If I felt like I needed the house, I would accept it. If I felt like I did not need the house, I would gift it. Either way I would try to put the house in better relation with the local landbase and oppressed peoples than when I inherited it. If I intended to live in the house I would do co-housing, attempt to set up some sort of collective or safe house or social center or seedbank or tool library, de-pave it if I could get away with it, get off grid as best I could, and plant a native perennial polyculture or create wild habitat. If I decided to gift it I would gift it to the people who needed and deserved it most in my area (such as evicted natives, inner city poor, rural poor, street queers, escaped domestic violence or sexual assault survivors, migrant laborers, prole strategists who could use time off to organize actions, etc.). I wouldn't become an absentee owner or a renter, and I would only sell it if I thought the money could do more good than the house, and I would not feel entitled to the money from the sale for myself, it would go to projects and solidarity. I would ask, who lived here before us, how do they live now, who needs this? I would try to cultivate gifting, sharing, networking, autonomy, create a hub for strategic struggle...