The purpose of this study is to identify the experience and meaning of the community Intergration activities for self-reliance of the mentally disabled and to analyze the support of the community capacity building of the mentally disabled. The study was conducted using general qualitative research methods, and to this end, three groups of FGIs were conducted: mentally disabled, local residents, and business personnel. According to the analysis, the experience of mentally disabled people participating in Our Neighborhood Meeting was a belonging experience in the village. Participants with mental disabilities listened to local residents, talked about them together, and worked together to become members. For local residents, Our Neighborhood Meeting has become a familiar place to meet mentally disabled people. While working in their respective village organizations, they welcomed participants with mental disabilities by combining with the right business groups, so the type or nature of their activities did not change after the mentally disabled participated. The mentally disabled and the local people could be meet again next time by doing these activities together. The core of the A Center s efforts to create a place where local residents and mentally disabled people can meet naturally was to take a way that the Center itself permeated the village. Since the first year of the project, the business group has consistently attended various village gatherings to consider ways and alternatives to solve the problem of the village. When the business group became a relationship to talk about the problems of local residents, village organizations and villages, the adaptation of the mentally disabled to the community became a common problem that the village should strive for, and the village moved from there. Based on the analysis results, practical implications for supporting community integration of mentally disabled people were presented at weekly rehabilitation facilities.