The History of the German Section of the Theosophical Society 1902-1913
GA 250 — 26 October 1908, Berlin
38. Seventh General Assembly of the German Section of the Theosophical Society
Report in the “Mitteilungen für die Mitglieder der Deutschen Sektion der Theosophischen Gesellschaft (Hauptquartier Adyar), herausgegeben von Mathilde Scholl”, No. 8/1908
At around 10:45 a.m., the meeting is opened by the General Secretary of the German Section, Dr. Rudolf Steiner.
The first item of business is to determine the voting ratio of the various lodges, and their representatives who are present are introduced:
The minutes of the General Assembly of October 20, 1907 are read by Mr. Selling and declared verified by the Assembly in terms of wording and content.
In order to determine the holders of votes, the names of the holders and the number of votes are read.
[Point] IT. Report of the Secretary General [Dr. Steiner]:
"First of all, it is my duty to extend a very warm welcome to you here as attendees of our seventh General Assembly of the German Section of the Theosophical Society. I am very aware of the significance of this welcome and of this General Assembly. We are entering the seventh year of the German Section of the Theosophical Society, and for anyone who has penetrated the spirit and meaning of the basis of theosophical work and the theosophical worldview, the word “seven” as an expression of deep and comprehensive world events will not fail to make a corresponding impression: Not from some superstitious notion, but from ever-increasing knowledge, man learns the meaning of the sacred seven, and he learns that not only out there in the great universe, not only in nature and in the spiritual world around us and independent of us but he also learns to recognize that in a corresponding way, this number seven signifies a law even where man himself is the active agent, where he himself has to intervene with his decisions, his views, his work. And when he allows what runs as a law through the world - and also through the world of his own thinking and creating - to come before his soul, such a coming before the soul probably leads to many feelings – above all, the feeling of responsibility for the fact that we have to recognize how we, in a development that is entering its seventh period, have to see a growing and developing, a lawful process. Therefore, it seems to me, we must enter our seventh year with this strong sense of responsibility. It will be no surprise if it is said here in view of this that many things will be decided in the seventh year of our work with regard to destiny and karma, to the next karma of the Theosophical Society. And it will also come as no surprise when it is said that perhaps some of the obstacles and dangers, some of the trials of fate, that will confront the German Section will fall precisely within this period. We will see some of the fruits during this period; but we will also see some obstacles and difficulties arising during this fateful period. Therefore, today we want to consult with ourselves in particular and urge ourselves – each of us urge himself – to enter into this seven-year period conscientiously. It is with this feeling that I greet you today, and I do so in the name of the spirit that brings us together in our work and allows us to work together: in the name of that truly fraternal love that should unite the members of the Theosophical Society everywhere. We should not be guided merely by what is said at a distance in a tone that appeals to the affairs of world affairs, but we want to take what has been said very seriously and then we will certainly decide to learn something from what has been said in order to carry something of what we have learned over into the future. More and more, we must learn to let go of all our personal desires and personal affairs, our views and attitudes, and even our personal opinions and our personal thoughts, as members of the whole of humanity, within theosophical work. The more objectively we devote ourselves to what flows to us from the foundations of the occult world current, the more we will work in the spirit of what the founders of this world current wanted. It is only right, then, to say a few words of retrospect in this welcoming address, which can give us a starting point for the introspection that we need.
We look back to the day when we were able to greet our esteemed Misses Besant at the first General Assembly, and we may well ask ourselves: under what stars were we then? Since we are talking about the affairs of the Section, it goes without saying that a great deal of Theosophical work has been done in Germany, and to great credit, even in earlier times and before the founding of the German Section. But it may also be assumed, for those who are interested in the history of things, that these great merits, predating the founding of the German Section, are known. But perhaps some of the things that could help us understand the spirit of the stars under which we stood at the founding of the German Section can be said. After all, many things have changed since then. The number of members has grown enormously. We were a small group at the time when we were able to found the German Section under such auspicious circumstances. But how did this small group come together? It is fair to say that those who were able to work within this small group at the time experienced a kind of inner connection with the way they linked their destiny with the affairs of the German Section, which was expressed outwardly in the success of the Theosophical work. What was it that lived in the people who founded the core of the German Section at that time? Something lived in them that was perhaps most succinctly expressed by the words: These people wanted to position the theosophical work in such a way that occult sentiment and occult work would be clearly taken as the basis of the society. This was automatically associated with the idea that in the inmost hearts of these people, who were involved in forming the German Section, anything that could be described as “propaganda” or “agitation” was far removed, just as these words are understood in the world at large. If I may refer to my own experiences, if only to illustrate a point, I have to say that two years before the founding of the German Section could be considered, there was a small group centered around Countess Brockdor ff, when the members of the German Theosophical movement felt no sense of unity, were scattered here and there, and that, above all, there were only a few in this small group who even considered a Theosophical current as such. Only a few were there when it became clear that we were entering the official channels of the Theosophical Society. But there was a small circle, and to them I was able to give the lectures that were expressed in the book 'Mysticism'. And in the second year, the lecture cycle that was expressed in the book 'Christianity as Mystical Fact' was able to follow. It may perhaps be said in all modesty at this very moment that those lectures on 'Christianity as a Mystical Fact', which were given to perhaps 20 people at the time, have now been translated into a foreign language, so that what we had in mind as the subject matter is beginning to bear fruit. And it may be mentioned that it was precisely this circle that provided the impetus for the founding of the German Section, at least the actual impetus for the work, which even then had the basis for lastingness within it. And then we always worked under the principle of “not engaging in propaganda”; rather, we said what we had to say and did not seek to impose our convictions on anyone. Those who voluntarily wanted to come should come. It is one's duty to stand by what one has to say before the world, but one should not impose one's convictions on anyone. The other person is a listener who comes when something compels him to do so. If anything else is practiced within a society based on occultism, it cannot flourish. This is the experience on which all spiritual societies are based – and this is also the inner freedom under the influence of which theosophical work alone can flourish. – And if we look back at what has happened in the German Section during this time, it may be said that here too we recognize the lawfulness that we were already able to hint at with the number seven. This law, which also works in every human being, is different from that of the “three”. We can remember at this moment, for example, that the seventh year of life is an important moment for a child's life in general, and it is also an important moment for a spiritual child to enter the seventh year of life, and in a certain respect this lawfulness, which expresses itself in the three years that follow, certainly prevails.
When we observe the child during the first three years, we can clearly see how it is exposed to impressions from the whole world and how much more passive it is than is usually thought. Then, in the third year, we can see a very noticeable change. Anyone who does not merely look at a concrete being like our Society in terms of mere words and intellectual concepts, but looks at it in terms of its ability to function, in terms of its inner strength, and looks back on the first three years of our existence, knows that many things can be compared to the infancy of a child. It was so, and that is only natural. This organism, which presented itself to the world as the 'German Section', developed in a certain passive way at first. And now we see how it has matured in the last three years, how it has come into this position, so to speak, through everything we have been allowed to achieve – we know it very well – through the help of the spiritual powers on which the theosophical movement is based; we saw this emerging everywhere as the individual work of the branches. Just as everything comes to life and independence develops in the child, so working groups developed everywhere in our ranks. Something has really happened that can be compared to the development of a child between the ages of three and six. It is something similar to what the parents of a child observe when the child grows into the seventh year, when all the beautiful signs, all the beautiful soul things emerge. We could feel this entering into the seventh year when we worked together in such beautiful harmony, in such a beautiful theosophical spirit, as karma gave us the good fortune to do in the courses in Munich, Basel, Cologne, Hamburg, Nuremberg, Stuttgart, Leipzig and so on. We can say that wherever a smaller number of members came together for such theosophical endeavors, or wherever more than 300 were present, as in Stuttgart, a spirit flowed through the hall that is created when so many people have the same spiritual concerns in their souls. In this positive work, little was reflected on abstract sentences, little of what was achieved was preached; it was all based, so to speak, on the world of spiritual facts. But just as all plants growing in different parts of the earth strive towards the sun, because they are irradiated by the common sun, so it is also with the theosophical work, where everything develops towards the one spiritual sun - and that is what has come to us in such a beautiful way in recent years. And in another way, we may say that the unfolding of what we have worked on as the German Section can be compared to what happens to a child between the ages of three and puberty.
Before that, it is quite different; but when the seventh year approaches, you can see how those around the child want to listen to what the young human child has to say. And in this sense, we may perhaps consider it that our work has already been heard in the choir of the great Theosophical work, has been able to expand to Hungary, Scandinavia, Holland; and we had the joy of being able to have a lecture cycle in Kristiania that was also carried by the same spirit. So the friends who wanted to hear the child's utterances, which went beyond mere babbling, also came.
This, however, points to the great laws that prevail in such an organism, as they do in the whole universe. We also see that the greatest mistakes are made in the outside world because someone has in mind that a child must be a certain way; if it is not so, it must be drummed into it. People may have all kinds of fine, grand ideas about how a section should be; but these are unrealistic thoughts of the individual. Once a section has reached a certain age, it must develop its own ideas about growth; for that alone can be the basis for future work, that we take the fruits, or better the germs of the past and bring them to fruition. It is in this spirit that I would like to greet you at this hour. It is with this sense of responsibility that we will find the way to continue working in the spirit in which we have worked so far.
This already indicates what needs to be said about the general progress of the Theosophical work: that the independent work of the Theosophical centers has developed more and more vigorously. Those who know nothing of the facts might believe that something like autocracy prevails among us. But anyone who is familiar with the facts knows how great the joy is when, somewhere or other, an independent center springs up, as in Stuttgart or Nuremberg, with work that comes from the members themselves. We will not decentralize ourselves into the opinions of individuals. We know what it means to be a growing individual movement. Wherever work grows in harmony, work grows more easily, because real work gets along with real work. It is not necessary to say anything more about how significant theosophical work emerged in such phenomena, which came to light in the last lecture cycles, in the lectures of our dear Dr. Unger and our esteemed Fräulein Völker in Stuttgart or our esteemed Mrs. Wolfram in Leipzig. And it will increasingly become the case that the other things will join the core of work and expand more and more. In this way we shall make more and more headway through positive work. All this has happened particularly clearly in the last year – and much would have to be said if I wanted to hint at everything that some of the members have really achieved in the last year. But since so many members have flocked together in the various places where courses have been held, the vast majority know what has happened in the last year.
Now it is still my duty to pay special tribute at this moment to those dear members of our Society who have left the physical plane during this year.
We have Mrs. Agnes [Schuchardt], a lady who has lived in theosophical pursuit for many years. She has been a member of the Theosophical Society for a long time, and although she was already confined to her bed when the German Section was founded, she was still very much connected in her soul to what was happening internally and externally; and many a letter she wrote to me showed how she followed what was going on with heartfelt concern.
Secondly, Franz Vrba, who joined the Theosophical Society as a member of the Prague branch and who left the physical plane after a relatively short period of membership.
Furthermore, we have two particularly moving cases from our Munich branch. One is Otto Huschke. The name Huschke is inseparable from the development of Theosophical work in Germany. And among those who offered their hand when the German Section was to be founded was Huschke. He was already deeply involved in the Theosophical movement and in occultism. It was always a pleasant duty for me when I came to Munich to visit the always sickly and immobile gentleman and to see what kind of occult needs and occult aspirations prevailed within the four walls of this gentleman. It may well be said to be particularly painful that Mr. Huschke's death occurred at the same time as his daughter, Miss Huschke, also left the physical plane. They shared everything they had in life, theosophically, as far as possible. Miss Huschke was also a dear member of the Munich Lodge, and above all, one of the most ambitious members. Otto and [Hilde] Huschke lived together and left the physical plane together a few hours apart, and will continue to live together theosophically in other worlds.
The passing of our dear Mrs. Doser from the physical plane is a fifth case. Mrs. Doser was also one of the oldest members of the German Section. In a very special way, she allowed into herself what could come from the resources of the occult world movement – and everyone who knew her or came into close contact with her will have felt deep in their hearts, on the one hand, the nature of this wonderful woman, who was so tender and devoted, and, on the other hand, her being filled with a deep striving for spiritual love. The last days of her life were filled with a serious illness, which she bore in a truly wonderful way. But she was a person who, despite everything, had something in the depths of her consciousness, the blissful anticipation of living towards a new world. She lived in such a way that she faded away on the outside of her life, as it were – but this allowed her inner spiritual life to become ever richer and richer; and I am sure that those personalities who were closest to her in life will also fully recognize these feelings as theirs. A number of members made it possible for Mrs. Doser to visit the sunny south, for which she longed so much; and it was really touching to see how she could perceive the spiritual power in the physical sun. And it will remain unforgettable for me that in Capri, a few hours before her death, this soul of Frau Doser addressed a few lines to me, from which emerges the longing to overcome the mood and the narrow space of the physical plane: “I want to get out, board a ship tomorrow - out into the wide sea.” It was a feeling that the soul was freeing itself from the physical body.
I have a painful case to mention in the death of Fritz Eyselein. Many of you who were at the Theosophical lectures know that in Fritz Eyselein a personality came among them who, so to speak, early in the development of the German Section, fell into an unfortunate state of mind that made it impossible to help him. It is neither necessary nor perhaps even tactful to go into what needs only to be hinted at, and which therefore can no less enable us to give our dear Fritz Eyselein the most beautiful feelings of love and friendship on the other side.
Now we have to mention a personality who took leave of the physical plane last year and who had been at the head of the Munich Lodge for many years: Fräulein von Hofstetten. Based on her extensive life experience, she was able to take over the leadership of this lodge in an appropriate manner. This lady, who had also been in poor health for a long time, whose body had only been held together by a lively mind for a long time, also had a lively striving in every direction, and she was always there when something needed to be done, even if she had just undergone an operation; and anyone who got to know the beautiful outer and inner life of Fräulein von Hofstetten will give her the best of love on the other plane.
Another member who was more interested in the Theosophical Society from afar and passed away from the physical plane is Mrs. Fähndrich. We will also remember her with love and respect beyond the physical plane.
Now I have to mention our dear Mrs. Rothenstein, who belonged to the Heidelberg Lodge for a short time and was taken from us after a short time by a treacherous illness. She was a beautiful, self-contained nature, deeply and earnestly devoted to our cause. We will also send her our feelings of love.
In saying this, I have commemorated those who are no longer with us in the physical sense, but who are always with us in spirit.
The assembly honors the memory of the persons mentioned by standing up.
A report on the membership movement is given by Miss von Sivers according to the most recently received lists: “The number of members is 1150 compared to 872 in the previous year; 336 have joined compared to 303 in the previous year. 25 have left or transferred to other sections, 23 could not be found and therefore deleted, and 10 have died.
Nine new branches have been established: Bern, Eisenach, Mannheim, Wiesbaden, Pforzheim, Strasbourg, Zurich, Bielefeld and Malsch.
The current number of branches is 37, compared to 28 last year. In addition, there is the Regensburg center with 4 members. The Charlottenburg branch has been dissolved.
Mr. Seiler presents the cash report with the annual accounts and balance sheet:
The total income amounted to 5643.27 marks
The total expenditure was 5478.58 marks
which leaves 164.69 marks
With cash assets of 2020.45 marks
and a stock of furniture worth 168.90 marks
results in total assets of 2354.04 Marks.
After the report of the auditors, Mr. Tessmar and Ms. Motzkus, the treasurer is discharged.
At the request of Mr. Arenson, the entire board is then discharged.
[Point] III. Election of the board:
Dr. Steiner remarks: “Since the majority of the board has a proposal to make to you, and since I, on behalf of the majority of the board, have to present this proposal to you here, it had to be considered whether it was not necessary for the internal reasons for the proceedings to introduce this proposal into the agenda before dealing with item III. This had to be done in the interest of conducting business properly.
Therefore, I will now make a proposal and at the same time give the reasons for it. The point is that we are already learning to apply in one case what arises from a correct understanding of such a great law, as I was allowed to describe earlier in terms of the number three or seven. Those of you who are here today as delegates will be aware that you are taking on a certain responsibility for the future in everything that happens today, as we enter our seventh year. Those who have been able to follow not only what has taken place in the German Section, which has been mainly beautiful and harmonious, but who are also able to follow what is happening in the great Theosophical Society of the world, will sense that there are certain conditions of life, especially for such a society. Anyone who does not operate according to maxims and concepts that are conceived before experience, but who lets experience itself speak, how such a spiritual organism has gradually developed, like the German Section of the Theosophical Society, will say to themselves that we are basically at a completely different point today, entering our seventh year, than we were when we laid the foundation for our German section under the auspices of our much-admired Misses Besant. At that time we had a “tabula rasa” before us. We had to create something out of abstract principles so that we could proceed favorably in one way or another. If what I am about to say has been said at the first General Assembly, instead of being said at the seventh, it would have been complete nonsense. But anyone who knows that something that would be nonsense at one time may be a necessity at another time will probably deal with the board's proposal now.
The Theosophical Society is in a completely different position than societies that are not based on occultism. This is not to say that the Theosophical Society as an external society is an occult, an esoteric society. But the basis on which it is built can only be an occult one. You can discuss ethics and historical morality in any other religious society, in any society for ethical culture. But the Theosophical Society would be robbed of its task if the occult life, which emanates from the great Masters of wisdom and of the harmony of sensations, could not flow through it. Then it would no longer be an instrument, as it should be. Friends have often rightly hinted to me that a certain discrepancy rooted in the conditions of life and in depth comes to light in the external institutions and structures of society. This was not considered when the German Section was founded, but it comes into consideration when so many years have passed and after a long period of work. When one's heart and soul are bound up with such work, one not only has love and enthusiasm for the task, but one has a certain sense of responsibility, which may be characterized as follows: Over the past few years, we have created a theosophical treasure out of what was a 'tabula rasa' when we founded the society. At that time there was nothing; now there is a good deal of theosophical work; and we not only have the duty to continue our work, but we would be failing in our duty if we did not want to take care to continue to cultivate this treasure and not let it be endangered. Because the work that has been done must not be endangered, it must be said that We are here as committed custodians of the work accumulated over the past few years, and we have to guide it into the future.
Now, the facts give rise to the necessity for a certain stability of conditions, for stability of conditions. How necessary stability is could be seen especially by someone who oversees the great Theosophical Society. It would be very easy for us to miss what is now a necessity. How stability was present when our dear Olcott was at the head of the Society – and how that stability was already threatened when a new president had to be elected. And anyone with insight knows that the president who was elected was the only possible one – that he was the one who had to be elected according to common sense. From this case alone, we can gauge the good fortune of a society built on an occult foundation, when, above all, the principle of stability is taken into account. It was not necessary to draw attention to this, even three years ago. Today is the time, and in three years the right time could be missed. Our society has grown enormously again, and there is no reason to believe that this growth will not continue. But such growth in breadth can also have something dangerous about it. For a small circle, this is not an issue. Today, the members number almost 1200. The Society continues to grow; imagine that a certain fact were to occur, that, say, 1500 new members join, and then one person – and this can be done by just one person – would call upon 1500 people to give the German Section of the Theosophical Society a completely different character. Today, we have the duty to guard the spiritual treasure we have acquired. It must not be allowed that our entire treasure trove of work is wiped out by a majority stepping in and trampling on all our work because they have no understanding for it.
Where there should be stability in the work, there must be stability in the leadership. Therefore, the members of the board wanted to make the following proposal to you, which at the same time creates stability in the board and, on the other hand, compensation for the growing number of members. It is quite natural that for someone who only 'counts' members, a member who joins after seven years is just as much a member as another who has been a member for a long time and for whom membership means something that is connected to their experience in society. Therefore, it is only natural that the forces in society should not only be 'counted', but also weighed properly. In this way, stability can be expressed just as variability is expressed when the size of the association grows through new members. For this reason, the members of the board make the following proposal:
§ 8 of our statutes reads:
"The administration of the entire management is in the hands of an executive committee, which is responsible to the annually convened general assembly. The executive committee consists of the general secretary, the treasurer and at least twelve members. Two of them, as well as the general secretary and the treasurer, should live at the location of the section's headquarters or in the neighborhood. The executive committee is newly elected every three years at the general assembly.
It is now proposed to add the following to this sentence of the statutes:
If a member of the board has been re-elected repeatedly so that they have been in office for seven years, they shall from then on be the non-removable holder of that office for life.
The board consists of 15 members for the 1908 to 1911 term of office; it is increased by so many people every three years that the increase in the number of members by 100 corresponds to a new board member.
So if after three years the Society has grown by 300 members, not 15 but 18 members of the board will be elected. This will enable those who have served on the board for seven years to truly be custodians of the accumulated treasure. It must be clear to you that it is relatively easy to care for a small society. As the society grows, so does the obligation of those who lead it to enter into all kinds of commitments. These can only be entered into by those who are also able to carry out what has been entered into; so that as the society grows, the holder of an office is able to maintain his or her responsibility in a continuous manner. Thus, the fact that a member of the executive committee has been in office for seven years, whether continuously or with intervals, and becomes the irrevocable holder of that office at the end of the seventh year, creates a core that continues to develop, and the opportunity to express what is joining from outside.
But there is something else. The Executive Council is an organization that represents the Central Leadership so that what is beneficial for the individual German branches can be expressed without restriction. But Theosophical work depends on the innermost individuality of the individual branches being able to unfold. Wherever we have branches, there are different living conditions; and it is only healthy if these living conditions are also taken into account. Therefore, on the other hand, the board of directors must be supported by an organization based on the individuality of the individual branches; and this would be expressed in the following:
"In addition, the board of directors is assisted by an Areopagus, in which, as an advisory board to the board of directors, the individuality of the branch work is to be emphasized. Each branch elects a number of members to this Areopagus, corresponding to 1-50 : 1; 51-100 : 2; 101-150 : 3 and so on Areopagus members.
This 'Areopagus' would act as an advisory body for the autonomy of each lodge. How the lodge chooses its Areopagus member is entirely up to it. But the members of this Areopagus will have the task of bringing the individuality of their branch to bear in the character of the entire German section. You can't just vote if you want to bring out individuality. Voting accomplishes nothing. That can never be the principle of a society that works out of its own inner necessity. How can a member living in Berlin know what the living conditions are like in a branch in Stuttgart or Basel? Therefore, the Areopagus should be a body that brings out the individualities of the various branches – a representative body with which communication takes place from lodge to lodge – and with the central leadership.
These amendments are hereby submitted for adoption.
The debate begins:
Dr. Fränkel believes that the decision is too important to be voted on immediately, and therefore requests that the vote be postponed and an extraordinary general assembly be convened to discuss the matter.
Dr. Steiner: “This meeting is a primary assembly; there is no obstacle to voting today. The delegates have voting rights. They have been informed of the matter in advance. The executive committee is making this proposal here so that the important point in time is not missed. It is important that the delegates can form an opinion on this. It could, after all, be that someone wanted to wipe out the work that had been done before by a mass entry of 1,500 members. The organization of the Society is a free one; no one is condemned to participate in a certain way. It is not work over a territory into which man is drawn, but a working community – and the work done so far must be protected against surprise attacks.
Pastor Wendt is in favor of accepting the proposal.
Dr. Fränkel asks for a measure so that the Section members can also meet in order to elect a representative to the assembly.
Dr. Steiner: “The board is not standing in the way of the section members. However, if they want to be heard in the section, they have to meet themselves and report their representative.”
Dr. Vollrath is not given the floor for reasons that will be communicated later.
Mr. Hubo supports the board's proposal regarding the Areopagus as well.
Dr. Steiner: “The proposal is intended to be a unified one. If one or the other is not adopted, the proposal would have to be considered as not having been made. The creation of new offices prevents centralization and furthers individualization, since it takes into account what the individual says. If the General Secretary has something to do that particularly concerns the Basel branch, he will consult the members based in Basel so that the Basel lodge receives what the Basel lodge needs. This is precisely how all the members' opinions are given as much weight as possible – not just as a majority, nor just according to the ratio of votes at a particular point in time, but in proportion to how the members have remained loyal. It is precisely this that counteracts the free mobility of forces in a certain abstract sense."
Mr. Wagner proposes that the section members should also be able to elect one member to the Areopagus for every 50; then they would have a mouthpiece to be heard. Dr. Steiner: ”There is the possibility that the section members organize themselves without the slightest change. I said two years ago that if the Section members had organized themselves and created a real board, they would be regarded as a real branch. So that is the essence of what Mr. Wagner said.
Dr. Fränkel says that since the members of the Section are not organized, he only wanted to make a request to that effect.
Dr. Steiner: “If a member of the Section makes a suggestion to that effect, the Executive Council will naturally do what it can to help such an organization. So far, nothing has been done by the members of the Section.”
Dr. Fränkel: “Then I would like to make a suggestion today.”
Dr. Steiner: “That can be done in the future.”
Herr [Hübener] is unsure whether the new provision should apply from today and could be applied immediately to the members of the board who have perhaps already been in office for seven years.
Dr. Steiner: “This arises from the fact that this proposal was put before the election of the Executive Board. The next election will then already be subject to the institution of this paragraph. This point was moved to third place so that the new election would be subject to this paragraph.”
The proposal of the Executive Board will now be put to the vote by roll call and adopted by all but two votes, those of Mr. Lauweriks.
The meeting now proceeds to the election of the new committee. During the election of the General Secretary, the Vice President, Mr. Adolf Arenson, proposes that Dr. Steiner be re-elected by acclamation. The meeting responds with unanimous applause. Dr. Steiner is elected. Dr. Steiner expresses his sincere thanks to the meeting.
Mr. Seiler is unanimously re-elected as treasurer.
The meeting now proceeds to the election of fifteen members of the executive council, which is carried out by ballot. After the votes cast have been recorded, the meeting is adjourned until 4 p.m. and then reopened at 5 a.m. Dr. Steiner first announces a letter from Mrs. Besant. She sends the General Assembly her warmest greetings, follows the work of the German Section with great interest, is satisfied with it, and sends her wishes that the German Section may become a leader in the pursuit of occult matters.
The election results are then announced. The following have been elected:
Mr. Wagner with 90 votes
Mr. Arenson 93
Dr. Unger 9%
Mr. Kiem 85
Mr. Hubo so
Dr. Grosheintz 80
Mr. Bauer 83
Mr. Kolbe 70
Mr. Tessmar 67
Miss von Sivers 92
Miss Scholl 88
Miss Stinde 86
Mrs. Wolfram 74
Mrs. Smits 69
Mrs. Noss 77
Dr. Steiner warmly welcomes those elected.
Proposals from the plenary session:
The proposal [Nitzsche] to “donate vegetarian spit houses and vegetarian sanatoriums with brochures for Theosophical propaganda” is rejected after a short debate.
Mr. Schwab would like to see reports in the “Mitteilungen” on the progress of the Theosophical movement abroad.
Dr. Steiner notes that this can be entered in the golden book as a “suggestion”. Such reports would be desirable; so far nothing has been done because it requires a lot of work and no one has been available for it yet. “The moment the material is provided to us by friends, the suggestion can be considered.”
Miscellaneous:
Dr. Steiner: “It is now my duty, which I find difficult, to make an announcement on behalf of the members of the board who met yesterday at the regular board meeting, about a member who actually represents a ‘first’ case within our German section. Yesterday at the board meeting, it became necessary to address a proposal that arose from the bosom of one of our lodges and which related to – and this has not happened before – the fact that a former member of our German section should no longer be considered a member.
It is my job – as the mouthpiece of the board, so to speak – to communicate the fact to you and to discuss the reasons why it was decided to continue to no longer consider Dr. Vollrath a member of the German Section. The board had to consider this motion, which originated from our Leipzig lodge, and there was no way to keep the matter from being discussed. If we want to look at the matter objectively and in the right light, it really must be viewed very soberly and, so to speak, realistically. All members of the executive committee who decided that Dr. Vollrath should no longer be considered a member of the German Section are well aware that this does not remotely constitute a court session about Dr. Vollrath – that he has not been slighted in any way. The matter is to be understood in such a way that the executive committee of the German Section had to approach the request of our Leipzig lodge and consider it. If you want to examine this question and form an opinion about it, we will have to go into the matter in more detail.
As many of you know, Dr. Vollrath was, in times past, a very active and leading member of the so-called 'International Theosophical Society' in Leipzig, against which we – as we have often stated – do not have any hostile feelings; rather, we believe that, despite all that is being done there, the people are mistaken. We have not opposed anything, but have always believed that we should let the forces play freely. We work in a positive sense. If the others believe that they have a right to proceed as they do, then they may answer for it; we just do not want to have anything to do with it and not be imposed upon by any opinion from any side. Dr. Vollrath was a contributor to this society.
But now I would ask you to please consider that I would have much preferred it if the decision could have been avoided. But it is necessary to consider some things that have made this decision so meaningful. There is one thing in which the work of the German Section differs greatly from that of others: it is completely free of all propaganda and agitation; it does not impose an opinion on anyone, but wants to let everyone approach freely – so that as many people as possible are offered the opportunity to come to Theosophy. It is the basic nerve of our conviction that the moment we abandon this principle, our work is completely worthless. All the attempts at understanding that were made with the members of other German societies were of no help. But why should those who want to work differently not work in their own way? We have not done the slightest thing to interfere with the work of others. A lot has happened. For example, people came from there who declared that they wanted to join our society. Of course you can join, they were told. Thereupon the people asked us to hold a meeting with their representatives. I said to Miss von Sivers, I needed someone who had been there. Miss von Sivers went along and knows how everything happened. What came out of it? The people said, “Yes, we don't like your statutes!” — That is not necessary, I said — you don't need to join. It was a long discussion, and the result was that the other side wrote a pamphlet; and the course of the meeting was incorrectly related. I have never seen such a brilliant ability as that used there to present something as it did not happen. The most incredible things were said against us. I said: Let them write the pamphlet! It is not important for us to defend ourselves, but to work. We could have defended ourselves – against every point – but then people would have said: There should be peace between the Theosophists! You see how Theosophists can attack each other. At the time, I also said that those who had first caused discord were the ones who complained the most about the discord. What is meant by this is that the way in which things are handled is so different between the other societies calling themselves 'theosophical' and what is the basic nerve of our way of life within our society.
Now, although Dr. Vollrath has been with our society for quite some time, he has never managed to even entertain the desire to embrace our way of thinking theosophically. But that is my opinion, and I cannot get into discussions about it. He simply could not understand what we wanted in the German Section. He carried over the whole way of thinking, all the airs and graces, from one society to the other. Of course, when someone is obsessed with an idea, it seems quite natural to them to act accordingly. So it should not be judged, but made clear what is important.
At our congress in Munich, we attached the seals and pillars, and we then had the seals and pillars duplicated in a folder with a red cover. Now, read the preface that was written about it, which was intended to suggest the very peculiar position of such a thing. - What does Dr. Vollrath do? He had just opened a 'Theosophical Central Bookstore'. He had come to see me beforehand and asked for my advice. I told him that if you open a bookshop, the most important thing is that you understand the business, that you are a capable bookseller; then, above all, make sure that you set up the bookshop in such a way that it is profitable. Dr. Vollrath asked if he could publish my work; I said: Of course, there would be no objection to that. In short, these were things that naturally had to be said to Dr. Vollrath, since he was our member. What happens next? One day, Dr. Vollrath wrote a note—anyone with a little feeling will know what I mean—in an incredible red, in which he wrote that his bookstore would take care of the distribution of this folder and that it would be particularly suitable as a Christmas gift. He sent out these flyers and forced me to declare: Anyone who is capable of doing something like that, I can't possibly have anything further to do with. — At the time, Dr. Vollrath also prepared a brochure that was something incredible in my opinion. For example, if you use the phrase, 'Theosophy should penetrate life!' That does not yet mean that the matter has emerged from the phrase; because, of course, it can also be a phrase. Dr. Vollrath then said: 'Yes, I did want you to help me; but you don't have time for me!' – Even if I had a lot of time, I would consider it a matter of course for someone who is running a business to stand up for themselves.
I can imagine that someone cannot understand such a way of thinking. But then working together must be rejected, and one can only say in this case: 'You are a very nice person, but we cannot work together anymore.' That's all there is to it. Or does the other person have the right to say, 'If you have human love, you must work with me'? It is not acceptable to suppress the intentions of the other person or to impose one's own opinion on him. We cannot be expected to work together with Dr. Vollrath. That is how things were. In addition, there were various other things. - In order to avoid the worst, which could happen, it should be made clear to Dr. Vollrath again and again that he should work in his own way, but also let us work and not constantly disturb us. He went to Leipzig. The Leipzig Lodge now had to make the same experience that it is simply not possible to work with Dr. Vollrath. When I came to Holland, I was asked by someone: What kind of 'Literary Section of the German Section' have you opened in Leipzig? Here honorary members of the 'Literary Section of the German Section' have been appointed! So Doctor Vollrath appoints people as honorary members of the 'Literary Section of the German Section' on his own authority. Where does that leave us? And you will admit that there is no logical way for me to understand this. For me, the logical possibility is excluded. - The Leipzig Lodge tried to work with Dr. Vollrath after all, to appoint him as a librarian. But it has also been shown to be impossible by his way of thinking.
When Dr. Vollrath announced his central bookshop, he used a certain symbolic sign for it. Now, in it, an entwined 'HV' stands for another sign - and instead of the saying 'No religion is higher than the truth', it says: 'Peace is the first civil duty!' I once said to Dr. Vollrath that the only way to get over it would be if he said, 'HV' means 'publishing house'. One day, like many other members, I was surprised - I was in Stuttgart at the time - by a four-page 'open letter' from Dr. Vollrath, in which he provided an explanation for the 'HV' and 'Ruhe ist die erste Bürgerpflicht' (Calm is the first civic duty). Among other things, he said that it had nothing to do with his name, but were only the initials of the two 'pillars' of the Munich Congress, the 'I' pillar and the 'Am' pillar. The designations are nonsense. A more grandiose amateurism was really not possible. But in order to get anything into the 'HV' at all, 'H' first had to be reinterpreted as 'I' - so two 'I's were made out of the 'H' - and then it means 'Jehovah'. And about the saying that every child knows and where it first appeared, you can read in the 'open letter': 'Peace is the first civic duty' is a deeply occult saying that has come to the public for about a century! It is true that in our society dogmas and doctrines, what someone means, are not important, and that everyone represents what they want to represent. But there are limits to everything. Someone cannot just do whatever he wants if he happens to have the means to have something printed and to make people believe that he is a representative of the 'Adyar Society' - because surely it is impossible for someone to appoint people as honorary members of the 'Literary Section of the German Section' on his own authority! And if then, little by little, all the members of the other society are sued, if reports keep appearing about how a resigned member fights so that people are convicted – even to prison – and if that is publicized, what kind of situation will our society's Leipzig lodge find itself in, exposed to all of this! The Leipzig lodge feels that its throat is being choked by Dr. Vollrath!
Of course, the matter was also brought to me. I asked Dr. Vollrath, because something like this must be completely eliminated, and perhaps a way out could be created, that Dr. Vollrath stay in our society, that he visit me, and talk things over with me. I said to him: “You wrote this ‘open letter’. I really do believe that everyone can spread their own opinion. But for me, everything you said about and ‘Peace is the first civic duty’ is just a lot of nonsense. Nothing could be more nonsensical. But I grant every member the obvious right to spread as much nonsense as possible in the world – even if they want to write a pamphlet that the people of Leipzig walk on their heads contrary to all other populations” – Dr. Vollrath said that everyone should be allowed to have their hobbyhorse! – and that even in the face of something like the name ”Jehovah is! I would never have participated in the Vollrath matter for my part if something else had not been decisive for me, and I told him so. Anyone who has followed the course of our theosophical work in recent years must say that if there is any calm and worthy cooperation in the matter, it can be seen as a fact in the German section. Dr. Vollrath begins his pamphlet by saying that he had to “introduce calm as the first civic duty because of the great nervousness that has arisen among Theosophists.” For me, this is something I would rather not even describe. What does it mean when you misrepresent something out of your own power? Dr. Vollrath replied: “I didn't mean our society, I meant the other one.” The thing is, it's impossible to get into a discussion about it; because no one can even realize that a different society is meant. You also have an obligation to look at what you write. Is it possible to work together under such circumstances? I would like to say, can't a person at least breathe freely without the other person opposing him and breathing against him? It is only a matter of creating the possibility of freedom for ourselves. No one is doing anything to Dr. Vollrath. It is not even possible to imagine a society in which a single person should be forced to work with him. I would be the first to object to Dr. Vollrath being put on trial.
That was what made it necessary, little by little, to stop resisting and to take the proposal of the Leipzig Lodge into account and to set an example that it is not the phrase that matters, but the majority, and that nothing bad is being done to Dr. Vollrath by the fact that the Society can no longer consider him as its member. It is simply something we have been forced to do, and we finally had to look at the matter from this point of view: mere talk of brotherhood and love is just a phrase. We must actively love, we must help those who work – not just leave it at love in general, but make love active. Is it not unkind that the Leipzig Lodge wants to work, and if we were to say to this Lodge: We, as the German section, won't deal with it at all – you can drink your own swill!? Are we not obliged to help such a Lodge, which feels its neck is being choked by someone who is using its own name and its own company sign?
To sum up: Doctor Vollrath has not been judged in the slightest; it has only been decided that we no longer regard Doctor Vollrath as our member, since he pushed his things out into the world as “Adyar things”, so to speak. There were only two options: either to send statements around the world every few moments that these are not Adyar matters, or to no longer regard Dr. Vollrath as our member. It is very painful for me that such a case has arisen. I will not get involved in a discussion about what my opinion is, and I will not concern myself with the matter any further. I have dealt with it for as long as it was necessary to hold back the decision. Now the executive council has spoken, and I am the mouthpiece of the executive council. I myself have closed the case of Dr. Vollrath. Of course, everyone can find reasons to present what they intended differently than the other person perceived it. It was my task to inform you of the decision taken by the executive council yesterday, namely that Dr. Vollrath is no longer considered a member of the German Section of the Theosophical Society, and I have been instructed to communicate this to you and to explain the reasons that led to it. That I have done.
Miss [Steinbart] cannot understand how the Theosophical Society can expel a member when that member has devoted his entire life and all his wealth to the service of its cause, and in whom everything he does and says is the purest Theosophy. As a consequence of the decision, she would have to announce her resignation.
Pastor Wendt believes that this man can also change; if we can no longer regard him as our member for the time being, we are still giving him the opportunity to change.
Ms. Schmidt emphasizes that if we want to be Christians, we must still practice brotherhood, and reminds us of the saying: Let him who is without sin among you cast the first stone at her.
Ms. Von Sonklar asks if there is a paragraph in the statutes that allows a member to be suspended, and if this can also happen to another member.
Dr. Steiner: “The point is that we are a society that can take majority decisions and that a society that accepts people can also expel people – and not that anyone who ‘wants to’ can consider themselves a member; otherwise anyone who wants to, and not those whom the others want, could want to belong to the society. It is not a matter of us judging Dr. Vollrath, but of our not understanding each other; and if Dr. Vollrath says that we 'do not understand him at all', that is one reason for it. For the time being, it depends on what the majority of the Society or the relevant body thinks about it. The point is that there is no possibility of working together, and that this reality is expressed in a formula.
Dr. Vollrath (speaks very incomprehensibly): “I represented Theosophy as a worldview and never said that my opinion was the truth itself, but rather what appeared to me to be the truth. I never said that I was speaking on behalf of the Adyar Society. It was just a childish gesture. You can't be classic right away, you just grope. If you are not a businessman, you make such mistakes. I have no method, but say and do what I think is necessary. I did not sue my colleagues, but was sued and had a duty to defend myself so that I would not be pushed to the wall. I took action because I was pushed by Mrs. Wolfram for weeks: 'You have to take action!' So I put myself in a position where I could be sued. A 'Theosophical Society' that expels someone loses its cosmopolitan character. I have not violated the statutes, I have paid my dues. I have always tried to do justice to everyone. Stability consists in striving; on the outside, there is always ebb and flow. A person who is restless cannot properly grasp the moment. If you cultivate the eternal, you must still maintain calm. But the matter should have been discussed with me first."
Mrs. Wolfram: “However, Dr. Vollrath has constantly complained to me that people owe him money. So I told him that if people don't want to give him his capital back, then he just has to sue for it. But there is a world of difference between publishing private letters from his enemies and then the whole thing goes through the Leipzig newspapers. Just someone should try it first, how impossible it is to work with Dr. Vollrath. But he still does not see it. Do you think I have time to hold a meeting every week about a nonsense? Every other week, Dr. Vollrath demanded board meetings. He had a long list of nothing but trivialities; we sat together for hours on those occasions, too, and when we couldn't address everything, he just started crying and screaming. You should experience that just once. In Leipzig, Theosophy is so discredited that people say Theosophy should be banned by the police. I give my lectures. You can experience it that at an invitation people say: “How should I go to this lodge? Haven't you heard what's going on there?” The craziest things are told there; whether it's true or not, it doesn't matter – but Doctor Vollrath is just giving cause for it. In this case, tolerance is just: I can do whatever I want! And then tolerance is nonsense. We have tried for three years to work with Dr. Vollrath; but it is impossible. We know very well that Dr. Vollrath wants the very best, but he just can't do it. He also lacks the understanding to see the matter. How can someone advise him if he doesn't understand? If he wants to learn something, I'm willing to work with him. But he doesn't want to learn anything. Dr. Vollrath says that Theosophy is something that everyone wants and where everyone can work as they please. We revolted because other members also have the right not to have our good name besmirched."
Mr. Hubo: “Since concerns have been raised as to whether the board is authorized to make such a decision, it seems to me, on the one hand, that the board can make such a decision; on the other hand, in view of the facts that have been expressed here, it seems to me that this decision of the board is not only appropriate but necessary in the interest of the German Section. I move that the debate be closed.
The motion is put to the vote and carried.
Dr. Vollrath (very difficult to hear): “There was no order in the library, there were no statutes. I have had statutes sent to me from all the libraries. I did not say that Theosophy is what everyone wants. People will calm down and come to self-control.”
Dr. Steiner: “What is really surprising is that two members have said what would happen to another member if he was not liked by the Society. Just think how we have tried for years to keep the matter to one side. It is very unlikely that something like what happened with Dr. Vollrath will occur again. Those who are concerned that the same thing could happen to them have not been listening carefully; because what has been said has shown that it is quite impossible for the case to recur. It would be really necessary for you to take the time to find out what efforts have been made to prevent the case from happening again. But you have the unchristian lack of love to treat the work of the Leipzig branch in such a way that you say: May you do whatever you want to deal with it; we have 'brotherhood' after all - so drink your own mess! - So Christianity is also becoming a cliché. Of course, someone may believe that Dr. Vollrath's work in Leipzig is worth more than any other work – and also that Dr. Vollrath is a genius and the rest of us are fools. – But we declare that the Leipzig branch has been choked and that its throat must be cleared again. Where is the unchristianity in this, whether the Leipzig branch should not be helped at all – or whether it should be helped by taking action against Dr. Vollrath, that should be considered first.
Miss [Steinbart] asks how long one is still a member if one is excluded in this way.
Dr. Steiner: “Don't talk about being excluded. I had my good reasons for formulating it at the last moment as it is now. I asked the board to use the phrase: The German Section no longer considers Dr. Vollrath to be its member. Of course, he can request that the General Secretariat discuss the case again in a year. But we cannot consider him a member. That is why I had to say this morning that I am not in a position to give Dr. Vollrath the floor. There is no question of the decision not being implemented at this very moment.
Since there is nothing further on the agenda, our business for the day is exhausted, and I hereby declare the official part of the Seventh General Assembly of the German Section of the Theosophical Society closed.