are invalids.
In
a small farming community called Svetlana (about 90 miles
east of St. Petersburg) they are called villagers.
They
work the field, harvest potatoes, take them to market,
and even build the buildings that make their village.
They are part of a community organized by a few staff
members and a trickling stream of volunteers in the rural
Russian outback, where everyone learns from everyone
else.
A
video portraying this life, Svetlana: the Camphill
Experience in Russia, will have its premiere screening
on Saturday. Director Gunnar Madsen, and his brother
and Svetlana resident Peter will be in attendance.
Last
Saturday Peter Madsen sat sitting in his brothers
kitchen in west Berkeley. After eight years running the
farming village in Svetlana, the Palo Alto native has
picked up a slight Russian lilt in his voice. Its
an accent that didnt come easily.
When
I did finally learn to speak Russian, I was amazed that
they couldnt conceptualize someone who would come
from so far just to help,
Madsen said of his neighbors. They laughed.
Developmentally
disabled people in Russia are often ostracized, erroneously
thought of as the result of an alcoholic pregnancy. Peter
came to Svetlana because he had heard of the village
that takes these children and adults and puts them to
work. He discovered these villagers
are vital for the communitys long-term growth.
Gunnar
said he had always wanted to visit his brother in his
Russian home, but was not too thrilled about traveling
halfway around the world to go to an impoverished Russian
potato farm populated by disabled people.
Then
he got a call from his mother. The farm needed funds,
and Gunnar, a singer and founding member of the a cappella
group The Bobs, had some experience making videos. Gunnars
trepidation turned to excitement. If I could go
and help my brother with a movie, then it was a grand
adventure and I couldnt wait to buy the ticket.
Im going to Russia, to meet these amazing people.
Yahoo! As soon as I had a task that would lead me to
it, then it was fine.
Gunnar
admitted that he was still afraid of meeting the community
of mentally handicapped people, with visions of spooky
insane asylums in his head. Upon arrival all his fears
melted away.
Half
these people are disabled, but aside from a few Down
syndrome people, you couldnt tell who is or who
isnt. The lines are not that clearly drawn. Then
it starts to sink in: Of course the lines are not clearly
drawn, were all people, and we all have our disabilities.
And this happened after 10 minutes of being there.
The
Camphill Experience in the title of the video
is a reference to an education and community model begun
by an Austrian pediatrician and educator named Dr. Karl
Koenig who, in 1939, fled from the Nazis to Scotland. There,
on an estate called Camphill, he began a community for
developmentally disabled children. His educational system
focused on the villagers abilities, rather than their
weaknesses. Mixing staff and volunteers with the villagers
in all the communal work allows them to teach and learn
from each other.
The
original Camphill serves as a rough model for a network
of Camphill communities throughout the world. There are
almost 100 schools, villages, farms and institutions
bearing the Camphill name in 20 countries.
Peter
Madsen said mixing the more intelligent and efficient
people with the villagers is critical to
the success of the community. Social activities are recognized
as of equal importance as daily chores, and the villagers
input is regarded with the same gravity as that of village
organizers.
I thought it would be all the intellectually capable people that drive
the thing forward, said Gunnar. Like, Let them bake the bread
while we figure out the finances for next year. But theyre included
in the meetings. If you just had intellectual people in there, we start to
get lost in ourselves.
When
are we going to have another picnic? is one of
the vehement interruptions you might hear from a villager
in a meeting. And that becomes the main topic of
discussion, Peter said. Which one of us would
have put our foot down and said, Its time
for our picnic? It becomes an imperative. And theyre
right.
Just
as the film is a portrait of the Svetlana community,
it is also pushing the hard sell. The Russian village
is looking toward America for funds because charity in
Russia, still in the wake of socialism, is almost unheard
of. American industry is quickly descending on the newly
opened Russian market, but philanthropic moneys for charity
organizations are not forthcoming.
Peter
says he is beginning to seek grants. However, grant money
is only given to organizations that have proven nonprofit
status, which is difficult to do from Russia because
the government has no official standards for non-profit
organizations.
There
is a Camphill community in Northern California just
outside Santa Cruz which might seem more hospitable
than a Russian potato farm. But Peter Madsen says their
challenges are much different.
Theirs is with schmoozing with municipal health departments
and proving themselves the better of the many good options
for handicapped people, said Peter. And thats
maybe why its so exciting to see what is happening
in Camphill in Russia right now because it is so pioneering. |