In the 1800s and early 1900s, mutual aid organizations included unions, the
friendly societies that were common throughout Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
medieval craft guilds, the American "
fraternity societies" that existed during the
Great Depression providing their members with
health and
life insurance and
funeral benefits, and the English
working men's clubs of the 1930s that also provided health insurance. In the United States, mutual aid has been practiced extensively in marginalized communities, notably in Black communities, working-class neighborhoods, migrant groups,
LGBT communities, and others. The
Black Panther Party's urban food programs in the 1960s were another prominent example of mutual aid. During the AIDS crisis in the United States, many LGBT+ groups started mutual aid networks to provide medical care, support groups, and political activism when the government chose to ignore the community. A
Common Ground Relief mutual aid group organized to provide
disaster relief for the 2005 Hurricane Katrina. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, mutual aid and grassroots solidarity groups around the world organized distribution networks for food and
personal protective equipment. The term "mutual aid", previously associated with anarchism, drifted into public parlance during the pandemic. Local mutual aid groups, sometimes as local as the street level, organized to help shop, deliver medicine, create games for kids, offering civic connection during a time of isolation. Multiple online outlets ran stories on how to create a mutual aid group. Around the same time was the
Black Lives Matter movement, which resulted in multiple protestors detained and arrested by police. Bail funds, which are community organizations that pays cash bail for people in need for free, is another example of a mutual aid organization. == See also ==