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LETTERS FALSE AND TRUE

Sep 14, 2006 09:07 AM
by carlosaveline


Dear Friends,  

Below,  a shorter version of the text evaluating Algeo's editorial work with regard to the HPB Letters. 

Marie wanted to see my evidences about it  --  and it seems I had not brought this text to Theos-talk  yet.  Better late than never. ( Please consider the footnotes.)
Regards,  Carlos. 

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There is something which is surprising about he book  entitled  The Letters of H. P. Blavatsky - Volume I , edited by Mr. John Algeo and published by  the USA T.P.H. in 2003.    In it you can find  forged texts with the most disgusting lies and libels against HPB, cleverly mixed among authentic documents.  

In those pages  H.P. Blavatsky – the woman who worked day and night  for the good of mankind and who gave the world such wonderful books as The Voice of the Silence and The Secret Doctrine –  is made  to describe herself as a mean person; a Russian spy (“letter” 07);  someone who helped torture a cat to death during “occult” experiences ( “letter” 76);  someone who would like to sell her soul (“letter” 53);  and  someone whom the devil got into trouble in her youth (“letter” 69) –  to name but a few examples of Mr. John  Algeo’s “work”.   
 
Out of the 136  “letters” published by Mr. John Algeo,  at least 27 documents are certainly false.(1)   That makes 20 percent of the total.  One out of five letters of the volume is false. Nearly all the 27 forged documents are deeply offensive to H .P. Blavatsky, and more treacherously so since they are presented as if signed by HPB herself. Mr. Algeo, who happens to be the international vice-president of the Theosophical Society, Adyar, has accomplished what no anti-theosophical initiative had done so far: a serious, partially successful  attempt to have  the worst falsehoods against the Old Lady included in the so-called theosophical literature and, worse, in the very body of books which are ascribed to Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. 
 
A single woman travelling around the world in that rigid and authoritarian society of the 19th century, H.P.B. used her brilliant pen to tirelessly denounce the blind dogmas of the different religions and churches; to propose universal brotherhood as the only real basis for world peace;  to criticize the scientific ilusions of her time, and to bring to the world the wisdom of all times, which is always simultaneously new and ancient.  But in the short term  she disturbed many established routines and could only offer to people a dangerous, difficult, steep and narrow way to inner truth in their own hearts.  She had but a few loyal friends to help her face many powerful enemies, who were ready to do anything to stop or hinder her work.  Libelling her was one of the first things to do. 
 
More than one century later,  it seems  we are dealing  with a renewed  attempt to  destroy her at the moral level and thus prevent or make it more difficult for Adyar theosophists to come back to the original teachings and “rediscover” them,  now that the neo-theosophy of Mr. Charles Leadbeater loses  its strength. 
 
It is possible that the conscious or unconscious logic behind Mr. Algeo’s “editorial work “  aims at preserving for some time more the ritualistic movements which make the real power-structure of the Adyar  theosophical society, and which were created by the Bishop C.W. Leadbeater in the  first part of the 20th century.  I have nothing to say against the personal good faith of Mr. Algeo, and have no  interest in judging anyone’s intentions.  Yet  Mr. John Algeo’s  editorial actions have at least  three main aspects  in his volume of  “Letters”.    
 
ONE.
 
In the first place,  there is a group of 22 false documents whose “originals” never appeared (“Solovyov letters”, and the “Spy Letter”). Of these, 21 were kindly copied  by Algeo from the collections  of attacks to the theosophical movement published initially by Mr. Vsevolod  Solovyov and later by Walter Leaf.  Of this I have already  written. (2)  Henry Olcott,  who could hardly be accused of  being too loyal to Blavatasky,  had to admit in his memories that Solovyov’s texts against H.P.B. were published only after her death, because that “made it safe for him to tell his falsehoods about her”.  According to Olcott, this  fact shows Solovyov to be “as heartless and as contemptible,  though fifty times more talented, than the Coulombs”. (3)  
 
The Coulombs forgeries against HPB – made under  the inspiration of the Vatican missionaries in India –  are far more famous than the ones fabricated by Solovyov.  In fact, Mr. Solovyov  did  not even present any  false originals of his “letters”.   He just published the false texts and libels,  and that was  enough for  Mr. Algeo to accept them as “Blavatsky Letters”.   As to the Russian Spy letter, obviously false, it is not clear yet who forged it.  This  should be investigated. 
            
TWO.  
            
Besides the Solovyov Letters, John Algeo  included in the volume a second and different  set of false texts and libels, whose originals also never appeared.  These texts were made up by a person who belonged to the Society for Psychical Research, Mrs. Eleanor Sidgwick.   These are “Letters” 108, 115,  116, 118 and  125, besides one of the three versions of “Letter”  117.  Mr. John Algeo  admits, in a small note at the end of each of these texts: 
 
“Original unavailable. Transcribed from a copy in the Archives of the Society for Psychical Research  in Cambridge University Library. The copy, of poor legitimacy, was made presumably by Eleanor Sidgwick, who freely abbreviated and paraphrased the material she copied.”
 
How could Mr. Algeo ascribe these texts to H. P. Blavatsky, if they come from the Society for Psychical Research, SPR, whose open campaign against HPB was dismantled by the very same SPR in 1986, after a technical  research led by Mr. Vernon Harrison, clearly indicated that all “proofs” against HPB were false and forged?   There is no legitimacy for any documents coming from the SPR and dealing with H.P.B.  Algeo writes that these forgeries have “poor legitimacy”, which is a violent understatement. Thus he destroys his own legitimacy as an editor.  
 
THREE. 
 
One third aspect of the editorial work of Mr. Algeo is that he fragmented or ignored the  Letters of H.P. Blavatsky as published  by Mr. William Judge  in the magazine The Path in 1894-1895.    
 
Mr. Judge knew her personally.  One of  the three main founders of the theosophical movement, he worked in direct touch with H.P.B. and was loyal to her all the way from  1875 up to his death in 1896.  Judge also made several important contributions to the theosophical literature. No experienced editor could ignore or try to dismantle his rendering of the letters. 
 
On the other hand, in order to pretend to be scientific,  sub-scholars often prefer the dead letter instead of the living spirit. The HPB letters as edited  by Judge are nice to read.  The reader enjoys them.  They are not  a collection of fragments separated by idle speculations.  But Algeo preferred  to cut and fragment the material available. He separated one piece from the other with long and boring discussions about useless details.  
 
One enlightening example of this is given  by the “Letters”  80 and 87 in his volume.   The small fragment miscalled  “Letter”  80 corresponds in fact but  to  the second half of a paragraph quoted by William Judge from her letters and published by him in January 1895.  The reader will have to jump over  “letters” 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, and 86, in order to finally meet the first half  of the same paragraph quoted by William Judge!   
 
Such is the “scholarship”  used by Mr. Algeo in his strange volume.  Great part of the book is a collection of disconnected sentences and groups of sentences or paragraphs separated one from another like islands in a (shallow) ocean of  pseudo-academic commentaries.  In addition to it, of course, one out of five fragments or texts is simply false. 
 
And  yet there is a bright side to this. The  publication of the Algeo Letters has given  many theosophists new food for thought, and some of them have already come into action in several countries in order to restore  the truth.    
             
Best regards,  Carlos Cardoso Aveline.           
 
 
NOTES:
 
(1) This is an initial assessment. Further research may  reveal the  number is actually greater and – besides the 27 false letters – one of the three versions presented by Algeo of his “Letter 117” is certainly false, too.  
 
(2) See my article Defending the Old Lady,  in  The Aquarian Theosophist, September  2005, pp. 1-9, or in  “FOHAT” magazine, Canada, in its Fall 2004 edition. A Portuguese translation of the text was published in Portugal by the magazine Biosofia in its edition of Winter 2004-2005, pp. 25-31.  A brief summary of it was published as a letter in Sunrise, the magazine of the Theosophical Society, February/March 2005, p. 82. 
 
(3) The sentence comes from H.S. Olcott’s “, vice-president of the T.S,the letter enclosed and   e the book The Letters of H.tters of H. learn so much during more than twoOld Diary Leaves” (TPH-India, 1972, volume III, p. 185). A longer quotation of his words about Solovyov or  Solovioff: “Among the visitors of H.P.B. was that talented Russian Solovioff, whose book, which appeared long after dear H.P.B.’s death, made it safe for him to tell his falsehoods about her, shows him to be as heartless and contemptible, though fifty times more talented than the Coulombs.”
 
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