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Rainbow Gathering

Rainbow Gatherings are temporary, loosely knit communities of people, who congregate in remote forests around the world for one or more weeks at a time[2] with the stated intention of living a shared ideology[3] of peace, harmony, freedom, and respect.[4] In the original invitation, spread throughout the United States in 1971, the "Rainbow Family Tribe" referred to themselves as "brothers & sisters, children of God", "Families of life on Earth", "Friends of Nature & of all People" and "Children of Humankind".[5] All races, nations, politicians, etc. were invited in the desire that there could be peace among all people. The goal was to create what they believed was a more satisfying culture — free from consumerism, capitalism, and mass media — one that would be non-hierarchical, that would further world peace, and serve as a model for reforms to mainstream society. However, the values actually exhibited by the group have at times varied quite a bit from this ideal,[6] with recent decades showing increasing levels of crime at the events,[7][8] and some organizers stating the core principles have been modified, and become more mainstream, in an effort to attract more people.[9][10]

Rainbow Gathering
Trading circle at Rainbow Gathering
StatusActive
GenreFestival
FrequencyAnnually, July 1–7
InauguratedJuly 1, 1972
Next eventFor 2024, in a US National Forest or National Grassland in California, Oklahoma, or Washington[1]
PeopleRainbow Family

Influenced by 1960s counterculture and the non-commercial rock festivals of the early 1970s,[9] Rainbow is a "revitalization movement" with many philosophies and practices that have roots in the historic utopian traditions of the mid-19th century.[10] The first Rainbow Gathering was held in Colorado, U.S. in 1972[4] and was attended by more than 20,000 people. In the 1980s, gatherings started to form outside of North America as autonomous, but connected events around the world.[10]

Media coverage of Rainbow Gatherings since the 1980s, has described Rainbow Gathering attendees with terms such as "aging hippies", "grown-up flower children", or "middle-aged white folks". In the 2000s, the media focus shifted to the increase in crime in the local communities closest to Gatherings, ranging from petty crimes like retail theft to violent assaults and serious traffic charges, such as driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.[6] Despite the movement's environmentalist and pacifist aspirations, Gatherings, which are typically held in national forests and other ecologically sensitive areas, are portrayed by media as having a deleterious impact on the local environment; thus, participants have developed a reputation for excessive drug and alcohol use, in addition to engaging in disruptive and criminal activity.[7][8] This has resulted in increased police presence at Gatherings and a poor reception from area residents and business owners in nearby towns. Cultural appropriation and misrepresentation of Native American traditions and beliefs[11][12] have also given the Gathering a poor reception from nearby reservations.[12][13] In the U.S., these issues are also contributing factors in the decline in attendance at regional and national Gatherings.[14]

Background edit

Rainbow Gatherings and the Rainbow Family of Living Light (usually abbreviated to "Rainbow Family") claim to express utopian impulses, bohemianism, hipster and hippie culture.[citation needed] The gatherings have roots clearly traceable to the counterculture of the 1960s.

Rainbow Gatherings have their own jargon, which helps to create a sense of community and the ability to express their thoughts on society and social justice. In particular, mainstream society is commonly referred to and viewed as "Babylon" - a term also used by Rastafarian culture - from the Christian New Testament connoting the participants' widely held belief that modern lifestyles and systems of government are unhealthy, unsustainable, exploitative and out of harmony with the natural systems of the planet.[citation needed]

History edit

The original Rainbow Gathering was in 1972, and since then gatherings have been held annually in the United States from July 1 through 7 every year on National Forest land.[15] Throughout the year, regional and international gatherings are held in the United States and in many other places around the world.

The first Rainbow Gathering of the Tribes, was a four-day event in Colorado, United States in July, 1972. It was organized by youth counterculture "tribes" (youth communes) of the Rainbow Family, based in Northern California and the Pacific Northwest. The first 3 days of the festival took place at Strawberry Lake, outside of Granby, CO. The lake is in a wooded area elevated 900 ft. above the surrounding area. Campsites surrounded the lake, and there was no event stage of any kind. Then on the final day, July 4, 1972, most in attendance migrated to Table Mountain, a barren summit located a mile away from the lake. This was ostensibly for the noon sighting of a white buffalo, as had been envisioned/prophesied by Barry "Plunker" Adams, a spiritual leader of the Family. However, a week before the festival was to begin, local authorities banned the event, and state police blocked the road to the lake, only letting through tourists with reservations for a nearby resort. Over 10,000 attendees gathered (with permission) on the grounds of a local airport until a court order allowed access to the lake. Estimates of attendance vary between 20,000 and 45,000.

The first gathering was intended to be a one-time event; however, a second gathering in Wyoming the following year materialized, at which point an annual event was declared. The length of the gatherings has since expanded beyond the original four-day span, as have the number and frequency of the gatherings.[10]

Although groups from California and the Northwest region of the U.S. were heavily involved in the first Rainbow Gathering, the U.S. Southeast was strongly represented as well. At least 2,600 people from throughout that region attended and provided support for the 1972 Rainbow Gathering of the Tribes on Strawberry Lake, above Granby, Colorado. There was also strong representation from other regions of the U.S.[citation needed]

In 2017, the United States gathering was held near the 1.4 million acres (5,700 km2) Malheur National Forest in eastern Oregon. Between 10,000 and 18,000 attended the multi-day event, near Flagtail Meadow, with the largest crowds expected on July 4.[16] The 50th Annual Rainbow Gathering took place in Taos County, New Mexico, in July 2021.[17]

The 50th anniversary gathering in July 2022 was held in Routt National Forest, Colorado,[18] with over 10,000 in attendance.[19]

Social aspects edit

Non-commercialism edit

 
"Welcome home" and "We love you" are common greetings at the Rainbow Gathering.

As Michael Niman notes, "Rainbow Gatherings, as a matter of principle, are free and non-commercial." Using money to buy or sell anything at Rainbow Gatherings is taboo. There are no paid organizers, although there are volunteers ("focalizers") who are crucial to setting up the gathering site. Participants are expected to contribute money, labor, and/or material. All labor is voluntary and never formally compensated; conversely, there is no monetary cost or prior obligation required to attend a Rainbow Gathering.[citation needed]

Aside from taking up collections (the "Magic Hat" in Rainbow parlance) for essential items purchased from the local community, there is little or no exchange of currency internally at a Gathering. The primary principle is that necessities should be freely shared, while luxuries can be traded. A designated trading area is a feature at most U.S. Gatherings. It is called "trading circle" if it is circular and "barter lane" if it is linear. Frequently traded items include items such as sweets (often referred to as "zuzus"), books, zines, crystals, rocks, gems, and handcrafts. In some rare cases people may even trade marijuana or smoking pipes (usually when no police are in the area). Snickers bars have emerged as a semi-standardized unit of exchange at some gatherings.[20]

Non-membership edit

There are no official leaders, no formal structure, no official spokespersons, and no membership. Some rainbow family participants make the claim that the family is the "largest non-organization of non-members in the world". In addition to referring to itself as a non-organization, the Rainbow Family of Living Light's "non-members" also playfully call the movement a "disorganization".[21] However, there is a changing network of "focalizers" who take responsibility for passing on Rainbow information year-round, and serve as contacts listed in the Rainbow Guide.[22]

Consensus process edit

Gatherings are loosely maintained by open, free form counsel circles consisting of any "non-members" who wish to be part of a conversation,[21] which use consensus process for making decisions. According to the Mini-manual, "Recognized Rainbow guidelines come from only one source, a main Counsel circle at the annual gatherings."[23]

Talking circles are also a feature of rainbow gatherings. Each participant in the circle talks in turn while all others present listen in silence. A ritual talking stick, feather or other object is passed around the circle to allow everyone the opportunity to speak without being interrupted; this is a custom appropriated from Indigenous peoples of North America.[24][11]

Creativity and spirituality edit

 
"Ohm" Circle on July 4th 1980 at West Virginia Rainbow Gathering

One of the central features of the annual U.S. gathering is silent meditation on the morning of the Fourth of July, with attendees gathering in a circle in the Main Meadow. At approximately noon the assembly begins a collective "Om" which is ended with whooping and a celebration. A parade of children comes from the Kiddie Village, singing and dancing into the middle of the circle.[10]

Spiritually, there is a strong tradition of cultural appropriation.[25][26][27] Native American leaders of several tribes have spoken out against the Rainbows' misappropriation of their religious ceremonies as well as their trespassing onto Native sacred sites.[28][29]

Many spiritual traditions are represented, often with their own kitchen, from Hare Krishnas to Orthodox Jews to several denominations of Christianity and many others.[30]

Creative events may include variety shows, campfire singing, fire-juggling, and large or small art projects. At one gathering, a cable car was rigged to carry groups of four quickly across a meadow. Faerie Camp was "alive with hundreds of bells and oddly illuminated objects". Musicians and music pervade all Gatherings, at kitchens, on the trails, and at campfires.[31]

Gathering logistics edit

 
"Rap 107," concise Gathering participation principles[32]

The Rainbow Family has governed Gatherings of up to 30,000 people. Regional Rainbow gatherings can attract as many as 5,000.[33] The U.S. annual rainbow gathering occurs around July 1-7th, but people come up to a month earlier to help set up (this is known as "Seed Camp") and remain on-site up to a month later to participate in cleanup and to perform site restorations.[34]

Although each event is more or less anarchic, practical guidelines have been reached through the consensus process and are documented in a "Mini-manual". Items that are strongly discouraged, by some, at gatherings include firearms, alcohol, tobacco, and pets. Other items that tend to be discouraged include radios, tape players, sound amplifiers, and power tools.[citation needed]

Camps and kitchens edit

Camps and kitchens are the basic community units of the Gathering. Camps may be based on regional, spiritual, or even dietary commonalities. For example, Kid Village attracts attendees with children, Tea Time specializes in serving herbal teas, Jesus Camp has a Christian foundation. Some kitchens such as the Turtle Soup Kitchen serve predominantly vegetarian meals. Lovin' Ovens is a kitchen that craft ovens out of metal drums, clay, and mud in the area and will cook food such as pizza (meat, vegetarian, and vegan) and different types of bread and snacks. Nic@Nite is a camp that focuses on the sharing of tobacco and tobacco-related products.[citation needed]

Not all camps are kitchens, but all kitchens are camps. In addition to feeding passers-by, kitchens send food to the one or two large communal, predominantly vegetarian meals served daily in the main meadow.[35]

Water and sanitation edit

Drinking water is filtered at gatherings, both by small pump filters and large gravity-feed devices. Attendees are encouraged also to boil drinking water. Water is often tapped at a source (such as a spring or stream) and runs hundreds of yards to main kitchens in the gathering via plastic hosing.[citation needed]

Sanitation has historically been a major concern at Rainbow Gatherings. Human waste is deposited in latrine trenches (typically referred to as 'shitters') and treated with lime and ash from campfires. New latrines are dug and filled in daily. However sanitation may still be inadequate: the 1987 gathering in North Carolina experienced a large outbreak of highly contagious shigellosis (a.k.a. dysentery), and a smaller outbreak occurred in association with a 2018 gathering in Poland.[36][37]

C.A.L.M. edit

C.A.L.M., or the Center for Alternative Living Medicine, is the primary group of doctors at Rainbow Gatherings who assist people with health and wellness and take responsibility for medical emergencies and sanitation of those who attend these large gatherings.[38]

It is an all volunteer, non-hierarchical group encompassing both mainstream, conventional medicine and alternative medicine, such as naturopathic healing modalities. It is common to find physicians working with herbalists, EMTs helping massage therapists and naturopaths coordinating with Registered Nurses on patient care. C.A.L.M. works closely with the Shanti peace army, as they are often the first on the scene in a crisis. There is usually one main C.A.L.M. camp near the inner part of the gatherings and smaller first aid stations set up around the Gatherings. Even those without medical experience are encouraged to help with things such as procuring water and cooking for the healers, who are often too busy to attend main circle or visit other kitchens. In case of any emergency, CALM can be contacted on FRS Channel 3 (no tones, 462.6125 MHz UHF) and other site-specific radio frequencies.[citation needed]

Shanti Sena edit

Within the Rainbow Gathering, security, conflict resolution, and emergency situations are handled by Shanti Sena ("peace army" in Sanskrit), which includes anyone who is capable of helping at that time.[39][better source needed] Shanti Sena also sometimes acts as liaisons to observers and law enforcement officers who patrol the Rainbow Gathering, often tracking the movements of police and park rangers through the gathering, and overseeing the interactions between officers and people attending the gathering to ensure that neither group instigates or takes part in illegal or inflammatory confrontations. This type of interference with police operations resulted in numerous arrests in the 1987 gathering in North Carolina, with state, federal and local officers being assaulted, blocked from patrol areas and threatened. The Shanti Sena at the '87 gathering were characterized by local, state, and federal officers as a criminal gang and were suspected to have collaborated in the assault on an Asheville Citizen-Times reporter. Several gathering attendees who reported they had been expelled from the gathering called the Shanti Sena "gestapo" and thugs. In some particularly serious situations, Shanti Sena have collaborated with law enforcement (although without violating the Gathering's principle of consensus).[40] For example, a gathering regular and wanted murder suspect, Joseph Geibel, was peacefully approached by Shanti Sena and transferred to police custody at the 1998 gathering.[41]

The phrase is also used as a call for aid. If individuals find themselves in a dispute, they can shout "Shanti Sena". Everyone within earshot is expected to then approach the scene calmly, de-escalate where possible, and eventually reach a consensus agreement to settle the dispute.[citation needed]

Difficulties and criticisms edit

Difficulties include:

  • The often unacknowledged class and power structures of the Rainbow community and its events[42]
  • The phenomenon of "Drainbows"—individuals who are perceived to not give sufficiently of their labor or other resources for the common good, but rather are only consuming the social benefits a Rainbow gathering offers (a classic cooperation problem)[43]
  • Relationships with both the Forest Service as well as local communities and other stakeholders in National Forest lands (both commercial interests as well as local environmentalists, who are often concerned about Gathering impacts)[44]
  • The Spring Council of the Rainbow Family does not inform the U.S. Forest Service of the gathering location until a few days prior to the event[45]
  • Damage to forest lands, campgrounds and facilities, with human waste, trash and other mess such as abandoned vehicles
  • Occasionally the site selection process does not run smoothly resulting in a split gathering (1993); or in very low attendance either due to a dispute over the legitimacy of the site (2015) or in light of the COVID-19 pandemic[46]

In recent years, there have been increasing reports of drifters and vagrants who attach themselves to gatherings where they engage in hard drug use, sexual assault, theft and violence. In 2014, Heber City, Utah police arrested Leilani Novak-Garcia, known as "Hitler", who repeatedly stabbed a man at the annual gathering after he tried to stop her honking her car horn.[clarification needed] Novak-Garcia pleaded no contest to the charges and served 300 days in jail.[47][48]

Jose Antonio Ramos, who was identified in 1985 and again in 2004 as the primary suspect in the disappearance of Etan Patz, attended and was removed from the Rainbow Gathering twice in the 1980s and was convicted of molesting an 8-year-old boy at a gathering in Pennsylvania. Rainbow elder Barry Adams helped to identify and convict Ramos.[49] Ramos served a 20-year prison sentence in the State Correctional Institution in Dallas, Pennsylvania, for child molestation.[50] He was released from prison on November 7, 2012. Soon after his release he was arrested on a Megan's Law violation.[51]

Cost to local and federal governments edit

Costs local jurisdictions must bear. For example, the 2013 gathering in Beaverhead County, Montana experienced uncollectible patient charges for emergency room care and additional costs incurred at the county's hospital, which totaled an estimated $175,000.[52][53]

Cost to federal government of $573,000 according to Tim Walther, assistant special agent in charge of law enforcement for the Forest Service. A total of 850 incident reports, written warnings and citations were recorded during the event. Of these, 405 incident reports were written up for Rainbow people not following the operational plan agreed upon by the Rainbows and the Forest Service.[54]

Relations with law enforcement edit

 
Police and medics near "trading circle" at the annual U.S. national Rainbow Gathering in West Virginia, 2005

In an October 2008 report the American Civil Liberties Union stated:

The U.S. Forest Service systematically harasses people who attend Rainbow Family gatherings on public lands.[55]

In 2016, the American Civil Liberties Union in Vermont issued a report expressing concern over federal law enforcement activities that the ACLU describe as "overzealous" and "unconstitutional". The ACLU-VT sent letters to law enforcement officials calling for an end to the illegal targeting of Rainbow Gathering attendees expressing First Amendment rights on public land.[56] In an October 2008 report the American Civil Liberties Union stated, "The U.S. Forest Service systematically harasses people who attend Rainbow Family gatherings on public lands."[57]

All major gatherings in the United States are held on National Forest land, which is under the jurisdiction of the United States Forest Service, a federal agency with its own federal law enforcement officers. County sheriffs have concurrent jurisdiction on all forest lands, as do county police and local police depending on location, community boundaries and local laws. So too do state law enforcement agencies, namely state wildlife wardens, state troopers and state police or bureaus of investigation. Many local gatherings occur in remote areas, with county sheriffs being the primary responders. They often request deputies from neighboring counties and officers from area police departments. Additionally, it is common for state conservation and wildlife officers and state troopers to deploy personnel. The Forest Service has often received assistance from the FBI, US Marshalls for fugitives, DEA for drug trafficking and other federal agencies. The USFS has tried to prevent these gatherings from taking place; it denies all others access to the forest and the surrounding area for the duration of the gathering [58] or insists that a group-use permit be signed, contending that this is standard practice for large groups wishing to camp on public land and that it is necessary to protect public safety and the local environment. Gathering organizers generally contend that the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights give them the right to peaceably assemble on public land and that requiring a permit would violate that basic right by turning it into a privilege to be regulated.[citation needed]

In 1984, the Forest Service enacted a regulation requiring a permit for any expressive assembly of ten or more people on Forest Service lands. This was unenforced for a year and a half before the Service attempted to apply it to the gathering in Arizona in 1986. Judge Bilby called attention to the selective enforcement of the regulation, and in any case ruled it unconstitutional, in part because it required expressive assemblies, but not non-expressive ones, to obtain permits.[59]

The U.S. government has in the past pressured individuals to be representatives of the Gathering (e.g., by signing a permit). However, this is in violation of the well-established Rainbow principle that "no individual may officially represent the Family as a whole." A number of court cases have resulted from both Forest Service prosecutions and Rainbow Family-inspired legal actions against enforcement activities; among other legal defeats, the Forest Service found itself rebuffed by the judge in a defendant class suit originating from the 1987 North Carolina Gathering.[60] In a notable account of Gathering relations with law enforcement, Judge Dave and the Rainbow People, was written by U.S. Federal Judge David Sentelle. The book provides a firsthand account of Sentelle's role in presiding over the 1987 case brought by the State of North Carolina in an attempt to stop the Gathering, including site visits to the Gathering and related legal actions. Garrick Beck, a Rainbow Family organizer involved in the 1987 case, wrote an afterword to the book in which he expresses agreement with Sentelle's characterizations. In that particular gathering, numerous state arrests were made for breaches of the peace, alcohol and traffic violations and interfering with officers. The federal court allowed the NC gathering to continue, but when attendees overstayed their time allocation, they were forcibly removed and arrested by state and federal officers. Damage to the Slick Rock area of Nantaha National Forest was estimated to be in the tens of thousands of dollars. An outbreak of bloody diarrhea occurred and at least two kidnapped minors were rescued from the camp in two separate incidents.[40]

The Forest Service has dealt with the scale of the US Annual Rainbow Gathering in the past by assigning a Type 2 National Incident Management Team (NIMT). Around 40 personnel from the NIMT have been assigned in the past, including NIMT members, Forest Service law enforcement officers (LEOs) and resource advisors. Because the Rainbow Gathering has utilized the land in the past without required consent from the Forest Service, the gatherings have been given special attention, since, under current Forestry rules and regulations, they may occur illegally.[61]

In 1999 and again in 2000, the NIMT selected three gathering participants who were charged with "use or occupancy of National Forest System lands without authorization." The citation carried a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $5,000 fine; the charges originally could have been cleared by paying a $100 fine. Instead, they all chose to fight it in court, but lost their appeals.[62] The three 1999 cases were later turned down by the Supreme Court.[63]

At the 2008 National Gathering in Wyoming, an incident occurred whereby Forest Service officers tried to arrest an attendee at the gathering. A spokeswoman for the U.S. Forest Service said that about 400 participants in the Gathering began to advance, throwing sticks and rocks at the officers,[64] although this was disputed by Gathering participants and video evidence.[65] Pepper balls were then fired to control the crowd.[66] Witnesses reported that officers pointed weapons at children and fired rubber bullets at gathering participants.[67] The ACLU produced a report following their investigation of the incident in which they were critical of the officers for engaging in a pattern of harassment, using overzealous enforcement techniques, and using small violations as a pretense for larger searches.[65]

Alcohol edit

According to the guidelines, or Raps of the Rainbow Gathering, open and public consumption of alcohol is discouraged by many people at the gatherings with respect for others being the primary reason.[68] A distinguishing characteristic of the U.S. annual gatherings is "A-Camp," (commonly, and mistakenly, thought to mean "alcohol camp") typically located near the front gate, where some of those who want to openly drink alcohol usually stay, yet public drinking is generally accepted in most camps close to the road. Gatherings in Europe do not have "A-Camps." Some gatherings in Canada have "A-Camps" and some do not. Wine is tolerated in moderation at some European gatherings, particularly in France, where it is customary to drink wine with the evening meal.[69]

Confusion over Hopi legend edit

There has been a long-standing Rainbow rumor that the Gathering is recognized by the elders of the Hopi people as the fulfillment of an ancient Hopi prophecy[70] (some versions substitute Hopi with the Ojibwe people).[71] Sometimes referred to as the Legend of the Rainbow Warriors, it was debunked as fakelore by writer Michael Niman in the 1997 book People of the Rainbow: A Nomadic Utopia.[72] While researching the legend, Niman interviewed Thomas Banyaca, a Hopi selected by elders in the 1950s to interpret and pass on Hopi prophecies. According to Niman, Banyaca was "puzzled about the supposed Hopi prophecy" and said, "It's not right...We hope they will stop it".[70]

Although Banyaca was unfamiliar with the Rainbow Family, he was aware of the Rainbow Warrior myth and said it was invented by two non-Native, Evangelical Christians, William Willoya and Vinson Brown. Willoya and Brown had briefly met with Banyaca before publishing Warriors of the Rainbow in 1962, a Christian tract in which they fabricated the Rainbow Warrior concept, claiming it was an ancient Native American legend and a prophecy about the Second Coming of Christ. According to Niman, the rainbow in Willoya and Brown's version was a reference to the rainbow in the Book of Genesis. Niman described the source as purveying "covert anti-Semitism throughout"[70] and that, "If anything, it was an attack on Native culture...an attempt to evangelize within the Native American community".[71] He said Rainbows who likely don't recognize the Biblical overtones continue to cite Warriors of the Rainbow and mischaracterize it as containing a message that aligns with the Rainbow ideology, often inventing entirely new versions of the myth that they still attribute to Willoya and Brown's 1962 tract.[70]

Cultural misappropriation edit

In 2015, a group of Native American academics and writers issued a statement against the Rainbow Gathering attendees who are "appropriating and practicing faux Native ceremonies and beliefs. These actions, although Rainbows may not realize, dehumanize us as an indigenous Nation because they imply our culture and humanity, like our land, is anyone's for the taking." The signatories specifically named this misappropriation as "cultural exploitation".[11]

Deaths edit

In 1980, the bodies of two women were found after the gathering at Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia and attendees were questioned about possible involvement. They had been shot dead during the gathering. There had been tension between local residents and "hippies", and police concluded that local men led by Greenbrier County resident Jacob Beard were responsible. Beard was convicted in 1999, but exonerated on appeal in 2000 and received a $2 million settlement for wrongful conviction. White supremacist Joseph Paul Franklin confessed to the murders but later revealed he had just read about them. The killers remain at large and filmmaker Julia Huffman is working on a documentary, The Rainbow Murders, hoping to bring more facts to light.[73][74][75][76][77][78] Emma Copley Eisenberg wrote about the murders and their impact in the 2020 book The Third Rainbow Girl.

In July 2011, a woman named Marie Hanson, from South Lake Tahoe, California went missing in Skookum Meadow, Washington state while attending the 2011 Rainbow Gathering at Gifford Pinchot National Forest.[79] The local Sheriff's office reportedly initially refused to use tracking dogs at the site, stating they were not certain a crime had taken place.[80] After pleas by the Hanson family and the Rainbow Family, a series of four searches by Rainbow Gathering attendees, law enforcement and the Hanson Family took place during late summer and fall of 2011. In October 2011, human remains and jewelry were found near the woman's campsite.[81] It was later confirmed that the remains were those of Marie Hanson.[82]

In 2011, four fatalities from natural causes occurred at Rainbow Gatherings, including two deaths at the 2011 Washington State national Rainbow Gathering.[83] The Washington State deaths were those of Amber Kellar, a 28-year-old Californian who died of a preexisting medical condition,[84] and Steve Pierce, a 50-year-old Californian who died of a heart attack.[85] In February 2011, a man drowned in a Farles Prairie pond during a regional Rainbow Gathering in Ocala National Forest, Florida.[86]

In 2015, at a regional gathering at Apalachicola National Forest in Florida, 24-year-old attendee Wesley "Dice" Jones was shot and paralyzed by Clark Mayers, 39, of Milledgeville, Georgia. Another attendee, Jacob Cardwell, known as "Smiley", threw himself over Dice and was himself shot and killed. Other gathering attendees then beat and stabbed Mayers, who spent two weeks in the hospital before being moved to jail, where he was charged with first-degree murder. Authorities ordered the encampment vacated. The group complied after holding a prayer meeting.[87][88][89][90][91][92]

In July 2018, Joseph Bryan Capstraw, 20, was arrested in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, after confessing to the murder of a woman he met at a Rainbow Gathering in Lumpkin County, Georgia, the week before. Police say the woman, identified as 18-year-old Amber Robinson of Florida, hitchhiked with Capstraw after leaving the Gathering and was beaten to death by him after an altercation.[93][94]

In February 2021, Larry "Frank" Dugger, who was attending a Rainbow Gathering at the Ocala National Forest, was shot and killed by an unknown assailant.[95]

Gatherings outside the United States edit

 
The Québec tipi at the World Gathering in Costa Rica, 2004

Gatherings are routinely held all over the world, on every continent (excluding Antarctica).[39]

European gatherings edit

There is an annual European gathering and many European countries host their own national or regional gatherings. The first European Rainbow Gathering was organized in 1983 in Val Campo, Ticino, Switzerland. The 2007 European gathering, the 25th recurrence of that annual event, took place in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The subsequent European Gatherings took place in Serbia (2008), Ukraine (2009)[96] and Finland (2010). In 2010, there were also two Rainbow Gatherings in the Canary Islands, Spain. The first was held near the northern coast of La Palma and the second was held on Gran Canaria. The 2011 Gathering was in Portugal, 2012 in Slovakia, 2013 in Greece, the 2014 gathering in Romania, the 2015 gathering in Lithuania, 2016 in the Alps, 2017 in Italy, 2018 in Poland, 2019 in Sweden. The 2020 European Gathering took place in Estonia. In 2021 the gathering was held in France.

Note that the 2017 gathering in Italy was connected to several typhoid cases in France, Germany,[97] and Slovenia.[98]

World gatherings edit

World Gatherings have been held in Australia, Zimbabwe, Brazil, Costa Rica, Canada, Turkey, Thailand, China, New Zealand, Argentina, Guatemala, Mexico, Hungary, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Taiwan, and Colombia. Approximately 3,000 people attended the 2000 World Gathering in Australia, held on farmland in Boonoo Boonoo State Forest, in northern New South Wales.[39] The 2009 World Gathering was held outside Murchison, New Zealand, 2011 in Argentina, 2012 it began in Brazil, where the gatherers caravaned to Guatemala and completed the second half of the WRG, carrying their vision counsel finally to Palenque, Mexico. In 2013, it was once again held in Canada, on Vancouver Island[99] in the western province of British Columbia. 2014 WRG was in Hungary. 2015 WRG was in Egypt, Sinai. 2016 in Ethiopia. World Rainbow Gathering May 2017 was at Jengglungharjo, Indonesia. 2018 World Rainbow Gathering was in Hualien county in Taiwan. 2019 World Rainbow Gathering was in Chimila, in the Sierra Nevadas of Colombia. The 2020 World Rainbow Gathering was to be in Siberia, Russia, but was postponed to 2021.[citation needed] In 2021 due to travel restrictions upon entering Russia the vision council decided to make it in December in Mexico. The October 2022 World Rainbow Gathering was held in the southwest of Turkey.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ "Consensus from Vision Council on the land at the 2023 New Hampshire annual Rainbow Gathering for the 2024 annual Rainbow Gathering…". Facebook. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
  2. ^ Niman, Michael I (2011), "The Shanti Sena "peace center" and the non-policing of an anarchist temporary autonomous zone: Rainbow Family peacekeeping strategies", Contemporary Justice Review, 14 (1): 65, doi:10.1080/10282580.2011.541077, ISSN 1477-2248, S2CID 145126718
  3. ^ Niman 1997, pp. 31–32: "The Rainbow Family of Living Light is an "intentional group" whose members purposefully gather together to enact a supposedly shared ideology".
  4. ^ a b Wehelie, Benazir (March 22, 2015). "Nineteen years under the rainbow". CNN. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  5. ^ Rainbow Family Of Living Light, The Rainbow Oracle Of Mandala City
  6. ^ a b Niman 1997, pp. 149–155.
  7. ^ a b Niman 1997, pp. 30–33, 149–155.
  8. ^ a b Lelis, Ludmilla (February 16, 2013), "Rainbow Family of aging hippies, teen wanderers chills out at annual Ocala National Forest encampment", Orlando Sentinel, retrieved June 29, 2016
  9. ^ a b Capital Journal Staff and Wire Reports (June 7, 2015). "Feds say hippie Rainbow Gathering to hit Black Hills this summer". Capital Journal. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d e Niman 1997, pp. 31–35.
  11. ^ a b c Estes, Nick; et al "Protect He Sapa, Stop Cultural Exploitation 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine" at Indian Country Today Media Network. 14 July 2015. Accessed 24 Nov 2015
  12. ^ a b Caudill, Jack (June 16, 2015), "Group speaks out against Rainbow Gathering", KEVN Black Hills Fox, retrieved June 29, 2016
  13. ^ Ring, Wilson (June 25, 2016). "Rainbow Family Arriving in Vermont Forest for Annual Fest". Montpelier, Vermont: ABC News. Associated Press. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  14. ^ Niman 1997, p. xiii.
  15. ^ KGW Staff (29 June 2011). . KGW News Portland. King Broadcasting Company. Archived from the original (News article) on 3 September 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2012.
  16. ^ Selsky, Andrew (June 23, 2017). "Rainbow Family members start gathering in Oregon". Associated Press. Retrieved June 23, 2017.
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  19. ^ Blevins, Jason (July 6, 2022). "The 2022 Rainbow Family gathering is in Colorado. Here's what we saw". The Colorado Sun. Retrieved July 24, 2022.
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  21. ^ a b . Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 12, 2015.
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  26. ^ Deloria, Philip J., Playing Indian. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-300-08067-4. Chapter Six: "Counterculture Indians and the New Age"
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  28. ^ Estes et al., for the Oak Lake Writers' Society, "Open Letter: Protect He Sapa, Stop Cultural Exploitation 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine," at Indian Country Today Media Network. 2 July 2015. Accessed 15 July 2015
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  31. ^ Niman 1997, p. 28: "Sunflower's Day"
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  34. ^ Niman 1997, pp. 60–66: "From Seed" and "Seed Camp"
  35. ^ Niman 1997, pp. 72–78: "Kitchens"
  36. ^ Wharton, M.; Spiegel, R. A.; Horan, J. M.; Tauxe, R. V.; Wells, J. G.; Barg, N.; Herndon, J.; Meriwether, R. A.; MacCormack, J. N.; Levine, R. H. (December 1, 1990). "A Large Outbreak of Antibiotic-Resistant Shigellosis at a Mass Gathering". Journal of Infectious Diseases. 162 (6): 1324–1328. doi:10.1093/infdis/162.6.1324. ISSN 0022-1899. PMID 2230262.
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  47. ^ Jessica Miller, . Salt Lake Tribune, August 11, 2014. [archived]
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  56. ^ "ACLU-VT blog · Constitutional Rights Exist — Even In Our Forests". June 30, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2016.
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Further reading edit

  • Cahill, Tim (August 3, 1972). "Acid Crawlback Fest: Armageddon Postponed". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 5, 2018.

External links edit

  • Savoye, Rob. "Rainbow Family of Living Light (unofficial home page)". Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  • "Rainbow Family of Living Light: Peace, Love and Light. Humanity in Harmony". Retrieved July 18, 2022.
  • "Sounds from the Rainbow". Retrieved July 19, 2022.

rainbow, gathering, temporary, loosely, knit, communities, people, congregate, remote, forests, around, world, more, weeks, time, with, stated, intention, living, shared, ideology, peace, harmony, freedom, respect, original, invitation, spread, throughout, uni. Rainbow Gatherings are temporary loosely knit communities of people who congregate in remote forests around the world for one or more weeks at a time 2 with the stated intention of living a shared ideology 3 of peace harmony freedom and respect 4 In the original invitation spread throughout the United States in 1971 the Rainbow Family Tribe referred to themselves as brothers amp sisters children of God Families of life on Earth Friends of Nature amp of all People and Children of Humankind 5 All races nations politicians etc were invited in the desire that there could be peace among all people The goal was to create what they believed was a more satisfying culture free from consumerism capitalism and mass media one that would be non hierarchical that would further world peace and serve as a model for reforms to mainstream society However the values actually exhibited by the group have at times varied quite a bit from this ideal 6 with recent decades showing increasing levels of crime at the events 7 8 and some organizers stating the core principles have been modified and become more mainstream in an effort to attract more people 9 10 Rainbow GatheringTrading circle at Rainbow GatheringStatusActiveGenreFestivalFrequencyAnnually July 1 7InauguratedJuly 1 1972Next eventFor 2024 in a US National Forest or National Grassland in California Oklahoma or Washington 1 PeopleRainbow Family Influenced by 1960s counterculture and the non commercial rock festivals of the early 1970s 9 Rainbow is a revitalization movement with many philosophies and practices that have roots in the historic utopian traditions of the mid 19th century 10 The first Rainbow Gathering was held in Colorado U S in 1972 4 and was attended by more than 20 000 people In the 1980s gatherings started to form outside of North America as autonomous but connected events around the world 10 Media coverage of Rainbow Gatherings since the 1980s has described Rainbow Gathering attendees with terms such as aging hippies grown up flower children or middle aged white folks In the 2000s the media focus shifted to the increase in crime in the local communities closest to Gatherings ranging from petty crimes like retail theft to violent assaults and serious traffic charges such as driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol 6 Despite the movement s environmentalist and pacifist aspirations Gatherings which are typically held in national forests and other ecologically sensitive areas are portrayed by media as having a deleterious impact on the local environment thus participants have developed a reputation for excessive drug and alcohol use in addition to engaging in disruptive and criminal activity 7 8 This has resulted in increased police presence at Gatherings and a poor reception from area residents and business owners in nearby towns Cultural appropriation and misrepresentation of Native American traditions and beliefs 11 12 have also given the Gathering a poor reception from nearby reservations 12 13 In the U S these issues are also contributing factors in the decline in attendance at regional and national Gatherings 14 Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Social aspects 3 1 Non commercialism 3 2 Non membership 3 3 Consensus process 3 4 Creativity and spirituality 4 Gathering logistics 4 1 Camps and kitchens 4 2 Water and sanitation 4 3 C A L M 4 4 Shanti Sena 5 Difficulties and criticisms 5 1 Cost to local and federal governments 5 2 Relations with law enforcement 5 3 Alcohol 5 4 Confusion over Hopi legend 5 5 Cultural misappropriation 5 6 Deaths 6 Gatherings outside the United States 6 1 European gatherings 6 2 World gatherings 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editRainbow Gatherings and the Rainbow Family of Living Light usually abbreviated to Rainbow Family claim to express utopian impulses bohemianism hipster and hippie culture citation needed The gatherings have roots clearly traceable to the counterculture of the 1960s Rainbow Gatherings have their own jargon which helps to create a sense of community and the ability to express their thoughts on society and social justice In particular mainstream society is commonly referred to and viewed as Babylon a term also used by Rastafarian culture from the Christian New Testament connoting the participants widely held belief that modern lifestyles and systems of government are unhealthy unsustainable exploitative and out of harmony with the natural systems of the planet citation needed History editThe original Rainbow Gathering was in 1972 and since then gatherings have been held annually in the United States from July 1 through 7 every year on National Forest land 15 Throughout the year regional and international gatherings are held in the United States and in many other places around the world The first Rainbow Gathering of the Tribes was a four day event in Colorado United States in July 1972 It was organized by youth counterculture tribes youth communes of the Rainbow Family based in Northern California and the Pacific Northwest The first 3 days of the festival took place at Strawberry Lake outside of Granby CO The lake is in a wooded area elevated 900 ft above the surrounding area Campsites surrounded the lake and there was no event stage of any kind Then on the final day July 4 1972 most in attendance migrated to Table Mountain a barren summit located a mile away from the lake This was ostensibly for the noon sighting of a white buffalo as had been envisioned prophesied by Barry Plunker Adams a spiritual leader of the Family However a week before the festival was to begin local authorities banned the event and state police blocked the road to the lake only letting through tourists with reservations for a nearby resort Over 10 000 attendees gathered with permission on the grounds of a local airport until a court order allowed access to the lake Estimates of attendance vary between 20 000 and 45 000 The first gathering was intended to be a one time event however a second gathering in Wyoming the following year materialized at which point an annual event was declared The length of the gatherings has since expanded beyond the original four day span as have the number and frequency of the gatherings 10 Although groups from California and the Northwest region of the U S were heavily involved in the first Rainbow Gathering the U S Southeast was strongly represented as well At least 2 600 people from throughout that region attended and provided support for the 1972 Rainbow Gathering of the Tribes on Strawberry Lake above Granby Colorado There was also strong representation from other regions of the U S citation needed In 2017 the United States gathering was held near the 1 4 million acres 5 700 km2 Malheur National Forest in eastern Oregon Between 10 000 and 18 000 attended the multi day event near Flagtail Meadow with the largest crowds expected on July 4 16 The 50th Annual Rainbow Gathering took place in Taos County New Mexico in July 2021 17 The 50th anniversary gathering in July 2022 was held in Routt National Forest Colorado 18 with over 10 000 in attendance 19 Social aspects editNon commercialism edit nbsp Welcome home and We love you are common greetings at the Rainbow Gathering As Michael Niman notes Rainbow Gatherings as a matter of principle are free and non commercial Using money to buy or sell anything at Rainbow Gatherings is taboo There are no paid organizers although there are volunteers focalizers who are crucial to setting up the gathering site Participants are expected to contribute money labor and or material All labor is voluntary and never formally compensated conversely there is no monetary cost or prior obligation required to attend a Rainbow Gathering citation needed Aside from taking up collections the Magic Hat in Rainbow parlance for essential items purchased from the local community there is little or no exchange of currency internally at a Gathering The primary principle is that necessities should be freely shared while luxuries can be traded A designated trading area is a feature at most U S Gatherings It is called trading circle if it is circular and barter lane if it is linear Frequently traded items include items such as sweets often referred to as zuzus books zines crystals rocks gems and handcrafts In some rare cases people may even trade marijuana or smoking pipes usually when no police are in the area Snickers bars have emerged as a semi standardized unit of exchange at some gatherings 20 Non membership edit There are no official leaders no formal structure no official spokespersons and no membership Some rainbow family participants make the claim that the family is the largest non organization of non members in the world In addition to referring to itself as a non organization the Rainbow Family of Living Light s non members also playfully call the movement a disorganization 21 However there is a changing network of focalizers who take responsibility for passing on Rainbow information year round and serve as contacts listed in the Rainbow Guide 22 Consensus process edit Gatherings are loosely maintained by open free form counsel circles consisting of any non members who wish to be part of a conversation 21 which use consensus process for making decisions According to the Mini manual Recognized Rainbow guidelines come from only one source a main Counsel circle at the annual gatherings 23 Talking circles are also a feature of rainbow gatherings Each participant in the circle talks in turn while all others present listen in silence A ritual talking stick feather or other object is passed around the circle to allow everyone the opportunity to speak without being interrupted this is a custom appropriated from Indigenous peoples of North America 24 11 Creativity and spirituality edit nbsp Ohm Circle on July 4th 1980 at West Virginia Rainbow Gathering One of the central features of the annual U S gathering is silent meditation on the morning of the Fourth of July with attendees gathering in a circle in the Main Meadow At approximately noon the assembly begins a collective Om which is ended with whooping and a celebration A parade of children comes from the Kiddie Village singing and dancing into the middle of the circle 10 Spiritually there is a strong tradition of cultural appropriation 25 26 27 Native American leaders of several tribes have spoken out against the Rainbows misappropriation of their religious ceremonies as well as their trespassing onto Native sacred sites 28 29 Many spiritual traditions are represented often with their own kitchen from Hare Krishnas to Orthodox Jews to several denominations of Christianity and many others 30 Creative events may include variety shows campfire singing fire juggling and large or small art projects At one gathering a cable car was rigged to carry groups of four quickly across a meadow Faerie Camp was alive with hundreds of bells and oddly illuminated objects Musicians and music pervade all Gatherings at kitchens on the trails and at campfires 31 Gathering logistics edit nbsp Rap 107 concise Gathering participation principles 32 The Rainbow Family has governed Gatherings of up to 30 000 people Regional Rainbow gatherings can attract as many as 5 000 33 The U S annual rainbow gathering occurs around July 1 7th but people come up to a month earlier to help set up this is known as Seed Camp and remain on site up to a month later to participate in cleanup and to perform site restorations 34 Although each event is more or less anarchic practical guidelines have been reached through the consensus process and are documented in a Mini manual Items that are strongly discouraged by some at gatherings include firearms alcohol tobacco and pets Other items that tend to be discouraged include radios tape players sound amplifiers and power tools citation needed Camps and kitchens edit Camps and kitchens are the basic community units of the Gathering Camps may be based on regional spiritual or even dietary commonalities For example Kid Village attracts attendees with children Tea Time specializes in serving herbal teas Jesus Camp has a Christian foundation Some kitchens such as the Turtle Soup Kitchen serve predominantly vegetarian meals Lovin Ovens is a kitchen that craft ovens out of metal drums clay and mud in the area and will cook food such as pizza meat vegetarian and vegan and different types of bread and snacks Nic Nite is a camp that focuses on the sharing of tobacco and tobacco related products citation needed Not all camps are kitchens but all kitchens are camps In addition to feeding passers by kitchens send food to the one or two large communal predominantly vegetarian meals served daily in the main meadow 35 Water and sanitation edit Drinking water is filtered at gatherings both by small pump filters and large gravity feed devices Attendees are encouraged also to boil drinking water Water is often tapped at a source such as a spring or stream and runs hundreds of yards to main kitchens in the gathering via plastic hosing citation needed Sanitation has historically been a major concern at Rainbow Gatherings Human waste is deposited in latrine trenches typically referred to as shitters and treated with lime and ash from campfires New latrines are dug and filled in daily However sanitation may still be inadequate the 1987 gathering in North Carolina experienced a large outbreak of highly contagious shigellosis a k a dysentery and a smaller outbreak occurred in association with a 2018 gathering in Poland 36 37 C A L M edit C A L M or the Center for Alternative Living Medicine is the primary group of doctors at Rainbow Gatherings who assist people with health and wellness and take responsibility for medical emergencies and sanitation of those who attend these large gatherings 38 It is an all volunteer non hierarchical group encompassing both mainstream conventional medicine and alternative medicine such as naturopathic healing modalities It is common to find physicians working with herbalists EMTs helping massage therapists and naturopaths coordinating with Registered Nurses on patient care C A L M works closely with the Shanti peace army as they are often the first on the scene in a crisis There is usually one main C A L M camp near the inner part of the gatherings and smaller first aid stations set up around the Gatherings Even those without medical experience are encouraged to help with things such as procuring water and cooking for the healers who are often too busy to attend main circle or visit other kitchens In case of any emergency CALM can be contacted on FRS Channel 3 no tones 462 6125 MHz UHF and other site specific radio frequencies citation needed Shanti Sena edit Within the Rainbow Gathering security conflict resolution and emergency situations are handled by Shanti Sena peace army in Sanskrit which includes anyone who is capable of helping at that time 39 better source needed Shanti Sena also sometimes acts as liaisons to observers and law enforcement officers who patrol the Rainbow Gathering often tracking the movements of police and park rangers through the gathering and overseeing the interactions between officers and people attending the gathering to ensure that neither group instigates or takes part in illegal or inflammatory confrontations This type of interference with police operations resulted in numerous arrests in the 1987 gathering in North Carolina with state federal and local officers being assaulted blocked from patrol areas and threatened The Shanti Sena at the 87 gathering were characterized by local state and federal officers as a criminal gang and were suspected to have collaborated in the assault on an Asheville Citizen Times reporter Several gathering attendees who reported they had been expelled from the gathering called the Shanti Sena gestapo and thugs In some particularly serious situations Shanti Sena have collaborated with law enforcement although without violating the Gathering s principle of consensus 40 For example a gathering regular and wanted murder suspect Joseph Geibel was peacefully approached by Shanti Sena and transferred to police custody at the 1998 gathering 41 The phrase is also used as a call for aid If individuals find themselves in a dispute they can shout Shanti Sena Everyone within earshot is expected to then approach the scene calmly de escalate where possible and eventually reach a consensus agreement to settle the dispute citation needed Difficulties and criticisms editDifficulties include The often unacknowledged class and power structures of the Rainbow community and its events 42 The phenomenon of Drainbows individuals who are perceived to not give sufficiently of their labor or other resources for the common good but rather are only consuming the social benefits a Rainbow gathering offers a classic cooperation problem 43 Relationships with both the Forest Service as well as local communities and other stakeholders in National Forest lands both commercial interests as well as local environmentalists who are often concerned about Gathering impacts 44 The Spring Council of the Rainbow Family does not inform the U S Forest Service of the gathering location until a few days prior to the event 45 Damage to forest lands campgrounds and facilities with human waste trash and other mess such as abandoned vehicles Occasionally the site selection process does not run smoothly resulting in a split gathering 1993 or in very low attendance either due to a dispute over the legitimacy of the site 2015 or in light of the COVID 19 pandemic 46 In recent years there have been increasing reports of drifters and vagrants who attach themselves to gatherings where they engage in hard drug use sexual assault theft and violence In 2014 Heber City Utah police arrested Leilani Novak Garcia known as Hitler who repeatedly stabbed a man at the annual gathering after he tried to stop her honking her car horn clarification needed Novak Garcia pleaded no contest to the charges and served 300 days in jail 47 48 Jose Antonio Ramos who was identified in 1985 and again in 2004 as the primary suspect in the disappearance of Etan Patz attended and was removed from the Rainbow Gathering twice in the 1980s and was convicted of molesting an 8 year old boy at a gathering in Pennsylvania Rainbow elder Barry Adams helped to identify and convict Ramos 49 Ramos served a 20 year prison sentence in the State Correctional Institution in Dallas Pennsylvania for child molestation 50 He was released from prison on November 7 2012 Soon after his release he was arrested on a Megan s Law violation 51 Cost to local and federal governments edit Costs local jurisdictions must bear For example the 2013 gathering in Beaverhead County Montana experienced uncollectible patient charges for emergency room care and additional costs incurred at the county s hospital which totaled an estimated 175 000 52 53 Cost to federal government of 573 000 according to Tim Walther assistant special agent in charge of law enforcement for the Forest Service A total of 850 incident reports written warnings and citations were recorded during the event Of these 405 incident reports were written up for Rainbow people not following the operational plan agreed upon by the Rainbows and the Forest Service 54 Relations with law enforcement edit nbsp Police and medics near trading circle at the annual U S national Rainbow Gathering in West Virginia 2005 In an October 2008 report the American Civil Liberties Union stated The U S Forest Service systematically harasses people who attend Rainbow Family gatherings on public lands 55 In 2016 the American Civil Liberties Union in Vermont issued a report expressing concern over federal law enforcement activities that the ACLU describe as overzealous and unconstitutional The ACLU VT sent letters to law enforcement officials calling for an end to the illegal targeting of Rainbow Gathering attendees expressing First Amendment rights on public land 56 In an October 2008 report the American Civil Liberties Union stated The U S Forest Service systematically harasses people who attend Rainbow Family gatherings on public lands 57 All major gatherings in the United States are held on National Forest land which is under the jurisdiction of the United States Forest Service a federal agency with its own federal law enforcement officers County sheriffs have concurrent jurisdiction on all forest lands as do county police and local police depending on location community boundaries and local laws So too do state law enforcement agencies namely state wildlife wardens state troopers and state police or bureaus of investigation Many local gatherings occur in remote areas with county sheriffs being the primary responders They often request deputies from neighboring counties and officers from area police departments Additionally it is common for state conservation and wildlife officers and state troopers to deploy personnel The Forest Service has often received assistance from the FBI US Marshalls for fugitives DEA for drug trafficking and other federal agencies The USFS has tried to prevent these gatherings from taking place it denies all others access to the forest and the surrounding area for the duration of the gathering 58 or insists that a group use permit be signed contending that this is standard practice for large groups wishing to camp on public land and that it is necessary to protect public safety and the local environment Gathering organizers generally contend that the United States Constitution and Bill of Rights give them the right to peaceably assemble on public land and that requiring a permit would violate that basic right by turning it into a privilege to be regulated citation needed In 1984 the Forest Service enacted a regulation requiring a permit for any expressive assembly of ten or more people on Forest Service lands This was unenforced for a year and a half before the Service attempted to apply it to the gathering in Arizona in 1986 Judge Bilby called attention to the selective enforcement of the regulation and in any case ruled it unconstitutional in part because it required expressive assemblies but not non expressive ones to obtain permits 59 The U S government has in the past pressured individuals to be representatives of the Gathering e g by signing a permit However this is in violation of the well established Rainbow principle that no individual may officially represent the Family as a whole A number of court cases have resulted from both Forest Service prosecutions and Rainbow Family inspired legal actions against enforcement activities among other legal defeats the Forest Service found itself rebuffed by the judge in a defendant class suit originating from the 1987 North Carolina Gathering 60 In a notable account of Gathering relations with law enforcement Judge Dave and the Rainbow People was written by U S Federal Judge David Sentelle The book provides a firsthand account of Sentelle s role in presiding over the 1987 case brought by the State of North Carolina in an attempt to stop the Gathering including site visits to the Gathering and related legal actions Garrick Beck a Rainbow Family organizer involved in the 1987 case wrote an afterword to the book in which he expresses agreement with Sentelle s characterizations In that particular gathering numerous state arrests were made for breaches of the peace alcohol and traffic violations and interfering with officers The federal court allowed the NC gathering to continue but when attendees overstayed their time allocation they were forcibly removed and arrested by state and federal officers Damage to the Slick Rock area of Nantaha National Forest was estimated to be in the tens of thousands of dollars An outbreak of bloody diarrhea occurred and at least two kidnapped minors were rescued from the camp in two separate incidents 40 The Forest Service has dealt with the scale of the US Annual Rainbow Gathering in the past by assigning a Type 2 National Incident Management Team NIMT Around 40 personnel from the NIMT have been assigned in the past including NIMT members Forest Service law enforcement officers LEOs and resource advisors Because the Rainbow Gathering has utilized the land in the past without required consent from the Forest Service the gatherings have been given special attention since under current Forestry rules and regulations they may occur illegally 61 In 1999 and again in 2000 the NIMT selected three gathering participants who were charged with use or occupancy of National Forest System lands without authorization The citation carried a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a 5 000 fine the charges originally could have been cleared by paying a 100 fine Instead they all chose to fight it in court but lost their appeals 62 The three 1999 cases were later turned down by the Supreme Court 63 At the 2008 National Gathering in Wyoming an incident occurred whereby Forest Service officers tried to arrest an attendee at the gathering A spokeswoman for the U S Forest Service said that about 400 participants in the Gathering began to advance throwing sticks and rocks at the officers 64 although this was disputed by Gathering participants and video evidence 65 Pepper balls were then fired to control the crowd 66 Witnesses reported that officers pointed weapons at children and fired rubber bullets at gathering participants 67 The ACLU produced a report following their investigation of the incident in which they were critical of the officers for engaging in a pattern of harassment using overzealous enforcement techniques and using small violations as a pretense for larger searches 65 Alcohol edit According to the guidelines or Raps of the Rainbow Gathering open and public consumption of alcohol is discouraged by many people at the gatherings with respect for others being the primary reason 68 A distinguishing characteristic of the U S annual gatherings is A Camp commonly and mistakenly thought to mean alcohol camp typically located near the front gate where some of those who want to openly drink alcohol usually stay yet public drinking is generally accepted in most camps close to the road Gatherings in Europe do not have A Camps Some gatherings in Canada have A Camps and some do not Wine is tolerated in moderation at some European gatherings particularly in France where it is customary to drink wine with the evening meal 69 Confusion over Hopi legend edit There has been a long standing Rainbow rumor that the Gathering is recognized by the elders of the Hopi people as the fulfillment of an ancient Hopi prophecy 70 some versions substitute Hopi with the Ojibwe people 71 Sometimes referred to as the Legend of the Rainbow Warriors it was debunked as fakelore by writer Michael Niman in the 1997 book People of the Rainbow A Nomadic Utopia 72 While researching the legend Niman interviewed Thomas Banyaca a Hopi selected by elders in the 1950s to interpret and pass on Hopi prophecies According to Niman Banyaca was puzzled about the supposed Hopi prophecy and said It s not right We hope they will stop it 70 Although Banyaca was unfamiliar with the Rainbow Family he was aware of the Rainbow Warrior myth and said it was invented by two non Native Evangelical Christians William Willoya and Vinson Brown Willoya and Brown had briefly met with Banyaca before publishing Warriors of the Rainbow in 1962 a Christian tract in which they fabricated the Rainbow Warrior concept claiming it was an ancient Native American legend and a prophecy about the Second Coming of Christ According to Niman the rainbow in Willoya and Brown s version was a reference to the rainbow in the Book of Genesis Niman described the source as purveying covert anti Semitism throughout 70 and that If anything it was an attack on Native culture an attempt to evangelize within the Native American community 71 He said Rainbows who likely don t recognize the Biblical overtones continue to cite Warriors of the Rainbow and mischaracterize it as containing a message that aligns with the Rainbow ideology often inventing entirely new versions of the myth that they still attribute to Willoya and Brown s 1962 tract 70 Cultural misappropriation edit In 2015 a group of Native American academics and writers issued a statement against the Rainbow Gathering attendees who are appropriating and practicing faux Native ceremonies and beliefs These actions although Rainbows may not realize dehumanize us as an indigenous Nation because they imply our culture and humanity like our land is anyone s for the taking The signatories specifically named this misappropriation as cultural exploitation 11 Deaths edit In 1980 the bodies of two women were found after the gathering at Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia and attendees were questioned about possible involvement They had been shot dead during the gathering There had been tension between local residents and hippies and police concluded that local men led by Greenbrier County resident Jacob Beard were responsible Beard was convicted in 1999 but exonerated on appeal in 2000 and received a 2 million settlement for wrongful conviction White supremacist Joseph Paul Franklin confessed to the murders but later revealed he had just read about them The killers remain at large and filmmaker Julia Huffman is working on a documentary The Rainbow Murders hoping to bring more facts to light 73 74 75 76 77 78 Emma Copley Eisenberg wrote about the murders and their impact in the 2020 book The Third Rainbow Girl In July 2011 a woman named Marie Hanson from South Lake Tahoe California went missing in Skookum Meadow Washington state while attending the 2011 Rainbow Gathering at Gifford Pinchot National Forest 79 The local Sheriff s office reportedly initially refused to use tracking dogs at the site stating they were not certain a crime had taken place 80 After pleas by the Hanson family and the Rainbow Family a series of four searches by Rainbow Gathering attendees law enforcement and the Hanson Family took place during late summer and fall of 2011 In October 2011 human remains and jewelry were found near the woman s campsite 81 It was later confirmed that the remains were those of Marie Hanson 82 In 2011 four fatalities from natural causes occurred at Rainbow Gatherings including two deaths at the 2011 Washington State national Rainbow Gathering 83 The Washington State deaths were those of Amber Kellar a 28 year old Californian who died of a preexisting medical condition 84 and Steve Pierce a 50 year old Californian who died of a heart attack 85 In February 2011 a man drowned in a Farles Prairie pond during a regional Rainbow Gathering in Ocala National Forest Florida 86 In 2015 at a regional gathering at Apalachicola National Forest in Florida 24 year old attendee Wesley Dice Jones was shot and paralyzed by Clark Mayers 39 of Milledgeville Georgia Another attendee Jacob Cardwell known as Smiley threw himself over Dice and was himself shot and killed Other gathering attendees then beat and stabbed Mayers who spent two weeks in the hospital before being moved to jail where he was charged with first degree murder Authorities ordered the encampment vacated The group complied after holding a prayer meeting 87 88 89 90 91 92 In July 2018 Joseph Bryan Capstraw 20 was arrested in Elizabethtown Kentucky after confessing to the murder of a woman he met at a Rainbow Gathering in Lumpkin County Georgia the week before Police say the woman identified as 18 year old Amber Robinson of Florida hitchhiked with Capstraw after leaving the Gathering and was beaten to death by him after an altercation 93 94 In February 2021 Larry Frank Dugger who was attending a Rainbow Gathering at the Ocala National Forest was shot and killed by an unknown assailant 95 Gatherings outside the United States editAll of this section s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp The Quebec tipi at the World Gathering in Costa Rica 2004 Gatherings are routinely held all over the world on every continent excluding Antarctica 39 European gatherings edit There is an annual European gathering and many European countries host their own national or regional gatherings The first European Rainbow Gathering was organized in 1983 in Val Campo Ticino Switzerland The 2007 European gathering the 25th recurrence of that annual event took place in Bosnia Herzegovina The subsequent European Gatherings took place in Serbia 2008 Ukraine 2009 96 and Finland 2010 In 2010 there were also two Rainbow Gatherings in the Canary Islands Spain The first was held near the northern coast of La Palma and the second was held on Gran Canaria The 2011 Gathering was in Portugal 2012 in Slovakia 2013 in Greece the 2014 gathering in Romania the 2015 gathering in Lithuania 2016 in the Alps 2017 in Italy 2018 in Poland 2019 in Sweden The 2020 European Gathering took place in Estonia In 2021 the gathering was held in France Note that the 2017 gathering in Italy was connected to several typhoid cases in France Germany 97 and Slovenia 98 World gatherings edit World Gatherings have been held in Australia Zimbabwe Brazil Costa Rica Canada Turkey Thailand China New Zealand Argentina Guatemala Mexico Hungary Egypt Ethiopia Indonesia Taiwan and Colombia Approximately 3 000 people attended the 2000 World Gathering in Australia held on farmland in Boonoo Boonoo State Forest in northern New South Wales 39 The 2009 World Gathering was held outside Murchison New Zealand 2011 in Argentina 2012 it began in Brazil where the gatherers caravaned to Guatemala and completed the second half of the WRG carrying their vision counsel finally to Palenque Mexico In 2013 it was once again held in Canada on Vancouver Island 99 in the western province of British Columbia 2014 WRG was in Hungary 2015 WRG was in Egypt Sinai 2016 in Ethiopia World Rainbow Gathering May 2017 was at Jengglungharjo Indonesia 2018 World Rainbow Gathering was in Hualien county in Taiwan 2019 World Rainbow Gathering was in Chimila in the Sierra Nevadas of Colombia The 2020 World Rainbow Gathering was to be in Siberia Russia but was postponed to 2021 citation needed In 2021 due to travel restrictions upon entering Russia the vision council decided to make it in December in Mexico The October 2022 World Rainbow Gathering was held in the southwest of Turkey citation needed References edit Consensus from Vision Council on the land at the 2023 New Hampshire annual Rainbow Gathering for the 2024 annual Rainbow Gathering Facebook Retrieved April 30 2024 Niman Michael I 2011 The Shanti Sena peace center and the non policing of an anarchist temporary autonomous zone Rainbow Family peacekeeping strategies Contemporary Justice Review 14 1 65 doi 10 1080 10282580 2011 541077 ISSN 1477 2248 S2CID 145126718 Niman 1997 pp 31 32 The Rainbow Family of Living Light is an intentional group whose members purposefully gather together to enact a supposedly shared ideology a b Wehelie Benazir March 22 2015 Nineteen years under the rainbow CNN Retrieved June 29 2016 Rainbow Family Of Living Light The Rainbow Oracle Of Mandala City a b Niman 1997 pp 149 155 a b Niman 1997 pp 30 33 149 155 a b Lelis Ludmilla February 16 2013 Rainbow Family of aging hippies teen wanderers chills out at annual Ocala National Forest encampment Orlando Sentinel retrieved June 29 2016 a b Capital Journal Staff and Wire Reports June 7 2015 Feds say hippie Rainbow Gathering to hit Black Hills this summer Capital Journal Retrieved June 29 2016 a b c d e Niman 1997 pp 31 35 a b c Estes Nick et al Protect He Sapa Stop Cultural Exploitation Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine at Indian Country Today Media Network 14 July 2015 Accessed 24 Nov 2015 a b Caudill Jack June 16 2015 Group speaks out against Rainbow Gathering KEVN Black Hills Fox retrieved June 29 2016 Ring Wilson June 25 2016 Rainbow Family Arriving in Vermont Forest for Annual Fest Montpelier Vermont ABC News Associated Press Retrieved June 29 2016 Niman 1997 p xiii KGW Staff 29 June 2011 WA rainbow gathering draws tens of thousands KGW News Portland King Broadcasting Company Archived from the original News article on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 1 May 2012 Selsky Andrew June 23 2017 Rainbow Family members start gathering in Oregon Associated Press Retrieved June 23 2017 Hooper Will December 1 1969 Sunshine lollipops and Rainbows Hippies flock to Taos for the 50th Annual Rainbow Gathering The Taos News Retrieved June 18 2021 Brulliard Karin July 3 2022 The Rainbow Family comes to Colorado bringing peace love and anxiety Washington Post Retrieved July 24 2022 Blevins Jason July 6 2022 The 2022 Rainbow Family gathering is in Colorado Here s what we saw The Colorado Sun Retrieved July 24 2022 Niman 1997 pp 68 72 A World Without Money and Trade Circle a b Welcomehere org Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 12 2015 Rob Savoye FOCALIZER WHAT S A FOCALIZER welcomehome org Retrieved January 21 2015 Mini Manual Counciling Archived from the original on July 13 2012 Retrieved February 8 2009 Niman 1997 pp 42 43 McGaa Ed Rainbow Tribe Ordinary People Journeying on the Red Road HarperCollins 2009 Deloria Philip J Playing Indian New Haven Yale University Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 300 08067 4 Chapter Six Counterculture Indians and the New Age Huhndorf Shari Michelle Going Native Indians in the American Cultural Imagination Cornell University Press 2001 p 164 Estes et al for the Oak Lake Writers Society Open Letter Protect He Sapa Stop Cultural Exploitation Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine at Indian Country Today Media Network 2 July 2015 Accessed 15 July 2015 Rickert Levi Winnemem Wintu Tribe Gives Cease amp Desist Order to Rainbow Family Archived 2015 07 05 at the Wayback Machine at Native News Online 04 Jul 2015 Accessed 13 July 2015 Niman 1997 p 146 From Ethnocide to a Multispiritual Utopia Niman 1997 p 28 Sunflower s Day The Rainbow Guide Volunteer Crew February 20 2010 Rainbow Guide Rainbow Family of Living Light Rainbow Raps 107 Rainbowguide info Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved July 20 2013 Niman 1997 pp 33 40 Niman 1997 pp 60 66 From Seed and Seed Camp Niman 1997 pp 72 78 Kitchens Wharton M Spiegel R A Horan J M Tauxe R V Wells J G Barg N Herndon J Meriwether R A MacCormack J N Levine R H December 1 1990 A Large Outbreak of Antibiotic Resistant Shigellosis at a Mass Gathering Journal of Infectious Diseases 162 6 1324 1328 doi 10 1093 infdis 162 6 1324 ISSN 0022 1899 PMID 2230262 Shigellosis outbreak linked to European Rainbow Gathering in Poland European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control August 15 2018 Retrieved June 5 2020 Center for Alternative Living Medicine Retrieved February 8 2009 a b c Welcome Home welcomehome org July 15 1996 Archived from the original on May 10 2012 Retrieved May 1 2012 The only rule we have is that of peaceful respect a b Sentelle 2002 pp 200 204 Niman 1997 pp 118 125 Not Really Cops Rainbow Cop Trip Niman 1997 pp 35 55 57 118 125 128 130 Roots A Persistent Democracy Not Really Cops Rainbow Cop Trip Peace through Violence The Rainbow Ghetto Niman 1997 p 85 Work and Drudgery Niman 1997 pp 170 183 Land Stewardship and Community Relations Forest Service emails obtained by Buffalo State University of New York under the Freedom of Information Act full citation needed Eric Barker July 2 2020 UPDATED Rainbow Gathering not sitting well with some The Lewiston Tribune Lewiston Morning Tribune Archived from the original on July 5 2020 Retrieved December 5 2020 Jessica Miller Rainbow Gathering s Hitler pleads no contest in Utah stabbing Salt Lake Tribune August 11 2014 archived Michael McFall Hitler sentenced to jail for assault during Rainbow Gathering Salt Lake Tribune Sept 24 2014 Rainbow Family Fears Release Date Of Child Molester KECI News May 24 2012 Clyde Haberman A New Horror Recalls Another New York Times 2011 07 14 Rubinkam Michael November 7 2012 Longtime Etan Patz Suspect Released Then Held Associated Press Archived from the original on March 4 2016 archived Breaking down the cleanup and cost of the Rainbow Family Gathering Montana Public Radio July 9 2013 County Rainbow Gathering expenses top 200 000 Dillon Tribune August 13 2013 Retrieved June 17 2014 Rainbow Family gathering costs U S Forest Service 573 000 The Missoulian September 19 2013 Retrieved June 17 2014 Report Says Forest Service Has Harassed Gatherings The New York Times October 5 2008 Retrieved May 22 2010 ACLU VT blog Constitutional Rights Exist Even In Our Forests June 30 2016 Retrieved July 6 2016 Report Says Forest Service Has Harassed Gatherings The New York Times October 5 2008 Retrieved May 22 2010 A Allen Butcher 1999 Review of People of the Rainbow a Nomadic Utopia Essay Rainbow Family of Living Light 3 Articles Fourth World Services p 13 Retrieved May 1 2012 Sentelle David B 2002 Judge Dave and the Rainbow People Green Bag Press pp 249 250 ISBN 0967756839 OCLC 50337509 Niman 1997 pp 184 189 The Rainbow and the U S Government The lawsuits filed against local and state law enforcement were however ruled as frivolous and dismissed for lacking merit with plaintiffs having to pay court costs USDA Forest Service Medicine Bow amp Routt National Forests Thunder Basin National Grassland Newsroom Archived from the original on January 31 2008 Retrieved July 20 2013 Robinson Nicholas A December 1982 Environmental Regulation of Real Property Law Journal Press pp 3 103 ISBN 9781588520166 crystalhawk allegheny3 Mx reocities com Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved July 20 2013 5 arrested in Rainbow Family clash with feds USATODAY com usatoday com Retrieved January 21 2015 a b Neary Ben October 3 2008 ACLU blasts Forest Service over Rainbow gathering USA Today Retrieved April 15 2010 ACLU Plans to Investigate Rainbow Family Treatment High Times Archived from the original on May 14 2012 Retrieved January 21 2015 Morton Tom July 5 2008 Arrest leads to Rainbow riot Casper Star Tribune Retrieved April 9 2010 Rainbow Guide Rainbow Family of Living Light Rainbow Raps 151 rainbowguide info Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved January 21 2015 Niman 1997 pp 125 128 189 193 A Camp for Alcohol Abusers The Drug Factor a b c d Niman 1997 pp 134 137 a b Tarleton John July 1999 Interview with Michael Niman On the Road with John Tarleton retrieved July 28 2016 Niman Michael 1997 Fakelore People of the Rainbow A Nomadic Utopia University of Tennessee Press pp 134 137 ISBN 978 0870499890 Lynne Darling The Rainbow People Washington Post July 7 1980 After 12 Years a Break in West Virginia Slaying of 2 Hitchhikers New York Times April 19 1992 Man who confessed to Rainbow Murders is executed Charleston Gazette Mail November 19 2013 Maurice Posley Jacob Beard National Registry of Exonerations July 30 2012 State vs Beard decided July 15 1998 Joe Dashiell Documentary filmmaker investigates Rainbow Murders WDBJ Roanoke VA October 27 2017 California woman missing after Rainbow Family Gathering Vancouver Washington Associated Press July 15 2011 Hopes fade for woman missing after Rainbow Family campout KATU News August 10 2011 Remains of Rainbow Gathering attendee from California possibly found Los Angeles Times October 10 2011 Remains identified as woman missing from Rainbow gathering The Columbian October 17 2011 Washington Rainbow Gathering July 15 2011 R I P Steve and Amber Aya Washington Rainbow Gathering 2011 washingtongathering blogspot com Retrieved May 1 2012 David Krough 7 July 2011 Woman found dead at Rainbow Gathering KGW News Channel King Broadcasting Company Archived from the original News article on 7 September 2011 Retrieved 1 May 2012 Tony Lystra September 23 2011 Rainbow Family members returning to Gifford Pinchot to search for missing woman News article The Daily News The Daily News Online Retrieved May 1 2012 Jeff Weiner February 26 2011 Marion detectives investigate body found in pond after rainbow gathering News article Orlando Sentinel Tribune Newspapers Retrieved May 1 2012 Jeff Burlew and Karl Etters Rainbow Family kicked from campsite after fatal shooting Tallahassee Democrat March 6 2015 David Adlerstein Murder darkens Rainbow Gathering Apalachicola Times March 11 2015 Deadly shooting at Rainbow Family pacifist gathering in Florida CBS News March 12 2015 Tara Dodrill Rainbow Family Gathering Shooting Rampage at Pacifist Hippie Group Event in Florida Inquisitr March 13 2015 Karl Etters Man charged with first degree murder in Rainbow shooting Tallahassee Democrat March 18 2015 David Adlerstein Rainbow murder suspect moved to jail Apalachicola Times April 8 2015 Woman murdered after she met man at Rainbow Gathering deputies say WSB TV July 8 2018 Police ID 18 year old woman beaten to death in Elizabethtown WDRB July 12 2018 Laude Julia February 16 2021 Rainbow Family speaks out after their brother is killed in late night shooting www wcjb com Retrieved February 18 2021 2009 European Rainbow Gathering Ukraine 22 July 20 August 2009 Eurogathering Rainbowinfo net archived from the original on June 8 2009 self published source Typhoid fever cases linked to Italian Rainbow gathering Summer 2017 travelhealthpro org uk self published source 15 letna Slovenka ki je zbolela za tifusom ni v nevarnosti www rtvslo si self published source Staff Writer August 9 2013 Editorial A rainbow at Cape Scott Times Colonist Retrieved July 28 2016 non primary source needed Further reading editCahill Tim August 3 1972 Acid Crawlback Fest Armageddon Postponed Rolling Stone Retrieved June 5 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rainbow gathering Savoye Rob Rainbow Family of Living Light unofficial home page Retrieved July 18 2022 Rainbow Family of Living Light Peace Love and Light Humanity in Harmony Retrieved July 18 2022 Sounds from the Rainbow Retrieved July 19 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rainbow Gathering amp oldid 1221591546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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