Type: | Not For Profit |
Key People: | Board Chair: Darryl Hansome; Chair-Elect: Lonnie Hamilton[1] |
Mankind Project | |
Founded Date: | 1984, Wisconsin, United States |
Founder: | Rich Tosi,[2] Bill Kauth Ron Hering |
Product: | Personal development |
Focus: | Men's movement |
ManKind Project (MKP) is a global network of nonprofit organizations focused on modern male initiation, self-awareness, and personal growth.[3] [4] MKP offers an intensive men's weekend (New Warrior Training Adventure), post-weekend "integration" training, and ongoing men's groups.
The ManKind Project has 12 regions: Australia, Belgium, Canada, French Speaking Europe, Germany, Mexico, New Zealand, Nordic (Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Finland), South Africa, Switzerland, The United Kingdom and Ireland, and 22 Areas in the United States. There are also three developing regions: Israel, The Netherlands, and Spain.[5]
MKP has its origins in the mythopoetic men's movement of the early 1980s, drawing heavily on the works of Robert Bly, Robert L. Moore, and Douglas Gillette. In 1984, Rich Tosi, a former Marine Corps officer; Bill Kauth, a social worker, therapist, and author; and university professor Ron Hering, Ph.D. (Curriculum Studies); created an experiential weekend for men called the "Wildman Weekend" (later renamed "The New Warrior Training"[6]). As the popularity of the training grew, they formed a New Warrior Network organization, which would later become The Mankind Project.[7] [8]
MKP states:
MKP states that those who undertake this journey pass through three phases characteristic to virtually all historic forms of male initiation: descent, ordeal and return.[9] Participants surrender all electronic devices (cell phones, watches, laptops, etc.), weapons (guns, knives, etc.) and jewelry for the weekend. This was explained as way of removing the "noise of a man's life", separating the man "from what he is comfortable with," and ensuring the safety of all participants.[10]
Participants agree to confidentiality of the NWTA processes, to create an experience "uncluttered by expectation" for the next man and to protect the privacy of all participants. MKP encourages participants to freely discuss what they learned about themselves with anyone.
Training courses usually involve 20 to 32 participants, and some 30 to 45 staff.[11] The course usually takes place at a retreat center, over a 48-hour period, with a one-to-one ratio of staff to participants.[12]
Researchers reported on data from 100 men, whom they interviewed and administered a battery of questionnaires, before the men participated in a New Warrior Training Adventure during 1997-1999. The same men completed a set of follow-up questionnaires 18 months after they had completed the NWTA. The men endorsed changes such as "... [becoming more] assertive and clear with others about what I want or need" and "... accept[ing] total responsibility for all aspects of my life".[13] The study findings also indicated that the men had more social support and experienced more life satisfaction 18 months after the NWTA.
The authors acknowledge limitations to their research, since they did not have a comparison or control group, which results in various "threats to internal validity"[14] mentioned by the researchers, primarily history, maturation, and selection bias.
A second study accumulated data from 45 trainings held between 2006-2009, indicated that the psychological well-being of participants, as well as other indicators, improved after the initial weekend of participation in an NWTA. Many of the initial changes endured across a 2-year follow-up period.[15]
MKP co-founder Bill Kauth's 1992 book A Circle of Men: The Original Manual for Men's Support Groups details how groups of men can assemble to help one another emotionally and psychologically.[16] Men who have completed the NWTA are encouraged to consider joining such a group. An optional "Integration Group" training is offered shortly after each NWTA; a fee is charged for this training (fees vary by community and format). Some training courses are part of a small integration group on their own with qualified leaders, other training courses take place over an entire weekend and can cost between $100 and $250 depending on lodging, location, and number of men attending.
The "I-Group" is for participants to engage in ongoing personal work and to apply the principles learned on the NWTA to their lives. I-Groups are available to all men who complete the NWTA, and sometimes to men who want to explore the Mankind Project. Many I-Groups meet one evening per week. A typical I-Group meeting includes conversation and sharing in a series of "rounds" that allow each man to be heard.[17]
In both the New Warrior weekend and the follow-up groups, Mankind Project "... focuses on men's emotional well-being, drawing on elements like Carl Jung's theories of the psyche, nonviolent communication, breath work, Native American customs, and good old-fashioned male bonding".[18]
A study conducted in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area collected retrospective survey data from members of 45 I-groups that met between 1990 and 1998. At the end of the study period (1998), 23 groups were active and 22 had disbanded. Groups were active for 4.5 years (median), and the median length of individual participation was 26.2 months (2.2 years). Each group consisted of about six men. Survey participants rated their groups as moderately effective.[19]
MKP is affiliated with several similar training programs:
My Morning Jacket frontman (vocals, guitar) Jim James, told Pitchfork magazine:[27]
There's this group called ManKind Project, they lead retreats to try and help men feel more OK with all the different sides of being a man. I went on one of those retreats because I was so intrigued. It was fucking amazing. The experience was about taking accountability for yourself and your actions ...
Actor Wentworth Miller, in an address to the Human Rights Campaign during an event in 2013, describes his involvement with MKP as vital to his coming out process, and his introduction to being part of an accepting community.[28] In his letter rejecting an invitation to the Festival of Festivals, Saint Petersburg on grounds that he as a gay man could not support the event while Russian law prohibits homosexuality, Miller signed as a member of the ManKind Project as well as member of the HRC and GLAAD.[29]
Actor Eka Darville told the New York Times that MKP helped him become a better father, commenting, "There is no way I could have done that without a brotherhood telling me all the bull I was projecting onto my wife . ... "
Frederick Marx, a film director, writer, and producer (Hoop Dreams, Journey from Zanskar) talks openly about his involvement with MKP,[30] and has made documentary films involving the organization, e.g., The Tatanka Alliance[31] about a "Hunka" ceremony[32] to consecrate an alliance between the ManKind Project USA and the Pine Ridge Oglala Lakota elders community.
A 2007 Houston Press article[33] detailed criticisms of the ManKind Project. Anthropology associate professor Norris G. Lang[34] said that some of the groups' exercises that he attended were "fairly traumatic" and were "dangerous territory for an unprofessional"; and Anti-cult advocate Rick Alan Ross said that The ManKind Project appears to use coercive mind-control tactics, such as limiting participants' sleep and diet, cutting them off from the outside world, forcing members to keep secrets, and using intimidation. A response by the ManKind Project states: "If you have visited the [Cult Education Forum], you know he refers to the ManKind Project as a large group awareness training ... Rick Ross doesn’t call us a cult."[35] The organization also indicated that licensed physicians review applicants' medical questionnaires, and that they added questions to "improve our ability to identify men with emotional instability, mental illness, and suicidal ideation."[36] They subsequently organized a team of mental health professionals who assess men's appropriateness for the training.[37]
A 2007 wrongful death lawsuit filed by the parents of Texan Michael Scinto charged that MKP was responsible for his suicide. The parents said that he had struggled with alcohol and cocaine addiction in the past. Scinto was a 29-year-old adult who had been sober for a year and a half prior to his attending MKP's New Warrior Training Adventure in July 2005. Two days after Scinto returned from the NWTA retreat, he sought psychiatric help at Ben Taub Hospital. He subsequently resumed drinking and taking drugs, and he then committed suicide. The parties settled in 2008. The terms of the settlement were not publicly disclosed, although a copy of the court documents were posted online by Warren Throckmorton,[38] and aspects of the settlement were reported in the press.[39] [40]