Burning Man in the Context of Refugees and Starvation- Deep Poverty
Posted: Sun Jul 20, 2025 7:36 pm
Hi all,
First time Burner, but long time Rainbow Family and humanitarian worker.
Hey, hope this is Ok, but I read the BM Journal Article about compliance, and I really appreciate the thoughtfulness of this piece - https://journal.burningman.org/2025/02/ ... compliant/
But, as I prep for the trip, and am looking forward to this experience shaping my work with LGBTQ+ refugees in Gorom camp in South Sudan, who are facing abuse (including murder of their peers) - I just wanted to step back and talk about global context - the fact that most BM attendees have some degree of financial comfort - and the piece.
1. “Burning Man has come to a point of unprecedented reach, scope, and diversity...”
Critique: This implies a global cultural movement, yet it is centered on a ticketed event in a desert that costs thousands to attend. Calling this “diverse” should be reconsidered in a global context where 99% of the global poor couldn’t afford the flight, ticket, or supplies. We should question the term inclusive when it's limited to people who can afford to stay in an extra-cost camp.
2. “We are moving from a ‘High Culture’ to a ‘Diaspora’ period…”
Critique: The use of “diaspora” to describe the voluntary diffusion of a festival lifestyle does not acknowledge real diasporas, which result from war, genocide, famine, or persecution — we could be considered a group of wealthy creatives who take their dance parties global.
3. “Making bureaucracy Burning Man compliant.”
Critique: Only in an environment of extreme privilege can bureaucracy be considered a philosophical playground. In a refugee camp, people are dying because they can’t get their paperwork processed for food rations or medical care. There, bureaucracy means life or death, not whether your “form has playful language.”
4. “Burners get inspired to collaborate… so we need bureaucracy.”
Critique: This ignores how much unpaid labor and cognitive bandwidth are required to even have the time to collaborate. Most of the world’s poorest are trying to survive the day. They don't “collaborate” on visionary projects; they stand in line for food distribution or try not to get cholera from the river. The mission of my humanitarian work at Dusoma is about making sure that all staff are not asked to volunteer.
Happy to hear your feedback.
Kathryn
First time Burner, but long time Rainbow Family and humanitarian worker.
Hey, hope this is Ok, but I read the BM Journal Article about compliance, and I really appreciate the thoughtfulness of this piece - https://journal.burningman.org/2025/02/ ... compliant/
But, as I prep for the trip, and am looking forward to this experience shaping my work with LGBTQ+ refugees in Gorom camp in South Sudan, who are facing abuse (including murder of their peers) - I just wanted to step back and talk about global context - the fact that most BM attendees have some degree of financial comfort - and the piece.
1. “Burning Man has come to a point of unprecedented reach, scope, and diversity...”
Critique: This implies a global cultural movement, yet it is centered on a ticketed event in a desert that costs thousands to attend. Calling this “diverse” should be reconsidered in a global context where 99% of the global poor couldn’t afford the flight, ticket, or supplies. We should question the term inclusive when it's limited to people who can afford to stay in an extra-cost camp.
2. “We are moving from a ‘High Culture’ to a ‘Diaspora’ period…”
Critique: The use of “diaspora” to describe the voluntary diffusion of a festival lifestyle does not acknowledge real diasporas, which result from war, genocide, famine, or persecution — we could be considered a group of wealthy creatives who take their dance parties global.
3. “Making bureaucracy Burning Man compliant.”
Critique: Only in an environment of extreme privilege can bureaucracy be considered a philosophical playground. In a refugee camp, people are dying because they can’t get their paperwork processed for food rations or medical care. There, bureaucracy means life or death, not whether your “form has playful language.”
4. “Burners get inspired to collaborate… so we need bureaucracy.”
Critique: This ignores how much unpaid labor and cognitive bandwidth are required to even have the time to collaborate. Most of the world’s poorest are trying to survive the day. They don't “collaborate” on visionary projects; they stand in line for food distribution or try not to get cholera from the river. The mission of my humanitarian work at Dusoma is about making sure that all staff are not asked to volunteer.
Happy to hear your feedback.
Kathryn