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Radical Hospitality

Transforming Shelter, Home and Community: The Wellspring House Story

by Nancy Schwoyer (Author) Rosemary Haughton (Author) Kimberly French (Author)
©2024 Monographs XVIII, 206 Pages

Summary

«Most books about purpose-driven lives either glorify or vilify a savior figure. This deep, engaging memoir is the inspirational exception. Wellspring House was a haven from dominant social structures, collectively built on mutuality and a commitment to a sustainable community, both economically and spiritually. It is a model that can and should be replicated.»
(Ruth McCambridge, editor emerita of the Nonprofit Quarterly)
«If you care at all about homelessness, read this book. Most of the conversation about affordable housing is about the housing. This book demonstrates how to welcome the stranger, inhabit a house, and make it a home, and that may be the point. Written with the grace it speaks about, this book is both inspiring and grounded in the moral challenges of our time.»
(Peter Block, author of Community: The Structure of Belonging)
This book tells the story of Wellspring House, an extraordinary community founded by ordinary people with a simple but radical mission: to live together and share their home with people who needed one.
Rejecting typical nonprofit models, they created a welcoming home for families, mostly headed by women, through reciprocal relationships, human dignity, and fresh flowers always on the table. Wellspring listened to what their guests needed, then stretched to meet those needs: by developing affordable housing and a land trust, educating women to be change leaders, supporting parents, and more.
This book combines the dramatic narrative of creating homes and losing them—including their own—with an analysis of misguided anti-poverty policy. It is a cautionary tale about the misuse of power in nonprofits. In a time of desperate need for hospitality and community, it offers justice-seeking organizations and activists an inspiring model of how to make a real difference in the place you call home.

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • List of Figures
  • Chuck Collins Foreword: Called to Something Bigger Than Ourselves
  • Introduction: Evicted
  • Chapter 1 Change Your Life
  • Chapter 2 Loving and Living
  • Chapter 3 Finding a Home
  • Chapter 4 Homemaking
  • Chapter 5 Stretching Hospitality
  • Chapter 6 Housing Should Be a Right
  • Chapter 7 Celebration
  • Chapter 8 What Is Radical Hospitality?
  • Chapter 9 Education Is the Key to the Transformation of Poverty
  • Chapter 10 A Community Ecosystem
  • Chapter 11 The Lights Go Out
  • Epilogue: The Power of Mutuality
  • Bibliography
  • About the Authors

Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. The German
National Library lists this publication in the German National Bibliography; detailed bibliographic
data is available on the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de.

Names: Schwoyer, Nancy, 1937-author. | Haughton, Rosemary, author. |
French, Kimberly, author.

Title: Radical hospitality: transforming shelter, home and community: the
Wellspring House story / Nancy Schwoyer, Rosemary Haughton, Kimberly
French.

Description: Oxford; New York: Peter Lang, 2024. | Includes
bibliographical references.

Identifiers: LCCN 2024008515 | ISBN 9781803744261 (paperback) | ISBN
9781803744278 (ebook) | ISBN 9781803744285 (epub)

Subjects: LCSH: Wellspring House. | Shelters for the
homeless--Massachusetts--Gloucester. | Human-service
nonprofits--Massachusetts--Gloucester.

Classification: LCC HV4506.G56 S39 2024 | DDC
305.5/69209744--dc23/eng/20240315

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2024008515

The authors are grateful for the generous funding contributions of Jerry Ackerman, Jen Cohen,
Susanna Dammann, Patty and Marty Doggett, Anne Gifford, Pixie and Robert Gillis, Nancy
Goodman and Jim Gutstadt, Susan Gray, Deborah and Raymond Grimard, Mark Haughton,
Nic and Pauline Haughton, Don Hommen, Rebecca Koch and Nubar Alexanian, Sister
Margaret Leonard, Jackie Littlefield, Melinda Marble and Jay Cantor, Carol Provenzano, the
Rev. Margaret Rose and Bill Curran, Jane Saltonstall, Margaret and Jack Scally, Alice and Tim
Schwoyer, Stacy and Tom Shaheen, Susan Stokes, Leslee Shlopak, Kathleen and Mark Townsend,
Kristi Voelkerding, and Richard Wilson.

About the author

Nancy Schwoyer has a BA in journalism from St. Mary-of-the-Woods College in Indiana and an MA in English literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She has done post-graduate work in theology and education at Boston College.

Rosemary Haughton began writing while raising a large family, publishing more than thirty books on relationships, family, community, and theology. She also illustrated some of her own and others’ books.

Kimberly French writes essays, journalism, and other nonfiction. She coaches, edits, and helps authors with book-length works.

About the book

‘Most books about purpose-driven lives either glorify or vilify a savior figure. This deep, engaging memoir is the inspirational exception. Wellspring House was a haven from dominant social structures, collectively built on mutuality and a commitment to a sustainable community, both economically and spiritually. It is a model that can and should be replicated.’

– Ruth McCambridge, editor emerita of the Nonprofit Quarterly

‘If you care at all about homelessness, read this book. Most of the conversation about affordable housing is about the housing. This book demonstrates how to welcome the stranger, inhabit a house, and make it a home, and that may be the point. Written with the grace it speaks about, this book is both inspiring and grounded in the moral challenges of our time.’

– Peter Block, author of Community: The Structure of Belonging

This book tells the story of Wellspring House, an extraordinary community founded by ordinary people with a simple but radical mission: to live together and share their home with people who needed one.

Rejecting typical nonprofit models, they created a welcoming home for families, mostly headed by women, through reciprocal relationships, human dignity, and fresh flowers always on the table. Wellspring listened to what their guests needed, then stretched to meet those needs: by developing affordable housing and a land trust, educating women to be change leaders, supporting parents, and more.

This book combines the dramatic narrative of creating homes and losing them— including their own—with an analysis of misguided anti-poverty policy. It is a cautionary tale about the misuse of power in nonprofits. In a time of desperate need for hospitality and community, it offers justice-seeking organizations and activists an inspiring model of how to make a real difference in the place you call home.

This eBook can be cited

This edition of the eBook can be cited. To enable this we have marked the start and end of a page. In cases where a word straddles a page break, the marker is placed inside the word at exactly the same position as in the physical book. This means that occasionally a word might be bifurcated by this marker.

Contents

Details

Pages
XVIII, 206
Year
2024
ISBN (PDF)
9781803744278
ISBN (ePUB)
9781803744285
ISBN (Softcover)
9781803744261
DOI
10.3726/b21625
Language
English
Publication date
2024 (April)
Keywords
Radical hospitality welcoming the stranger homelessness affordable housing poverty anti poverty policy communitarian living mutuality praxis nonprofit leadership transitions collaborative decision making community development celebrations
Published
Oxford, Berlin, Bruxelles, Chennai, Lausanne, New York, 2024. XVIII, 206 pp., 6 fig. col., 1 fig. b/w.

Biographical notes

Nancy Schwoyer (Author) Rosemary Haughton (Author) Kimberly French (Author)

Nancy Schwoyer has a BA in journalism from St. Mary-of-the-Woods College in Indiana and an MA in English literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She has done post-graduate work in theology and education at Boston College. Rosemary Haughton began writing while raising a large family, publishing more than thirty books on relationships, family, community, and theology. She also illustrated some of her own and others’ books. Kimberly French writes essays, journalism, and other nonfiction. She coaches, edits, and helps authors with book-length works.

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