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{{Short description|Intentional community in New York City}}
{{Other uses}} {{Other uses}}
{{Coord| 40.637779|-74.083359|name=Ganas|type:landmark|display=title}} {{Coord| 40.637779|-74.083359|name=Ganas|type:landmark|display=title}}
{{Infobox organization
{{POV|date=July 2010}}
|name = Ganas Community
{{Infobox Organization
|name = Ganas
|image = 135-corson.JPG |image = 135-corson.JPG
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|location = ] |location = ]
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|membership = 70-80 |membership = 70–80
|language = |language =
|leader_title = |leader_title =
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'''Ganas''' is an ] in ],<ref name=commune>{{cite news |author=] |coauthors= |title=Yes, It's a Commune. Yes, It's on Staten Island. |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/29/nyregion/yes-it-s-a-commune-yes-it-s-on-staten-island.html?pagewanted=all |work=] |date=November 29, 1998 |accessdate=2009-07-22 }}</ref> and a partial member of the ].<ref name=fec>{{cite web|url=http://www.thefec.org/taxonomy/term/4/#Allied_Communities|title=Our Communities|date=February 22, 2005|publisher=Federation of Egalitarian Communities|accessdate=2009-07-28}}</ref> Ganas is an urban experiment committed to exploring applications of Feedback Learning,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fic.ic.org/video/ganasinfo.php|title=Ganas Info|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> a group problem-solving process begun by Ganas founder ].<ref name=dictators/> Participation in the group process is obligatory in some situations.<ref name=ganas/> Ganas was founded in 1979 with a group of six people, and has grown to consist of 10–12 core group members plus 60 to 70 members of varying involvement. There are three on-site businesses run by Ganas, including a bookstore-cafe. A 2006 shooting incident increased public awareness of Ganas, heightened by published allegations of ]<ref name=london/> and ].<ref name=shocker>{{Cite news|author=Heather Gilmore |quote=wacky sex sessions with a shrink|title=Commune Sex Shocker|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/item_ij6VPUIaV3y12A6S6xrMkN/0|publisher=] |date=06-04-2006|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> '''Ganas''' is an ] founded in 1979 in ].<ref name=communenyt>{{cite news |author=Andrew Jacobs |author-link=Andrew Jacobs (journalist) |title=Yes, It's a Commune. Yes, It's on Staten Island. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/29/nyregion/yes-it-s-a-commune-yes-it-s-on-staten-island.html?pagewanted=all |work=] |date=November 29, 1998 |accessdate=2009-07-22 }}</ref> Ganas has non-egalitarian, tiered membership groups,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://thefec.org/node/959 |title=Radical Culture Shock: The Desire for Community and the Need for Private Space |date=August 14, 2008 |publisher=Federation of Egalitarian Communities}}</ref> and is thus a partial member at the ].<ref name=fec>{{cite web|url=http://www.thefec.org/taxonomy/term/4/#Allied_Communities|title=Our Communities|date=February 22, 2005|publisher=Federation of Egalitarian Communities|accessdate=2009-07-28}}</ref> The community uses a group problem-solving process called "Feedback Learning",<ref>{{cite web|url=http://fic.ic.org/video/ganasinfo.php|title=Ganas Info|accessdate=2009-07-23|archive-date=2010-02-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100218184647/http://fic.ic.org/video/ganasinfo.php|url-status=dead}}</ref> which was begun by co-founder Mildred Gordon.<ref name=dictators/> The community attracted press attention after a 2006 shooting incident which led to lurid tabloid headlines.<ref name=nyt2008>{{Cite news|author= James Barron|title=Ex-Member of Commune Is Acquitted|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/05/nyregion/05commune.html|work=] |date=August 5, 2008 |accessdate=2008-08-05 |author-link= James Barron (journalist) }}</ref><ref name=shocker>{{Cite news|author=Heather Gilmore |quote=wacky sex sessions with a shrink|title=Commune Sex Shocker|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/item_ij6VPUIaV3y12A6S6xrMkN/0|work=] |date=June 4, 2006|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> The community was founded by a group of six people, and has grown to consist of 10–12 core group members plus 60 to 70 members of varying involvement. There are three businesses run by Ganas, including a bookstore-cafe.


==History== ==History==
The group that would become Ganas got its start in 1973 when founder ] left New York City for San Francisco's Haight Ashbury. In New York City, Gordon had founded GROW,<ref name=about>{{cite web|url=http://activistsolutions.org/about/who_we_are/mildred_gordon|title=About Mildred Gordon|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref name=six>{{cite news |first= Iver|last=Peterson |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Six at School Lack Degrees|url=http://ganas.tk/School_Lack_Degrees.pdf|publisher=] |date=], ] |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> an unaccredited school of ] that "turned out unlicensed group psychotherapists."<ref name=cityphd/> Throughout 1972 GROW was the subject of state Attorney General and city ] investigations into "fraudulent use of Ph.D.'s from unaccredited universities";<ref name=self>{{cite news |first= Seth|last=King |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Self-Accredited School|url=http://ganas.tk/Self_Accredited_School.pdf|publisher=] |date=], ] |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref name=cityphd>{{cite news |first= Iver|last=Peterson |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=City to Look into PhD Use|url=http://ganas.awardspace.us/City_Look_PhD_Use.pdf |publisher=] |date=], ] |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> that same year, a general investigation into unregulated mental therapy in New York resulted in a push for a "'tough' licensing bill that would impose stronger standards for all mental health workers",<ref name=abuse>{{cite news |first= Iver|last=Peterson |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Unlicensed Therapists|url=http://ganas.tk/Unlicensed%20Therapists.pdf|publisher=] |date=], ] |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> which had been lobbied against by Gordon previously.<ref name=strict>{{cite news |first= William|last=Sherman |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Get Strict on Mental Health|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/Get_Strict_Mental_Health.pdf|publisher=] |date=], ] |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Ganas started in Staten Island in 1979 with six founders including ] and Jeff Gross.<ref name=meetup>{{Cite web|url=http://www.meetup.com/RemembranceProject/events/16517763/|title=Community as a Path to New Social Structures and Sustainability}}</ref> In 1973 Gordon left New York City where she had founded GROW,<ref name=about>{{cite web|url=http://activistsolutions.org/about/who_we_are/mildred_gordon|title=About Mildred Gordon|access-date=2009-07-23|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080227041205/http://activistsolutions.org/about/who_we_are/mildred_gordon|archive-date=2008-02-27}}</ref><ref name=six>{{cite news |first= Iver|last=Peterson |title=Six at School Lack Degrees|url=http://ganas.awardspace.us/School_Lack_Degrees.pdf|work=] |date=July 14, 1972 |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> an unaccredited school of ] that "turned out unlicensed group psychotherapists."<ref name=cityphd/> Throughout 1972 GROW was the subject of state Attorney General and city ] investigations into "fraudulent use of Ph.D.'s from unaccredited universities".<ref name=cityphd>{{cite news |first= Iver|last=Peterson |title=City to Look into PhD Use|url=http://ganas.awardspace.us/City_Look_PhD_Use.pdf |work=] |date=July 15, 1972 |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref name=self>{{cite news |first= Seth|last=King |title=Self-Accredited School|url=http://ganas.awardspace.us/Self_Accreddited_School.pdf|work=] |date=July 23, 1972 |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Gordon went to San Francisco where she studied ] which became the basis of what she termed "Feedback Learning".<ref name=communenyt/> Gordon met the five people who would become the original core-group of the Ganas community and incorporated the tax-exempt ] non-profit organization Foundation for Feedback Learning (FFL) in 1974. The new community went by the name FFL until changing their name to Ganas in the early 1990s.<ref name=dictators>{{cite journal|author=Kat Kinkade|author2=Mildred Gordon|date=Fall 1995|title=Benevolent Dictators in Community|journal=Communities Magazine|publisher=Fellowship for Intentional Community|url=http://ganas.tk/Benevolent_Dictators_in_Community.html#author|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://directory.ic.org/431/Ganas|title=Communities Directory|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> In the late 1970s they returned to New York and moved into a Lower East Side apartment, finally settling in Tompkinsville, Staten Island in 1979.<ref name=communenyt/> On Staten Island the core-group shares ownership of eight houses and three commercial buildings that house their retail stores.<ref name=ganas>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ganas.org |title=Ganas Community |accessdate=2009-07-21|publisher=Ganas }}</ref> There are about 65 non-core group residents who live in Ganas houses and cover expenses by either paying rent or working in the stores.<ref name=nymag>{{Cite news|author=Annalee Newitz|author-link=Annalee Newitz|title=Big Love on Staten Island. |url=http://nymag.com/news/features/16711/ |work=] |date=April 24, 2006 |accessdate=2007-10-31 }}</ref>


==Culture==
In San Francisco Gordon studied ]<ref name=commune/> which became the basis of what she termed "Feedback Learning". Gordon's own literature on Feedback Learning defines it as a simultaneously psychological and political method to help neurotic individuals make self-directed behavior changes that lead to cooperative government. Gordon met the six people who would become the original core-group of the Ganas community and incorporated the tax-exempt ] non-profit organization ] (FFL) in 1974. The new community went by the name FFL until changing their name to Ganas in the early 1990s.<ref name=dictators>{{cite journal|author=Kat Kinkade|coauthors=Mildred Gordon|date=Fall 1995|title=Benevolent Dictators in Community|journal=Communities Magazine|publisher=Fellowship for Intentional Community|url=http://ganas.tk/Benevolent_Dictators_in_Community.html#author|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://directory.ic.org/431/Ganas|title=Communities Directory|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> In the late 1970's they returned to New York and moved into a Lower East Side apartment, finally settling in Tompkinsville, Staten Island in 1979.<ref name=commune>{{cite news |author=] |coauthors= |title=Yes, It's a Commune. Yes, It's on Staten Island. |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/29/nyregion/yes-it-s-a-commune-yes-it-s-on-staten-island.html?pagewanted=all|work=] |date=November 29, 1998 |accessdate=2009-07-22 }}</ref> On Staten Island the core-group shares ownership of eight houses and three commercial buildings that house their retail stores.<ref name=ganas>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ganas.org |title=Ganas Community |accessdate=2009-07-21|publisher=Ganas }}</ref> There are about 65 non-core group residents who live in Ganas houses and cover expenses by either paying rent or working in the stores.<ref name=nymag>{{Cite news|author=] |coauthors= |title=Big Love on Staten Island. |url=http://nymag.com/news/features/16711/ |work=] |date=April 24, 2006 |accessdate=2007-10-31 }}</ref>
Ganas operates on four primary rules forbidding violence, freeloading, illegal activities, and non-negotiable negativity (requiring that complaints be discussed in group process or not discussed at all either in private or public).<ref name=utopiavisions>{{Cite web|title=Visions of Utopia|url=http://directory.ic.org/431/Ganas|accessdate=2010-11-10}}</ref> The primary focus of Ganas is Feedback Learning, an "intense brand of communication" according to '']'',<ref name=free>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/01/nyregion/01commune.html?_r=2&oref=slogin|title=Free Love, Hate and an Ambush at a Commune on Staten Island |last=Jacobs|first=Andrew|author2=Sarah Garland|date=June 1, 2006|work=The New York Times|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> about which journalist Jonah Owen Lamb writes: "Those new to Ganas would share their life story with the group, who would respond by picking apart their issues and deciding how those issues should be dealt with. By 'killing their buddhas,' it was felt, Ganas members could begin to take control of how they reacted to the world."<ref name=utopia>{{Cite news|url=http://www.brooklynrail.org/2006/05/streets/utopia-has-a-web-site|title=Utopia Has a Web Site: Commune Life on Staten Island|last=Lamb|first=Jonah Owen|date=May 2006|publisher=The Brooklyn Rail|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Mildred Gordon describes Feedback Learning as an "indispensable day-to-day guiding experience" in which members of the community provide feedback—helpful criticism—to each other. Through daily discussions of every community member's behaviour members can learn about themselves and their motivations, gain from hearing unpleasant truths, and "accept negative information with the excitement of discovery".<ref>{{Cite web|author=Farhan Haq|url=http://www.uwcc.wisc.edu/icic/today/housing/usa-ganas.html|title='Ganas' Brings Cooperative Housing to New York|publisher=International Co-operative Alliance|accessdate=2009-07-23|archive-date=2010-06-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100615192524/http://www.uwcc.wisc.edu/icic/today/housing/usa-ganas.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> Mildred Gordon left Ganas in 2001 but still returned weekly to conduct Feedback Learning sessions at the commune.<ref name=utopia/> Profiles of Ganas today suggest the community has become less insular, with a more diverse group living there relatively less engaged in feedback learning.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://realestateforradicals.org/?p=131|title=From "cult" to community: Ganas mellows with age|date=November 2, 2022}}</ref>{{Better source needed|date=November 2022|reason=This is a blog. See ]}}


==Finances==
In May of 2006 Ganas co-founder Jeff Gross was shot outside of his home on Ganas property. Gross survived and at trial identified the shooter as Rebekah Johnson, a former member who lived at Ganas periodically until she was evicted in 1996.<ref name=nyt2008>{{Cite news|first= |author= ]|coauthors= |title=Ex-Member of Commune Is Acquitted|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/05/nyregion/05commune.html|work=] |date=5 August 2008 |accessdate=2008-08-05 }}</ref><ref name=london>{{Cite news|author=Tony Allen-Mills |title=New York shooting blows apart hippie commune with kinky sex on the side|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article671452.ece|publisher=] |date=06-04-2006|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Johnson had unsuccessfully sued the group for fraud and sexual harassment in 2000. Johnson's attorney denied that she had shot Gross, but said that she was psychologically damaged by Ganas and sought to expose their harmful practices. She was "wrongfully accused by Gross as payback for portraying him as a brainwashing rapist and the commune as a kinky cult."<ref name=acquitted>{{Cite news|first= |author= Edgar Sandoval|coauthors= |title=Ex-commune member Rebekah Johnson cleared in shooting; guru fears for life|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2008/08/04/2008-08-04_excommune_member_rebekah_johnson_cleared.html|work=] |date=4 August 2008 |accessdate=2008-08-05 }}</ref> In August of 2008 Johnson was acquitted on charges of second-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault and attempted grand larceny following less than five hours of deliberation by a jury.<ref name=nyt2008/><ref name=risk>{{Cite news|author=] |coauthors= |title=Staten Island commune leader: 'My life is at risk'|url=http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2008/08/staten_island_commune_leader_m.html |quote=Rebekah Johnson was found not guilty on charges of second-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault and attempted grand larceny. |work=] |date= 4 August 2008|accessdate=2008-08-05 }}</ref>
]]]
Though Ganas is portrayed as a ] in the media,<ref name=communenyt/><ref name=nymag/><ref name=utopia/><ref name=free/> only the core group participates in income and property sharing.<ref name=utopiavisions/>


Ganas runs three stores under the name "Every Thing Goes" that are dedicated to the re-use and re-sale of used goods. The stores include a furniture store, a clothing store and a bookstore/cafe with a performance stage. The businesses support the community but are labor-intensive and only marginally profitable.<ref name=communenyt/> For most of its life Ganas' income was declared on FFL's IRS form 990 for tax-exempt organizations. Since 2001 FFL has taken in an average of $475,000 in total annual revenue, including direct public support and program service revenue.<ref name=fflmerged>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFLmerged.pdf|title=FFL 2001–2004 Tax Returns|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> FFL's program services are listed as "Feedback Learning Skills Development" and "Interpersonal Skills Development".<ref name=06progrmas>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFL06_programs.pdf|title=FFL 2006 Programs|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> FFL's revenues do not include income from their "Everything Goes" stores, as those are for-profit entities.
Jeff Gross left the group after the shooting, and filed several lawsuits against both Ganas and Rebekah Johnson.<ref name=acquitted/><ref name=risk/> Gross claimed that after requesting the group upgrade security the leadership responded by publishing his personal daily schedule in their newsletter, before then "booting" him out of Ganas in October 2007.<ref name=boot/> Gross is seeking damages totaling over $20 million.<ref name=boot>{{Cite news|author=] |coauthors= |title=Gravely wounded in shooting, founder sues Staten Island commune|url=http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/05/gravely_wounded_in_shooting_fo.html|quote=Gross, who now lives in Denver, was booted out of the group in October 2007, court papers said. |work=] |date=28 May 2009 |accessdate=2009-07-21 }}</ref>


In late 2006 the core group reorganized as Ganas Community ],<ref name=dos>{{cite web |url=http://appext9.dos.state.ny.us/corp_public/CORPSEARCH.ENTITY_INFORMATION?p_nameid=3441574&p_corpid=3436048&p_entity_name=ganas%20&p_name_type=%25&p_search_type=CONTAINS&p_srch_results_page=0|title=NYS Division of Corporations State Records|publisher=New York DOS}}</ref> and began a new business called Ganas Food Company LLC.<ref name=food>{{cite web|url=http://appext9.dos.state.ny.us/corp_public/CORPSEARCH.ENTITY_INFORMATION?p_nameid=3432755&p_corpid=3426999&p_entity_name=ganas&p_name_type=%25&p_search_type=CONTAINS&p_srch_results_page=0|title=NYS DOC Entity Information|publisher=New York DOS}}{{Dead link|date=May 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> Mildred Gordon continued to draw an annual salary of $40,000 as the executive director of FFL.<ref name=salary>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFL_salaries.pdf|title=FFL 2008 Compensation|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> In 2007 the legal address of FFL changed from Ganas headquarters on Staten Island to Brooklyn, and the same year FFL's tax return declared only $15,550 in total revenue and $75 in direct public support.<ref name=ffl08>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/2008.1.pdf|title=FFL 2007 Tax Return|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> The following year total revenue fell to $2295 with direct public support of $0.<ref name=ffl09>{{Cite web|title=FFL 2008 Tax Return|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/2009.1.pdf|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> Ganas has a real estate portfolio estimated at $10 million with holdings in upstate New York, Brooklyn, Virginia, California and Spain.<ref>{{cite news |author=Maureen Seaberg |author2=Oren Yaniv |author3=Alison Gendar |title=Ganas: Not a cult, insists groupie|url=http://www.religionnewsblog.com/14829/ganas-not-a-cult-insists-groupie|work=] |date=May 31, 2006 |accessdate=2009-07-22 }}</ref>
==Culture==
Ganas operates on four primary rules forbidding violence, freeloading, illegal activities, and non-negotiable negativity (requiring that complaints be discussed in group process or not discussed at all either in private or public).<ref name=ganas>{{Cite web|title=Visions of Utopia|url=http://directory.ic.org/431/Ganas|accessdate=2010-11-10}}</ref> Ganas practices ] and "safe sex groups", which member may be partipate in after being ]<ref name=hippie>{{Cite news|author=Heidi Singer|title=My Nights in Hippie Haven|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/inside_big_love_my_nights_in_hippie_u3PKotKpzpnR6qARHWe0GP|publisher=]|date=June 1, 2006 |accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref>


== Controversy ==
The primary focus of Ganas is Feedback Learning, an intense brand of communication <ref name=free>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/01/nyregion/01commune.html?_r=2&oref=slogin|title=Free Love, Hate and an Ambush at a Commune on Staten Island |last=Jacobs|first=Andrew|coauthors=Sarah Garland|date=06-01-2006|publisher=New York Times|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref>
Two ex-members have made allegations about Ganas, including that it is a ],<ref name=boot/><ref name=look/> that it pressures residents into sex and ]s,<ref name=nyt2008/><ref name=free/><ref name=look/><ref name=london/> and that "they control minds with drugs that are used by psychotherapists".<ref name=shocker>{{Cite news|author=Heather Gilmore |quote=wacky sex sessions with a shrink|title=Commune Sex Shocker|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/item_ij6VPUIaV3y12A6S6xrMkN/0|work=] |date=June 4, 2006|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref><ref name=look>{{Cite news|author=Jeff Harrell|title=A look at Ganas from one who has lived there|work=] |date=June 3, 2006}}</ref> Ganas opposes being described as a cult.<ref name=nyt2008/>
designed to allow members to control their reactions to the world.<ref name=utopia>{{Cite news|url=http://www.brooklynrail.org/2006/05/streets/utopia-has-a-web-site|title=Utopia Has a Web Site: Commune Life on Staten Island|last=Lamb|first=Jonah Owen|date=05-2006|publisher=The Brooklyn Rail|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Mildred Gordon describes Feedback Learning as an "indispensable day-to-day guiding experience" in which members of the community provide feedback - helpful criticism - to each other. Through daily discussions of every community member's behaviour members can learn about themselves and their motivations, gain from hearing unpleasant truths, and "accept negative information with the excitement of discovery".<ref>{{Cite web|author= Farhan Haq|url=http://www.uwcc.wisc.edu/icic/today/housing/usa-ganas.html|title='Ganas' Brings Cooperative Housing to New York|publisher=International Co-operative Alliance|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref>


===2006 shooting===
==Business and Financial Info==
In May 2006 Ganas co-founder Jeff Gross was shot outside of his home on Ganas property. Gross survived and at trial identified the shooter as Rebekah Johnson, a former member who lived at Ganas periodically until she was evicted in 1996.<ref name=nyt2008>{{Cite news|author= James Barron|title=Ex-Member of Commune Is Acquitted|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/05/nyregion/05commune.html|work=] |date=August 5, 2008 |accessdate=2008-08-05 |author-link= James Barron (journalist) }}</ref><ref name=london>{{Cite news|author=Tony Allen-Mills |title=New York shooting blows apart hippie commune with kinky sex on the side|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/new-york-shooting-blows-apart-hippie-commune-with-kinky-sex-on-the-side-5ql5fwmkjlv|work=] |date=June 4, 2006|accessdate=February 4, 2024}}</ref> Johnson's attorney denied that she had shot Gross, but said that she was "wrongfully accused by Gross as payback for portraying him as a brainwashing rapist and the commune as a kinky cult."<ref name=acquitted>{{Cite news|author= Edgar Sandoval|title=Ex-commune member Rebekah Johnson cleared in shooting; guru fears for life|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2008/08/04/2008-08-04_excommune_member_rebekah_johnson_cleared.html|work=] |date=August 4, 2008 |accessdate=2008-08-05 }}</ref> Johnson had unsuccessfully sued the group for sexual harassment in 2000.<ref name=london/> In August 2008 Johnson was acquitted of all charges.<ref name=nyt2008/><ref name=risk>{{Cite news|author=John Annese|author-link=John Annese|title=Staten Island commune leader: 'My life is at risk'|url=http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2008/08/staten_island_commune_leader_m.html |quote=Rebekah Johnson was found not guilty on charges of second-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault and attempted grand larceny. |work=] |date= August 4, 2008|accessdate=2008-08-05 }}</ref>
].]]
Ganas runs three stores under the name "Everything Goes" that are dedicated to the re-use and re-sale of used goods. The stores include a furniture store, a clothing store and a bookstore/cafe with a performance stage. The businesses support the community but are labor-intensive and only marginally profitable.<ref name=commune/> Full time work is 35 hours a week, and wages cover all community expenses plus a $300/mo stipend. Profit sharing opportunities may be available to some members.<ref name=ganas/>


Jeff Gross left the group after the shooting, and filed several lawsuits against Ganas and Rebekah Johnson.<ref name=acquitted/><ref name=risk/> Gross claimed that the leadership rejected his requests that the group upgrade security, that his personal daily schedule was published in a Ganas newsletter, and that he was "booted out" of Ganas in October 2007.<ref name=boot/> Gross is seeking damages totaling over $20 million.<ref name=boot>{{Cite news|author=Frank Donnelly|author-link=Frank Donnelly|title=Gravely wounded in shooting, founder sues Staten Island commune|url=http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/05/gravely_wounded_in_shooting_fo.html|quote=Gross was booted out of the group in October 2007, court papers said. |work=] |date=May 28, 2009 |accessdate=2009-07-21 }}</ref> A 2022 Esquire article followed up with Jeff, who was living in hiding. He was granted $1.3 million judgment against his shooter but it is<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a40105747/the-follower-staten-island-1980s-cult/|title=The Cult Leader of Staten Island|author=David Gauvey Herbert|date=June 7, 2022|website=Esquire}}</ref> outstanding.
For most of its life Ganas' income was declared on FFL's IRS form ] for tax-exempt organizations. Since 2001 FFL has taken in an average of $475,000 in total annual revenue, including direct public support and program service revenue.<ref name=fflmerged>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFLmerged.pdf|title=FFL 2001-2004 Tax Returns|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> FFL's program services are listed as "Feedback Learning Skills Development" and "Interpersonal Skills Development".<ref name=06progrmas>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFL06_programs.pdf|title=FFL 2006 Programs|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> FFL's revenues do not include income from their "Everything Goes" stores, as those are for-profit entities. In 2007 the legal address of FFL changed from Ganas headquarters on Staten Island to Brooklyn, and the same year FFL's tax return declared only $15,550 in total revenue and $75 in direct public support.<ref name=ffl08>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/2008.1.pdf|title=FFL 2007 Tax Return|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> The following year total revenue fell to $2295 with direct public support of $0.<ref name=ffl09>{{Cite web|title=FFL 2008 Tax Return|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/2009.1.pdf|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref>


==References==
In late 2006 the core-group reorganized as Ganas Community ],<ref name=dos>{{cite web |url=http://appext9.dos.state.ny.us/corp_public/CORPSEARCH.ENTITY_INFORMATION?p_nameid=3441574&p_corpid=3436048&p_entity_name=ganas%20&p_name_type=%25&p_search_type=CONTAINS&p_srch_results_page=0|title=NYS Division of Corporations State Records|publisher=New York DOS}}</ref> and began a new business called Ganas Food Company LLC.<ref name=food>{{cite web |url=http://appext9.dos.state.ny.us/corp_public/CORPSEARCH.ENTITY_INFORMATION?p_nameid=3432755&p_corpid=3426999&p_entity_name=ganas&p_name_type=%25&p_search_type=CONTAINS&p_srch_results_page=0|title=NYS DOC Entity Information|publisher=New York DOS}}</ref> Mildred Gordon continues to draw an annual salary of $40,000 as the executive director of FFL.<ref name=salary>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFL_salaries.pdf|title=FFL 2008 Compensation|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> The latest FFL tax return on file still states the organization's mission as "Research of Feedback Learning" and its programs the same as those above.<ref name=ffl092>{{cite web|url=http://ganas.tk/ffl/FFL_programs.pdf|title=FFL 2008 Programs|publisher=Internal Revenue Service}}</ref> However the programs list expenses of $71,722<ref name=ffl092/> and FFL's total revenue at -$76,427.<ref name=ffl09/>
{{Reflist|2}}

== Controversy & Criticism ==
Several ex-members have made serious allegations about Ganas, including that they are a ],<ref name=look/><ref name=boot/><ref name=shocker/> that they pressure residents into sex and ]s,<ref name=london/><ref name=shocker/><ref name=look/><ref name=free/><ref name=nyt2008/> and that they practice unlicensed psychotherapy.<ref name=look>{{Cite news|author=Jeff Harrell|title=A look at Ganas from one who has lived there |url=http://www.rickross.com/reference/ganas/ganas10.html|publisher=] |date=06-03-2006|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> Founder Mildred Gordon's school GROW was in the business of producing unlicensed therapists (see History). The Ganas website states "We are not a ]" but admits that distinction is not always clear. "Ganas groups are often mistakenly thought of as personal therapy",<ref name=ganas>{{Cite web|url=http://ganas.org#offers|title=What Ganas Offers|accessdate=2009-07-23}}</ref> but Mildred Gordon does not hold a professional license or even a degree.<ref name=six>{{Cite news|first= Iver|last=Peterson |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=6 at School Lack Accredited Degress |url=http://ganas.awardspace.us/School_Lack_Degrees.pdf |publisher=] |date=July 14, 1972 |accessdate=2007-10-31 }}</ref> The Ganas rule against non-negotiable negativity requires members to participate in group process in situations of conflict.<ref name=utopia/><ref name=ganas/> The 2006 shooting incident at the commune prompted questions about whether Feedback Learning might have the effect of driving some participants "insane" through invasive group examinations of their personal affairs.<ref name=free/> Ganas has dismissed its critics as "mentally unstable" and "crackpots",<ref name=london/><ref name=shocker/> and opposes being described as a cult.<ref name=nyt2008/> Ganas is widely perceived by the public as a ],<ref name=commune/><ref name=nymag/><ref name=free/><ref name=utopia/> although only the core-group participates in income and property sharing.<ref name=utopia>{{Cite web|title=Visions of Utopia|url=http://directory.ic.org/431/Ganas|accessdate=2010-11-10}}</ref> The media often characterizes the Ganas tradition of multiple sexual relationships as "]."<ref name=freelove>{{Cite news|author=] |coauthors=Sarah Garland|title=Free Love, Hate and an Ambush at a Commune on Staten Island |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/01/nyregion/01commune.html |work=] |date=June 1, 2006 |accessdate=2009-07-22 }}</ref>

==See also==
* ]
* ]


==External links== ==External links==
* * {{official website|http://www.ganas.org/}}
*

==References and notes==
{{Reflist}}


] ]
] ]
]

Latest revision as of 17:31, 4 January 2025

Intentional community in New York City For other uses, see Ganas (disambiguation).

40°38′16″N 74°05′00″W / 40.637779°N 74.083359°W / 40.637779; -74.083359 (Ganas)

Ganas Community
135 Corson Avenue, Staten Island
Formation1979
TypeIntentional community
PurposeFeedback Learning, recycling
Location
Membership70–80

Ganas is an intentional community founded in 1979 in Tompkinsville, Staten Island. Ganas has non-egalitarian, tiered membership groups, and is thus a partial member at the Federation of Egalitarian Communities. The community uses a group problem-solving process called "Feedback Learning", which was begun by co-founder Mildred Gordon. The community attracted press attention after a 2006 shooting incident which led to lurid tabloid headlines. The community was founded by a group of six people, and has grown to consist of 10–12 core group members plus 60 to 70 members of varying involvement. There are three businesses run by Ganas, including a bookstore-cafe.

History

Ganas started in Staten Island in 1979 with six founders including Mildred Gordon and Jeff Gross. In 1973 Gordon left New York City where she had founded GROW, an unaccredited school of group therapy that "turned out unlicensed group psychotherapists." Throughout 1972 GROW was the subject of state Attorney General and city fraud investigations into "fraudulent use of Ph.D.'s from unaccredited universities". Gordon went to San Francisco where she studied biofeedback which became the basis of what she termed "Feedback Learning". Gordon met the five people who would become the original core-group of the Ganas community and incorporated the tax-exempt 501(c)(3) non-profit organization Foundation for Feedback Learning (FFL) in 1974. The new community went by the name FFL until changing their name to Ganas in the early 1990s. In the late 1970s they returned to New York and moved into a Lower East Side apartment, finally settling in Tompkinsville, Staten Island in 1979. On Staten Island the core-group shares ownership of eight houses and three commercial buildings that house their retail stores. There are about 65 non-core group residents who live in Ganas houses and cover expenses by either paying rent or working in the stores.

Culture

Ganas operates on four primary rules forbidding violence, freeloading, illegal activities, and non-negotiable negativity (requiring that complaints be discussed in group process or not discussed at all either in private or public). The primary focus of Ganas is Feedback Learning, an "intense brand of communication" according to The New York Times, about which journalist Jonah Owen Lamb writes: "Those new to Ganas would share their life story with the group, who would respond by picking apart their issues and deciding how those issues should be dealt with. By 'killing their buddhas,' it was felt, Ganas members could begin to take control of how they reacted to the world." Mildred Gordon describes Feedback Learning as an "indispensable day-to-day guiding experience" in which members of the community provide feedback—helpful criticism—to each other. Through daily discussions of every community member's behaviour members can learn about themselves and their motivations, gain from hearing unpleasant truths, and "accept negative information with the excitement of discovery". Mildred Gordon left Ganas in 2001 but still returned weekly to conduct Feedback Learning sessions at the commune. Profiles of Ganas today suggest the community has become less insular, with a more diverse group living there relatively less engaged in feedback learning.

Finances

The "Every Thing Goes Book Cafe" on Staten Island

Though Ganas is portrayed as a commune in the media, only the core group participates in income and property sharing.

Ganas runs three stores under the name "Every Thing Goes" that are dedicated to the re-use and re-sale of used goods. The stores include a furniture store, a clothing store and a bookstore/cafe with a performance stage. The businesses support the community but are labor-intensive and only marginally profitable. For most of its life Ganas' income was declared on FFL's IRS form 990 for tax-exempt organizations. Since 2001 FFL has taken in an average of $475,000 in total annual revenue, including direct public support and program service revenue. FFL's program services are listed as "Feedback Learning Skills Development" and "Interpersonal Skills Development". FFL's revenues do not include income from their "Everything Goes" stores, as those are for-profit entities.

In late 2006 the core group reorganized as Ganas Community LLC, and began a new business called Ganas Food Company LLC. Mildred Gordon continued to draw an annual salary of $40,000 as the executive director of FFL. In 2007 the legal address of FFL changed from Ganas headquarters on Staten Island to Brooklyn, and the same year FFL's tax return declared only $15,550 in total revenue and $75 in direct public support. The following year total revenue fell to $2295 with direct public support of $0. Ganas has a real estate portfolio estimated at $10 million with holdings in upstate New York, Brooklyn, Virginia, California and Spain.

Controversy

Two ex-members have made allegations about Ganas, including that it is a cult, that it pressures residents into sex and green-card marriages, and that "they control minds with drugs that are used by psychotherapists". Ganas opposes being described as a cult.

2006 shooting

In May 2006 Ganas co-founder Jeff Gross was shot outside of his home on Ganas property. Gross survived and at trial identified the shooter as Rebekah Johnson, a former member who lived at Ganas periodically until she was evicted in 1996. Johnson's attorney denied that she had shot Gross, but said that she was "wrongfully accused by Gross as payback for portraying him as a brainwashing rapist and the commune as a kinky cult." Johnson had unsuccessfully sued the group for sexual harassment in 2000. In August 2008 Johnson was acquitted of all charges.

Jeff Gross left the group after the shooting, and filed several lawsuits against Ganas and Rebekah Johnson. Gross claimed that the leadership rejected his requests that the group upgrade security, that his personal daily schedule was published in a Ganas newsletter, and that he was "booted out" of Ganas in October 2007. Gross is seeking damages totaling over $20 million. A 2022 Esquire article followed up with Jeff, who was living in hiding. He was granted $1.3 million judgment against his shooter but it is outstanding.

References

  1. ^ Andrew Jacobs (November 29, 1998). "Yes, It's a Commune. Yes, It's on Staten Island". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
  2. "Radical Culture Shock: The Desire for Community and the Need for Private Space". Federation of Egalitarian Communities. August 14, 2008.
  3. "Our Communities". Federation of Egalitarian Communities. February 22, 2005. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  4. "Ganas Info". Archived from the original on 2010-02-18. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  5. ^ Kat Kinkade; Mildred Gordon (Fall 1995). "Benevolent Dictators in Community". Communities Magazine. Fellowship for Intentional Community. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  6. ^ James Barron (August 5, 2008). "Ex-Member of Commune Is Acquitted". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  7. ^ Heather Gilmore (June 4, 2006). "Commune Sex Shocker". New York Post. Retrieved 2009-07-23. wacky sex sessions with a shrink
  8. "Community as a Path to New Social Structures and Sustainability".
  9. "About Mildred Gordon". Archived from the original on 2008-02-27. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  10. Peterson, Iver (July 14, 1972). "Six at School Lack Degrees" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  11. ^ Peterson, Iver (July 15, 1972). "City to Look into PhD Use" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  12. King, Seth (July 23, 1972). "Self-Accredited School" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  13. "Communities Directory". Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  14. "Ganas Community". Ganas. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
  15. ^ Annalee Newitz (April 24, 2006). "Big Love on Staten Island". New York. Retrieved 2007-10-31.
  16. ^ "Visions of Utopia". Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  17. ^ Jacobs, Andrew; Sarah Garland (June 1, 2006). "Free Love, Hate and an Ambush at a Commune on Staten Island". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  18. ^ Lamb, Jonah Owen (May 2006). "Utopia Has a Web Site: Commune Life on Staten Island". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  19. Farhan Haq. "'Ganas' Brings Cooperative Housing to New York". International Co-operative Alliance. Archived from the original on 2010-06-15. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  20. "From "cult" to community: Ganas mellows with age". November 2, 2022.
  21. "FFL 2001–2004 Tax Returns" (PDF). Internal Revenue Service.
  22. "FFL 2006 Programs" (PDF). Internal Revenue Service.
  23. "NYS Division of Corporations State Records". New York DOS.
  24. "NYS DOC Entity Information". New York DOS.
  25. "FFL 2008 Compensation" (PDF). Internal Revenue Service.
  26. "FFL 2007 Tax Return" (PDF). Internal Revenue Service.
  27. "FFL 2008 Tax Return" (PDF). Internal Revenue Service.
  28. Maureen Seaberg; Oren Yaniv; Alison Gendar (May 31, 2006). "Ganas: Not a cult, insists groupie". Daily News. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
  29. ^ Frank Donnelly (May 28, 2009). "Gravely wounded in shooting, founder sues Staten Island commune". Staten Island Advance. Retrieved 2009-07-21. Gross was booted out of the group in October 2007, court papers said.
  30. ^ Jeff Harrell (June 3, 2006). "A look at Ganas from one who has lived there". Staten Island Advance.
  31. ^ Tony Allen-Mills (June 4, 2006). "New York shooting blows apart hippie commune with kinky sex on the side". The Sunday Times. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  32. ^ Edgar Sandoval (August 4, 2008). "Ex-commune member Rebekah Johnson cleared in shooting; guru fears for life". Daily News. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  33. ^ John Annese (August 4, 2008). "Staten Island commune leader: 'My life is at risk'". Staten Island Advance. Retrieved 2008-08-05. Rebekah Johnson was found not guilty on charges of second-degree attempted murder, first-degree assault and attempted grand larceny.
  34. David Gauvey Herbert (June 7, 2022). "The Cult Leader of Staten Island". Esquire.

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