A group of people involved in a “liberation movement” led by an eccentric South African man wants to establish a money-free community on the mountain in Bolton. Residents of the tiny slope-side town are trying to figure out how to react.
Behind the plan is a young couple, Krysta and David Mihaljevich. She describes herself as a medical intuitive — meaning she can use her intuition to find the source of someone’s ailment — and a psychic reader; he identifies as a Reiki master and shamanic healer. Earlier this year, they opened the Lotus Lodge Inn, a wellness center on the Bolton Valley Access Road.
In June, the couple began a more ambitious endeavor. They launched an online fundraiser seeking $500,000 to buy property to start an “Ubuntu” community in Bolton.
Ubuntu communities are the brainchild of Michael Tellinger, a South African man who describes himself as an “author, scientist and … a real-life Indiana Jones.” (Ubuntu is a Bantu term that roughly translates to “humanity toward others.”)
Tellinger says he’s trying to pioneer a “postcapitalist social structure” without money or any form of trade, in which people share all resources. He calls this “contributionism.” His 2013 book UBUNTU Contributionism: A Blueprint for Human Prosperity describes how to create communities based on this concept. Community members write the rules, and a council of elders offers guidance.
Tellinger has espoused some highly peculiar theories.
In 2007, he published another book, Slave Species of the Gods. It makes the case that an extraterrestrial tribe created the human race to serve as slaves mining gold for them. A prolific user of YouTube, he claims in videos to have personally uncovered massive corporate fraud.
Tellinger has also started an Ubuntu political party in South Africa. By his own count, candidates mustered a minuscule 2,700 votes countrywide in municipal elections this August; he said the real goal is to bring media attention to the movement.
The Mihaljeviches encountered Tellinger and his Ubuntu Liberation Movement on the spiritually inclined website Gaia, where he has a video series. As they sat in the softly lit lobby of the Lotus Lodge on August 17, the couple spoke earnestly about why Tellinger’s contributionism philosophy clicked with them. Krysta said she’s long felt that “the current structure isn’t working.” As an example of its failure, she cited the concentration of wealth among a small number of families.
Krysta, 32, is spritely, with waist-length blond hair and ring-laden fingers; David, also 32, has a reddish beard and wore a lotus flower T-shirt and Carhartts. The lodge offers the couple’s health services and those of an ayurvedic master who lives on the premises, providing ancient Indian healing treatments. The couple, who used to run a bed-and-breakfast in Sedona, Ariz., also cook organic meals for guests.
After learning of Ubuntu, Krysta emailed Tellinger, told him about Bolton and offered to “hold space” for an Ubuntu community. He responded within 20 minutes, enthusiastic about the idea.
The blueprint for setting up Ubuntu communities is uncharacteristically pragmatic, relying on the very thing the movement seeks to eradicate: money.
“It kind of takes money to be free from money,” Krysta said, noting that she and David plan to use revenue from their inn, in addition to fundraising. “Our intention is to give all of our profits back to the [Ubuntu] community and start purchasing more property here to house more people who are in the same mind-set.”
The only requirement for joining the Ubuntu community will be a commitment to work at least three hours each week on a community project, she explained. Until they can produce their own energy, food and other resources, people will probably keep their day jobs.
Tellinger provided a YouTube video for the fundraising page in which he urged Ubuntu acolytes to contribute to the purchase: “We have an unbelievable opportunity to acquire a piece of land — and virtually a whole town, if one looks at it from that perspective — that could become, in essence, the first Ubuntu village or Ubuntu community in the USA that operates on the principles of contributionism. Bolton Valley, Vt., is the venue, and we need $500,000 to purchase the rest of the land to make this a reality.”
The video, posted on the fundraising page, caught the attention of Bolton residents, who were taken aback by his suggestion that the entire town could be “acquired.”
Asked about his statement, Krysta said Tellinger had gone off script and said they have no intention of somehow buying all of Bolton.
Another cause for concern among residents: Originally, the online fundraiser stated that the goal was to buy Bolton Valley Resort. The reference was recently removed.
The resort, which offers downhill skiing from a 3,150-foot summit and a large network of Nordic and backcountry trails, changed hands five times in quick succession before Doug Nedde and Larry Williams took it over in 2007.
It is the lifeblood of Bolton, providing a solid property-tax base, employment and backyard recreational opportunities for the town’s 1,200 residents. The value of the businesses and condos on the mountain are closely tied to the resort’s success.
“We’ve been improving our financial profitability every year,” Nedde reported, except for last year’s season, plagued by a lack of snow. But since at least 2010, he and Williams have wanted to sell it. Both men are experienced real estate professionals, but, according to Nedde, ski operations fall outside their respective “core businesses.”
In an interview last week, Krysta and David downplayed the possibility that they might buy the resort, which includes a 200-room hotel. “If we did come up with the money we needed, there’s a chance that we might collectively purchase the resort as Ubuntu,” Krysta said, noting that it could provide a significant source of revenue to support the community. But, she emphasized, they have no agreement with the owners and are also looking at land elsewhere on the mountain.
In a separate interview, Nedde echoed Krysta. “They know we’re open to selling the resort,” he said. But, “I can tell you we don’t have a purchase and sales agreement with them.” Nedde leases the Lotus Lodge building to the couple, and he noted that they do have an option to purchase that building. “I think they have done a tremendous job of building a great business,” he added.
As for the resort, Nedde said, “We continue to try to find an established ski resort operator that is interested in buying Bolton Valley.”
Bolton residents are keenly interested in the fate of the resort — and the mountain it sits on. They’ve notified their town officials, who are so far refraining from publicly weighing in on the Ubuntu proposal.
“We haven’t had a chance as a board to really discuss it, and we haven’t read anything formal from Ubuntu or Lotus Lodge,” said selectboard vice chair Josh Arneson, who is also vice president of sales and marketing for Bolton Valley Resort.
Selectboard chair Jen Dudley-Gaillard said, “I have not heard which parcel they are hoping to purchase and doubt that the whole of Bolton Valley Resort would be for sale for only $500,000.”
Despite skepticism, people are signaling that they’d like more information.
“My personal opinion is that there should be some community outreach and some involvement with the town, and there hasn’t been,” said Stephen Diglio, who is chair of the town’s Development Review Board.
Krysta said they were caught off guard by the publicity — several news outlets recently learned of the couple’s plans — and felt unprepared to go public with what was still a conceptual plan. She pledged to be transparent and noted that she and David are getting ready to send a letter explaining their plans to Bolton residents.
In the meantime, fellow Ubuntu followers around the country are contacting them with offers to assist, according to Krysta. A permaculture expert from New York City has offered his services, she said. After he heard about the endeavor, Pete Schwan, who has been the managing partner of a South Boston real estate firm called Bode Well, decided to move to Bolton to be a part of it. He bought a condo with David and Krysta, and arrives in two weeks. Disenchanted with what he calls a “debt slavery system,” he said, he’s been following Tellinger for about five years.
According to the fundraising page, they’ve raised only $15,000 from 145 supporters — just 3 percent of their goal — but Krysta said that contributions outside the online platform have brought the total closer to $250,000. Schwan said he plans to contribute proceeds from the sale of an investment property he co-owns in Boston.
It’s unclear how much support this budding group of free-spirited anticapitalists will have. Tellinger claims to have amassed “millions” of followers who’ve started affiliates in 200 countries. On the Ubuntu website, which allows followers to connect with each other, it appears that roughly 6,000 people have registered. Twenty-seven people have joined an online Vermont group.
The U.S. affiliate began in earnest just earlier this year, according to its national coordinator, Starr MacKinnon. The San Diego resident said they don’t yet have a way to track total membership, but a team of 40 people is starting to plan for communities in the states, working on everything from public relations to renewable energy systems. In monthly webinar planning sessions, the team has been exploring future Ubuntu community sites in several states, including Washington, Florida and New Mexico.
MacKinnon and Krysta said that other communities have been established elsewhere in the world; Seven Days was unable to confirm this. There’s a YouTube video of Tellinger giving viewers a tour of a small compound in South Africa, which he describes as a partially constructed Ubuntu community center for hosting backpackers. He has also posted videos previewing what he calls community projects — for instance, revitalizing an abandoned fish farm — but it’s unclear whether they’ve come to fruition.
In the United States, MacKinnon said, the Vermont opportunity has garnered the most interest: “We’ve been very focused on Bolton Valley.” And Tellinger is bringing more attention to the cause: He’s announced that he’s coming to the Lotus Lodge September 30 through October 2 to hold a community “meet and greet” and a workshop.
For her part, Krysta is confident their Ubuntu community will succeed. “We’re following our own inner truth,” she said.
This article appears in Aug 24 – Sep 1, 2016.



Whew.
I’m reminded of the controversy presently swirling around Tulsi Gabbard, the congresswoman from Hawaii (and a Bernie Sanders supporter) who has recently been challenged on her assertion that she has been Hindu all her life. People are saying she grew up in a cult called The Science of Identity Foundation. The Huff Post ran this article, and I have follwed Tulsi for a long time and never knew this.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/16/t…
My advice is: do your due diligence, folks. You can’t judge a book by looking at the cover. They may be great people, but dig deep.
wow another cult wants to be in Vermont . shut this down as fast as you can .
Its an enviable organic flow in our current structure.
Not a cult, religion or segregated community.
It’s using the political structure we have and moving toward more self sustainability and freedom. You have to start with one town. it’s a grass roots approach to freedom for all.
Yeah dig real deep because they take over one town they will take over many more then the whole state of Vermont..there’s enough idiots in Vt to fall for this crap.. The extraterrestrial tribe could be taking over Vt!!!.. “Tellinger says he’s trying to pioneer a “postcapitalist social structure” without money or any form of trade, in which people share all resources.”Yet he’s trying to raise $500,000.00 Yup great scam…
https://www.youtube.com/shared?ci=G9a9J4XF…
Here is an accurate representation of what we are supporting.
In transparency and truth,
“She describes herself as a medical intuitive…” is a lot different than saying “She is a medical intuitive.” The former seems to undermine the woman while the second states a fact that allows for the reader to judge. Regardless of what this couple is trying to accomplish, whether or not they are a cult, gets lost in this poor choice of words. It comes off like the author has an agenda.
Oh for god’s sake. There is no such thing as a “medical intuitive.” The author’s choice of words was perfectly appropriate.
Its an enviable organic flow in our current structure.
Not a cult, religion or segregated community.
It’s using the political structure we have and moving toward more self sustainability and freedom. You have to start with one town. it’s a grass roots approach to freedom for all.
Give me a break ! Since when does freedom require 500k. Self sustaining, no electric, no phones, no cable, no sewage system, all organic.
I love how you monkeys play with words. You will create a structure (laws and rules do not equate to freedom), and infrastructure. stop playing with words to suit your agenda. Just say you want life to be free which does not equate to freedom.
The reporter has an agenda – perhaps reality?
Compare:
She describes herself as a purple dinosaur vs. She is a purple dinosaur
Where the rubber meets the road is simple. The current system does NOT work or serve us well and moving towards cooperation not competition and division based on names,words and assumptions but strategies and ideas we can all understand and get behind that benefit ALL involved. That’s where the conversation can bring light not heat and be had by those involved NOT so much by spectators.
That’s exactly correct, RDS. Medical intuitive is a real thing (although I would never go to one) and a purple dinosaur is not. You got it. So in using the same language the author would use in allowing the woman to call herself a purple dinosaur, she is casting the same kind of doubt on a profession (again, I would never trust a medical intuitive but many people do).
I find it difficult to imagine that the owners of the Lotus Lodge are surprised by the attention this has received. As a BV resident who has been following this closely, I can explain the attention from my perspective. When their fundraising efforts began, the Lotus Lodge owners posted their intention of purchasing the ski resort and the water and sewer company. (They have since taken this down.) Many of us live in and/or own property in the resort residential zoning district adjacent to the resort. Our homes are hooked into the already maxed-out water and sewer company. Incredibly, in their online monthly collaborative meetings (available on YouTube), Ubuntu folks were saying that the community was entirely on board with the plan and that they were getting a lot of local support. In fact, most of us had NO idea this was being planned. My concern is not just for my own position, but for those in the Ubuntu community being seduced into donating money to the project based on the misinformation of town-wide support of this plan. Transparency from the start might have avoided some of this fuss.
Why did Krysta and David leave Sedona, AZ?
That’s a beautiful place for an Ubuntu contributionism community too?
Whackos!
Katherine – my guess is that Sedona had too many purple dinosaurs already…err…”medical intuitives.” I have my own *intuition* about someone that charges $180 dollars to talk to ghosts and prescribes raw food and thinking super duper hard to “cure” ailments.
http://www.lotuslodgeinn.com/readings-by-krysta.html
Ubuntu is a concept whose time has come. The current system enslaves the 99% and it is high time we reclaim our sovereign right to Live Free. Money was created as a form of control. And boy, it was a brilliant idea that has served the 1% beautifully!
Money was created as a form of control? Open yourself an Economics 101 book please, because money originates because it is a medium of exchange, a common measure of value, a standard of deferred payment, and a store of value. Also just saying “money” is vague. If you made an argument about how fiat currency may limit economic liberty — maybe I’d listen, but just blaming money without having some kind of logically structured argument as to how and why that will work economically… That’s just arm waving, it’s not an economic answer to anything.
So making people feel good with platitudes about things they don’t understand (like economics), such as saying (paraphrased) “money is the problem!” and making them feel emotional about it (because having money problems IS hard on people)… And then in turn TAKING their money starts to sound like a tactic a cult would use.
You know the real reason why this Ubuntu idea will never work? I do, but I think the people considering it as a good idea need to go read up on a few theories that might prove it otherwise. I’d recommend starting with both “the tragedy of the Commons” and “the prisoners dilemma” (an example of game theory) which in my mind both demonstrate that if people defect from the “we are all equals sharing and singing Kumbaya” — not only do they benefit themselves greatly, but they also harm those who originally tried to cooperate.
we need to keep the conversation going until it becomes the son without end praise the lord thank you jesus halleluya you all keep on keeping on love israel
So sad that the world is not ready to evolve out of the slave system and slave mentality. So many roadblocks to the evolution of our consciousness. Fear is the mind killer! its easy to point fingers and scream CULT without recognizing our current system is the real Cult that we have all been indoctrinated into. If you are so opposed to Ubuntu what you are essentially saying is this – I have no imagination to create a new way of living and I am completely dependent on my slave masters to take care of me.
We are all waking up at out own pace and we are all in this together and Ubuntu is our future. Honestly ask yourself do we really need money? If you listen to your heart the answer is obviously NO! People create everything, money does nothing but hold us back. Peace.
Opinions without background knowledge mean nothing. Go to ubuntuplanet.org and watch some of Michael Tellinger’s videos. Then make your comments.