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ellenrr

(3,864 posts)
Mon Aug 11, 2014, 07:45 AM Aug 2014

Has anyone visited the anarchist utopia, Marinaleda, in Spain?

In the south of Spain, the street is the collective living room. Vibrant sidewalk cafes are interspersed between configurations of two to five lawn chairs where neighbors come together to chat over the day’s events late into the night. In mid-June the weather peaks well over 40 degrees Celsius and the smells of fresh seafood waft from kitchens and restaurants as the seasonably-late dining hour begins to approach. The scene is archetypally Spanish, particularly for the Andalusian region to the country’s south, where life is lived more in public than in private, when given half a chance.

Specifically, this imagery above describes Marinaleda. Initially indistinguishable from several of its local counterparts in the Sierra Sur southern mountain range, were it not for a few tell-tale signs. Maybe it’s the street names (Ernesto Che Guevara, Solidarity and Salvador Allende Plaza, to name a few); maybe it’s the graffiti (hand drawn hammers-and-sickles sit happily alongside encircled A’s, oblivious to the differences the two ideologies have shared, even in the country’s recent past); maybe it’s the two-story Che head which emblazons the outer wall of the local sports stadium.

Marinaleda has been called Spain’s ‘communist utopia,’ though the local variation bears little resemblance to the Soviet model most associate with the phrase. Classifications aside, this is a town whose social fabric has been woven from very different economic threads to the rest of the country since the fall of the Franco dictatorship in the mid 1970s. A cooperatively-owned olive oil factory, houses built by and for the community, and a famous looting of a large-scale supermarket, led by the town’s charismatic mayor, in which proceeds were donated to food banks, are amongst the steps that have helped position Marinaleda as a beacon of hope.

http://roarmag.org/2014/07/marinaleda-spain-communist-utopia/

I'm planning a visit or move there in 2 years..
Dan Hancox also wrote a book about it, "The village against the world"

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Has anyone visited the anarchist utopia, Marinaleda, in Spain? (Original Post) ellenrr Aug 2014 OP
Interesting. Also look into Mondragon - giant worker owned cooperative. Warren Stupidity Aug 2014 #1
Mondragon is having some problems due to Spain's economic catastrophe ellenrr Aug 2014 #3
Kick. nt ZombieHorde Aug 2014 #2

ellenrr

(3,864 posts)
3. Mondragon is having some problems due to Spain's economic catastrophe
Mon Aug 11, 2014, 03:17 PM
Aug 2014

Their unit that builds consumer appliances Fagor has been struggling to avoid backruptcy for almost a year.
Nevertheless Mondragon is an inspiration for all of us seeking an alternative to capitalism.

Gar Alperovitz:
http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/mondragon-and-the-system-problem

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