| Othona
History and Values
Beginnings
Othona
began as an experiment in Christian community back in 1946.
Our founder, Norman Motley, was a Church of England priest.
He served as a chaplain in the RAF during World War II.
His
style was very unusual for that time. He made no distinction
between officers and others. And he welcomed completely open
discussion of 'life, the universe and everything'.
He
and his friends had found a comradeship in wartime that lowered
many social and religious barriers. They wanted to preserve
something of that in peacetime. So they began to gather as
a community each summer.
They
found a place with exciting Christian roots going back almost
13 centuries. This was the Chapel of St Peter's near Bradwell-on-Sea
in Essex. It's a hauntingly simple little barn of a church
on the edge of the Essex marshes, where Othona still has a
centre in the next field.
Norman's
fledgling community took the name of an even older settlement
on that site – the Roman fort of Othona. With permission to
worship in St Peter's, they spent each summer in tents and
old huts.
It
was all very basic – the nearest water source was a standpipe
two fields away! But basic conditions seemed to help people
explore fundamental issues together. Such as how we could
avoid yet more terrible wars. And what Christians and other
'people who care' (as Norman put it) could contribute to a
better world.
From
these humble first steps the Othona journey began. For thousands
of people over the years it has become a precious part of
their own journey. The Othona Community is now a network of
people stretching over the UK and beyond. It's a bit like
a big extended family in many ways – good and sometimes not
so good, as families often are!
The
original Othona site in Essex now boasts a permanent centre.
And it was from there that pioneers came to open the West
Dorset centre near Burton Bradstock in 1965.
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