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Blavatsky - 16/07/2024

IT IS BLAVATSKY TIME


Baboon-owner, world-traveling perennial syncretist, self-admitted huckster, protofeminist marajuana icon, and innovative antisemite, Mme. Helena Blavatsky was the most influential occultist of the Victorian era, for better and worse. 


Born August 12 1831 to a mishmash of european nobility, Blavatsky is our only source for her early life. She would claim to have psychic abilities, and that her grandfather was a high-ranking mason who gave her access to his vast occult library. Doubtless, she was a strange young woman with an interest in the religious and esoteric. 


As a young woman, Blavatsky had frankly unprecedented level of freedom for a woman. She was married at 17 to Nikifor Blavatsky, a man significantly older than her. She made so many attempts to escape and return to her family at Tiflis that Nikifor eventually relented and let her go. The result was a young, married, woman with access to significant wealth and social currency. Blavatsky could effectively travel anywhere she liked, whenever she liked. Over the course of her life, she would damn near circumnavigate the globe several times over. She ended up everywhere from North Africa to India to Canada to South America. Generally, if Blavatsky claimed to have visited someplace, she had probably been there.


Cairo was a particular early favorite for her. Here, she supposedly met with a Coptic mage and the pair founded her first esoteric society, the “Societe Spirite.” Which is initially a more “scientific” occult investigation group that rapidly became a magical society for doing wizard stuff. This would be the blueprint for the Theosophical Society


Around 1873, she would travel to the United States, where she became popular on a victorian form of Social Media known as the local independently published newspaper scene. Through this, she would meet a man named Henry Steele Olcott. The two would become fast and lifelong friends. Though, understand that a lifelong friendship with Mme Blavatsky has the stability of a weasel in a henhouse. 


Spiritualism was the hot topic of the day. While Blavatsky would initially gain popularity defending spiritualism, she would gain more attention by turning against the grain. Where Spiritualism accentuated a scientific approach to the magical, Blavatsky emphasized the opposite. Her conception of Occultism was in part a reaction to the scientific trappings of spiritualism. Blavatsky would emphasize the esoteric, hidden, inner teachings she claimed were present within all religious doctrine. This definition of Occultism is neatly summarized in the Hanegraaf dictionary as “Spiritualism, plus the doctrine of western esotericism.”


The idea of western esotericism having some form of shared hidden doctrine is nothing new. The Renaissance Esotericists loved some comparative religious study. But when Pico Della Mirandola looks at the hidden inner doctrine present in pagan texts, the result looks suspiciously like Christianity. 


Blavatsky’s Occult doctrine is secular, in the sense that it does not belong to any particular sect. It is a vichyssoise of Greek, Egyptian, Jewish, Christian, and Islamic, concepts. Plus, an innovative new ingredient. Blavatsky was one of the first westerners to incorporate (dubiously understood) concepts from eastasian religions like Hinduism and Buddhism. Given that she was one of the only occultists who had actually been to east asia, she had a significant degree of authority over western occult conceptions of Hinduism and Buddhism. The local library probably didn’t have a comprehensive translation of the Pali Canon, or the Bhagavad Gita. People had to take Blavatsky at her word. 








ToDo:


Roots:


Notable Ideas:


Influenced:


General Outline:


ERA 1: YUNG VATSKY

“I remember that when addressed as a medium, she (Mme. Blavatsky) used to laugh and assure us she was no medium, but only a mediator between mortals and beings we knew nothing about’.” - Blavatsky’s Sister speaking about her quoted in Hanegraaf 178


ERA 2: VATSKY AND OLCOTT

“On September 7, a lecture was given here by George Henry Felt (1831-1906) entitled “The Lost Canon of Proportion of the Egyptians”. In which he proved the existence of numerous elemental spirits within the Egyptian zodiac, and implied that these spirits could be invoked through ritual and chemical means. 


ERA 3 - THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY

1875 the Theosophical Society is founded in America by Olcott and Blavatskty


SIDEBAR: ISIS UNVEILED


‘For our own part, we regard her neither as the mouthpiece of hidden seers, nor as a mere vulgar adventuress; we think that she has achieved a title to permanent remembrance as one of the most accomplished, ingenious, and interesting impostors in history’.


ERA 4 - THE BLAVATSKY LODGE



ADDITIONAL NOTES

DIFFUSIONISM: Its the Atlantis myth. The idea that all culture and technology are descendant from a few ancient civilizations. Radical diffusionists believe in the Atlantis myth.


Dan Eddlestien. Blavatsky and the Hyperborean Atlantis

https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=view_citation&hl=en&user=gs3RA3QAAAAJ&citation_for_view=gs3RA3QAAAAJ:zYLM7Y9cAGgC 


https://pismin.com/10.1353/sec.2010.0055 


Okay. Her defenders will say that she was simply echoing the mentality of her time. Her detractors will say that she was not just a mirror, she contributed something new. She combined two previously disconnected ideas; antisemitism and the new atlantis theory. She gave antisemitism “cosmological importance.” The jews were now an inevitable enemy on a cosmic scale. Although, to be fair, the Jews as some ultimate spiritual enemy is nothing new. One need only look at the history of christian polemics. The greatest effect here is, I think, the secularization of a previously christian idea. 


Madame Blavatsky: The Mother of Modern Spirituality by Gary Lachman

https://www.amazon.com/Madame-Blavatsky-Mother-Modern-Spirituality/dp/1585428639/ref=asc_df_1585428639?tag=bngsmtphsnus-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=80814225697823&hvnetw=s&hvqmt=e&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4584413753927889&psc=1 



Jean Sylvane Bailey tries to find atlantis.

s appointed some position of ambassadorship or something idk check the Lachman biography



https://www.amazon.com/Madame-Blavatsky-Woman-Behind-Myth-ebook/dp/B00J2IK7YK 

Madame Blavatsky: The Woman Behind the Myth


Comments

I didn't realize Madame B also got into Buddhism, that's interesting

Kathleen Flint


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