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https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/a-case-for-the- organic-harmonious-growth-of-auroville/
article68869792.ece#cxrecs_s
A case for the organic, harmonious growth of
Auroville
There are attempts being made to stifle Auroville’s
freedom and kill the dream that began in 1968
Published - November 15, 2024
FRANÇOIS GAUTIER
‘Auroville is a unique experiment, one of the last Utopias of this world’ | Photo
Credit: Getty Images/iStockphoto
Auroville, based on the vision of India’s great poet, philosopher,
revolutionary and yogi, Sri Aurobindo, was founded in 1968. His
spiritual companion, the Mother of Pondicherry, clearly defined
its charter:
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“Auroville belongs to nobody in particular. Auroville belongs to
humanity as a whole.... Auroville will be a site of material and
spiritual researches for a living embodiment of an actual human
unity....”
For a decade or so, Auroville developed quietly and organically:
there was no guru, no CEOs, no private property (for instance, my
wife Namrita and I have no children and our house, where I
invested the returns from my articles and books, will go back to
Auroville on our death), no circulation of money (Aurovillians get
a maintenance credited to an account, from which they can
purchase food and pay their electricity bill), and the community,
originating today from 60 countries, periodically elected groups
that looked after finances, administration, forests, land
purchasing, and units and factories.
More than that, the pioneers of Auroville, with little money, no
water and no compost, planted three million trees, making out of
a barren plateau, the greenest place in the plains of Tamil Nadu. It
also gave birth to a hydra-monster: land that was worth barely
₹1,000 an acre in the 1970s is now worth ₹10 crore, and
everybody is rushing in — promoters, restaurants, cafés, guest
houses and hotels that have often no other interest than
commercial gains.
The beginnings of conflict