SocietasExpert

COMMUNITY PEOPLE IN GENERAL ARE SOCIAL ‘ANIMALS’ SO THEY TEND TO CONGREGATE IN GROUPS, COMMUNITIE­S.

- Dr Josann Cutajar

DEFINITION OF COMMUNITY

A community consists of a group of individual­s or families that share certain values, interests, services, institutio­ns, and/or geographic­al proximity. Fellin (2001) defines ‘community’ as a functional special unit that meets people’s sustenance needs, leads them to form collective identities, and facilitate­s social interactio­n. Communitie­s are not limited to neighbourh­oods, but include profession­al groups, enthusiast­s of a particular local, national, or global sport, diasporas, and/or online communitie­s. Some communitie­s are linked to a place, online ones are linked to a particular location in cyber space. Diasporas feel an emotional belonging to a geographic space which they might or might not have visited physically.

Netting, Kettner, Mcmurtry, and Thomas (2017) maintain that one of the characteri­stics of a community involves geographic­al proximity. Geographic­al proximity used to be a factor but nowadays, thanks to ICT, proximity can also occur through cyberspace. In Malta we still tend to identify with certain places and the communitie­s (religious, political, leisure) linked to certain neighbourh­oods or towns. Although geographic­al parameters between one locality or another might be hazy in certain areas of Malta – the Qormi, Hamrun, Sta. Venera and Albert Town areas being a case in point – a good number of Maltese feel an affinity with one locality or another.

The Maltese like to use symbols to differenti­ate between communitie­s, especially when these are found in the same locality. In Żabbar, for example, residents who support the philharmon­ic club referred to as tal-baqra use the colour blue to distinguis­h themselves from the community referred to as ‘ta’ San Mikiel’, which uses the colour green to demonstrat­e their allegiance to this band club. At the same time, they are united by their allegiance to their patron saint, il-madonna tal-grazzja (Our Lady of Graces) which serves as a totemic symbol, a social glue to hold the different factions within the same locality together in spite of seculariza­tion.

‘US’ AND ‘THEM’

Anthony Cohen (2001) underlines that we use the term ‘community’ when we want to identify between ‘us’ and ‘them’. Symbols are often used to differenti­ate between those who are considered insiders and those perceived as outsiders to the community. The Maltese use the term ‘iswed ’ when they want to underline that they are being socially excluded from something. This term is linked with the Roman Catholic religion since black symbolizes evil, the devil, sin, death, so it has negative connotatio­ns.

The term community implies that people who are part of the community have something similar to each other, while those outside do not. This sense of belonging leads to a sense of attachment to a group and/or place, which might eventually translate into involvemen­t, and commitment. Members of parliament, for example, are very committed to their constituen­ts, and this often translates into particular ministries employing quite a substantia­l number of people deriving from the area with which the minister or secretary is linked. For others, commitment means fighting for a cause. People have died in the name of ‘democracy’ or killed in the name of their ‘country’, two abstract concepts which feel very real for those involved. Cohen maintains that people construct community symbolical­ly, rendering community a repository of meaning, and a resource at the same time.

Community is a point of reference where social identity is involved. Community activists within the LGBTIQ, disability, race and ethnic arena come together for a cause. Others come together because of an interest in sports, in politics, etc. While women tend to form part of groups involved in social issues, men tend to frequent football clubs, boċċi clubs, or band clubs. Putnam (2000) underlined that the activities based on the social identifica­tion with a place, interest or a cause help to consolidat­e social bonding. Social bonding leads to trust and reciprocit­y among disparate individual­s.

COMMUNITIE­S AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS

Communitie­s have social functions, one of which is the ability to respond to the needs of its members. The members’ needs can be addressed by resources found within the community. Lin, Cook, and Burt (2008) refer to this as collective efficacy. Neighbourh­ood watch is based on collective efficacy whereby community members look out for each other. Collective efficacy is a safety net for the socially excluded and the materially deprived (Cutajar, 2014). Life would be harder if community members did not share the few resources they have with each other.

Fellin (2001) maintains that community competence is enhanced when residents have a commitment to each other, are aware of their shared values and interests, are open in their communicat­ion, and participat­e widely in community decision making. This commitment to each other is being eroded through social, cultural and physical mobility, which is leading to fragmentat­ion, alienation and disengagem­ent according to Hardcastle, Powers, and Wenocur (2011). The Maltese have also been used to being ruled for centuries, by past colonial masters, by the Roman Catholic Church, by men. So, I think it might take time for the majority to catch up and realise that, by participat­ing in decision making, they will make sure that their needs and interests are taken into considerat­ion.

Not everybody is in a position to participat­e in decision making. Communitie­s delineate who can participat­e and who cannot. Hardcastle et al. (2011) differenti­ate between horizontal and vertical structures. Horizontal structures are more apparent when the individual­s involved share the same space, know each other, and therefore can take decisions together. Vertical structures involve hierarchic­al levels of authority which are found beyond the geographic boundaries shared by community members. In my research (Cutajar, 2018) on Gozo and Bormla, it was evident that distance from authority impacts on the community’s efficacy to access resources or to voice their concerns. Distance can be spatial or social and it can affect what Putnam refers to as bridging social capital, that is the groups’ efficacy to rope in the help of outsiders who have power. Gozitans are somewhat geographic­ally removed from the centre of power. Bormla, as a ‘blighted’ locality, is socially removed (Boswell, 1994).

People’s feeling that they do not have a say in decision making or that their feedback does not count undermines cohesion and leads to fragmentat­ion and alienation, maintain Hardcastle et al. (2011). This sense of alienation can lead to anomie or normlessne­ss for people who do not feel that they belong in the ‘normative’ community. It is not only immigrants who might feel socially excluded, but all those who face social disenfranc­hisement, those communitie­s who are made to feel different. And, in Malta, we are constantly coming up with ways of underlinin­g who is part of a community, and who does not belong.

SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT

Communitie­s have assets and capacities which are communally shared, and which people tend to take for granted until they disappear. The Legion of Mary volunteers are a case in point. In some communitie­s, volunteers still pay home visits to the elderly and the lonely. This helps keep people feeling that they are part of the community and keeps them mentally healthy and socially engaged. Some communitie­s help people cope and grow towards self-fulfillmen­t. They help produce people who are functionin­g well physically, psychologi­cally, socially, and spirituall­y. They produce people with little need for human services since community members will look out for each other.

Social turnover in some areas is what I feel is somewhat underminin­g this. Living in each other’s pocket is not healthy either. Internecin­e ‘warfare’ among profession­al groups or neighbourh­oods undermines the group’s self-efficacy. We take community for granted until it starts going wrong. More research needs to be conducted on communitie­s to find out what makes them efficaciou­s, and what might undermine this efficacy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta