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Re: Theos-World Besant's Inaugural Address

Dec 03, 2008 09:57 PM
by Drpsionic


Someone should have hit her in the face with a pie too.  
 
Chuck the Heretic (who thinks that who claim leadership positions need to  be 
hit with a pie in the face every once in a while)
 
 
In a message dated 12/3/2008 9:09:11 P.M. Central Standard Time,  
mkr777@gmail.com writes:

 
 
 
Sometime ago, one of our fellow theosophists sent me the Inaugural  Address
of Annie Besant. Before she came to theosophy, she was involved in  many
social issues in England and after moving ot India, she continued to  be very
active in many of them and even today, for this she is remembered  in India.
She also got involved in Indian Independence Movement and was the  only
non-Indian to be elected as the President of Indian National  Congress.

Both HSO & HPB were instrumental in social humanitarian  activities to help
the depressed and poor classes in India. After Besant,  there is a disconnect
world-wide between the leaders and their activities  relating to local social
issues of the day. They all seem to be happy and  content to stay in their
cocoons and of course with computers, happily  keyboarding. I think this
disconnect may have something to do with the  dismal membership situation
world-wide except in India.

Some of you  may find Besant's Address of  interest.

MKR

===================================

INAUGURAL  ADDRESS OF ANNIE BESANT

June 26, 1907

Dear Friends:

By an  overwhelming majority you have ratified the nomination of  our
President-Founder, made by his Master's order, and have called upon me  to
take up work as his successor in the high office of President of  the
Theosophical Society. The Society, as a whole, has thus chosen to  continue
in the path marked out from its inception, and trodden by its two  outer
Founders; it has refused to reject the guiding Hand which gave it its  first
President, and indicated its second; it therefore goes forward on its  new
cycle of activity, with its elected President at its head, under  the
benediction which rested upon it at its birth and is now repeated, as  the
chosen vehicle for the direct influence of the Masters of WISDOM on  the
world, as the standard-bearer of the mighty Theosophical Movement which  is
sweeping through all religions, all literature, all art, all craft,  through
all the activities of a humanity preparing itself to take a new  step forward
in civilization.

The Society asserts itself as a  nucleus of Universal Brotherhood, and its
specialty, as such a nucleus, is  indicated by its nameâTheosophical. It is
its function to proclaim and  spread abroad Theosophy, the Divine Wisdom, the
Brahma VidyÃ, the Gnosis,  the Light of all lights, that Man may know God,
may attain the knowledge  which is Eternal Life, because he is himself of
that Nature which he seeks  to know.

On this fact, this all-pervading identity of nature, this  UNITY, is based
the Universal Brotherhood, and, to bring the outer proofs  of it, it searches
through all religions and philosophies, and dives into  the hidden secrets of
nature and of man.

Because of this fact, it  welcomes to its membership men and women of all
religions, of all opinions,  and, provided that they recognize the
Brotherhood as universal, it demands  from them no belief in any fact,
however sure, in any teaching, however  vital. With a splendid faith in the
victorious power of Truth, it  disregards all the barriers which
superficially divide Humanityâsex, race,  creed, colour, casteâand welcomes
those as brothers who deny even the very  truths on which Brotherhood is
based, and who reject even the Revealers who  make its realization possible
for Humanity. Its platform is as wide as  thought, its all-embracing love is
as the sun which gives warmth and life  to all, even to those who are blind
to its light.

The condition of  the continuing life of the Society is its perfect
toleration of all  differences, of all shades of opinion. None has the right
to exclude his  brother for difference of thought, nor to claim for his own
thought a  fuller liberty of expression than he claims for that of another.
Complete  liberty of thought must be guarded by all of usâby me, as your
President,  most of allânot granted as a privilege or a concession, but
recognized as  the inherent right of the intellect, as its breath of life.
Tolerance, even  with the intolerant, must be our rule. And this must be our
principle in  life and action, not only in words, lest a fatal orthodoxy,
checking new  initiative and new growth, should stealthily spread in the
Society. We must  welcome differences of thought, and give free play to their
expression, so  that our windows may be kept open to all new light. This is
not only sound  principle, but it is also sound policy, for thus only can new
avenues to  knowledge constantly open before us. We possess only portions of
the Truth,  and no searcher must be hindered or frowned upon, lest the
Society should  lose some fragment that he may have found. Better the
temporary life of a  thousand falsehoods, than stifling of one truth at the
hour of its birth. I  claim the help of every Theosophist in this guarding of
our liberty, for  universal and constant vigilance is necessary lest it
should be  infringed.

But let it not be supposed that this perfect freedom of  opinion connotes
indifference to truth in any who hold definite convictions  as to any facts,
or should prevent them from full expression of their own  convictions, of
their beliefs, or of their knowledge. There is perfect  freedom of
affirmation among us as well as of denial, and scepticism must  not claim
greater rights of expression than knowledge. For the Society as a  whole, by
its very name, affirms the existence of the Divine Wisdom, and  the
affirmation would be futile if that Wisdom were beyond human  attainment.
Moreover, the Society would be without a reason for its being  if it did not,
as a whole, spread the Teachings which lead up to the  attainment of that
Wisdom, while leaving to its members as individuals the  fullest freedom to
give to any of those teachings any form which expresses  their own thinking,
and even to deny any one of them. Each Truth can only  be seen by a man as he
develops the power of vision corresponding to it;  the Society, by refusing
to impose on its members any expressions of Truth,  does not mean that a man
should remain blind, but declares that man's power  of vision increases in
the open air of freedom better than in the  hot-houses of unreasoned beliefs.
Hence the Society does not impose on its  members even the truths by which it
lives, although the denial of those  truths by it, as a Society, would be
suicide.

The Theosophical  Society thus offers to the thinkers of every religion and
of none a common  platform, on which they may meet as Lovers of Truth, to
learn from and to  teach each other; it stands as the herald of the coming
time when all  religions shall see themselves as branches of One Religion,
the WISDOM of  GOD. As its President, I say to all men of peace and goodwill:
"Come, and  let us labour together for the establishment of the kingdom of
religious  Truth, religious Peace, and religious Freedom upon earthâthe true
Kingdom  of Heaven."

So much for our principles. What of our practice?

We  owe to the President-Founder a well-planned organization,  combining
complete divisional liberty with the strength ensured by  attachment to a
single centre. Some details may need amendment, but the  work of organization
is practically complete. Our work is to use the  organization he created, and
to guide it to the accomplishment of its  purposeâthe spread of Theosophical
ideas, and the growth of our  knowledge.

For the first, our Lodges should not be content with a  programme of
lectures, private and public, and with classes. The members  should be known
as good workers in all branches of beneficent activity. The  Lodge should be
the centre, not the circumference, of our work. To the  Lodge for inspiration
and knowledge; to the world for service and teaching.  The members should
take part in local clubs, societies, and debating  associations, and should
both offer Theosophical lectures, and lectures in  which Theosophical ideas
can be put forth on the questions of the day. They  should, when members of
religious bodies, hold classes outside the Society  for members of their
faith, in which the spiritual, instead of the literal  meaning of Hindu,
Buddhist, Christian, and other doctrines should be  explained, and the lives
of the great mystics of all religions should be  taught. They should see that
children receive religious education,  according to their respective faiths.
They should in every way hand on the  light which they have received, and
replenish their own torch with oil at  the Lodge meetings.

People belonging to kindred movements should be  invited to the Lodge, and
visits should be paid to them in turn. Lodges  with a numerous membership
should form groups for special work. For the  second, the growth of our
knowledge, groups should be formed for study  under each of our Objects.
Under the first, the intellectual and social  movements of the day should be
studied, their tendencies traced out and  their methods examined; the results
of these studies would help the outside  workers in their choice of
activities. It would be useful also if, in every  Lodge, a small group of
members were formed, harmonious in thought and  feeling, who should meet once
a week for a quiet hour, for combined silent  thought for a given purpose,
and for united meditation on some inspiring  idea; the members of this group
might also agree on a time at which, daily,  they should unite in a selected
thought-effort to aid the Lodge. Another  group should study under the second
Object, and this group should supply  lecturers on Theosophy to the outer
world, and no lecturer should be sent  out by a Lodge who was not equipped
for his work by such study. A third  group might take up the third Object of
the Society, and work practically  at research, carrying on their work, if
possible, under the direction of a  member who has already some experience on
these lines, and thus increasing  our store of knowledge.

There are many other lines of useful work which  should be taken up, series
of books to be planned, concerted activities in  various lands. These are for
the future. But I trust to make the Presidency  a centre of life-radiating
force, inspiring and uplifting the whole  Society.

In order that it may be so, let me close with a final word to  all who have
aided and to all who have worked against me in the election  now over. We all
are lovers of the same Ideal, and eager servants of  Theosophy. Let us all
then work in amity, along our different lines and in  our different ways, for
our beloved Society. Let not those who have worked  for me expect me to be
always right, nor those who have worked against me  expect me to be always
wrong. Help me, I pray you all, in filling well the  office to which I have
been elected, and share with me the burden of our  common work. Where you
agree with me follow and work with me; where you  disagree, criticize and
work against me, but without bitterness and  rancour. Diversities of method,
diversities of thought, diversities of  operation, will enrich, not weaken,
our Movement, if love inspire and  charity judge. Only through you and with
you can the Presidency be useful  to the Society. Help me so to fill it as to
hand it on, a richer legacy, to  my successor. And so may the Masters guide
and prosper the work which they  have given into my hands, and blessed.

---xxx---

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