Standoff at whites-only city in Ozarks as alarming plot is revealed
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Authorities in Arkansas have initiated an inquiry into a whites-only community in the Ozark Mountains, following growing concerns that approximately twelve homeschooled children may be learning neo-Nazi beliefs rather than essential skills.

The Return to the Land (RTTL) settlement is situated on a secluded 160-acre estate near Ravenden, Arkansas. It is spearheaded by Eric Orwoll, a far-right YouTuber and ex-adult film actor, and Peter Csere, an extremist previously accused of stabbing a man in Ecuador.

The enclave prohibits people of color, Muslims, Jews, and others from entering its premises. Activists for education and human rights argue that the children in this isolated setting are at significant risk of indoctrination and require urgent intervention.

Tess Ulrey, who leads the Coalition for Responsible Home Education (CRHE) nonprofit, highlighted that Arkansas law leaves these RTTL children particularly exposed.

‘In an insulated group like RTTL, the educational setting might reinforce ideologies of white supremacy, spread dubious and fictionalized sciences, support harmful behaviors, and restrict children from forming independent beliefs or hearing alternative perspectives,’ Ulrey stated to the Daily Mail.

‘We believe that kind of homeschooling is a violation of children’s rights, and harms their ability to thrive in a diverse and connected world.’

While RTTL hasn’t revealed their educational curriculum, external observers have been alarmed by indications of extremist sway. In a recent media tour, Hitler’s infamous book Mein Kampf was seen on a shelf in Orwoll’s office.

The compound’s radical nature has fueled fears the children are being spoon-fed supremacist dogma.

Roughly a dozen children are being homeschooled at the RTTL compound, but little is known about what they learn

Roughly a dozen children are being homeschooled at the RTTL compound, but little is known about what they learn  

In the past, investigators across the US have exposed illicit homeschooling materials that glorify Hitler’s Third Reich, demean Martin Luther King Jr., and openly claim black people are less smart than whites.

They even uncovered lesson plans for baking a ‘Führer cake’ on Hitler’s birthday from an Ohio-based group in 2023.

Orwoll has previously defended RTTL as a legitimate social experiment.

‘It’s important to our members to raise their children around whites – people they feel comfortable around,’ he told the Daily Mail earlier this year.

He insists the enclave, also branded ‘Community1’ and ‘The Settlement,’ is legal, and does not flout America’s civil rights laws because it is a private, members-only club, and so can limit who may join.

The self-described ‘white identitarian’ sees RTTL as the beginning of a much larger movement.

He bills the compound as the first of many nationwide that doesn’t flout fair housing laws while rejecting all applicants of color, Muslims, Hindus, Jews, and those who identify as LGBTQ.

Critics say the case highlights just how permissive Arkansas’s homeschooling laws are.

Parents must simply notify their local school district of their intent to homeschool. They are not required to have a diploma, teaching experience, or submit curricula for review, says Ulrey.

‘There is no legislation in place to continue oversight of education, safety of the homeschooled children or opportunity access,’ she says.

That legal blind spot, she adds, denies children in the enclave the chance to receive a balanced education.

State lawmakers should back a draft law that supports the ‘rights of children to access an open future’, she said.

Others say the problem goes beyond Arkansas. At least 38 other US states have similarly weak oversight of homeschooling.

Kieryn Darkwater, a political campaigner who writes about growing up in ‘cult and cult-like environments’ during the 1990s, told the Daily Mail that RTTL represents a grim repeat of that pattern.

Orwoll, the president of Return to the Land, sparked with his whites-only community near Ravenden, Arkansas

Orwoll, the president of Return to the Land, sparked with his whites-only community near Ravenden, Arkansas

Orwoll has posted the community's progress on his social media platforms - including YouTube. It bars people of color, Muslims, Jews and anyone else organizers deemed to be LGBTQ-leaning or a militant atheist

Orwoll has posted the community’s progress on his social media platforms – including YouTube. It bars people of color, Muslims, Jews and anyone else organizers deemed to be LGBTQ-leaning or a militant atheist

Orwoll has made headlines lately for 'Community1' – aplot of land that Return to the Land owns near the Ozark Mountains – where applicants must prove their white European heritage in order to live there

Orwoll has made headlines lately for ‘Community1’ – aplot of land that Return to the Land owns near the Ozark Mountains – where applicants must prove their white European heritage in order to live there 

Ravenden (population 423), the closest town to Orwoll's land, is near the Missouri border, 140 miles north of Arkansas's state capital, Little Rock

Ravenden (population 423), the closest town to Orwoll’s land, is near the Missouri border, 140 miles north of Arkansas’s state capital, Little Rock

‘The families indoctrinating their children with white supremacist ideology, such as those who live in racist communes like RTTL, are not providing education and have chosen to actively harm their kids’ chances of success in adulthood,’ said Darkwater.

Investigations elsewhere suggest what RTTL’s homeschooling may look like.

In 2023, researchers uncovered the ‘Dissident Homeschool’, an Ohio-based network that distributed racist, antisemitic and homophobic materials to far-right families nationwide.

The logo for Orwoll's organization Return to the Land which is overseeing the development of the community. The group sells memberships rather than land in hopes of skirting the federal Fair Housing Act which prohibits housing discrimination

The logo for Orwoll’s organization Return to the Land which is overseeing the development of the community. The group sells memberships rather than land in hopes of skirting the federal Fair Housing Act which prohibits housing discrimination

Through the encrypted app Telegram, parents received Nazi-infused lesson plans: handwriting exercises quoting Adolf Hitler, distorted accounts smearing Martin Luther King Jr., and even family activities like baking a ‘Führer cake’ on Hitler’s birthday, decorated with swastikas, a Vice investigation showed.

Critics fear RTTL could be doing the same — cloaking indoctrination in the language of ‘parental freedom’.

The pasts of RTTL’s leaders add to the unease.

Orwoll once made money performing in livestreamed sex videos with his then-wife Caitlyn, who now lives at RTTL with their four children. He now denounces pornography, presenting himself as a Christian traditionalist.

Csere, meanwhile, was arrested in Ecuador over the stabbing of a miner — an incident he claims was self-defense and which remains under investigation.

He has also been accused of stealing tens of thousands from a vegan eco-village, allegations he denies.

Both men have openly promoted white supremacist views. Orwoll appeared as a guest at a gathering led by extremist firebrand Nick Fuentes, while Csere has downplayed the Holocaust online.

In July 2025, Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin launched an investigation into RTTL, citing possible violations of civil rights and fair housing laws.

Griffin’s spokesman told the Daily Mail that the probe is ‘continuing’.

Neither Orwoll, Csere, nor the Arkansas Department of Education responded to our requests for comment.

RTTL is home to about 40 men, women and children, living in cabins connected by gravel roads.

The co-founder of Return to the Land, Peter Csere, 36, has been living on the property for two years in a cabin he built there for his family

The co-founder of Return to the Land, Peter Csere, 36, has been living on the property for two years in a cabin he built there for his family 

Orwoll says he relishes the chance to defend his community in court and that he has already cleared its legality with his lawyers

Orwoll says he relishes the chance to defend his community in court and that he has already cleared its legality with his lawyers

The 'Dissident Homeschool' network outed in 2023 taught handwriting through Adolf Hitler quotes

The ‘Dissident Homeschool’ network outed in 2023 taught handwriting through Adolf Hitler quotes

Most of the homes on the compound were built by the residents. Some already have solar panels, generators and water systems

Most of the homes on the compound were built by the residents. Some already have solar panels, generators and water systems

The rise of communities like Orwoll's comes amid President Donald Trump's anti-DEI policies and the revisionist ideology of the MAGA movement

The rise of communities like Orwoll’s comes amid President Donald Trump’s anti-DEI policies and the revisionist ideology of the MAGA movement 

Applicants undergo an interview, background check, and must prove white European heritage by filling out a questionnaire and sharing family photographs.

The settlement is remote — half an hour to the nearest grocery store, and miles from Arkansas’s state capital.

Orwoll recently acknowledged in another interview that about a dozen children are being homeschooled on the site.

He said it was up to ‘parents to educate their kids how they want.’

But with Mein Kampf on the shelf and an openly racist ethos at the community’s core, campaigners say that freedom is being abused at the expense of vulnerable children.

For Ulrey, the case underlines the urgent need for reform.

‘We believe that kind of homeschooling is a violation of children’s rights, and harms their ability to thrive in a diverse and connected world,’ she said.

She says Arkansas lawmakers must act before more children are harmed.

For now, the children of RTTL remain out of reach — growing up behind closed gates in a whites-only enclave, homeschooled by parents who openly embrace racist ideology.

And as campaigners warn, unless the law changes, the next generation raised in the Arkansas woods may emerge not educated, but radicalized.

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