358 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
358 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
LETTER FROM GERMANY No. 2
|
||
|
||
by
|
||
Frater U.'.D.'.
|
||
|
||
|
||
*In these letters I am taking a diachronic look at German
|
||
occultism past and present, mixing current news with historical
|
||
titbits illustrating among other things the strong relationship
|
||
between German magic and the Anglo-Saxon world. (For linguistic
|
||
reasons as well as for convenience's sake I will generally
|
||
include Swiss and Austrian occultism under this heading - no
|
||
imperialist takein intended!)*
|
||
|
||
|
||
The accentuation of this second letter will lie on the more
|
||
contemporary aspects of magic in the German speaking countries.
|
||
The pre-war magical setup had been a very lively affair: a
|
||
colorful hotpotch of irregular freemasonry and theosophy; yoga;
|
||
astrology (of an intellectual calibre never surpassed
|
||
internationally since, if we can trust an English expert like
|
||
Ellic Howe); Mazdaznan, a quasi-yogic religious cult originally
|
||
founded by Otto(man) Hanish in the USA, with its myriad of
|
||
dietetic rules and a strong emphasis on physical exercise and
|
||
pranayama, purporting to have derived from Iranian Zoroastrism
|
||
and still rumored to be extant in some of the more obscure
|
||
corners of the Western world; thelemic lodges of the O.T.O., and
|
||
other Crowleyites; the Fraternitas Saturni (FS); the Order of
|
||
Mental Building Masters (under Ra-Ohmir Quintscher), which later
|
||
fused with the FS; a variety of groups (often quite tiny
|
||
organisations with a cultural impact reciprocal to their actual
|
||
size) of the "blood and soil" flavor espousing runic lore and
|
||
racial/Arian mysticism, the most notable being the Guido von List
|
||
Society (which included the Armanen Order) and J”rg Lanz von
|
||
Liebenfels's ariosophic Ordo Novi Templi (Order of the New
|
||
Temple, ONT); plus the usual riffraff aspiring to more or less
|
||
vaguely defined "spiritual" or "esoteric" goals with a strong
|
||
Eastern bias, to name but the highlights of this era.
|
||
With the arrival of Hitler and National Socialist rulership
|
||
all "secret orders", whether genuinely clandestine operations or
|
||
"secret" only by claim, where banned along with political parties
|
||
(barring, of course, the NSdAP) and where consequently deprived
|
||
of all publicity. This process was basically completed by 1935
|
||
with the exception of the astrologers' associations, which in
|
||
1937 even became part of the workers' union temporarily, until
|
||
they, too, were abolished and persecuted in 1941 following Rudolf
|
||
Hess's misguided flight to England which was purported to have
|
||
been incited by his personal astrological counselor. In a later
|
||
letter I will cover the question of Nazi Occultism in a more
|
||
comprehensive manner. Suffice it here to state that the magical
|
||
scene in Germany and Austria was practically defunct from 1935 at
|
||
the latest and was unable to recover until well after the war
|
||
when the more dire material needs in these devastated countries
|
||
had been coped with.
|
||
Gregor A. Gregorius (1888-1961), the Berlin bookseller whose
|
||
conventional name was Eugen Grosche, had founded the FS in 1928,
|
||
as mentioned in my *Letter from Germany No. 1*. He had been a
|
||
communist of sorts with a one year arrest during Nazi
|
||
dictatorship to prove it. (He had even moved into Swiss exile and
|
||
later went to Italy where he was arrested by the fascists and
|
||
turned over to the German authorities on their categorical
|
||
request. Interestingly enough, his Gestapo arrest warrant
|
||
declares his "contacts with the internationally renowned
|
||
Freemason Aleister Crowley" as one of the prime reasons for his
|
||
internment.)
|
||
Immediately after the war he became a "cultural commissary"
|
||
of the German Communist Party in the then time Soviet Zone (the -
|
||
Eastern - *German Democratic Republic* was only founded in 1948,
|
||
as was the - West German - *Federal Republic of Germany*) but was
|
||
later expelled on reasons of "bourgeois tendencies", a standard
|
||
accusation in Stalinist times.
|
||
He next moved to West Berlin, where he set up a bookstore
|
||
and renewed his international contacts, getting together a number
|
||
of pre-war members and re-registering the FS as a formal
|
||
institution in 1948. In 1950 he started publishing the monthly
|
||
*Bl„tter f<>r angewandte okkulte Lebenskunst* ("Magazine for
|
||
Applied Occult Arts of Life"), a curious title veiling the most
|
||
comprehensive, extensive and encylopedic periodical on the
|
||
magical arts in Western history. While openly sold in bookstores,
|
||
it was the official organ of the Fraternitas Saturni and included
|
||
inlets (handed out to members only) covering internal affairs
|
||
such as graduations, membership lists, syllabi &c.
|
||
The publication mode of this foretime monthly magazine was
|
||
later changed to bi-monthly appearance and it existed till 1963,
|
||
totalling 164 issues of some 3,500 pages of text and
|
||
illustrations. Gregorius retained editorship until his death and
|
||
it was only in concurrence with internal squabbles and schisms
|
||
within the order itself that it ceased publication two years
|
||
after. It has never been published in English (or any other
|
||
language apart from German, for that matter), though Stephen
|
||
Flowers quotes extensively from it in his excellent *Fire and
|
||
Ice* (Llewellyn Publications).
|
||
|
||
The English speaking world would really be in for a surprise
|
||
or two should this magazine be published in translation one day.
|
||
True to say, the general tenor of its articles is biassed towards
|
||
the more traditionalist approach to magic and the majority of
|
||
essays may well be considered to be somewhat pedestrian, as
|
||
magazines generally go; but then again never before (or after)
|
||
has Western magic produced such a treasure house of knowledge
|
||
surpassing even Aleister Crowley's famous *Equinox* in scope,
|
||
practicability and diversity. There is many a pearl of wisdom to
|
||
be found here for anyone interested in the conventional mode of
|
||
magic, and it is to be hoped that some American or English
|
||
publisher will be bold enought to take the risk of publishing it
|
||
in translation one day.
|
||
Nor where the *Bl„tter* the order's only publication. Well
|
||
before the war Gregorius edited the magazine *Saturn Gnosis*,
|
||
which was taken up again after the FS's post-war reconstitution
|
||
and is still being published on an irregular basis; other
|
||
magazines included *Vita-Gnosis* and *Der magische Weg* ("The
|
||
Magical Path"). However, these periodicals were strictly
|
||
promulgated for members only and are very hard (and costly!) to
|
||
come by for outsiders.
|
||
Today, order membership has decreased considerably compared
|
||
with the fifties, but this is not, as one might suppose, due to
|
||
lack of interest. On the contrary: while fluctuation in the
|
||
order's purported heyday used to be exorbitant (appr. 50% per
|
||
year!), it has been reduced to almost nil now due to its rigid
|
||
initiation policy. For unlike the O.T.O., the FS is not obliged
|
||
by its own constitution to accept any candidate willing (or
|
||
purporting) to give it a try. Consequently, only very few
|
||
applicants ever make it into the order's august ranks, and it is
|
||
safe to say that the Fraternitas Saturni still constitutes the
|
||
paragon of traditionalist, conventional magic in the German
|
||
speaking world of today.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
However, magic comes in many masks. Especially the younger
|
||
generation amongst today's magicians has lost interest in the
|
||
dogmatic and traditionalist approach or is, at least, striving to
|
||
incorporate more modern techniques and beliefs as well. This is
|
||
mainly the doing of what I have named the "Bonn Group" of
|
||
magicians operating between 1979 to 1981 in a formal framework
|
||
and individually actively contributing to the advancement of
|
||
magical theory and practice ever since.
|
||
When I founded the Horus Bookshop with two partners in Bonn,
|
||
in 1979, the current wave of esotericism had not quite begun yet,
|
||
and while interest in the occult arts was undeniably mounting,
|
||
business then was sluggish enough to provide ample time for other
|
||
activities. Thus, a group of some fourteen people (male and
|
||
female) interested in practical magic assembled in the bookshop's
|
||
backroom every other week or so to constitute what was
|
||
tentatively termed the "Working Group for Experimental Magic".
|
||
Most of us were then still studying at university (as did I
|
||
beside my career as a not yet quite successful entrepreneur in
|
||
the book business), and quite a few have later finished their
|
||
academic studies with doctorates or masters' theses in various
|
||
fields running from Physics to Comparative Literature, from
|
||
Indology via German and English Literature to Comparative
|
||
Religious Studies, Medicine, Psychology and Social Studies; while
|
||
the tiny minority of our professional people were all working in
|
||
the medical field. Thus, intellectual standards were pretty high
|
||
even by the academic yardstick and a wide reading knowledge could
|
||
be relied upon.
|
||
A few members where well worn experts of some ten years'
|
||
standing, some, such as myself, had only begun to work on
|
||
practical magic proper about a year or so before, complete
|
||
beginners being only few. Our group convened primarily for
|
||
practical work in various traditions covering a broad spectrum
|
||
ranging from Franz Bardon's system via the Golden Dawn,
|
||
Freemasonism and Kabbalism to Crowleyan, Tibetan, Voodoo, Wiccan,
|
||
neopagan and shamanic techniques. Experiments included telepathy,
|
||
hypnosis, astral travel, kabbalistic path workings, rune magic,
|
||
tarot readings, sigil magic, the use of astrology for practical
|
||
magic and rituals, rituals, rituals. Rituals indoors, rituals
|
||
outdoors, rituals in caves and basements in the woods and in the
|
||
living room (only a few could afford their own temple rooms then,
|
||
and these were usually too small to encompass us all), rituals
|
||
for love and for healing, for death and for smiting foes, for fun
|
||
and profit, rituals with drugs and without, and lots of rituals
|
||
just to gain experience or for the pure, uninhibited heck of it.
|
||
In addition to our regular meetings practical research was
|
||
augmented by additional work on a more individual basis or in
|
||
smaller groups which gladly reported on their results and
|
||
discussed new and old approaches towards the Black Arts. Topics
|
||
thrashed out covered physics and Thelema, trance techniques and
|
||
sigil magic, Crowley and Gurdjieff, the pro and cons of
|
||
hallucinogenics in ritual, the psychological rationale behind
|
||
analogies and correspondences, behind the synchronicities of
|
||
oracle readings from tarot cards to horoscopes (most of us
|
||
sporting a strong Jungian bias at that time), sex magic, and a
|
||
pile of others - far too many to list here. Most important was
|
||
our basic tenet, "if it works, use it; if it doesn't work, don't
|
||
believe it", which made all the difference when compared to the
|
||
more dogmatic, cramped and inhibited approach to be noted in
|
||
traditional magical orders, of whom none of us was a member then.
|
||
Yet, it was not so much the existence or the practical and
|
||
theoretical work of the Bonn Group as such but rather the
|
||
publicistic impetus it created, which came to be responsible for
|
||
the German magical scene as we know it today. While formal
|
||
meetings had been abandoned by 1982, a few members having moved,
|
||
lost interest or concentrated on more eremitical work, a hard
|
||
core of some ten people continued to work together casually in a
|
||
different format, and it was at my instigation that J”rg Wichmann
|
||
(a former Wiccan) began to publish the now almost legendary
|
||
*Unicorn* magazine in the same year, which concentrated on
|
||
mythology and practical magic on a quarterly basis.
|
||
Granted that *Unicorn* was never a commercial success, it
|
||
wasn't quite a loss making venture either. It was right here, in
|
||
the very first issue, that I formulated the basic tenets of what
|
||
I termed "Pragmatic Magic" in contrast to "Dogmatic Magic".
|
||
Having been influenced, as had been all members of the Bonn Group
|
||
sooner or later, by the English and American authors of the
|
||
seventies (notably Regardie, Conway, Butler, Skinner, King, Grant
|
||
plus the only then rediscovered Austin Osman Spare), and based on
|
||
our own varied practical experiences with all sorts of creeds and
|
||
techniques, it was not hard to propagate a pragmatic spirit.
|
||
This, however, had been totally unheard of until then in the
|
||
conventional magical scene of the German speaking countries
|
||
(embracing, let us not forget, some 74 million people then and
|
||
appr. 90 million people today, after German reunification). It is
|
||
no exaggeration to say that we virtually *created* the German
|
||
magical scene. For while of course lots of people all over the
|
||
country had been working in more or less splendid isolation
|
||
before, it was only now that the thread had been put in the brine
|
||
for a real scene to crystallize. Though the lion's share of
|
||
published material was covered by members of the Bonn Group such
|
||
as J”rg Wichmann, the editor-in-chief, myself, Peter Ellert,
|
||
Harry Eilenstein and Mahamudra, *Unicorn* was able to gain the
|
||
favour of a number of internationally renowned high calibre
|
||
authors as well, in spite of the fact that articles were
|
||
remunerated only symbolically. Moreover, many leading figures in
|
||
the magical and fringe-magical scene such as Alex Sanders, Michael
|
||
Harner and Harley Swiftdeer were presented in comprehensive
|
||
interviews in the mag, thus exerting a notable influence by way
|
||
of popularizing their teachings.
|
||
The magazine lasted for three happy years until it ceased
|
||
publication in 1985 after 13 issues. Readers' participation and
|
||
loyalty to the mag turned out to be unusually high - which again
|
||
paved the way to its successor, *Anubis*, founded, edited and
|
||
published by myself at the end of 1985 and handed over to another
|
||
editor-cum-publisher the following year. This magazine is still
|
||
extant albeit in a more sporadic publication mode and has put out
|
||
15 issues to date.
|
||
|
||
|
||
It may be regarded as characteristic for the evolution of a
|
||
magical scene that I was able to introduce a column titled
|
||
"Golems Gossen Glosse" ("Golem's Gutter Glossings") much on the
|
||
same line as the British *Lamp of Thoth*'s column "Golem's
|
||
Gossip" - right from the very first issue of *Anubis* for there
|
||
would have been hardly any point in trying to report on
|
||
internecine affairs without the appropriate social foundation for
|
||
such gossip, i.e. a scene lively, colorful and diversified enough
|
||
to supply the necessary information and interested in it as well.
|
||
Golem's Glossing soon became the mag's most popular column, and
|
||
while I myself am no contributor to the now Vienna based *Anubis*
|
||
any longer, the continued existence of this periodical goes to
|
||
show that the German magical scene has matured enough to compete
|
||
with the - nowadays far less - picturesque setup in the U.K.
|
||
(which used to be *the* prime benchmark for comparison well into
|
||
the eighties).
|
||
Thus, the "Bonn Group" may well be viewed as the instigator
|
||
and nucleus of the modern German magical scene in the eighties.
|
||
The influence of the Magical Pact of the Illuminates of
|
||
Thanateros (IOT) and of Chaos Magic will be covered at some
|
||
length in the next Letter from Germany, so before I end this
|
||
instalment I would like to give a short summary of Wicca and
|
||
Paganism in the German speaking world today.
|
||
Wicca, at least in its formalized aspects (schools,
|
||
traditions &c.), being a strictly English phenomenon from its
|
||
inception, it is not surprising that the German Wicca scene has
|
||
done little but imitate its compeers in the British Isles.
|
||
Contacts with the U.K. were and still are pretty strong, but it
|
||
is a moot point whether the majority of German speaking Wiccans
|
||
are adherents of the Gardnerian or rather the Alexandrian school.
|
||
My impression is that these distinctions, hotly debated though
|
||
they were in the England of the seventies and early eighties,
|
||
have been watered down on the Continent, while there is hardly
|
||
any "hereditary" scene worth mentioning at all. If German pagans
|
||
do pretend to being "hereditary" (whatever such claims may be
|
||
worth), they are usually on the ariosophic or runelore side and
|
||
not involved in the craft.
|
||
German Wicca used to be strictly a closed shop affair
|
||
dominated by cliqueish squabbles and infights, until the well
|
||
known Hamburg based lady journalist Gisela Graichen published a
|
||
bestselling hardcover, *Die neuen Hexen. Gespr„che mit Hexen*
|
||
("The New Witches. Conversations with Witches") in 1986, in which
|
||
she claimed (albeit misguidedly) that there were some 20,000
|
||
active Wiccans in Germany alone, while 200 would then have been a
|
||
more realistic figure.
|
||
Little did she fathom that the handful of people she had
|
||
interviewed constituted about half of the then active and
|
||
articulate Wiccan set in Germany. However, facts published
|
||
commonly being regarded as facts true, (paradoxically
|
||
*especially* by the publishing profession, who should really know
|
||
better, strange as this may sound to the layman), other German
|
||
publishers took her at face value and felt attracted by this
|
||
seemingly vast and expanding market. Thus bookshops were suddenly
|
||
inundated with literature on the topic in the following year or
|
||
two and witchcraft became the dernier cri with those mainstream
|
||
people who were either totally new to the occult or had only been
|
||
dabbling with it on the fringe.
|
||
While not a Wiccan myself, I, too, was instrumental in
|
||
getting an anonymous paperback on the cult published in 1987 with
|
||
one of Germany's major paperback and mass market publishers, a
|
||
minor bestseller which was to give some spunk to the hitherto
|
||
somewhat parochial, simplicistic Wiccan scene, reducing the
|
||
strong goddess-bias in favor of a more balanced approach
|
||
*including* the male element on an "equal rights" basis, giving
|
||
hints on magazines to read and modes of contacting covens: *Das
|
||
Hexenbuch. Authentische Texte moderner Hexen zu Geschichte, Magie
|
||
und Mythos des alten Weges* ("The Witches' Book. Authentic Texts
|
||
by Modern Witches on History, Magic and Myth of the Ancient Way";
|
||
now out of print).
|
||
It was also during this post-feminist era that museum
|
||
exhibitions centering on witches, traditional herbal medicine and
|
||
"Wise Women" began to crop up like mushrooms overnight in all
|
||
three German speaking countries, especially so in holiday
|
||
resorts, as if sponsored by various Boards of Tourism ... and a
|
||
Wiccan biassed German magazine like *Mescalito* gained hordes of
|
||
new subscribers attracted by the boom. Today, interest in the
|
||
craft has waned again like the moon, but it is anybody's guess
|
||
how many people have really stuck to their guns and would
|
||
consider themselves to be active Wiccans.
|
||
As in other countries, most contemporary German adherents of
|
||
pagan ideals are primarily concerned with ecological and ethnic
|
||
issues, tending to opt for Green politics, and the majority are
|
||
certainly suckers for the Gaia hypothesis and Rupert Sheldrake's
|
||
once so popular, rather overestimated "theory" of morphic fields
|
||
(which he himself seems basically to have renounced in the
|
||
meantime). But these fairly simple doctrines seem to represent
|
||
the acme of intellectuality within this scene already. Both, the
|
||
Wicca cult and neopaganism in general, being primarily of an
|
||
avowedly *religious* nature, they do not tend to develop original
|
||
magical theories and practices of their own and may thus be
|
||
fairly disregarded in a history of magic proper. Their influx on
|
||
modern magic has been negligible, not to be compared with the
|
||
influence of neoshamanism as presented by popular American
|
||
workshop speakers, the most notable amongst whom have certainly
|
||
been Don Eduardo Calderon Palomino from Peru and Alberto Villoldo
|
||
and Michael Harner from the USA.
|
||
|
||
==================================================================
|
||
|
||
*In the next Letters from Germany:*
|
||
|
||
* "Edition Magus" and the German Magical Revival * "Germanic
|
||
Chaos": a moot look at the IOT and Chaoism * Ludwig Staudenmaier:
|
||
an early pioneer who demanded chairs for experimental magic at
|
||
German universities during the Kaiserreich * Aleister Crowley in
|
||
Germany * Ariosophism and Nazi Occultism: some basic
|
||
misapprehensions cleared * Runic lore in Germany yesterday and
|
||
today * early American influences on the O.T.O. * "Vorsprung
|
||
durch Technik": Computer Magic made in Germany * the magician as
|
||
a cyber punk: Cyber Magic * Clan Animals: an Afro-Austro-German
|
||
neo-tradition * the Eastern Diaspora: magic after reunification *
|
||
the European conflict: "Ice Magic" or The Might of Cold versus
|
||
Bourgeois Boy Scout Idylls * "Ever-glowing embers": the Witch
|
||
Hunt is still on &c.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
* Origin: ChaosBox: Nothing is true -> all is permitted... (2:243/2)
|
||
|