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This 1991 Archive Edition with Stephen Gaskin has significant historical content and continues to remain relevant in today’s world. Something happened in the 1960s in San Francisco that inspirited and affected the entire planet. Stephen Gaskin was part of what happened. He led the Monday Night Class at the Family Dog Ballroom in San Francisco at the end of the 60s. He and many others set off in a caravan of 150 hippie busses and founded The Farm in Tennessee, which became one of the best-known spiritual communities in North America, growing to over 1500 members. He was the production manager for the Birth Gazette, and the co-founder of Rocinante, which we'll be hearing about more in this conversation. His books include Monday Night Class, Hey Beatnik, Mind At Play, and Haight Ashbury Flashbacks. Join us as we flash back to the past, the present, and even flash a little forward with our guest, Steven Gaskin. (hosted by Michael Toms)
Stephen Gaskin (1935-2014) was an American counterculture teacher, author, and co‑founder of The Farm commune in Tennessee, and he wrote more than a dozen books on spirituality, community, politics, and cannabis. In the late 1960s his San Francisco “Monday Night Class” drew hundreds of people for wide-ranging discussions on spirituality, psychedelics, and social change. In 1970 he led a cross‑country bus caravan that settled in Tennessee and founded The Farm, which became one of the most influential intentional communities of the era. He went on to co‑found the relief and human-rights nonprofit Plenty International and received the first Right Livelihood Award in 1980 for this work. Gaskin remained active as a writer, speaker, and activist until his death in 2014.
Stephen Gaskin’s books include:
To learn more about the work and legacy of Stephen Gaskin go to https://thefarmcommunity.com
Host: Michael Toms Interview Date: 02/5/1991 Program Number: 2237