Drug use at the commune
MDMA (Impacts on Children and Young Persons
A three-year study undertaken by Massey University's School of Psychology culminating in a 260-page report was released in May 2010. The study was commissioned by the New Zealand Communities Growth Trust that had been set up by a High Court order to manage the Centrepoint Community Growth Trust assets after the commune was disestablished in 2000. Twenty nine men and women in their 20s, 30s and 40s (at the time of the study) who had spent at least part of their youth at the commune were interviewed about their experiences of growing up at Centrepoint, including how psychological manipulation, neglect, sexual abuse and drug taking affected them at the time and subsequently. About 300 children lived at the commune over the 22 years it operated. The qualitative study, titled ''A Different Kind of Family: Retrospective accounts of growing up at Centrepoint, and implications for adulthood'', contains testimonies from some of the 29 interviewees. Most participants agreed it was common to have sex for the first time between the ages of 11 and 13. Boys "propositioned" by older women found it easier to resist, while sexually abused girls - some as young as 10 - were "idealised" as "being in touch with their loving". Some of the key findings were: * Centrepoint was an environment which potentially exposed children to a range of adverse circumstances that extended well beyond the widely reported sexual abuse. Drug use, psychological manipulation, parental neglect, witnessing abuse, corporal punishment, adult conflict, peer bullying and a parent's imprisonment were just some of the additional factors that may have impacted on them. * Negative impacts were psychological disorders, substance abuse problems, difficulties in intimate and family relationships, financial problems, lack of direction in education and career, fear of social stigma and, for some, uncertainty about their perception of reality. * Different experiences, beliefs and coping strategies created a tendency towards factionalised perspectives about Centrepoint with some study participants arguing it was fundamentally abusive, and others that it was an ideal place to grow up. * Stigmatised perceptions of Centrepoint were reported as being further sources of psychological distress. There have been suggestions that the report was 'watered-down' by excluding some of the testimonial content because they would have been too hard to believe and had an impact on the reception of the report as a whole.After Centrepoint
In March 2000 the trust that owned the property was disestablished by order of The High Court of New Zealand, and all assets placed under administration by the newly formed New Zealand Communities Growth Trust. The new trust then leased property to the New Community Group, made up of former Centrepoint members, who formed the Anahata Eco-village. By 2004, about 20 adults and 8 children were resident. In 2007 a group of artists took over the property on a short-term lease and renamed it as Kahikatea Eco-village and art-space. On 17 December 2008 the Public Trust, as trustee for the New Zealand Community Growth Trust, announced the sale of the 7.6 hectare (19 acre) property and communal living buildings to The Prema Charitable Trust. The site has been renameReferences
Further reading
* ''Surviving Centrepoint'' by Rachel C King Random House Ltd., Auckland 2021) * ''Inside Centrepoint'' by Len Oakes (Benton Ross Publishers Ltd., Auckland, 1986) {{ISBN, 0908636075 *''A Different Kind of Family: Retrospective accounts of growing up at Centrepoint, and implications for adulthood'' (Massey University, 2010External links