“…The community has been recognized, in various investigations, as a privileged setting for intervention in the promotion of mental health, based on participation in artistic, recreational, sports, occupational and religious activities, which are not explicitly offered as therapeutic actions, but which are articulated as community-based initiatives. In this sense, interventions based on art are recognized as music groups (Clift, Manship, & Stephens, 2017;Hedemann & Frazier, 2016), dance, art therapy and creative expression (Ruiz-Casares, Kolyn, Sullivan, & Rousseau, 2015), writing, visual arts (Bridger, Emmanouil, & Lawthom, 2017) and traditional games in the public space (Bang, 2014b); also, occupational training activities such as training in agriculture (Shields-Zeeman, Pathare, Hipple Walters, Kapadia-Kundu, & Joag, 2016), shoe store and carpentry (Wilson, Cordier, Parsons, Vaz, & Buchanan, 2016), tribal history and jewelery making (Langdon et al, 2016), community cooking and English as a second language (Ruiz-Casares et al, 2015).…”