ѻýWelcome home.ѻý
These are the first words anyone who attends a Rainbow Family of Living Light annual gathering will hear. It is both a greeting, and an affirmation that you found the right place and made it safely.
At a rest area near a remote north Vancouver Island river, colourful ribbons tied to branches of trees mark the way to the encampment, until you see several vehicles (some registered from out-of-province) parked alongside the trail.
Dread-locked hair, colourful attires, and smiling faces greet you along with the ѻýwelcome homeѻý chant at the entrance. Nobody asks who you are, or where you are coming from. Everyone here has come to escape ѻýBabylonѻý ѻý a Rainbow term to describe the evils of modern life, such as technology and capitalism.
Members of the Rainbow Family of Living Light movement say they want to propagate a general ideology of acceptance and non-judgment. A deep sense of community and respect for individuals is fostered on these shared values.
ѻýYou can be comfortable being whoever you are and believing in whatever you want to,ѻý said a man at the gathering who called himself Coco.
Another attendee, a young woman from Montreal, had flown in on Friday to be a part of the ѻýcelebration,ѻý her third. Several others are also returning attendees, some of whom have travelled around the globe to attend ѻýworld-gatheringsѻý of Rainbow Family. The gatherings are free and open to anyone as long as they have a ѻýbelly button,ѻý said another attendee.
Rainbow Family ѻý which originated in the U.S. sometime in the 1960s as a nondenominational, non-political counterculture group ѻý has held annual gatherings all over the world since 1972. These gatherings attract a loosely-knit community of hippies, bohemians, nudists and itinerants, among others.
Based on Utopian ideals, Rainbow Family has no structure, no leadership, nor any spokesperson. Everything anyone says is expressed as ѻýpersonal opinionsѻý and no one can tell anyone what to do.
Their gatherings usually takes place in July based on the lunar cycle, from full moon to new moon. Thereѻýs no end-date; people stay and leave at will. This yearѻýs Vancouver Island edition has been in progress for more than two weeks.
It is taking place inside a remote forest area near Eve River in the vast, sparsely inhabited stretch of the Island between Campbell River and Port McNeill, where cellphone service ends and GPS coordinates are of no use.
A gas station employee at the Sayward junction is the best bet to ask for directions.
ѻýI wish they wore shoes,ѻý she says before pointing towards the direction in which she saw ѻýmany vansѻý heading over the past few weeks.
On Monday afternoon, at the gathering spot, colourful camping tents were spread across along the banks of a semi-dried-up pebbled river. Maybe two dozen people are visible. Children and pet dogs are playing by the stream of water outside their tents. A nude man practices yoga.
Thereѻýs a communal kitchen, featuring groceries that attendees packed in from farms or food banks. A sanitation spot with signage and a spray bottle has also been set up near a tree near the entrance.
ѻýWeѻýre practicing handwashing for COVID-19,ѻý said Coco.
A small group of people have gathered around a fire pit where coffee is brewing. Full moon celebrations the previous evening went on from dusk until dawn. Musicians strum guitars softly and hum soft tunes as the smell of coffee and marijuana floats around. Everyone seems to be very relaxed or slowly waking up to the day.
The ѻýsacred fireѻý which was lit last week was still crackling in the afternoon. According to Coco, it will be kept ѻýaliveѻý throughout the duration of the gathering.
There are also ѻýhealing sessionsѻý that take place around the sacred fire before the evening gives way to music, dance and celebrations. A stick is passed from person to person around the circle and they are given the chance to speak and be heard. Some talk about their life journeys while others talk about traumatic, tough experiences. People also exchange and teach skills that they know to those who wish to learn.
Some were already packing to leave. A young woman from Vancouver who attended the gathering for the first time with her brother, said she will be back next year for the gathering as she found the experience of cutting away from technology and spending time in nature ѻýpersonally uplifting.ѻý
This year, the number of people who turned up was far less compared to previous gatherings, mostly because of the pandemic. While no one was wearing masks, people seemed to be cognizant of personal space.
A lot of people within the group have fluid beliefs when it comes to coronavirus. Some spoke about ѻýpreventive lifestyleѻý and the bodyѻýs capacity to self-heal and fight off any virus. Some dismissed the virus altogether as a conspiracy theory. None seemed to be overly perturbed by COVID-19.
Most learned about the gathering through informal Facebook announcements toward the end of June. Although there is no ѻýleadershipѻý for the Rainbow Family, a volunteer-based organizing council or ѻýSeed Camp,ѻý heads out to ѻýscoutѻý for a gathering place. The scout team also takes into account the ѻýgeopoliticalѻý nuances of the place, said Coco.
Over the years, the Rainbow gatherings have garnered controversy and an unfavourable reputation after incidences of violent behavior, drug abuse, murder and environmental littering in the U.S. was highlighted in the media.
In 2014, a news report by highlighted the ѻýdark sideѻý of these gatherings, following a series of misadventures that took place at a gathering in Utah. A woman was arrested for stabbing a man and law enforcement also had to respond to drug overdose and people crashing a nearby wedding. The report also highlighted the groupѻýs frequent clashes with forest authorities in U.S., saying ѻýarrests and police run-ins have always been a hallmark of these gatherings.ѻý
In 2013, Vancouver Islandѻýs remote Raft Cove Provincial Park was shut down after authorities and locals found out that more than 2,000 people were looking to attend a planned Rainbow Family world gathering there.
Concerns of campfire bans, waste management and the fact that authorities had not been notified about the gathering were some reasons cited.
Rainbow Family members in this yearѻýs Island gathering were quick to point out that a lot of people who attend are environmentally conscious. At the end of the gathering, groups of people volunteer to clean up, said one of the attendees. But without a structural hierarchy or ѻýpeople-in-charge,ѻý it is difficult to say if the clean-up plan has been successfully implemented until after everyone has left the place.
Local authorities are aware of the Rainbow Family gathering. Constable Francios Veillette from the Sayward RCMP detachment, said that they are ѻýmonitoring the areaѻý and there seems to be ѻýno issues so far.ѻý
People who have been attending the gathering for the past three or four years in B.C., have hardly noticed any problematic run-in with authorities.
ѻýWeѻýre peaceful people, we donѻýt incite violence or suport it and we respect everyone who comes to the gathering,ѻý said an attendee.
For him, every year, coming to the gathering has been a pleasant experience almost like ѻýcoming home,ѻý to familiar faces and new ones. His sense of belonging has never changed.
ѻýEveryone is family here,ѻý he said.

