The Fateful Year of 1923

GA 259

Editor's Preface

“Time and again, the Anthroposophical Society has faced fateful decisions and turning points in its development,” (Marie Steiner). It was not only exposed to external attacks—both from the orientalizing direction that emerged from the Theosophical Society and from the representatives of materialistic science and the denominational churches—but it also had to overcome internal crises. In the context of such an internal crisis, Marie Steiner began publishing lectures and protocols on the history of the Anthroposophical Society in the late 1930s and early 1940s, guided by the insight that knowledge of history can develop social qualities for present and future work. In 1943, for example, she published a document entitled Rudolf Steiner and the Civilization Tasks of Anthroposophy—A Retrospective View of the Year 1923 about Rudolf Steiner's efforts during the whole of 1923 to place the Anthroposophical Society on a new footing. The publication of this volume was announced by her at the time in the newsletter What is happening in the Anthroposophical Society—News for its Members (Vol. 1943, No. 49 of December 5, 1943) as follows: “...In fulfillment of a duty of filial piety and in the awareness of the great significance of all the addresses addressed by Dr. Steiner to the members, ... a work will be published that conveys to us Dr. Steiner's comments on the events of the very significant year 1923 in his own words. I have written a narrative report that connects his addresses of the most varied kinds.” A few years later (1947), she published further protocol records of sessions with Rudolf Steiner in 1923 under the title: Study material from the sessions of the Stuttgart Circle of Thirty, 1923. In her preliminary remarks, she states: “This working material, compiled from imperfect transcripts and notes, may be supplemented and completed in the future.”

For the present publication within the Rudolf Steiner Complete Works, these two publications by Marie Steiner have been combined into a single volume and expanded with the additions she announced. Since these are quite extensive, this required a complete redesign, especially for Marie Steiner's publication Rudolf Steiner and the Civilization Tasks of Anthroposophy—A Retrospective View of the Year 1923. The texts by Rudolf Steiner embedded in her “narrative report” from lectures, addresses, assembly protocols, etc. were removed and, with all the newly added material, divided into two parts, which in turn are arranged chronologically. Marie Steiner's Retrospective, now without Rudolf Steiner's texts, forms the first part. It now provides a condensed overview of Rudolf Steiner's activities and travels during 1923, as witnessed by Marie Steiner at his side. With regard to publication details, it has been brought up to date with the latest edition of the Complete Works. But the minutes she edited, Study Material from the Meetings of the Circle of Thirty in 1923, also had to be broken down. Part II contains those dealing with anthroposophical work issues; Part III those relating to the reorganization of the German Society; and those connected with the affair of the German weekly Anthroposophie can be found in the relevant part of the appendix.

Since Marie Steiner regarded everything that Rudolf Steiner said about the Society as material for the ongoing schooling needed for the formation of an anthroposophical sense of community, she wanted it to be treated as part of his complete works, even if only incomplete transcripts or even just notes have survived. In her Guidelines for the Publication of Rudolf Steiner's Works (What are the tasks of the estate association?, 1945, now in Marie Steiner: Letters and Documents, Dornach 1981), she writes:

“...But there is material other than the purely spiritual substance that supports the movement, and that relates to the history of the Society and its struggles. ... One can see from this what tasks — which unfortunately do not consist of comforting spiritual substance — still await their fulfillment. ... There are endless folders of files about what happened within the Society, and piles of correspondence about it. Everything, for example, that is connected with the separation of the Anthroposophical Society from the Theosophical Society, with the machinations of the “Star of the East”, etc., etc. There were more than a few crises. It did not go as smoothly as some might have liked. It was a constant struggle. But this struggle was the necessary education for the powers of perception, because knowledge arises only out of pain. And nothing is more difficult than educating people to have a sense of community... And how much educational material there is in the notes from the teachers' conferences held at the Waldorf School! [GA 300/1-3] How much socially educational material in the even worse material from the so-called Circle of Thirty of Stuttgart [in the present volume]. All of this belongs to history and to soul-searching.... Everything connected with the opposition from the outside world, which culminated in the burning of the Goetheanum, the forcible termination of Dr. Steiner's public lectures, and finally his ‘terminal illness’ – that too belongs to the history of the Society and should one day be dealt with appropriately and from the necessary distance, but impressively...

For such a future historical account, the largest part of the documentary material is now available in the series of the complete edition Writings and Lectures on the History of the Anthroposophical Movement and Society. Another important part is the documentation presented here of the year 1923, which was so significant in the history of the Anthroposophical Society. It was marked by numerous crises and difficulties that a community struggling for higher forms of consciousness must inevitably face.

With reference to a lecture on history given shortly before by Dr. W. J. Stein, Rudolf Steiner expressed the following views on the general question of how documents for understanding history are to be weighted in a conference with the teachers of the Waldorf School in Stuttgart on March 30, 1923 (in CW 300/3): “[...] You spoke about experience in history. With reference to Herman Grimm, you have railed against documents – Herman Grimm, who, when speaking methodically, emphasized that one can only present history as far as material is available. When you said that one should build a story from the inside and dispense with the documents, the objection arises: what does Dr. Stein know from of own history if he has not studied history? So, it is something that collapses in on itself. ... You can't do anything with history without documents, if you don't develop the opposite pole, if you don't show that each document only has the right significance when it is illuminated in the right way.”

Rudolf Steiner also wanted to see a proper effect in and through the Anthroposophical Society based on knowledge of its history. At the members' meeting in Stuttgart on September 4, 1921, which was attended by about 1200 members - it was the first members' meeting that could be held again since the outbreak of the war in the summer of 1914 - he called on those present: “Please study the history of this movement!” And in connection with the serious problems of 1923, he said at the meeting in Stuttgart on February 28, 1923 (in this volume): “When I negotiate with someone, be it a group or an individual coming on behalf of a group, at first they understand nothing of what I say... but there is an infinitely great activity, an infinitely good will. Everything that has not been understood will be done immediately! ... But one must grow into the old history, one must become familiar with all the details!”

Hella Wiesberger

Raw Markdown · ← Previous · Next → · ▶ Speed Read

Space: play/pause · ←→: skip · ↑↓: speed · Esc: close
250 wpm