13. Bodhisattva Maitreya or Christ or Krishna, Incarnation of Second Ray or Love-Wisdom
Ajita (the invincible), the Savior who will unify East and
West

The only seated Bodhisattva, as he is ready
to rise and reappear.
Gilded statuette belonging to the author.
I shall start by saying that I am not able to provide
any information about the Masters that can reveal the activity they carry out
today; my purpose is only to demonstrate their historical presence. The chance
to contact them cannot be offered, it depends on karma and personal merit.
Our motto, by deliberate choice,
is "We are in the service of the old Master from all time: we are, we were, we shall
be such forever." 267
On the identity
of the Maitreya we must remember that he lives
in the entourage of
the master Morya and that he travels in the desert together with him,
guided by Jupiter, the star of Allahabad, at the Maha Kumbha Mela and that the next meeting too will be held always
in Allahabad in 2025 when Jupiter,
with an orbital
cycle of 11.86
years, will enter
Taurus, sign of enlightenment, and the sun and the
moon will be in Capricorn! 268
"But most difficult of all is to reveal the true Image of Christ. Think, how to cleanse the Image of Christ." 269
Virgil's prophecy at the end of the Age of Aries:
"The Virgin returns, the Golden Age (the
incarnation of the Avatar)
returns. A new progeny descends
from Heaven (the long-awaited
Messiah). O chaste Lucina, protect the newborn. The serpent (materialism) will
die. " Virgil Egloga IV, verses
6-24 (written in 40 BCE), analogous to the Pisces’ of this late century.
![]()
267 Ḥāfeẓ, Canzoniere (Divān) Ghazal
201, p. 245, Ariele Edizoni,
2005 Milano.
268 Leaves of the Garden
of Morya Vol. II, sutra 153, Part Two, V, sutra 5. Agni Yoga Society,
New York, 1954.
269 Leaves of the Garden
of Morya Vol. II, sutra 152, Part Two, V, sutra 4. Agni Yoga Society,
New York, 1954.
Prophecy of the Buddha: "When life expectancy is 80 years, there will arise in the world a
Blessed Lord, a fully enlightened Arhat and Buddha named Metteya (Pali
language) endowed with wisdom and conduct,
a Tathagata, Knower of the worlds,
incomparable Teacher of angels
and men, enlightened and blessed as I am now. He will know, through his own
intuition, and teach a Dharma all imbued with Love (Sanskrit Maitri) from beginning, middle and end.
He will proclaim, just as I do, the holy life in its fullness and purity. He
will be accompanied by thousands of monks, just as I am attended by a company
of hundreds." 270
On Christós. "In Volume I of the Secret Doctrine, in the first
Stanza of the third chapter, we read these words, 'The three
fall into the four.' This sentence contains the authentic secret of the manifestation of the Saviors
of all times. (The externalisation of the Hierarchy
or Golden Age)" 271
This is also symbolized on the Masonic apron.
"Western churches must realize that
fundamentally there is only one church but that it is not necessarily the
Christian church. God works in many ways, through many faiths and many
religious groups, and in their union the truth will be revealed in its
completeness." 272
But it is necessary
to deepen this idea of God according
to the perspective of the Master
K.H. who, at the time of Blavatsky, came into conflict with the
arrogant neophyte Allan Octavian Hume, precisely on the subject of an
extracosmic God. To the sentence about God contained in the book Paradoxes of the Highest Science by
Eliphas Levi, the Kabbalist whom Hume liked so much, "I simply believe
that he exists, it is impossible for me not to conceive a directing thought
in this eternally living substance
which populates infinite
space. " Master K.
H. (under his pseudonym E. O. the eminent occultist) added a note
which was to become a matter of dispute and which prevented Hume from learning
anything from the Master of Theosophy. "Within that substance, in every
atom of it, but not outside of it. There is no extracosmic Deity. All matter is God, and God is Matter, or
there is no God." 273
"When the idea that the solar
system is the physical vehicle of the Logos and His body of manifestation is
understood many problems will become clear." 274
"The Eastern faiths
have ever emphasized God Immanent, deep within the human heart, "nearer than hands and
feet", the Self, the One, the Atma, smaller than the small, yet
omnipervading. The Western
faiths have presented God Transcendent, outside His universe, an Onlooker. God transcendent, first of all, conditioned men’s
concept of Deity, for the action of this transcendent God appeared in the
process of nature; later, in the Jewish dispensation, God appeared as the
tribal Jehovah, as he soul of a nation. Next, God was seen as a perfected man,
and the divine God-man walked the Earth in the Person of the Christ. Nowadays
it is being increasingly acknowledged the concept of God immanent in every man
and in every created form. Today, we should have the churches presenting a
synthesis of these divine ideas, which have been summed up for us in the
statement of Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad
Gita: "Having pervaded this whole universe with a fragment
of Myself, I remain." God greater than the created whole, yet God present
also in the part; God transcendent guarantees the Plan of our world, and
![]()
270 Maurice Walshe, The Long discourses of the Buddha, A
translation of Digha Nikaya, Cakkavatti-Sihanada Sutta - Sutta 25 p. 404, Wisdom Publications, Somerville, 2012.
271 Hilarion, Theogenesis, Stanza VI, Sloka 8. The Temple of The People,
Halcyon, California 1906-1923.
272 Alice A. Bailey, The Reappearance of the Christ
p. 159, Lucis
Press, New York, 2017.
273 Eliphas Levi, Paradoxes of the Highest
Science, p. 61. Theosophical Publ. House, Adyar,
Madras, 1922.
274 Alice A. Bailey
A
Treatise on Cosmic
Fire, p. 556. Lucis Press,
New York, 1999.
is the Purpose conditioning all lives from the minutest
atom, up through all the kingdoms of nature, to man." 275
The transcendent God is like an iceberg,
nine parts of which are under water,
while the God that is
immanent in man, the tenth part that is afloat, is what we experience as
personal I. The latter is the same divine self,
but conditioned by mind and desire. As soon as it frees
itself from conditioning or maya,
it discovers the whole that has always been free and immortal. As simple as the number
one, which is everything, while
multiplicity is an illusion! Can a man be
divided into parts?
Transcendent aspect:
"But what is the knowledge
of all these details to thee, O
Arjuna?
Having pervaded
this entire universe
with one fragment
of Myself, I remain." 276
Immanent Aspect: "And I am
seated in the hearts of all and from Me radiate memory and wisdom or
denial." 277
In order to try to understand the figure of Jesus
Christ it is necessary to understand the mystery of his double name through the
Indian concept of Avesha Avatar.
After the symbolic baptism in the Jordan river, the spiritual power of Jesus
was joined by that of the Christ, his spiritual Guru, who used the vehicles
of Jesus to increase the work of his disciple
among men. It is also called
the process of adumbration/overshadowing and consists in the use, with the
disciple's full consent, of the latter's lower vehicles for the purpose of
service. The opposite is mediumship, which is the inferior correspondence of
adumbration/overshadowing, being due, on the other hand, to weakness and
sickness; it is always non-consensual and is, therefore, a theft by inferior
entities of the body and emotions of the poor unfortunate who, therefore,
becomes obsessed and sick and is no longer responsible for the actions and vile
deeds that another being performs through him.
Anyone who has attained the state of Master of
Wisdom, can no longer say "I am", "I can", "I
want" from a personal point of view, nor can he bear to be an object of
worship. The thought of personal deification, becomes an intense torture. Yet
this is what has happened to many spiritual instructors. "These great
Lives abhorred...worship." 278
Here are the sorrowful words of
the Master Jesus spoken in 1933.
"Worship! Did I ever asked for worship or
adulation and for a deluge of flattery to be poured into my ears? Verily I came
to point the way to peace and fraternity, through the education of the heart
and the will to love all beings... Belief in me yet disbelief in my precepts!
- a strange and paradoxical faith is that indeed." 279
Krishna, one of the last incarnations of the Christ,
was of noble birth and was himself
a King, and all His teaching
is permeated with a noble
and courageous spirit.
All the great
Masters belonged to the Kshatriya caste,
that of kings and warriors, which in ancient times was considered the highest.
It was the Brahmins who learned from the royal lineage and not vice versa. Rama
was also King of Ayodhya.
Even now it is so. Born in 1852, belonging to the
Rajput Chandrabansi, died (so to
speak) in the year 1918,
Krishna or Christ
lived, unknown to most people,
under the name of a prince, Raja Raghunath Singh, in a small town in India, in Kashmir in the jagir (principality)
275 Foster Bailey, Ponder on this, Ch. LXII, God,
p. 134, Lucis Press, New York, 19.
276 Bhagavad Gītā, translation A. Besant and Bhagavan Das. Chapter X, 42 Theosophical P. House, Adyar,
1926.
277 Bhagavad Gītā,
Chapter XV, 15.
278 Alice A. Bailey,
The Externalisation of the Hierarchy, p. 268. Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1981.
279 Cyril Scott, The Vision
of Nazarene, p. 10, Parable
of the Rope, Samuel Weiser,
York Beach, ME 2000.
of Ramkot consisting of 21
villages in Jaswa Dun given to him by
Maharaja Ranbir Singh (Master Morya, as I will show later) since his ancestors
had been dispossessed by the British. His very name means the Lord of the Raghu
lineage. Ranbir Singh gave him in marriage his only two daughters, the apples
of his eyes, and raised an enormous Temple with great golden domes.

Raghunath Temple with seven domes
dedicated to Ram, avatar of Vishnu, some in gold, Jammu.
Just as Muslims turn their heads in the direction of
Mecca during prayers, so Indians during their pujas or religious services turn their heads in direction of
Kashmir with its two cities of Srinagar
and Jammu, and it is to Him that they bow even though they call Him Krishna,
the name of His former incarnation. The Christ has always been present, so He
can only reappear and not return. Here is his image jealously preserved in
Adyar at the headquarters of the Theosophical Society, representing, though
unbeknownst to them, Raja Raghunath Singh
as a young man. It was generously given to me by Col. Nandan Nilakanta, who
had worked there for 30 years, for some things that I had told him in
confidence, and for that I am very grateful to him.

Maitreya or Krishna
in the time of Blavatsky, circa 1880.

Together with Nandan
Nilakanta in Adyar,
Chennai.
Why is this city of Jammu important? An Indian story must be told. One day a king was out hunting when he saw a lion and a
unicorn (the same as in the English royal coat of arms, symbols of personality
and soul) drinking together from the same pool of water. Astonished, the king
turned that forest into his kingdom and called it Jambhu. This king, Jambu
Lochan, was the true founder, millennia ago, of Jammu. In the ancient Sanskrit
Purāṇa India is called Jambhu-Dwipa (the
continent of Jammu). 280
There are two main temples built during the reign of
Ranbir Singh (1856-1885): one is the Ranbineswar
which takes its name from Ranbir himself and which has the peculiarity of
having in its sancta sanctorum some pure crystal lingams. They are unique in
India, specially brought in from Germany and of which I enclose a rare photo as
it is forbidden to all to photograph them. I was granted this privilege by the
Pujari (high priest) of the temple by kind permission of the current Maharaja
of Kashmir Karan Singh who helped me, with his magnanimity, in the historical research I carried
out on his ancestor. The other is the Raghunath
Temple (dedicated to the Lord of the solar lineage
of Raghu, ancestor of Rama)
which contains a vast library
with 6000 manuscripts, some of which are ancient and written on palm leaves,
which I personally viewed and of which I have the rare catalog compiled by the
great archaeologist Sir Aurel Stein. The library contains very rare writings on
philosophy and astrology, in Persian language, by K.H. or Kirpa Ram.

The Author in New Delhi
at the home of Maharaja
Karan Singh, former
ambassador of India to the USA.
![]()
280 H. P. Blavatsky, Theosophical Glossary, Jambhu-Dwipa, p. 124, Theosophy Company, Los Angeles,
1973.

Crystal lingams, unique
in size in India, in the Ranbineswar temple in Jammu.

Statue of Ranbir
Singh (Morya) facing
the Ranbineswar Temple,
in Jammu, India.
Another episode that corroborates that Ranbir Singh is the Guru of Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky, and I hope, given the motive, that the Master will forgive me
the quotation, is this. Says Sir Walter Lawrence:
"I remember meeting Ranbir Singh and his three
sons at the Durbar held in Lahore in 1881. I think he was one of the most
handsome men I ever saw, and his youngest son, Raja Amar Singh, at that time
was indeed a thing of beauty." 281
K.H. says of H.P.B. "When it becomes a question
of “puffing up” those she is devoted to, her enthusiasm knows no limits. Thus,
she has made of M⸫ an Apollo of Belvedere, the glowing description of whose
physical beauty, made him more than once start in anger, and break his pipe while
swearing like a true — Christian; and thus, under
her eloquent phraseology, I, myself had the pleasure of hearing myself
metamorphosed into an “angel of purity and light”
— shorn of his wings. We cannot help feeling at times angry,
with, oftener — laughing at, her."
282
![]()
281 Walter Lawrence, The India
we served, p. 126, Cassel
and Company, London,
1928.
282 The Mahatma's Letters to A. P. Sinnett, Letter 54 p. 309, The Theosophical Publish. House, London,
1972.

Ranbireswar, Jammu, Kashmir.
Northern India's largest
temple dedicated to Shiva, with a statue of Ranbir
Singh

Portrait of Maharaja Ranbir Singh taken from
a real photo that could be observed in various Offices and important places
in the kingdom of Kashmir,
particularly in Srinagar
and Jammu.

Maitreya, original painting in
Tashilunpo Monastery, Shigatse, 1920. Recognizable by the chorten
on the forehead representing the Buddha. On the right side Tsongkhapa, on the left Atìsha, the great Initiates revered
and celebrated by Master K.H.283 and Master M.284
![]()
283 The Mahatma's
Letters to A. P. Sinnett,
Vol. I, Letter 9, p. 43-44, The Theosophical Publishing House, London, 1972.
K. H. signing the letter states: "When our great Buddha-the patron of all
adepts, the reformer and codifier of the occult system-reached Nirvana on
earth, he became a Planetary Spirit, that is, his spirit could wander
interstellar spaces consciously and continue at will on earth in the original,
individual body. this is the highest
degree to which man can aspire on our planet, as rare as the Buddhas
themselves and the last to become such was
Tsongkapa of Kokonor (14th century), the reformer of esoteric and popular
Lamaism. "
284 Nicholas
Roerich, Heart of Asia, p. 103: "In 1027 of our era, we were first given
the opportunity to know the teaching of the Kalachakra, when it was popularized
by Atìsha."
MEDITATION FOR THE REAPPEARANCE OF CHRIST,
KRISHNA OR MAITREYA
Stage I. Alignment
a. Bring consciousness to the top of the head.
b. Elevate, through
the astral and the mind,
the thought or consciousness up to
the soul.
c. Identify the consciousness of the personality with that of the soul, and see them as
one.
Stage II. Dedication
We consecrate ourselves to the service of the Coming
One, and we will do our best to prepare the minds and hearts of men for His
Advent. With this firm intention we commit ourselves to meditate on the Laws and Principles of the Kingdom
of God and to cooperate
in every possible way in their implementation,
within and through the human realm.
Stage III. Approach and Contact
Repeat slowly, trying to penetrate the deeper meaning contained in
the Message "I Stand and Wait."
" Keep
close in touch with Me and with the Master Who surveys your life. With Us are found the forces
of the living Light and Love which you must use.
Keep close to Us, and day by day draw on that strength
And knowledge which We have and which
is also yours.
Let naught disturb the acquiescent calm which keeps
you close in touch,
Which brings you light and understanding
And which
keeps you steadfast on the Way."
Stage IV. Meditation
on the Kingdom of God -
Effects of the Externalisation of the Hierarchy.
“Think deeply upon the embodied
idea and carry
your thoughts forward
and onward and upward
(choose whichever word conveys to you the deepest meaning)
until you reach
as abstract a point
as you can achieve. When you can go no further and have entered
the world of abstraction, then stay poised in thought and hold the
mind steady in the light for as long a period as you can. Watch your thought
processes as you do this and note anything new or especially intuitive which you may register
during this time of waiting.
Keep a strict record of the ideas which may come into your mind and note them down each day for your spiritual diary.” Alice Bailey, Discipleship in the New Age Vol. I, p.
113.
Stage V. Creative Meditation
(Before beginning this stage of Meditation, remember
that "words are living things,
possessing form, soul, and spirit or life.")
1. Consider
the Principle of Essential Divinity for at least five minutes. Try to
understand its quality and life.
2. Chant OM and wait in silence,
keeping the mind still.
3. Assuming
an attitude of waiting, express in your own words the highest meaning you have
been able to perceive.
4. Establish
a relationship between the Meditation theme and the present world opportunity,
discerning its relation
to current world
affairs and its usefulness and spiritual value
to humanity as a whole.
5. Keeping
your mind steadfast in the light, transcribe any thought related to the
Meditation theme that penetrates your mind.
6. Formulate
the Principle of Essential Divinity and what you have understood by meditating
on it, so that it can be useful to others and to humanity.
Process the idea in its mental, emotional and practical aspects.
7. Then,
using creative imagination, pour the idea thus formulated into a living
thought-form, into the vast current of mental substance that acts ceaselessly
on human consciousness.
8. Chant the OM.
Stage VI. Visualization and Concluding Mantram.
1. Visualize
Christ on the horizon as a radiant Center of vivid Light. The radiance of His
aura conceals His appearance.
2. From the lower
part of the aura (from the feet), a Path of Golden Light departs.
3. You
then see a great multitude of people from whom rays of light emanate and
converge, forming a Path pointing
toward the One Who Comes. Between the two Paths there is still a gap.
4. Imagine Christ
saying:
"The Path I must tread to reach your place is one of Light; its quality
is goodwill, and it is almost ready for My feet. Work on.
Failure is not for you."
5. See the emptiness gradually diminish until the two Paths
come together, forming
One Path.
6. You see Christ approaching along this Path to humanity
as He says the concluding words: "I COME"
I Stand and Wait
I
stand and wait.
The One Who loves all men and things.
I stand and wait- with mind upon the Will of God
And heart wrapt up in love of all
mankind. Around Me also wait the many sons of men
Who, aeon after aeon, have found
the hard and thorny Way
Which leads into the Presence of the One Who ever holds the Light.
They know the hour has come,
But wait the rising
call which, day by day, is gathering force Out of humanity's distress, men's need and agony.
Attentive. also to another
rising call, the Centre where the Will of God is
known
Also awaits a summons
from the Christ
and His united Servers, the Forces of the Light. The planet stands arrayed-watching
and waiting for the crisis point of men.
The hour has
struck! Each year, at My Full Moon, a note sounds forth
And rings around the earth, meeting response from· those who know
Me well-
The One they serve in self-forgetfulness, with confidence and with surety
in the Plan.
To them goes forth the message
from Myself,
Not from a Master, but from the One
Who in wisdom and in love presides Over the Plans of Hierarchy and the work of those
who love their fellowmen.
I say: Keep close in touch with Me and with the Master Who surveys your life.
With Us are found the forces of the living Light and Love
which you must use. Keep close to Us, and day by day draw on that
strength
And knowledge which We have and which
is also yours.
Let naught disturb the acquiescent calm which keeps
you close in touch,
Which brings you light and understanding
And which keeps
you steadfast on the Way.
We know that you are
there, serving and struggling,
Leaming how to work,
and dealing with the plans which will prepare My Way.
Knowledge will come of how to work and where to find the men
Whose hallmark of divinity
is clearly seen in the way they love their fellowmen.
They are the ones We need, and they the ones who can prepare My Way.
Keep close to men, and see within mankind
The
working of the Plan which
will bring Us to the outer realm
of life. I stand in readiness,
and so do Those Who live and serve the Plan.
They stand with Me in ordered
ranks, waiting the call to
come.
Say
to mankind: The time is ripe; the hour has come; the Christ is on His Way.
Nearer He comes, and Those Who walk that Way with Him
Have lived and suffered, and have left behind that which you now endure.
But We have NOT left
the sons of men behind;
We now return to bring you light and life
and peace-
A
peace which now can be, because goodwill
is largely mankind's
inner urge. Thus will be
brought full glory to the Greatest One .
Whom I and you and all men
serve-e’en though they know 1t not.
The Path which I must
tread to reach your place
Is
one of Light; its quality-goodwill, and it is almost ready for My feet.
Work on. Failure is not for you.
I COME.
(Thoughts
on The Reappearance of the Christ by Alice A. Bailey, June, 1949)
There is no path too long for those who walk slowly, without
effort; there is no goal too high for those who prepare for it with patience.
Jean de La Bruyére
A Symbol of the New Era
The work of Christ today,
minor energies within
major ones, synthesis of an essay by Foster Bailey

The intense blue infinite field is
the life expression of our Second Ray Solar Logos or Love-Wisdom that keeps alive and conditions everything within the solar system,
including the life and destiny
of our Planetary Logos, Sanat Kumara.
The golden disc, in which the
triangle and the star appear, symbolizes the inclusive environment of life on this planet.
Through it Sanat
Kumara can look and we can become
aware of its reality. It is the golden disc referred to in the Gayatri, the 24-syllable mantra, "Unveil
to us the face of the true spiritual
Sun, hidden by a disc of liquid gold light, that we may know the
truth as we proceed to your sacred feet."
The large white cross symbolizes the
cosmic cross or the state of consciousness of our elder brothers on Sirius,
the brightest star in the sky, of which the solar system is a replica or of
which we are chelas or spiritual
children. For the Celts the heliacal rising or with the sun of Sirius dated the
feast of Lug, the King of the Gods.
The
triangle superimposed on the disc is yellow,
the color of buddhi,
the plane on which
the Hierarchy functions. The lower right corner represents the Buddha, who has
completely transcended his function as founder of the Buddhist religion and now
operates only on an extraplanetary level. The lower left corner represents the
spirit of peace or the peace that surpasses all understanding. The active agent
of peace is goodwill which will find its ultimate expression in the human
family as right relations put into practice.
At the top vertex of this triangle
is the Avatar of Synthesis. His influence on the masses hastens
the understanding on the part of humanity, which ultimately becomes more and
more aware that we all live united in a single world all united and with a
common destiny.
Superimposed on this triangle of new
age forces is the five-pointed star of Christ. This star has been the instrument of his influence in the human
family throughout the Piscean era. It
has great power today and is blue in color
because it represents that much solar
quality to which humanity can respond. The point in
the center is where Christ is, at the center of the star, the triangle and the disk of golden
light. He works
from that center
and as his work progresses the white, equal-armed cross emerges, reflecting his cosmic prototype. That will become
the cross of humanity
in the future. It symbolizes the balanced life of right relationship with God through aspiration and right relationship
with man through service and sharing. We will finally know and live that nothing
belongs to the individual human
being. As we focus
on this power
center in our symbol, enlightenment will ensue.
20. On
Master Rákoczky of 7th Ray today serving
as the new Mahachohan of Third Ray.
(Pronounced Rácosy in Hungarian language)

Francis II Rákóczy, Prince of Hungary and Transylvania
in a portrait by Mẚnyoki, with his natural son, the Count of Saint-Germain on
the right in a painting by Count Notari.
References from the only reliable sources:
"Under the Manu work the regents of the different world divisions, such as, for instance,
the Master Jupiter, the oldest
of the Masters now working
in physical bodies
for humanity, Who is the regent for India, and the
Master Rakoczi, Who is the regent for Europe and America. It must be remembered
here that though the Master R., for instance, belongs to the seventh ray, and
thus comes under the department of energy of the Mahachohan, yet in
Hierarchical work He may and does hold office temporarily under the Manu. These
regents hold in Their hands the reins of government for continents and nations,
thus guiding, even if unknown, their destinies; They impress and inspire
statesmen and rulers; They pour forth mental energy on governing groups, thus
bringing about the desired results wherever co-operation and receptive
intuition can be found amongst the thinkers." 285
"The Master Who concerns Himself especially with
the future development of racial affairs in Europe, and with the mental
outgrowth in America and Australia, is the Master Rakoczi. He is a Hungarian, and has a home in the Carpathian mountains, and was at one time
a well-known figure at the Hungarian Court. Reference to Him can be found in
old historical books, and He was particularly before the public eye when he was
the Comte de St. Germain, and earlier still
when he was both Roger
Bacon and later,
Francis Bacon. It is interesting to note that as the
Master R. takes hold, on the inner planes, of affairs in Europe, His name as
Francis Bacon is coming before the public eye in the Bacon-Shakespeare
controversy. He is rather a small, spare man, with pointed black beard, and
smooth black hair, and does not take as many pupils as do the Masters
previously mentioned. He is at present handling the majority of the third ray
pupils in the occident in conjunction with the Master Hilarion.
The Master R. is upon the seventh Ray, that of
Ceremonial Magic or Order, and He works largely through esoteric ritual and
ceremonial, being vitally interested in the effects, hitherto unrecognized, of
the ceremonial of the Freemasons, of the various fraternities and of the Churches
everywhere. He is called in the Lodge,
usually, "the Count," and in America
and Europe acts practically as the general
manager for the carrying out of the plans of the executive council of the Lodge.
Certain of the Masters form around the three great
Lords an inner
group, and meet in council with great frequency." 286
![]()
285 Alice A. Bailey,
Initiation Human and Solar, p. 46, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
286 Alice A. Bailey,
Initiation Human and Solar, p. 58, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
"Two other Masters, specially concerned with the
seventh or ceremonial ray, Whose particular work it is to supervise the
development of certain activities within the next fifteen years, work under the
Master R. Very definitely may the assurance be given here, that prior to the coming
of the Christ, adjustments will be made so that at the head of all great organizations
will be found either a Master, or an initiate who has taken the third
initiation. At the head of certain of the great occult groups, of the
Freemasons of the world, and of the various great divisions of the Church, and
resident in many of the great nations will be found initiates or Masters.287
"Lately the Master R. has taken the position of
Mahachohan, and that achievement has carried the entering force down into the
ranks of those Masters Who have taken the fifth initiation thus enabling Them
to step down this Shamballa force to Their individual Ashrams. This happening
has produced a tremendous stimulation with all the attendant opportunities,
manifestations, and dangers." 288
"When, for instance, the Master R. assumed the
task of Mahachohan or Lord of Civilisation, His Ashram was shifted from the
seventh Ray of Ceremonial Order to the third Ray of Active Intelligence; the
majority of those who have taken the second and the third initiations were
transferred with Him under what might be called a "special
dispensation"; the rest of the members of His Ashram
remained for tuition
and training in service under
that Master Who took His
place as the central point of the seventh ray Ashram."289
"... Master
R., in whose hands lies the rehabilitation of Europe..."
290
"The Master R., as the Lord of
Civilization, - is also closely involved: He is also, and this is of major
importance, Regent of Europe." 291
"This Ashram, related
to the Buddha, will be specifically under
the close supervision of the Christ, and also of the Lord of Civilization—at this
time the Master R. They are the only two Members of the Hierarchy able to
register the divine Purpose (in regard to its immediate objectives) in such a
manner that the entire Hierarchy can be informed and can then work unitedly and
intelligently at its implementation." 292
"We now come to a consideration of the vast Ashram controlled by the Master R. He is
the Lord of Civilization and His is the task of bringing
in the new civilisation for which all men
wait. It is a third ray Ashram, and therefore enfolds within its ring-pass-not all
the Ashrams to be found upon the third Ray of Active Intelligence, upon the fifth Ray of Concrete Science
and upon the seventh Ray of Ceremonial Order. All these Ashrams are
working under the general direction of the Master R. He works primarily through
the Masters of these three types of ray energy. He Himself at this time is
occupied with seventh ray energy, which is the order- producing energy
upon our planet.
This is the Ray of Ceremonial Order,
and through the activity
of its energy, when correctly directed and used, a right
rhythm is being
imposed upon all aspects
of human living." 293
![]()
287 Alice A. Bailey,
Initiation Human and Solar, p. 61, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
288 Alice Bailey,
The Discipleship in the New Age Vol. II, p. 135, Lucis Publishing Company, New York, 1980.
289 Alice Bailey, The Discipleship in the New Age Vol. II, p.
383, Lucis Publishing Company, New York, 1980.
290 Alice Bailey, The
Discipleship in the New Era Vol. II, p. 593, Lucis Publishing Company, New York, 1980. 291 Alice Bailey, The Discipleship in the New Era
Vol. II, p. 596, Lucis
Publishing Company, New York, 1980. 292
Alice A. Bailey, The Externalisation of the Hierarchy, p. 541, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1981. 293 Alice A. Bailey, The Externalisation of the Hierarchy, p. 667, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1981.
We will say little about Master R., since he
currently is the protagonist and the main engine of the union of Europe, a
phase not yet completed. We will not say, therefore, who he is, but let us remember that we owe the formation
of Europe to a single person who, in the space
of 25 years, created all by himself, both theoretically and practically, the
conditions for the intestine wars that have always
torn Europe to come to an end. He is Count Coudenhove-Kalergi (1894-1972) from a Bohemian
Jewish family, founder
of the Pan-European Union theorized in his book Pan-Europa of 1923 and financed by the banker Max
Warburg, then adopted in its final phase by Churchill. It culminates in the Congress of Europe in The Hague on 7-11 May 1948
(Wesak) but officially begins with the establishment of the Council of Europe
in the Treaty of London on May 5, 1949 (7 days after Wesak). It should
be reiterated that the Count had no ambition for power in political terms, but
was an idealist who opposed Hitler's exaggerated totalitarian nationalism. The
day before Hitler annexed Austria, March 11, 1938, Kalergi narrowly
escaped to Switzerland and the day after his escape the offices of Pan-Europe
in the Imperial Palace were occupied by the Nazi Chancellor Seyss-Inquart who established his residence there and burned
the 40,000 printed
volumes of Pan-Europe Editions deposited there, as is testified in the
autobiography of Kalergi. 294
He was born in Tokyo in 1894 and after the ‘40s ' was a university professor of
history in New York.
Is he the man of H.P.B.'s Prophecy of the coming
terror? "Count St. Germain was certainly
the greatest Oriental
Adept Europe has seen during
the last centuries. But Europe knew him not. Perchance some may
recognize him at the next Terreur which
will affect all Europe when it comes, and not one country alone." 295

Count Coudenhove-Kalergi
Let's talk about the previous incarnation of Master R., the one for
which he is called "The Count”. R. stands for Rákóczy or Saint-Germain.
His real biography has been written, with a lot of details, by Jean Overton
Fuller in the book "The
Comte de Saint-Germain, Last Scion of the House of Rákóczy" and it is to this work that we refer those who want to know more about
his life and his works. Another valuable
and truthful book is: "The
Count of Saint-Germain" by Isabel Cooper-Oakley. Here we add, in brief,
some information about
his birth and his youthful formation, which always remained
secret, mostly, due to the prejudices of public opinion and the social aversion of the world towards those born out of wedlock.
It was he himself at the end of his life to reveal his real
surname, Rákóczy, to Prince Carl of Hesse-Cassel. 296
Meeting. June 1693. Florence, Palazzo Portinari Salviati, Francis II
Rákóczy, future Regent of Hungary and 17-year-old Prince of Transylvania, had
just arrived in Italy from Vienna on a four-month pleasure trip as a guest of
the Medici family. On January 9th, 1689, Prince Ferdinand
Maria Medici (1663-1713) had married Princess
Violante Beatrice of Bavaria
![]()
294 Coudenhove-Kalergi, An Idea Conquers
the World, pref.
by W. Churchill, p. 212, Roy Publishers, N. Y. 1954.
295 H. P. Blavatsky, The Theosophical Glossary, p. 309, St. Germain, Theos.
Publ. Soc., London,
1892.
296 Jean Overtone Fuller,
The Comte de Saint-Germain, p. 280, East-West
Publications, London, 1988.
(1673-1731), a Wittelsbach, related to all the royal families of Europe, who had left Munich at fifteen to marry a man she had never
seen. She was beautiful, educated and had a wonderful character. The marriage
will never be consummated because Ferdinand Medici is only interested in the
boys or pages who attended the Pitti Palace. Francis II Rákóczy is judged by
all to be a chaste young man, but then confessed, since he is very religious,
"You alone Lord know my turpitude," referring to his affair with
Violante.
Attraction. The spark flew between
Violante, who had been neglected
for five years by
a husband who had contracted syphilis during a pre-wedding party in Venice, and
the young seventeen-year-old Francis. The following spring, a son was born,
considered illegitimate, yet unique in virtue,
and was raised,
adopted and protected by the Medicis.
The honor of the mother was never affected by any
revelations of the son, and this is the reason that led to his fame of
immortal. Moreover he looked like his father,
so much so that upon meeting him, the composer and organist Rameau mistook
him for his father and believed he had found him unchanged
from their first meeting, fifty years earlier. But the Count of
Saint-Germain, unable to reveal the misunderstanding so as not to defame his
mother, let people believe he was his father.
Karma. The fate of his previous life was repeated: he was Francis Bacon,
the natural son of Elizabeth I of England,
the Imperial Virgin,
297 and Robert Dudley,
her childhood friend. The latter was promoted to
bodyguard of the Queen and their rooms communicated so that he could always
have access to her room and person. He was a knight of the Order of the Garter
and the Queen's messenger to John Dee, an occultist who had great
influence on the Queen and on the events of the time, his
science teacher. He later became Earl of Leicester. 298 In April 1559 the Spanish ambassador De Feria
wrote to his King, "Her Majesty visits him in his chamber day and night.
People speak of this
relationship so freely
as to go so far as to say that his wife has a sinus disease and the
Queen is just waiting for his wife to die to marry Lord Robert." 299 The queen helped her son,
whom she had entrusted to the keeper of the seals, sir Nicholas Bacon and his
wife, by providing him with dwellings that were always close to her, but not too much,
so as not to cause
a scandal. On the other
hand, if, at that time,
children born out of wedlock were more than those born within, this was also due to the fact that birth control
methods were not as widespread as they are today. Here his words:
"I am named in the world not what my style should
be according to birth, nor what it rightfully
should be according to our law, which giveth
the first born of the Royal House...
the title of Prince of Wales. My name is Tidder (i.e. Tudor),
yet men speak of me as Bacon, even
![]()
297 Frances A.
Yates, Astraea, Routledge & Kegan
Paul, London, 1975. The whole chapter Queen
Elisabeth as Astraea, in particular: “The
virginity of the queen was used as a powerful political weapon through her
reign. Many foreign potentates hoped to wind her hand. She coquetted with them,
played them off against one another, and never married.” pag. 86. This myth became
so famous that, as anyone familiar with American history
knows, the name of the state of Virginia in America was dedicated
expressly to Elisabeth.
It
should be noted that in 1583, while in Oxford, the initiate Giordano Bruno
admired and praised Elizabeth, while mistreating the nitpicking British
"Cicada: Therefore certain pedants of our times are wrong... and then in fact they are nothing but worms, who do not know how to do anything good, but are born only to gnaw, soil and shit the studies and labors
of others; and not being able to make themselves famous by their own virtue and wit, they try to put themselves ahead
or rightly or wrongly, by others' vice and error." Giordano Bruno, De gli eroici furori, Einaudi, Turin, p.
27.
In 1604, the
Archbishop of Canterbury, George Abbot, who was present at Bruno's lectures at
Oxford in 1583 wrote: "When that Italian Diddapper [...] undertooke among
many other matters, to set on foote the opinion of Copernicus, that the earth did goe round and the heavens
did stand still;
whereas in truth
was his owne head which did
run round and his braine
that did not stand stil." France A. Yates Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic
Tradition, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1964, p. 208.
298 Peter Dawkins,
Dedication to the Light.
The Love Affair of Elizabeth
I and Leicester, p. 37. The Francis
Bacon Research Trust Series I, Volume 3, 1984.
299 Jean Overton
Fuller, Sir Francis Bacon, A Biography, Chap.
3 Elizabeth and Leicester, p. 33, George Mann Books, Maidstone, 1994, p. 384. Notes 2. Calendar of State Papers,
Spanish, 1558-67, pp. 174-76.
those who knew my Royal Mother and her lawful marriage with the Earl of Leicester, a suitable time prior
to my birth..." 300
But let us get back to talking
about the degenerating Medicis. The brother
of Cosimo III de'
Medici, Cardinal Francesco
Maria, remained famous in history
for his dissolute life and also
his father, Grand Duke Ferdinando II de' Medici,
had been abandoned
by his wife Vittoria Della Rovere, because he had been
discovered in intimate attitudes with a page of the court. Even in England, behind the chastity,
symbolized by the pearl, the sieve or the ermine,
a different reality was hidden, the atrocity of
religious wars, but life always took its revenge, despite the dead, becoming
the only irrepressible thing, rising with greater strength, like a lifeline.
There are no bastards in the eyes of God but only human beings. If anything,
unfortunate are the legitimate children born and raised without love within
false marriages, celebrated for economic and political reasons.
Escape. The spectre
of the extinction of the Medici family
due to the lack of successors
was already present, and the Church and the European potentates in 1701 were
counting on seizing its artistic and financial treasures. The Church tended to
put the noose around the neck of the family and since a possible
successor could prove very troublesome, the deeply Catholic Violante, was forced, in order to
save her son's life, to separate from him momentarily.
The situation of the Medicis
corroborated the words spoken by the Master and reported in the memoirs of Madame de Genlis, a harp player,
written in 1812.
She had met him in 1759,
when she was 13 years old, in Passy, west of Paris, through the very rich
Monsieur de La Pouplinière, a patron of musicians in whose house they played
Italian arias together for six months in a row. She was charmed
by his black eyes and, given her youth, she was not immune
to all the inaccuracies rumored about him, and she praised him extensively. Not
only did she ever hear him say extravagances, but the Count had such a grave
and respectable air that it prevented her and her mother from asking too
personal questions. But in the end De Genlis went on... "My mother
asked him... whether
it was true that his homeland had been Germany. He shook his head mysteriously and sighed deeply:
'All I can tell you,' he replied,
'is that when I was seven years old there was a
price on my head and that I wandered in the thick of the forests with my bodyguard.' These words made me shudder,
for I had no doubt of the sincerity
of such a great confidence. "The day before
my escape," continued Saint-Germain, "My mother, whom I might perhaps never see
again, tied her portrait to my arm." 'My God!" I exclaimed. Saint
Germain looked at me and became tender as he saw that my eyes had become moist.
'I will show it to you,' he said, and rolling up his sleeve, and detached a bracelet
with an enamel miniature representing a very beautiful woman's face. I looked
at it with great emotion. Saint- Germain went no further, and changed the
subject." 301
The swan-necked mother, of whom I will add a
portrait, was born on January 23, 1673 to Ferdinand Maria Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria
and Enrica Adelaide
of Savoy, a descendant
of the French branch of the Bourbons. That is why in once,
replying to the impertinent question of Princess Amalia, sister of
the King of Prussia Frederick II, of what country she was, he answered, "I
am, Madame, of a country which for sovereigns has never had men of foreign
origin." 302 The only family
in Europe that met this condition was the Wittelsbach family, which dated back to Otto I in 1180. The male line ruled the Palatinate, Bavaria
and Zweibrücken and continued uninterrupted until
1918. In addition to Bavarian, her mother spoke Italian, French, Turkish and Spanish. She loved, financed
and excelled in all the arts especially playing the lute. Her son was moved every time he
mentioned her, as he adored her, which is why he had changed the subject with
De Genlis.
![]()
300 Peter Dawkins,
Dedication to the Light.
The Love Affair of Elizabeth
I and Leicester, p. 59. The Francis
Bacon Research Trust Series I, Volume 3, 1984.
301 Mad. de Genlis,
Mémoires inédites pour servir
à l'Histoire des XVIII et XIX siècles, vol. I p. 90, Paris,
1825.
302 Dieudonné Thiébault, Souvenirs de vingt ans de séjour
a Berlin. Tome 2, p.
301.

Bartolomeo Mancini 1690. Violante Beatrice
of Bavaria-Medici at age 17, mother of Saint-
Germain and later Grand Princess of Tuscany. She was a Wittelsbach.
The memory that De Genlis mentioned a little later is very important: passing
by Siena about 15 years after
their meeting, she discovered that he lived in that city and that he did not
look any older than fifty. It was 1773 and Saint-Germain was in Italy.
Ferdinando Maria de' Medici, his mother's husband,
was a great patron of the arts and music and it was for him that Bartolomeo Cristofori invented the oval spinet, the spinet and the
fortepiano, the forerunner of the piano. Alessandro and Domenico Scarlatti,
Benedetto Marcello, Händel, Vivaldi,
and Albinoni composed
and played for him. At Pratolino, later
Villa Demidoff, he built
a theater. In his Villa of Poggio a Caiano
he had a collection of 200 paintings including those of Leonardo da
Vinci, Raphael, Dürer, Rubens, and so on.
It should be remembered that, in 1713, her mother
Violante, who had recently become a widow, inherited Villa Lappeggi, south of Florence,
with a marvelous Italian-style garden accessed
by two magnificent staircases. As a passionate musician who played the lute, she sang and was interested in theater and
poetry. She invited artists and men of letters to the villa and collected
valuable paintings.
In 1717 she became governor of Siena and it is
between this city, that has one of the oldest universities in the world, Villa
Lappeggi south of Florence, where his mother often returned, and Venice, that
the musical, intellectual and artistic preparation of the young Saint- Germain
continued. Here is where the Master R. spent his youth, mysterious until today.

Certainly, the enormous financial resources of his
mother allowed him to support himself and to be, since his youth, a citizen
of the world. In Paris, King Louis XV of Bourbon,
who did not accept to entertain himself with people below a certain rank of
nobility, not only received him personally but did not tolerate that they speak ill of him. Moreover,
as testified by Gleichen, a baron, collaborator of the Duke of Choiseul,
Minister of Foreign
Affairs of France, the king received him alone, even if, having
been stabbed a year before,
he did not go anywhere if not surrounded by guards.303
Besides expressing himself
perfectly in all European languages,304 Greek
and Latin, he spoke
Sanskrit, Chinese, Arabic.
Scholars and linguists were enchanted by him and sought
his company. He went to India twice, the last time with Colonel
Clive in July 1755: there he learned the art of buying and treating
diamonds, which he wore and gave away with nonchalance
because he paid them at very low prices. He renewed karmic relations from
when he was the great magician Padmasambhava in Tibet and prophesied that he would retire to the Himalayas towards the end of the century.
He was a vegetarian and in order not to be noticed, since for others it was an
ostentatious display of eccentricity, he gave up eating in public. Anyway, he
advised many ladies on such a healthy diet, of beauty and long-life which, by
virtue of his influence, they immediately adopted. The wife of his worst
opponent in politics, the Duke of Choiseul, who opposed with all his strength
to his project to end the famous seven years war, adopted this diet for life, opposing
to the veto of her husband who tried to forbid her to practice it.
He immediately showed the King his talents by solving
the famous case of the disappearance of the rich astronomer and alchemist Master Dumas, which the King himself had learned about from the Marquis of Villaray when he was a boy. The ninety-year-old Dumas had told his
wife that he would be late coming down from the room where he went to observe
the stars and when together with his son she went to check why the man did not
come down, she saw that the room was empty and the police could not explain the disappearance of the old man.
They probed the walls and brought in architects and masons but the enigma
remained. Suspicions centered on family members
who later died,
but decades later
the mystery remained unsolved. The King thought
he would ask his friend if he could tell him what had happened
and he agreed.
Saint-Germain used psychometry. He had a test tube used by Dumas brought
to him and placed it on his forehead, then concentrated on reviewing
the last hours of the vanished man. Shortly afterwards he issued his response:
"Your Majesty, the investigators did not know how to do their job. Next to
the front door the floor tiles are movable and lead to a descending staircase
that leads, after a small ascent, to a narrow room where Dumas had retired. At
the exhaustion of his strength, he drank a powerful narcotic and never woke up
again." The king ordered the police
to do further research that corroborated the story of Saint-Germain. The room
was found, with the corpse
lying on the ground next to a cup of agate and a glass
bottle that still contained a few drops that,
analyzed, turned out to be opium.
Let us now point out some special abilities of this
genius who seemed born to help everyone. No one spoke as many languages without
inflections as he did, including ancient ones
such as Sanskrit. He always predicted the future with accuracy, he cured dozens
of people who had serious diseases,
such as syphilis in the case of Count Von der Lippe Biesterfield and his lover and also some cases of
poisoning. He turned coins into gold in the presence of eyewitnesses. He loved
to shock by saying he dominated nature and he always succeeded in doing so,
even in the opinion of Casanova who usually knew how to be very critical.
![]()
303 Souvenirs de Charles Henri Baron de Gleichen, pp. 129-130, Paris,
1868.
304 Souvenirs de Charles Henri Baron de Gleichen, p. 128, Paris,
1868.
An example among the many that showed the vices but
also the goodness of the King of France. Miss Palois, 15 years old, was to marry a certain Viscount
and in order to give her a dowry her father sent her to the Deer
Park where the girls at the disposal of Louis XV were staying. The girl,
though, had no intention to offer herself to the king and rather than give in she
wrote him a letter to tell him she would commit suicide. The King, saddened,
sent a messenger to tell her that he would renounce her, but he arrived late
when the girl had already poisoned herself and lay lifeless. Distressed, the
King urgently called Saint-Germain, begging him to do everything in his power
to save her. In the presence of the court doctor, he went to the girl's bedside, examined
her carefully, then drew a circle on her head and poured some green liquid into her mouth. The body
suddenly arched and then collapsed inert. A doctor nearby exclaimed, "You
have killed her!" to which the thaumaturge left and replied,
"On the contrary, I have cured her. A few hours
later, the young lady left the park with five hundred thousand liras, which
constituted the King's honorable fine.305
He was able to read into people's heart because he
had the second sight, He himself affirmed that he never had love affair
and testified it with his life: no one, not even his enemies
have ever been able to attribute him relationships of any kind. He was very
rich and generous and had great bankers among his friends. He could play the
violin like Paganini, he was a physician, a poet, a chemist, an alchemist, a
discoverer of new methods to dye silks and to tan hides, a connoisseur and an
owner of many diamonds, a painter, a composer, a writer of comedies, a tireless
traveler in distant countries such as Russia, Mexico, China and India, a
connoisseur and an owner of many works
of art including Murillo's Holy Family, paintings by Rubens, Velasquez, Tintoretto and Raphael, which he showed
to many important collectors such as, for example, the Count of Cobenzl. He
created new ways of making oil paints, in particular an ultramarine blue that
had nothing to envy to that obtained from lapis lazuli.
He had the extravagance to change his name often, as
he did not like to be disturbed, and to spread the theory of reincarnation by talking about historical events occurred during his
former lives, remembering them as facts lived in person. He was kind and
discreet and was a charming storyteller who managed to make friends with women,
too, because he gave them advice, recipes for beauty and longevity without
sparing himself. He loved to tell them about the adventures of his exotic travels
and gave advice
on how to apply pearls,
jewelry and match colors in an unsurpassed way. He had the esteem,
benevolence and protection of many princes, counts and marquises. He was
famous for the gems he wore and because he knew how to remove flaws and stains
from them. He did this for Louis XV and for many of his friends. Where did he
acquire all this experience?
Let's now talk about diamonds
and minerals, one of the main interests
of a Master of the seventh ray such as Rákocsy. On March
10th, 1740 in the "Inventory
of the Jewels of the State of Tuscany" Anna Maria dei Medici stated
that in about
three centuries the Medici had collected
a cool 3900 diamonds, both large and small. Cosimo III, who was passionate
about diamonds, even had a workshop with experts, one of the few in Europe, for the cutting
of diamonds, a new
Italian invention capable of exalting their sparkle. In ancient times, in
India, carat, color and polish were deemed
more important than brilliance. In 1615 the famous 137-carat, almond cut Medici
diamond called "Fiorentino"
held the record of being one of the largest diamonds in Europe. Already by the
end of the 17th century, the Venetian Peruzzi invented the brilliant
cut with 57 facets that exalted the light and the first brilliant-cut blue diamond
was the 35-carat Wittelsbach.
![]()
305 J. Peuchet, Mémoirs tirées des Archives
de la Police.
Gian Gastone, last of the Medici and fond tutor of
Saint-Germain, died in 1737, after a long illness, and certainly put at the
disposal of the young nephew all the experience accumulated over the years by the family and Cosimo III, who had died in 1723. From that date on
the long Austrian
domination of Tuscany
began, and it would end, in the following century, thanks to the intervention of
Garibaldi. Following this loss, Rákócsy, who had lost his mother Violante in 1731 and his father,
Francesco Rákócsy, in 1735, now devoid of intimate affections, left for India, where
he stayed from 1737 until
1742. He made friends
with the Shah of Persia, Nadir Shah 306 and with
Niẓām-al-Mulk Aṣaf Jāh 1st, administrator of the Golconda diamond
mine near Hyderabad, at that time the largest in the world.
The Count, a pure being,
(lotus-born or padma sambhāva)
returned from his first trip to India as a messenger of the Great White
Brotherhood and with a specific mission: to bring peace back to Europe and make
it more spiritual.
They didn’t pay attention to him and since the
Masters do not impose anything, the karmic result was the prolongation of the 7
years war, the worsening of the conflicts and the French Revolution with its
horrible crimes. His action was carried out in the best of ways, but due to the ineptitude of men and the betrayal
of King Louis XV, who had sent him to The Hague in secret to conclude the peace with
England, but then stopped supporting him, his mission ended in complete
failure.
"A French nobleman
said one day to Saint-Germain, "I can't explain
the absurdities that circulate about you!" Saint
Germain replied, ‘You would not find it difficult to understand my absurdities,
if you gave them the same attention that you give to your own, if you read my
writings with the same commitment that you devote to the list of guests at
court dances. The trouble is that the formation of a minuet matters to you more
than the salvation of the planet.’ " 307
"It is very useful to observe the conduct of those to whom relief
was given. Those
who rejected St. Germain had a bad fate. Aid rejected turns into a most
painful burden - that is the law." 308
As Bruno von Hellen, the Prussian chargé d'affaires at The Hague, reported on January
8th, 1760 in a letter addressed to the King of Prussia Frederick II:
"the Count has an important role at Versailles because he is intimate with
King Louis XV and the Marchioness de Pompadour and all the ministers court him,
not only because he is protected by the King but because the latter asks for
and accepts his advice". 309
Overview of the context in which Saint-Germain's most important economic
and peace brokering action was taking place in January 1760. We are in the midst of the 7-year war (1756- 1763). Europe has been ravaged by
fratricidal wars for 150 years. The Thirty Years War between Catholics and
Protestants, which began in 1618, caused 12 million deaths, which for that era was an enormity. It was followed
by the Franco-Spanish war of 1635-1659, then three
other wars of succession including the Austrian one which lasted
from 1740 to 1748 and, after
the brief peace of Aachen, in 1756 the seven years war began, caused by the
colonial rivalry between England and Prussia, fought
against France and Austria, that is between
Protestant and Catholic
countries.
Few people know it, but France was bleeding
economically and on the verge of bankruptcy as it paid five percent interest
to the Pâris brothers, court bankers who, by providing supplies and weapons, wanted the
war to continue. "We are dependent on Jean Pâris de Montmartel, dispense
with this man, and bankruptcy will follow." Said Cardinal Abbot
De
![]()
306 Isabel Cooper-Oakley, Il Conte di Saint-Germain, p. 33, Edizioni
Synthesis, Pinasca, 2008.
307 Agni Yoga sutra 451, Agni Yoga Society, New York, 1997.
308 Fire World, III, sutra 449, Agni Yoga Society,
New York, 1980.
309 Merseburg, Central Archives, Dispatches von Hellen, Vol. XIV. F. 39 E.
Bernis, French foreign minister, a man of his, in 1758. This family
of bankers had no qualms, not only did they want war, but they had also become
wealthy with the Angola company that ran the slave
trade between Africa
and America. Saxon
Count Kauderback, the King of Poland's
representative in The Hague, wrote on March 14th, 1760 sarcastically referring
to them, "Perish France, as long as they can
earn 8 million!" 310
Besides the Abbot, Jean Pâris also introduced Madame de Pompadour
at court: she was
his goddaughter and daughter of one of his employees, and had a great influence
on the King and, moreover, the Duke of Choiseul who, in 1758, as Minister of
Foreign Affairs after the resignation of the Abbot, would
continue the opposition to every peace
attempt proposed by the
King.
A letter delivered by a Scotsman named Crammont sent
by the English Prime Minister the Duke of Newcastle and Lord Granville, who enjoyed the trust of King George II and which
suggests the possibility of a separate peace between England and France,
arrived in the hands of the King's favorite. This one, that is the Marquise de Pompadour, told Saint-Germain to show
it to Choiseul, an idea he did not like, but in the end he agreed. The result
was that Choiseul rejected the letter asserting that France could continue the
war for other five years. To which the Count replied "What? Who do you
think you are talking to? You will not last even a year without reducing
yourselves to ruin."
King Louis XV sent him to Holland
with a secret assignment that had two purposes, and the Count accepted, out of pure
friendship, as he was not a French subject. Since France was on the brink of
insolvency, the first purpose was to defer a substantial loan 311
provided by the bankers Thomas and Adrian Hope of Amsterdam, directors of the
East-India Company, which would become the most important
European bank in the following
twenty years. Saint-Germain, who knew them, having a
reputation not only for wealth but also for honesty, stayed in their house in
Amsterdam. In addition, according to some rumors, he was negotiating, with rich
Portuguese Jews from The Hague, a loan of thirty million in favor of France.
The second purpose was to bargain, in the name of the King of France, but
secretly from the Duke of Choiseul, Minister of Foreign Affairs
and a man of Pâris,
the peace that Louis himself,
Marshal de Belle-Isle, Minister
of War, the Marquise de Pompadour and the English
themselves, namely King George
II, the Duke of Newcastle and Lord Granville desired. In England William Pitt
the Elder, foreign minister who, until then, had hindered them because he
wanted to win the war, was deeply hated by the king, having no chance of
success.
Saint-Germain arrived in The Hague on March 5th,
1760 and Count Willem Bentinck van Rhoon, a diplomat residing there, whose
father had been a friend of King William III of England and who was then regent
of the twelve-years-old Prince of Orange-Nassau, William
V of Holland, wanted to meet him. Another regent, while waiting for the
Prince to come of age, was Prince Louis of Brunswick. General Sir Joseph Yorke,
English ambassador in The Hague and the French ambassador Count D'Affry spoke
of Saint-Germain with such esteem to Bentinck, that he did not want to miss the
opportunity to talk to him, having learned that he would stay for a few days in
his city.
In the diaries 312 of this practical statesman we have the
portrait of the solidity and the rare ability of Saint-Germain to know how to judge people and situations beyond appearances.
A true political observer, informed
at the highest levels on national and international affairs,
he judged the various
personalities by how he had personally known
them. He dealt
with problems from an economic
point of view and showed he knew
more than anyone else, a reason
why he
![]()
310 Letter to Earl Wickerbath. Public Record Office,
State Papers, London.
311 Paris, Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Holland, 503, folio 158.
312 Bentinck Diaries, The Hague Koninklijk Huisarchiv.
enjoyed the trust of various
kings. He attributed France's problems to an imbalance
in spending. Too much money for a war that could
not be won, and too many expenses
for Versailles, compared to the misery of the countryside and the landowners (overburdened by taxes to
finance the war, and unable
to improve the crops that they stopped
taking care of, at the expense
of
the peasants who were in misery) and a growing distrust of the people towards the rich classes.
He completely confided in Bentick, direct and
precise, especially in his description of the
character of many personalities, praising
the figure of Frederick II of Prussia
and criticizing the French
choice to ally themselves with the Hapsburgs of Austria. The seriousness, ease
and sincerity with which he answered the questions put to him; the new
perspectives and the alternative possibilities that opened up, compared to the
false news that used to be reported in the past; the affirmation that peace (desired
by many) was within reach,
won him the sympathy
of Bentinck, who was so much in favor of peace that he invited him, together
with the ladies with whom he had come from Amsterdam, that is the wife of the mayor
of Amsterdam, Madame Hasselaar and Madame Geelvink, to the court
ball on the occasion of the Prince's
12th birthday.
Speaking in mid-March with the English General Yorke,
Saint-Germain assured that France was willing
to surrender Canada,
Guadeloupe in the Antilles and Dunkirk, while
Yorke reassured him that Menorca could be surrendered, so the
negotiations were proceeding well. Then everything fell apart when Choiseul
realized (by secretly spying on the mail of the Marquise of Pompadour) that
Saint-Germain was maneuvering. He contrasted him by issuing an arrest warrant
against him and King Louis XV, at this point, did not defend him: instead of
stripping the Minister of Foreign Affairs of his authority, he said that he was
only an envoy, thus behaving as a coward. Thanks to his friend Bentick, Saint
Germain, was warned in time and managed to repair to England, but the possibility of peace vanished. Nevertheless someone,
just afterwards, dared
to affirm that Saint-Germain had been the cause of the French
revolution, while he had been the only one to predict it and to attempt
the only action to avoid it!
The central goal had escaped forever, but other minor
benevolent actions were implemented, as the compassionate action of the Masters
is unceasing. In 1762 Saint Germain was invited to St. Petersburg, Russia, by
Count Pierre Rotari and then introduced by Grégor Orloff to Tsarina Catherine II,
whom he encouraged to rebel against the idiotic and sadistic power of Tsar Peter III. In her diaries,
she wrote about her husband,
"Nature made him miserly, smallpox made him shy, and his degraded customs
made him disgusting." Peter loved war and
the Prussians and had "corporal’s mania," that is, an inordinate
passion for military uniforms, gilded insignia, spectacular parades, and
discipline. Peter detested Russians and preferred to surround himself with
Germans.
Count Alexis Orloff,
Grégor's brother, met Rákocsy a few years later in Russia and said
of him, "Here is the man who played such an important
role in our revolution." He had conjured for the tsarina, with a magic
mirror, the shadow of Peter the Great, whom she so admired, and who had
encouraged her to rebel. At that time Saint-Germain wore the uniform of a
Russian general and called himself Soltikoff. HPB mentions this. 313
Voltaire, king of the skeptics, made a valuable
portrait of the Count of Saint German in
a letter to Frederick II of Prussia
in which he called him "a man who never
dies, and who knows
everything".
A vital and very important lesson should be learned
from these past events. Nothing new under the sun. President
Eisenhower
said, "I hate war, as a soldier
who knows its brutality,
futility and stupidity." In his farewell
address to the nation on January, 17th 1961 he stated,
"We must guard against the
acquisition of influences that give no guarantees, whether sought or unsought, wielded by the military-industrial complex. The potential
for the disastrous rise of
![]()
313 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected
Writings Vol. III,
p. 127, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1982.
misplaced powers which override their seat and
prerogatives exists now and will persist into the future. We must never allow
the weight of this combination of powers to endanger our democratic freedoms or
processes. We must not assume that any right is given for guaranteed. Only a people of alert and knowledgeable citizenry
can compel the proper meshing
of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our
peaceful methods and goals so that both security and liberty may prosper
together. "
Of course, there is always a minority of military,
bankers and weapons manufacturers that, out of interest, put pression on, so
that on this small planet, now tiny because of the ease of communication and comparable to an airplane
flying in space,
we shoot each other. However this, in the current times, as
opposed to in the past, will cause its inevitable fall.
In 2021, a digitally controlled machine gun was invented in the US that fires one million rounds per minute, while according to a recent estimate, 40 million Americans
live in poverty. China, has ever increasing military ambitions, in fact
it rearms itself and builds Mach 5 supersonic missiles whose gliding re-entry
trajectory eludes anti-missile systems, instead of investing its growing
earnings in decent housing for the people. All over the world, games, movies, TV, military parades,
only glorify violence,
preventive conflicts are becoming the rule
and wars are no longer fought between soldiers, and a defenseless population
pays the price. Children must be protected from every scene and idea of
violence if we are to survive.
The insane are perhaps also today, as at the time of Saint-Germain, outside
the asylum, but this time
humanity is not only risking a revolution, but complete extinction! Gore Vidal
in his 2002 book states that only the U.S., since the end of World War II, have
participated in nearly two hundred
conflicts! 314 Paladins
of peace like Hammarskjöld and Martin
Luther King were assassinated
with impunity, while in dictatorships they are simply made to disappear. Julian
Assange, who revealed unprecedented filth, must be punished severely and being
an impartial war reporter now equates suicide, because it has become
fashionable to shoot independent journalists who want to photograph the reality
behind the propaganda.
According to the German Observatory and the website hiik.de, an average of 10 major wars are fought around
the world every
year and hundreds
of smaller conflicts. From 1945 until the beginning of 2022, wars have
grown to almost a thousand. When will we stop playing the Russian roulette? Only a world
population that is aware and determined to survive can stop this havoc of suffering, resources and
human lives. Compared to this emergency, global warming and Covid are real
trifles. The war arsenal increases by the day. Today, educating to peaceful
coexistence and tolerance has become imperative for our survival.
Those who today poison the minds of humanity or aggressively instill
ideas of struggle against their own species must be
stopped and placed in asylums. In Africa we have practiced a true economic cannibalism, such as to make our native brothers
flee. Continuing in this way, predicted Asimov315 in
1975, we will have only thirty years ahead of us. The date has now passed by 16
years but we will not have much longer because with these ideas we will end up
like the Easter Islanders. This is so evident that we do not need Saint-Germain
to anticipate it.
Will we be up to the task ahead? Will the instinct
of unity and self-preservation prevail? If not, the next great war,
which as many think will start from space and laser satellites, as predicted by Einstein, will not see winners, but only a few surviving
monkeys. Can it be wise
![]()
314 Gore Vidal, Perpetual War for perpetual
Peace, pp. 22-41. Clairview Books, Forest Row, 2002.
315 Asimov, Science Past, Science
Future, p. 352 Doubleday, New York, 1975.
to entrust the survival of the human race to artificial intelligence? When missiles rain down on our
heads it will be too late to curse the space economy.
Is it intelligent to fill the space
or even only the low orbits
of our planet with hundreds of thousands of satellites to acquire privileged
military positions, and economic power?
The
human mind is still driven
by childish impulses
that make us inevitably run toward
self-destruction.
"Second in space means second in everything." said Lyndon B. Johnson in January 1958 at the dawn of the space challenge
with Moscow, but since all want to be hegemonic, it will only end up with us
all being losers.
Some say we need to go to Mars, but perhaps the real purpose
is to justify and incentivize large investments to create
new power dynamics. We are at the all against all and the United Nations is
trudging along.
A space to wage war in was not what the Russian
schoolmaster Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky 1857-1935, much read by Von Braun, saw.
He is the scientist who inspired the Soviet cosmonautical program and the
enthusiasm for space exploration with a 1903 text.
His philosophy of the cosmos was based on a holistic
and unitary vision that presupposed the idea of active
evolution. He said "The success
of science is determined by the
degree to which unity is achieved" and also "What would be the point of the universe
if it were not filled with organic, intelligent, sentient
worlds?" 316 Want to
recognize a genius? Just read these lines of his from 1895: "The
technology of the future will give the possibility to overcome
the earth's gravitation and to travel throughout the solar system." 317
And I add if we don't destroy each other first and make it through the
watershed of 2025.

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky 1857-1935, self-taught engineer, father of astronautics.
316 K. E. Ciolkovsky, Dreams on Earth and Sky,
Tula 1986, Prioksoie.
317 K. E. Ciolkovsky, Dreams on Earth and Sky, p. 271, Tula 1986, Prioksoie.
21.
Master Jupiter, the Rishi of the Nilgiri Mountains
"Master Jupiter Who is also the Regent of India,
is looked up to by all the Lodge of Masters
as the oldest among Them.
He dwells in the Nilgherry Hills in Southern
India,... In his hands are the reins of government of
India, including a large part of the Northern frontier". 318
"Agastya. The name of a great Rishi, much revered in Southern India; the reputed
author of hymns in the Rig Veda, and a great
hero in the Râmâyana. In Tamil literature he is credited with having been the first instructor of the Dravidians in science, religion
and philosophy. It is
also the name of the star Canopus." 319 Second brightest star.
H.P. Blavatsky's Diary of Oct. 22, 1878 "Narayan
320 left watch - and in came Sahib.
(M.)" 321

Narayana Guru (August 20, 1856-September 20, 1928)
The educational center
or Gurukula (guru's family)
stands in Fernhill,
Outy, Nilgiri.
The contribution made by Sree Narayana Guru to
eradicate the social evil called caste system,
was immense and brought back self-respect among
the low caste
people. He challenged the monopoly that priests
had over temples
and their exclusive
divine right to officiate, creating a system of parallel places of
worship. He trained and appointed low-caste people as priests. He founded the
first such temple in Kerala in 1888. On the wall of the temple was written,
"Here is a model home, where men live as brothers, without caste prejudice
or the resentment of religious differences."
Near the temple of Aruvippuram, the
Guru had written, "Free from the dividing walls of caste and race, or the
hatred of rival faith, we all live here in brotherhood."

The poet Tagore on November
22, 1922 went to visit Narayana Guru in his Ashram of
Sivagiri Mutt in Varkala, south of the Nilgiri Mountains.
318 Alice Bailey, Initiation, Human and Solar
p. 53, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
319 H. P. Blavatsky, The Theosophical Glossary,
Agatsya, p. 9, The Theosophy
Company, Los Angeles,
1973.
320 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected
Writings, Vol. I, p. 438, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1988.
Note 42 "A
brother Adept called by H. P. B. “the Old Gentleman”... This Adept was living near
Arcot, not far from Madras, when H.P.B. and Col. Olcott saw him about April 30,
1882. A letter to The Theosophist from him, refuting the accusations of Swâmi
Dayânanda Sarasvatî against the Founders, appears in the June, 1882,
Supplement, pp. 6-8. It is dated “Tiruvallam Hills, May 17,” and signed “One of the Hindu Founders of the Parent Theosophical Society.." In
Thiluvallam there is a large temple dedicated to Shiva along the Bahuda River.
321 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected
Writings, Vol. I, p. 414, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1988.
After visiting he stated, "I
have visited several
places in the world. During these travels,
I have had the good fortune
to come in contact with several Saints
and Maharishis. But I must frankly
admit that I can never come across anyone who was spiritually greater than
Swami Sree Narayana Guru, nay a person
who is on par with him in spiritual attainment. I shall never
forget his radiant face illuminated by the self-effulgent light of divine glory and his yogic eyes; whose gaze fixed at a far remote point in
the distant horizon." 322
Opinions about him from others.
Annie Besant: "Guru was
Patanjali in Yoga, Shankara in wisdom, Manu in the art of government, Buddha in
renunciation, Mohamed in fortitude, and Christ in humility."
Romain Rolland: "Guru was a
Jnani of action who had a keen and vivid sense of the people and their social
needs. "
Dr.
Sir C. P. Ramaswamy Iyer: "Guru has instilled the slogan of universal brotherhood in the hearts of the
masses."
Vinoba Bhave: "Guru is regarded
as one of the Avatars that have appeared in India in the last 100 years. "
Mahatma Gandhi: "Great privilege in life to have met Sree Narayan Guru. Gandhiji was inspired by the Guru in his movement
for the elevation of the Harijan and the removal of Untouchability."
On March 12, 1925, Gandhi met Narayana Guru at
the Guru's house in Varkala.

All the yogis of South India are spiritual children
of Mahaguru Agastya, author of various hymns in the Rig Veda, or, as H. P. B.,
of the "Old Gentleman." His pupils in fact are all initiates of high
degree and also a number of Masters. 323
The first to break the barbaric caste system in Kerala was the yogi
Ayyaku Swamigal of Thycaud, Thiruvananthapuram, the Narayana Guru. Another was
a friend of Narayana, Chattambi Swakikal, yet another Raman Pillai Asan of
Pettah.
Narayana loved every being as himself. A child of one Reality, all
were brothers to him. He said, "What is meant by 'that person' or 'this
person,' in the world, thought of correctly, is in essence nothing but one
primordial Self."
His motto
is famous: "One caste, one religion,
one God for all mankind. "
322 Vijayalayam Jayakumar, Sree Narayana
Guru A Critical Study. Page VI, D.K. Printworld, New Delhi, 1999.
323 Alice Bailey, Initiation, Human and Solar
p. 54, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
Guru did a lot for Gandhi suffice
it to say that the first popular
satyagraha demonstrations were
held on his land, and he inspired him with his teachings.
The Nilgiri or Blue Mountains of which H. P. B, spoke
so much, are one of the privileged seats of Rishi Agatsya and his wife Lopamudra.
Another of the places which the Puranas traditionally attribute to him, is
situated on the Agastyakooda peak,
which lies at the extreme tip of India in the Kanyakumari region from which
a vast panorama of the Indian ocean can be admired. It is his
sacrificial altar, or yajñaśālā,
where he practices his ascetic sadhana. His final resting place is
Thiruvananthapuram, a city on seven hills like Rome.
It is to that peak that Narayana goes.
In the Maruthwamala
area there is a cave known by the name of Pillathadam and it is within it
that Narayana will complete his sadhana and be blessed with Enlightenment. It
will last for five years. Who were his companions? A cobra and a leopard,
who acted as his sentinels at the entrance to the cave. The leopard
would lick his feet and then curl up on them, while the
cobra would sometimes run over his body and then roll up close. When the pangs
of hunger became stronger, he had a vision of a yogi with a deformed body who was preparing rice balls
with his dirty hands, eating them from a bowl and inviting him to help himself.
The taste was better than nectar. The figure then became beautiful and
disappeared, blessing him. Then the Swami understood that it was Muruga or Kumara himself. Sometimes local visitors who addressed him as
siddha would come to see him: he was immensely popular among them because he
could miraculously cure their diseases.

Pillathadam Cave at Maruthwamala, Agastyakooda.
In the Nilgiri
Mountains in Ooty, now Udhagamandalam, which I visited
in 1979, there existed the simple, pastoral
people of the Toda, who had been defined as biblical and were under the special
protection of Master Jupiter.

We would have had a lot to learn from them. They were totally
vegetarian and fed only
on the milk of the buffaloes they raised. They kept their numbers strictly
closed so as never to exceed one thousand. In 1966 they were 978. They were
treated as gods by the surrounding tribes because they had strong
telepathic and thaumaturgic powers, but they refused to cure
those who were not vegetarian. They never made wars. They had everything in common, even their children, and lived very
simply. They lived in the beauty of nature without distorting it. They were
totally harmless in their relationships and very spiritual. Rather than
biblical men, they were the humanity of the future.
But today they have been almost destroyed by the current incivility. We wanted them to become
farmers, we sprayed
herbicides, planted eucalyptus trees and made it impossible for them to raise the buffalo. We
have not protected them and have exploited them for tourism. As a result of all
this, one Toda elder says that even the leaves on the trees are almost
unrecognizable in quality from when he was a boy.
From all this we deduce
that the Divine
must be found
in the midst of nature,
as did the Buddha, the yogis and the american natives who practiced
communion with nature. Whoever in any religion, claims to have spiritual
authority, should first be subjected to the judgment of the wild animals who
perceive, without ever being wrong, true holiness.

Parliament of Religions 1893
As in North
India one reveres Guru Nanak, so in the South one reveres Narayana Guru.
Narayana Guru organized the Second World Congress of Religions in Varkala on
December 15th, 1915.
The second All Religions Conference, which inaugurated the study of comparative
religions in India, was his initiative and took place at Alwaye in Southern
India in 1924.
On how to relate to the Guru.
“After having chosen the Lord and the Guru no retreat
is possible. The path lies only onward, and sooner or later with ease or
difficulties you will come to the Teacher. When the black ones surround you and
close their circle, there will remain, only the path upward to the Lord. Then
you will feel that the Lord is somewhere not far-off and that the silver thread
is above you. You have but to stretch out your hand! We can meet without the
help of the black ones, but more often only he who is pressed
from all sides
reaches out to the silver
thread, and only in distress does he learn
the language of the heart.
One should feel the Lord and the Guru
in the heart.” 324
324 Hierarchy, sutra 112, Agni Yoga Society, New York, 1977.
22.
The English Master
"Little can be given out anent the two English
Masters… One of Them, who resides in Great Britain, has in hand the definite
guidance of the Anglo-Saxon race and He works upon the plans for its future
development and evolution. He is behind the Labour movement throughout the
world. " 325
The most important
English Master is the one described by Cyril Scott in his novel "The
Initiate in the Dark Cycle", published under the pseudonym His Pupil,
in 1932. Since I know the cryptographic key of the names in the text, I can say
that the character of Tony Bland, a pseudonym for writer Herbert George Wells,
makes an important statement in Ch. IV: "A Master remains a Master whether
or not he temporarily loses his physical body." I should add that by the name Christabel Portman,
Scott refers to the psychic
Ellen Louisa Chaplin,
who was often overshadowed by Master K.H. and by the name Viola he refers to the writer Rose Allatini whom he later married at the
request of his own Master K.H. to extinguish their past karma as Chopin and
George Sand. In Ch. IX Scott gives the English Master the pseudonym of Sir
Thomas. The Masters often adopt the name of their previous incarnation. In
England lived Sir Thomas More, the humanist who authored Utopia, in which a peaceful island with 54 cities (as many as the English Counties) where
culture dominates is described. An ideal government flourishes there in which
private property is abolished.
Chancellor of the realm for 33 months, he was
beheaded on July 6th, 1535 because he deliberately opposed taking
the oath to Henry VIII's First Act of Succession. In Scott's book, the Master
dwells in the countryside, in a prominent Tudor-style building with a view of
the hills, and in its following chapter an oak-paneled dining room is
described, with a Van Dyck painting on the walls. Not many buildings meet these
characteristics. For obvious reasons, discretion is a must and his figure must remain unknown.
If someone came to know his identity he would be assailed
by a thousand onlookers, but his protective function toward his homeland
has not changed in the slightest and his activity continues undisturbed. He is
a Second Ray Master working in attunement with the Christ, and in A. A.
Bailey's Diagram of Masters on p. 43 he is called a European Master.
Cyril Scott's son Desmond, with whom I had the pleasure of corresponding via e-mail many years
ago, remembered his father quoting the eulogy John Ireland, a friend of his father,
had made in 1949: "You
were the first British composer
to write non-academic music
free and individual in style and of primary significance." 326
There is another social reformer who collaborates with the English
Master. In 1884 a book that established an era was published: "The
Industrial Revolution" by Arnold Toynbee (1852-1883). He was the man whose
actions encouraged the formation of the
workers' unions, who at that
time had pitiful working conditions. He gave dozens of lectures to the workers,
making them aware of their
rights. His early
death at the age of 31 was not only due to physical
exhaustion, but rather to the ill will of some owners who wanted to keep the
wages low. He suffered, like Paracelsus, what is called
a "Christic death". Afterwards, he always
supported the workers and
gave impulse to the unions.

Arnold Toynbee (1852-1883).
325 Alice A. Bailey,
Initiation, Human and Solar, p. 59, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1967.
326 Desmond Scott: Cyril Scott:
A man whose time has come again.
23.
Lives of the Masters
Morya and K.H.
Being confronted with the incarnate
Wisdom, all the prejudices of anyone against
them are disproved, because their acts were always motivated by Justice
and Truth.
In the nineteenth century they operated in unison in
the West through H. P. Blavatsky, to whom they dictated the Secret Doctrine, in
the twentieth century through Alice Bailey and Helena Roerich and by 2025 they
will probably dictate a Treatise on the magnetism of Love- Wisdom, after that on the constitution of the mind, already deepened
in the Treatise of Cosmic Fire.
I have some classic reproductions of the portraits of the Masters
when they were young,
dating back to 1915, given to me in 1988 by Eleanor Shumway of the Temple of
People of Halcyon in California. As many will know, instead, in Adyar it was
always forbidden, with good reason, to see the originals. I enclose three
of them, while
the ones below
are not portraits but real photos of the Masters
that should be treated with great respect because they are a powerful means to
get in touch with them by those who really love them. Precisely for this reason
I understand that, in his present Indian life, K.H. prevents photos from being
taken of him and it is simply impossible to do so; please consider the portrait
of the Maitreya and the other photos of the Masters the most important part of
this volume, as a real treasure, whose inclusion in a public volume is an
exceptional event, because humanity, rightly, needs proof.

![]()

Ranbir Singh,
India's most important
Maharaja, and his Diwan or 1st Minister, Kirpa Ram
![]()
24.
Life of Mahatma Morya,
1st Ray Master.
"Master Morya,
is the head of all esoteric organizations in the world."327 "Master
Morya is the head of all truly esoteric schools."328

Photo of Ranbir Singh born in August 1830 - and died on 12 September 1885
Speaking of the various Masters,
of very different characters, who take turns into
communicating
through the body of H.P.B.. Olcott gives us a valuable piece of information.
Among those who dictated to H.P.B. was an ancient
Platonist of high metaphysical stature
who did not even realize he was dead. Olcott reports
that he had died on September 1, 1687
329 and, from that date,
my friend Overtone Fuller rightly deduces that he was Henry More, the Cambridge
Platonist whose portrait I enclose.

But I would add that, in the following two pages,
there is the curious evidence that explains who the real Master Morya is. I
quote from Olcott: "One of his Alter
Ego's, whom I later met in person has
a thick beard and long moustache which is rolled up, according to the Rajput way, at the sides. He has the habit of rolling up his moustache when he is thinking hard and he does it mechanically and
unconsciously... Sometimes, when H.P.B.'s personality faded away, and she was Someone else, I would watch
her while with her hand she made the gesture of pulling and rolling up the
moustache which certainly did not grow visibly on her upper lips and while in
the meantime she had an absent look, until the mustachioed Someone looked up and surprised me while I was watching,
quickly removed her hand from her face and continued with the writing work. Then there was another
Someone, who hated English
so much that he
327 Alice A. Bailey,
Discipleship in the New Age Vol. I, p. 622, Lucis
Publishing Company, N. Y., 1972.
328 Alice A. Bailey,
The Rays and the Initiations, p. 373, Lucis
Publishing Company, N. Y., 1988.
329 Henry S. Olcott
Old Diary Leaves Vol. I, p. 242, Theos.
Publishing House, London
1941.
would not speak to me in any other language but French,
and who was fond of mechanical inventions." 330
We now know that Olcott had met Ranbir Singh on November
24th, 1883 331 and, knowing of H.P.B.'s travels
in Kashmir, it is easy to see to whom those long vertical moustaches of 10 cm. in length, which
H.P.B.'s hand stroked idly, belonged. Just look at Ranbir's photo!
Ranbir Singh, third son of Gulab Singh, Rajput of the
Jamwal or Dogra solar lineage, dating back to Ikhswaku and Rama, Maharaja of
Kashmir, Ladakh and Baltistan, was born in August 1830 332 in Ramgarth
by his mother Rajput Rani Rakwal of Jaipur and grew up, since it was
not foreseen that he would inherit the kingdom of his father,
under the tutelage
of his uncle Raja Suchet Singh. The latter, despite having had seven
wives, had not been able to have children, so he adopted him and gave him a
very high spiritual education.
He spent his first 15 years in his uncle's palace in
Rāmnagar, a city southeast of Udhampur, and it was because
of his uncle that his great love for the cultural aspect
of life was born, as reported by the late
historian and friend Prof. Charak.333

Jammu, 1996. The author
at Prof. Charak’s home with him and his grandson.
He was a professional soldier and an efficient
commander since he was 15 years old, and participated in the defense of
Ramnagar and Uttar Behani in 1845 when Jammu was invaded by the Sikh army of
Lahore.

March 9 th, 1860.
Viceroy Lord Canning
visits Ranbir Singh
(who is 30 years old).
He was a great scholar of Sanskrit and of the Persian
language, in which the official documents of the state were written. I had the
good fortune to visit in April 1996 the palace where he lived as a boy, the walls
of whose rooms
were decorated with images of all the Rishis
of antiquity and this may explain his disposition towards spirituality.
![]()
330 Henry S. Olcott,
Old Diary Leaves Vol. I, p. 244, Theos.
Publishing House, London
1941.
331 Henry S. Olcott,
Old Diary Leaves Vol. III, p. 45, Theos.
Publishing House, London
1904.
332 Sukhdev Singh Charak,
Life and Times of Maharaja Ranbir
Singh, p. 32, Jay Kay Book House,
Jammu, 1985.
333 Sukhdev Singh Charak,
Life and Times of Maharaja Ranbir
Singh, p. 33, Jay Kay Book House,
Jammu, 1985.
His uncle was an influential member of Ranjeet
Singh's court in Lahore while his father was the most important member of
the Sikh empire after Ranjeet Singh himself. The death of his elder
brother Udham Singh
on 5th November
1840 and reported
in Gulabnama page 160 due to the collapse of a wall that seemed
accidental, and that of his other brother Sohan Singh on 22th
December 1844, will lead to the dismantling and division of the Sikh empire
between the British and Gulab Singh.
Ranbir Singh's fate would change forever, as he
remained the only possible successor to the throne of his father, whose health
in later years would be endangered by generalized edema. In Rāmnagar, some Raja
told me of his solitary youthful outings on horseback in the extremely wild surrounding forests
and of his meditations in the impervious and wild landscape of Ramnagar, accomplished like
those of the ancient Rishi.

His friendship with Kirpa Ram, or K.H. dates back to his
boyhood years when he was prepared in a hurry for succession to the throne.
Their respective fathers met often for state leadership needs, and their sons,
their successors, were both prepared for their future duties.
On the solidity of their friendship will depend the
future of the independent state of Kashmir. As I was personally told by Prof.
Waklu, the joint action of these two enlightened rulers greatly fostered the
arts throughout Kashmir.334

Jammu. Amar Pahal
Palace Museum. The author with Prof. Waklu
on the right.
By now the only candidate for the succession to the
throne, as King of Kashmir, and being completely unprepared to reign (replacing
the two older brothers who had been duly prepared) he was sent to London by his
father, Gulab Singh, builder of an empire.335
Ranbir Singh (M.) at the age of 19 went to Britain to
observe the institutions of their chief allies, the British, and to treasure
the best ones. From them, in fact, his father had bought Kashmir in 1846, though in fact it
had been given on merit by Ranjit Singh.
334 Somnath Waklu, The Rich Heritage of Jammu and Kashmir, p.
115, Gyan Publis.
House, New Delhi,
1998.
335 Bawa Satinder Singh,
The Jammu Fox, a biography of Gulab Singh, Feffers & Simmons,
London, 1974.
To go to London, in 1850, he used
the help of a powerful friend, the Rajput kshatriya, (Khas) Jung Bahadur Kunwar
Rana, the Raja Prime Minister of Nepal.336
Rana was accompanied by his two brothers who were joined by the Maharaja's son and the son
of the Prime Minister of Kashmir, Yuvraj (the Crown Prince) Ranbir Singh and
Kirpa Ram.


Jung Bahadur
Kunwar Rana
Ranbir was not left alone as he barely knew the
English language and didn’t love it much. He was followed, like a shadow, by
his friend Kirpa Ram (K.H.) who, instead, spoke it very well. On 22nd
March 1850 The Times of London announced the event and Ranbir Singh, as a
chaperon, adopted a name similar to his own, Captain Rambir Singh Adhikaree (officer), while Kirpa Ram adopted the name
of Lieutenant Lal Singh Khutree
(kshastriya). They were housed in Richmond Terrace, a stone's throw from
Buckingham Palace. They visited the Parliament, and all the major institutions.
On June 20th Jung and his two brothers were introduced before the
Queen and H. P. B. told her aunt that the Master was not among those presented
to her. 337
The result of this journey was
that after their return, on January 6th, 1854, the Muluki Ain,
Nepal's legislative code, was enacted. In the meantime, laws were also being
enacted in Kashmir. The Ranbir Dand Vidhi or Ranbir Penal Code, by which
slavery was abolished, and the Sudras were given the right to read the sacred scriptures. Kashmir adopted the telegraph and compulsory education. Kashmir was also
a forerunner to India regarding the first paved road and the promotion of
various innovations. In addition, Olcott, the co-founder of the Theosophical
Society, brought with him the first phonograph invented by the theosophist and
inventor Thomas Edison.
The 18th Chapter
of Prof. Waklu's
book is entitled
"Ranbir Singh:
The Maharaja with a
Heart of Gold." Even today
136 years after
his death, the institution he founded in Kashmir, the Dharma
Trust, pays the expenses of the major Hindu shrines in the Himalayas, free of charge. The teaching he gave in his later
incarnation was transcribed by his disciple
Helena
Roerich and comprises 18 volumes of the Agni Yoga series
from 1924 to 1940.

Helena Roerich
338
336 Mary Neff, Personal memoirs
of H. P. B. p.
246, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1971.
"As to the Sahib, I have known him for a long time. Twenty-five years ago, he came to London with the Prince of
Nepaul; three years ago he sent me a letter by an Indian who came here to
lecture about Buddhism. In this letter he reminded me of many things,
foretold by him at the time, and asked me whether
I would consent to obey him, to avoid
complete destruction."
337 Jean Overton Fuller,
Blavatsky and Her Teachers
pp. 7-8, East-West
Publications, London, 1988.
338 Photo on Back cover, from International Centre of the Roerichs, Master-Bank, Moscow, 2013.
20.
Life of Mahatma Koot Hoomi, Second Ray Master.

Kirpa Ram
"Every one knows that Master
Koot Hoomi is a Puñjabi whose family was settled for years in Kashmir." 339
"No one ever dreamt
of saying that the Mahatma was a 'Tibetan
Monk' or a Lama."
340
As my friend Jean Overton Fuller has reported,
accurately, "the name Koothoomi appears
in the Vishnu Purāṇa (Wilson,
Book III, p. 60, as the name of a sage who disseminated
knowledge of certain sacred scriptures kept hidden up to that time). 341 It was not chosen at random.

Manasarovar, lake near Kailash
where the Vedas were inspired.
Favorite place of
the Naga or wise K. H. 342
339 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected Writings
Vol. VI, p. 277, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton,
1975. 340 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected Writings
Vol. VI, p. 292, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton,
1975. 341 Jean Overton Fuller, Blavatsky and Her Teachers, p. 84, East-West Publications, London,
1988.
342 H. P. Blavatsky, Theosophical Glossary, p. 203, The Theosophy Company, Los Angeles,
1973.
A young eighteen-year-old Indian man, Kirpa Ram,
later known in the West under the pseudonym
K.H., born in 1832 in Kashmir, but coming from a family
originally from Eminabad in Punjab,343 met in 1850, in Wazirabad, Lord Dalhousie, the English Viceroy
of India. For his
cultural merits he received the khilat, an honorary multicolored dress,344
and was admitted to attend incognito, for political reasons
related to the Cold War with Russia,
a graduate course in
Dublin.
He is by far the first Indian to travel to an
English-speaking country to study by virtue of the fact that he is the son of the
Prime Minister of a major Indian border state. His father is the Prime Minister
of Gulab Singh's Kashmir, Jawala Sahai Chand, who established a major agreement
with the British to purchase Kashmir.
![]()
Jwala Sahai,
Diwan (Chief Minister) of Kashmir under
Gulab Singh and father of K.H.
The Maharaja conquered the kingdom of Kashmir with arms and, in exchange
for a large sum of money given to the English, he obtained their
recognition, also because they intended to have his help as a strong military
ally against the Russian danger.
The Great Game,
the England-Russia political confrontation for the control of Asia, was underway; it was essential to the British
that the Maharajas and the Indian
government men be educated and drawn into the area of
English culture and influence. He was a promising young man of great
"indigenous" culture who would probably follow in his father's
footsteps in politics. He was the best that could be chosen to demonstrate Western "civilization and culture"
supremacy and to practice an intelligent policy of alliances, with an
indoctrination aimed at showing the superior
political, military, organizational, cultural, and religious
power of a nation
that considered itself the flower of the West.
By K. H. as a university student, we are left with
the mystical, typically anonymous poem, "The Dream of Ravan - A Mystery" published serially in "The Dublin University Magazine" in
the years 1853 and 1854, which can only have been written by an Indian who also
had first-hand spiritual experiences.345
In the same years, precisely in 1855
in Ireland, an idea, a luminous beacon, was taking shape, which
would then take the name of Theosophy, thanks to the decisions of Mahatma K.H.
343 Diwan Kirpa
Ram, Gulabnama, p. XI, Light & Life Publishers, New Delhi, 1977. 344 Diwan Kirpa
Ram, Gulabnama p. XX, Light & Life Publishers, New Delhi, 1977. 345 http://www.istitutocintamani.org/englishSession/Thedreamofravan-amystery.pdf
In the Victorian
age, in the midst of a thoroughly materialistic Western civilization, for having studied European law, music, poetry and literature
with rare commitment, this young man was privileged in many respects. In his
homeland he was regarded as one of the most educated men of India,
but he was certainly much more than that. He was one of the few young men in the world to have benefited
both from the best of Asian and European culture, and therefore, he was the
best person to act as a mediator between the two civilizations.
From an early age, he had the best spiritual
and meditation teachers
and, in an environment of
intense diplomatic relations, he learned a dozen languages at a very young age,
including good English, classical Persian, and classical Sanskrit. His natural
predispositions for psychology, philosophy, music, spirituality, and languages
turned him into a miracle; he embodied a new Pythagoras, who had built a bridge
between the new cultures of Magna Graecia: Crotone, Taranto, and Reggio and
those of Egypt, the Middle East, and India. He traveled from West to East,
reaching India. This young man, on the contrary, moves from the East, where
he was born, to the West and will have the same destiny—creating a bridge between the two cultures through
the intermediation of a woman
of Russian origin,
H.P.B., after having recently returned from his Western
"exile." I also recall that H.P.B. and Olcott used the term Sahib to
refer to M. and the code name Kashmir for K.H. and that H.P.B. herself said
that the last one was not Tibetan. Molone in this autograph drawing by H.P.B.
is Olcott's nickname.
![]()
Olcott (Molone) in conversation with Sahib Kashmere, in an autograph drawing by HPB.
Why exile? Kindness and tolerance. Never did his lips
utter a lie, never did his hands commit theft. Ethics perfected by a thousand
obligations already in another life, when he had been Flamen Dialis, high priest of the Temple of Jupiter placed on the
Capitol in Rome.346 What moved his thoughts that he had already learned
to master at a very young age? What did he derive from his long meditative
samādhi? Having tasted the perfume of the flower of European culture, he
immediately perceived its intrinsic weakness: the dominant materialism.
The perception of one’s own importance grows
accordingly with the amassing of wealth, power, culture: the British
treat the Indians
with condescension, they do not even speak to them. Much mind, little heart, few
authentic religious experiences. This is immediately apparent to those who come
from a culture in which no doubt is cast about the supremacy of mind over
matter and spirit over both. In simple terms, in India the purpose of each
individual precedes the vehicle through
which he acts.
The supreme hero is considered to be one who has conquered
himself, like Shiva, king of the yogis and meditator par excellence. But beware: the true Self of
the One in the other is found. What is Shiva without Shakti? Osiris without
Isis?
It
was Europe 170 years ago. The slavery
of Africans, who were being
shipped from Bristol to America, had been abolished a very few decades earlier.
People did not know what
346 The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett p. 171-172, The Theosophical Publishing House, London,
1972.
meditation was. In its place prayers for personal benefit were
recited in dreary cathedrals. Eastern spiritual and religious literature was
completely unknown. It was interpreted in a material and literal sense if
anything leaked out. The highly mystical poems of the Persian astronomer, mathematician and poet Omar Khayyam were considered an encouragement to get
drunk and enjoy life rather than an invitation to share the wine of Ananda, of the bliss of union with the Divine. He, the singer of
Joy, was being hailed instead as the poet of carpe diem, pervaded with pessimism!
Any idea to the contrary
was rejected and deemed ridiculous and, unfortunately, the initial
prejudice continues to this day. "A mystical reading of all the quatrains
of the Rubaiyat, common in Persian criticism, seems to be discarded." 347 This is the era of the presumption of European culture,
the one in which Max Müller, the Sanskritist who translated the Rig-Veda in 1849, never went, during his entire
life, to India, the home of Sanskrit studies.
But Sanskrit is par excellence written in Devanagari, the language of the gods, with precise mathematical meanings just as
Bharati Krishna Tirtha states in his Vedic
Mathematics, and since each letter, as in Arabic, has a numerical
correspondent, "a simple hymn to Krishna can contain pi divided by ten
extended to the 32a decimal place!" 348
![]()
Sree Bharati Krishna
Tirtha, Shankaracharya of Puri.
In the Theosophist 10/1883 the Tiruvallam Mahatma, 349 (the Jupiter Master or
Rishi Agatsya, or Narayana Guru of Thiruvananthapuram
in Kerala, the one who abolished
caste shame in South India) states that Sanskrit can only be understood
through Senzar.
K.H. was a wise and balanced person, who had been
Pythagoras in his previous incarnation. He, had then coined the motto "Do
not unbalance the scales," which became the "In medio stat
virtus" of the Romans. Consistent with this principle, he esteemed all
that was good in the West's science, technology, music, and practicality but
never devalued the culture of the land in which he was born. He did not adopt
Western habits and mentality under any circumstances but swore in his heart,
considering this state
of affairs unbearable, that he would do anything to raise the quality of
spiritual life of the brothers of the West. The sight of the suburbs of the
East End and the miseries of Whitechapel, London, aroused in him a bursting
wave of compassion. He saw the moral
degradation in this world and, mindful of the saying
he uttered during his lifetime as the divine Pythagoras "The doctor
goes where the sick man is," he swore to himself that for him the moral
and spiritual elevation of the masses of the West would be, in his lifetime, a priority. Still unaware of the ways to accomplish this undertaking
347 Enciclopedia Europea Garzanti
VIII, p. 267, Milan, 1979.
348 Bharati Krishna
Tirtha Vedic Mathematics, p.
363 Motilal Banarsidass, Delhi, 1975. For mentions of the life of
this great saint and discoverer of a different ancient mathematics see Paramahansa Yogananda, Autobiography of a Yogi, p. 258, Rider, London,
1996.
349 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected
Writings Vol. I, p. 438, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1988.
that would make even those who had the means and opportunity to do
so tremble; that is the commitment of a true bodhisattva, that he took on and
kept.
Here is the moment of a Bodhisattva's vow,
of whom, turning
around, saves. It is a moment
of extreme simplicity and impersonality. Identification with the whole allows
no other choice. Universal love shows all its power. With such choices made in
the silence of one's soul, the world is redeemed, and another servant is
born. I am talking about
choices that, to a much lesser
extent, many of us have already made.
This choice always
implies conflict. Should
one privilege above all the
personal good or that of the group? To live and work for one or the other?
H.P.B. too, from an early
age, turned her sympathies to lower class
people and showed
an apparent indifference to the nobility to which she belonged by birth,
and she also had a strong dislike of convention.350
Roberto Assagioli, my mentor (1888-1974) in a telepathic relationship with K.H., told me that
since he was ten years old he had felt the impulse
to eliminate the sufferings, especially the psychological ones, that poison the people's lives.
At the end of his life, like H.P.B., he too was offered by Master Morya the choice of
passing beyond the veil immediately or continuing for a few more years, albeit
amidst various bodily sufferings, the work he had begun.351 Both, for the love of humanity, chose the
path of sacrifice.
Disciples therefore work and are active in
well-defined areas of service,
otherwise they would not be such. In fact, "The initiate knows why he works." The others, i.e. those who have
opted for self-interest, are very active, they are interested in survival and
in perpetuating an ephemeral and transitory power, based on the exploitation of
others to attain their own ends. The activity is identical, but the goal that
drives one to act is totally different, and the highest one presupposes
harmlessness of thought, speech and action and, above all, consistency.
Therefore, having to make a choice, better to opt for the "narrow
way" of the gospel, the one that costs more in personal terms and, as the
Divine said in the Golden Sayings, "Avoid the public highways and walk in
unfrequented paths." 352 He means by this to ignore even the
exotericism of official religions.
Returning to life choices, they are made for the good of the whole
and, therefore, could
be called monadic choices, for the monos,
the one. It is such a choice that will allow K.H. to become the next bodhisattva and one day assume the
present function of the Maitreya.
K.H. therefore
is the true founder of Theosophy. He will then be helped by his great friend M., his great financier and
collaborator, who says "It is
incorrect to think that the past experiment
(and I add of the Theosophy) of My Friend was unsuccessful... H.P.B. was grateful
to the deriding drumbeaters." 353
Christ also chose to save not only the human kingdom
but also all those of nature, and made a similar choice imitating in this Sanat
Kumara, the Great Sacrifice who, having the 1st Ray monad, chose to
descend into the depths of matter and incarnate on Earth.
The Cintāmani
jewel, the Dharma, the gem that grants all wishes, becomes
the foundation stone, the center of the base within the solar system.
Here is the greatest of all sacrifices, which can be realized only by Sanat Kumara, a divine rebel who consciously renounces life in the
350 Mary Neff, Personal memoirs of H. P. B. p. 24 and
32, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1971. 351 C. Wachtmeister, Reminiscences of H. P. Blavatsky and the Secret Doctrine p. 62 T. P. H. Wheaton, 1989. 352 Iamblichus, Life of Pythagoras, p. 239, Vol. XVII,
Thomas Taylor Series, Prometheus Trust, 1999.
353 Agni Yoga, sutra 25, Agni Yoga Society, New York, 1954.
higher spheres. Certainly, the last who tarry will be the first, and a truly
noble being is not afraid to descend into matter to redeem
it. Muck, for example, is used to make fire throughout Asia, so matter is not to be despised, nor is the solar plexus and coccyx center, muladhara
or perineum or base center, as
many uninformed esotericists do.
Muladhara comes from "Mula"
root and "Adhara" Support.
It is the root of all the nadis and the support
of all the chakras, like a thread
on which they are strung
to form a garland. It is
necessary to clarify that a nadi is not a container like a vein, but a channel in the sense of a sea
current. It has a close relationship with the adrenal glands.354
We can understand the importance of the center at the
base, since the caudal part of the neural tube of the embryo called the
primitive or Hensen's node, which forms during the third week, is the center
of growth of the embryo
itself. It maintains the pluripotentiality of the stem cells and, therefore, the ability to transform into any cell type, even when all others have lost it.
At a higher, divine level, this descent to Muladhara
finds today an analogy in Shamballa, which reaches directly to humanity or in
the process of the Hierarchy's Externalisation. The coronal center, the summit
of the head, and the heart center are now seeking the seventh or physical plane,
the most material. Fortunate are those who can collaborate today
in this spiritual process, the highest of those
taking place on the planet, for the Great Beings support, reward, and increase
tenfold the forces
of each Self who has chosen the highest good. The world servers are the pillars of the
holographic way of the Divine.
On February 20th,
1856. Jammu, India:
the earthly task of K.H. began.
Kashmiri Maharaja Gulab Singh 355 (pictured in his biography
written by Kirpa
Ram) and his
![]()
Diwan or Prime Minister Jawala Sahai, renounced their functions and
designated their respective sons, Ranbir
Singh, whom we will call M., born in August
1830 and Kirpa
Ram K.H. born in 1832, to
take the leadership of the state as King and Prime Minister respectively. For
the two young men the responsibility was as great as their friendship. H.P.B. was present
at the Gaddi, or coronation of M. as King, so her discipleship began no longer at a distance but finally
"de visu" with the Master.
The Master's address was provided to her by Hilarion, who was Morya's delegate
for the entire Middle Eastern area.
354 A. Bailey, Esoteric Healing,
pp. 45 and 181, Lucis Publishing Company,
New York, 1981.
355 H.P.B. uses the
name of his Guru Gulab Singh's father as a screen for M., the protagonist of
the 700 - page novel From the Caves and Jungles of Hindostan,
Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1993.
"I went to India in 1856 - just because I was
longing for the Master... I met Külwein in Lahore... Were I to describe my
visit to India only in that year that would make a whole book, but how can I NOW say the truth! ... I went from Kashmir to Leh in Ladakh." 356
In a few years Kashmir
became an unparalleled diplomatic and military
power; at the time
of the revolt of the sepoys, the indigenous soldiers of the Anglo-Indian army,
and during the popular revolt of March 1857 in Northern India, the British were
forced to ask for the help of his powerful Dogra army
in order not to be slaughtered en masse. Ranbir
Singh promptly rushed with his army to their aid, all
the way to New Delhi, even though it was not his responsibility. He was then forced
not to participate personally in the battle,
due to the sudden deterioration of his father's health.
The territorial borders
of Kashmir are vast in the north and extend to include a large area up to and including
Kailash, part of what is now Tibet, and part of Ladakh.
Kashmir was the only state in India that enjoyed
effective independence. No Englishman was allowed to remain there during the
winter months. K. H. in 1865 was elected governor of Kashmir. He had the entire
administration of state affairs in his hands. The joint work of the two
Mahatmas advanced justice, freedom and culture.
Temples, schools, universities, canals, paved roads
were built, legislative codes were established, religious tolerance was
introduced, and crime was eliminated. Trade flourished, and cultural
institutions proliferated. Kashmir, unlike the rest of India, was a paradise
where the British happily spent their summer vacations.
On November 11th, 1870, K. H. handed a letter to Nadja, H.P.B.'s
aunt, to reassure
her that her niece would be
home soon and then disappeared before her eyes.357
September 11, 1876, Mahatma
K.H.'s Theosophy started
to advance.
After 20 years of service to the state,
K.H.'s death is announced at the age of 44, since the British secret service keeps him tightly
under control. His is an apparent death,
though, caused by the
catalepsy of samādhi and later the
Mahatma would wake up more active than ever to prepare the ground for the
coming of H.P.B to India on February 15th, 1879.
M. says of him "When the name of one of Our
Brothers who was in the world was revealed,
it became necessary to declare Him dead in order to preserve His freedom of action.
We have had to change
Our names repeatedly in order not to arouse
curiosity. Several times we had
to change the name to defend ourselves from curiosity. We have been compelled to hastily
hide Ourselves in order that a good work might not suffer harm." 358
May 1873. H. P. B., in Paris,
received from M. the order
to leave for the USA. She arrived there toward the end of June. She arrived
in New York on July 7th. The following year, in July, she moved to Long Island. In 1875,
in Buxuaduar, India, the Master known by the three pseudonyms D.K. or Djwhal
Kool (from the Tibetan, Servant of the Victorious) or the Disinherited, took the 5th initiation and could be then of great help to the project
of his Guru
K.H. From now on the will of his Master will be his own
and the project of K.H. would take a more defined shape.
356 H. P. Blavatsky, Letters of H.P.B. to Sinnett,
p.151 London T.P.H. 1925 and Mary Neff
Personal Memoirs of
H.P.B. p. 59. Theosophical Publishing House, A Quest Book, 1971.
357 S. Cranston, H.P.B. The Extraordinary Life and Influence
of H. Blavatsky: Ch. 9 Strange Apparition, 1993.
358 Supermundane I, sutra 13, Agni Yoga Society, New York, 1994.
On 17th November 1875 the Theosophical Society
was founded in New York, by H.P. Blavatsky and Henry Olcott. Their aim was to form the core of a
Universal Brotherhood without distinction of race, creed, sex, caste or color. Some secondary purposes were added later,
such as encouraging the study of religions, philosophies, sciences, and to
investigate the unexplained laws of nature, and the latent powers in man. The
quality of the teachings given was high but the central part consisted of a
loving disposition, as can be read in the Mahayana text The Voice of Silence.
To better understand what Theosophy has accomplished for
the culture of India and for Buddhism, it is enough to read back issues of The
Theosophist, now available online.
Indirect clues to understand who the Masters were.
Olcott when referring to Master K.H. called him Kashmir.
The initiate who accompanied H. P. B.
on his novel "From the Caves and
Jungles of Hindustan" was named Gulab Singh, after the father of her
guru Ranbir Singh."
As to H. P. B.'s presence at the coronation in Jammu in 1856 we know only from her own words that she was in Kashmir that year
and had gone there to meet her Guru, but we cannot give definite evidence of
her meeting with the Maharaja.
We know from her that she went to Ladakh,
to Shigatse in Tibet, and to Tashi
Lhunpo, and only the
high authorities of Kashmir could
have granted her this privilege, since Kailash and part of Ladakh were property of the Maharaja
of Kashmir, who was highly respected and feared in Lhasa.359
In November 1880, H. P. B. and Olcott were in Lahore
to organize a section of the Theosophical Society. Viceroy
Marquis Ripon's presentation to the Indian
Maharajas or Durbar
takes place in Lahore on November 15th, with H.P.B. attending
the ceremony and giving a description of it in the Russian newspaper Russkiy Vestnik (Russian Messenger). Her
articles were published in this newspaper’s May, June, and July 1881 issues,
under the name Radda Bai, and then published in the Theosophist from August 1960 to March
1961. In this event the only
relevant note, but also inexcusable offense, is that the most important of the Indian princes,
the Maharaja of Kashmir, refused
to meet and greet the Viceroy. H.P.B.
in the articles justifies
this by saying that the fact is due to a sudden attack of dysentery.
But the omniscient K. H. states that Viceroy Lord
Ripon betrayed England by secretly revealing the latter's every move to his
Catholic confessor Father Kerr. 360
Being a despicable being the Mahatma refused to greet him. But H.P.B., knowing
that her Russian articles would be read by the English secret service,
protected her Guru with a trivial excuse.
Direct Clue
How was the sum needed to purchase the headquarters
of the Theosophical Society of Adyar paid? The founders did not have such large
sums. Following the money trail, we can quickly arrive at the key characters. Therefore, since it is important
as evidence, it is necessary to tell the whole story fully.
359 H. P. Blavatsky, Collected
Writings Vol. VI, p. 277, Theosophical Publishing House, Wheaton, 1975.
360 The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett, p. 386, Letter
82, The Theos. Publishing House,
London, 1972.
The Masters not only had personal
contact with H.P.B. twice, in London, but they did with dozens of minor
disciples.
The following is one of the cases which testify,
among other things,
to the prescience of our Masters.
I summarize an article by Soobiah Chetty,
born March 10th, 1858, and enrolled
in the Theosophical Society April 27th, 1882, published
October 25th, 1928, in Adyar Notes and News titled "In the Days of H.P.B. Master M.'s Visit to
Madras in 1874." H.P.B. and Olcott arrived to take possession of the Madras office on December 19th, 1882. H.P.B. was unpacking
in the presence of Damodar, Narasimhulu, Krishnasvami known as Bhavaji, and
Subbiah Chetty. Among the items contained in one suitcase were two portraits
and Narasimhulu and Subbiah were looking at them with curiosity because, in one
of them, they had recognized a sadhu they had met four years earlier.
Noticing their interest
H.P.B. removed the paintings from their sight, saying that it was forbidden to examine them because they were the portraits of her
Masters. The two brothers replied that they had met one of those people in person, to which
H.P.B. replied
that it could
not be true.
Two weeks later
H.P.B. apologized to them saying
that what they had said was true,
and that they were two of the four people the master had met that day.
He then asked them to tell her how the meeting had taken place. They reported
that one morning a sadhu had entered the house unexpectedly. He had a long
white robe and turban on, black hair flowing down his shoulders, and a black
beard. Of the three people who were in the room one came out as they approached
him. Staying near the door he made some signs that they did not understand but
still remembered. He then asked them for a penny. They looked in their penny
holders and found precisely one penny they gave him. He turned
around and left the house,
followed by the two
brothers, and, to their surprise,
vanished into thin air. They could not find any trace of him
in the street. The whole thing was so strange that they still remembered every
detail. H.P.B. then added to their information that the Master was on his way
to Rameshvaram, one of the great pilgrimage places in India.
I also report an article now that can be found on the
internet "Madame Blavatsky and
Soobiah" by the Adyar Lodge, and I recommend reading both for
completeness and knowing some of the "miracles" performed by H.P.B.,
i.e. the siddhi of yoga, garima and laghima, that is the ability to weigh on
scales like a feather or, on the contrary, to weigh a lot, as shown to Soobiah.
Soobiah was the son of the wealthy
judge Grandhi Muthuswami Chetty and was a great friend of H. P. B. He had seven
children and died, as predicted by himself, in December 1946 on the day of the
Kartika Deepam festival.
When, as a young man, he was working for the English
in the port of Madras,
he learned that the
Huddlestone property, bordering the Adyar River, was for sale at an affordable
price and informed H. P. B. and Olcott,
who hesitated to buy it, having no funds available. He insisted that they at least visit it. They did, and H. P. B. said that the Masters
approved of the choice of place. Soobiah told them the sale
would be made in a hurry. Olcott deduced from this that, as he had no funds, it
would not be possible to purchase it, but, as a last resort, he told Soobiah
that even if he obtained
a loan from him, it would take a long time to raise the necessary funds to
repay them. Soobiah
said to him that he would give him an answer the next day. The young man's father, familiarly called
Muthiah, had attended a conference of the two theosophical founders in Madras
in the Georgetown area. At that time, the man was determined to change
religion, and the lecture brought up many questions, which he wrote down on a
sheet of paper to remember them, placing it at home on the sideboard before going to bed. The next day, he
strangely found the answers to all his questions on some
sheets of paper. This convinced him not to choose another religion but join the
Theosophical Society.
The next day, the young man asked his father to lend
the founders of T.S. the money needed to buy the property, but his father
replied that he should not interfere in the affairs of adults and refused to
lend the large sum. The young man insisted again in vain. A few hours later,
during the night, Muthiah went to his son in ecstasy to tell him that Master
Morya had appeared to him during the night and had suggested that he lend the
sum to Colonel Olcott because not only would the money soon be returned
to him, but it would do good for India and
the world. Soobiah purchased the 26 acres of the property, assigning it to the
Theosophical Society, and arranged for its registration. The founders settled
there in late 1882.
As stated in "The Key to Theosophy" p. 225 "Many were the promises of donations but few were kept, including that of a certain
Maharaja who, after being thanked in the January 1888 Theosophist, 18 months later still had not kept his promise. "
In
the Lucifer of February 1889 in the article "Paradoxical World" appears the ten-year financial statement of the
Theosophical Society from February 1879 to February 1889:
In India Rupees 40,000
In Europe " 7,000
In America " 700!!! Equivalent to pounds 3,600
Let us now analyze the most
important and decisive part that helps us understand who the Masters of Wisdom
were. How was the money from the purchase of Adyar returned?
November 19, 1883. A year after taking possession of
the Adyar headquarters, Olcott was in Lahore
and, during the night, Master K.H. met him for ten minutes and handed him a
letter with prophecies of the future death of two enemies of the Society, and
with descriptions of future events concerning the Society itself. The Master
also met Damodar and Mr. Brown. To the latter
he gave a letter in which he said "Welcome to the territory of our Kashmiri
prince. In truth, my native land is not so far away that I can play as host. You, are not only now merely
at the threshold of Tibet, but also of all the wisdom it contains." 361
K. H.'s hometown
was, as previously mentioned, Eminabad,
25 km north of Lahore. On November 21 Olcott left for Jammu in
Kashmir, as witnessed in his diary "Old
Diary Leaves Vol. III" page 45, accepting the request to cure the
Maharaja of Kashmir with his magnetic passes (the passage of the hands a few
centimeters from the skin). Having learned from the delegate sent to meet him
that the Maharaja has the habit of giving cash as well as beautiful clothes to
his guests, he decided to refuse to take a single rupee personally as this was
incompatible with his habits. He pointed out, however, that he would accept any
gift as President of the Theosophical Society.
Seven days later,
in leaving him, he affirmed: "No other reigning
Indian Prince whom I
have met has left so pleasant impressions on my memory…
No one could have shown himself
a more perfect gentleman, a more generous,
self respecting Prince,
or a more thoughtful host. "
In addition to bestowing many other gifts he signed a receipt for two bags of
Rs. 2,500 in silver.362
361 Letters from the Masters
of Wisdom 1870-1900, Letter 21 p. 61.
362 Henry S. Olcott
Old Diary Leaves Vol.
III, p. 57-58, Theosophical Publishing House, London,
1904.
Things from an esoteric point
of view are completely reversed. The Maharaja has always
protected him and taken care of him spiritually and materially. The magnetism of a lock of hair left in his turban as proof that his appearance in New York was not a dream, had allowed
Olcott to heal in India, with magnetic passes, thousands of blind,
disabled, and seriously ill people. And this physical
encounter with the Mahatmas is the reward
bestowed upon him by the "Boss,"
name by which the Colonel lovingly called his Guru, after the end of his seven
years of probation, from the end of 1875 to 1883, consisting of previous help to H. P. B. in America
and the continuous work done after that in India and Ceylon.
On the excellent usage of money, by having a good
karma, Olcott recounted, "On December 18, 1882, in Madras to set up the
farewell dinner of a retiring British officer the Indians spent
Rs. 15,000; a few days later we raised a smaller sum than that to pay for the Adyar
property." 363 (Returning the money to Soobiah's father).
![]()
The Theosophical Headquarters of Adyar, in Chennai.
As for the Hierarchy's protection of Olcott, or of collaborators, even if only briefly with its
work, I want to make a precise
and clear statement here. The gratitude of the Mahatmas
and the unlimited power of good saves the lives of disciples many times,
even if they are unaware of it. I will cite two examples. In 1943, during
the Second World
War, my teacher
of esotericism was hunted
together with his son Ilario by the Germans in the countryside of Arezzo,
because he was Jewish, and, while he was hiding in the high grass, he saw the Germans passing
by them but they were not
noticed. D.K. then wrote to him, "K.H. assured you that the aura of His
Ashram, and the aura of mine, would
act as a shield... This,
my brother, you know well,
and to this fused efficiency
you can testify." 364
Another example, among thousands of others, is that
of a wealthy Spanish aristocrat, José Xifré, a close friend of Queen Isabella
II and King Alfonso XII who claimed that upon first meeting with H. P. B. a
glance from her penetrated him and destroyed the personality he had been until that moment and that his ideas, tendencies and prejudices, more or less ingrained,
disappeared. He asserted that H. P. B. saved his life twice.
Once when he was leaving London for the continent,
H.P.B. said to him, "You are not leaving
today." "Xifré replied
that it was necessary for him to leave. "When Blavatsky insisted
that he should not, he replied, "But I must go, it is absolutely necessary
that I go, I cannot postpone my departure." "You must not go, you must stay overnight in London," she ordered.
363 Henry S. Olcott,
Old Diary Leaves Vol.
III, p. 65, Theos.
Publishing House, London,
1904.
364 Alice Bailey The Discipleship in the New Era Vol. II, p.
465, Lucis Publishing Company, New York, 1980.
Reluctantly he obeyed. The next day the newspapers
reported that the evening train, which Xifré was to take, had been involved in
a terrible train wreck.
Xifré together with several colleagues actively spread Theosophy in Spain and the texts of H.P.B. Later, in 1895, he
published the translation of "The Secret Doctrine" of H.P.B. in Spanish.365
I
offer here my triple apologies to the Guru of my instructor, about
daring and attempting the impossible task of
describing His life, doing it by means of some Aurobindo words.
“Most Yogis say nothing about their spiritual
experiences to others or not until long afterwards and secrecy was a general
rule among the ancient Mystics.
No moral or spiritual law commands us to make ourselves naked
to the world or open up our hearts and minds for public
inspection. Gandhi talked
about secrecy being
a sin but that is one of his many extravagances….
It is not very advisable to discuss either myself or the Ashram or spiritual
things with hostile minds or unbelievers. These discussions usually bring on
the Sadhak a stress of opposing
atmosphere and cannot be helpful to his progress. Reserve is the best attitude;
one need not be concerned to dispel their bad will or their ignorance.” 366
"To write my biography is impossible. The idea is quite wrong. Who could write it? Not
only in my case but in that of poets, philosophers and yogis it is no use attempting a biography, because
they do not live in their external life. Their real life is inner and how can
anyone else know that life? It is different with men of action like Napoleon or
Julius Caesar, men who develop themselves through action, but even in their
cases it would be best if they wrote their biographies themselves." 367
“First of all what matters in a spiritual man’s life
is not what he did or what he was outside to the view of the men of his time (that
is what historicity or biography comes
to, does it not?) but what he
was and did within; it is only that that gives any value to his outer life at
all. It is the inner life that gives to the outer any power it may have, and
the inner life of a spiritual man is something vast and full and, at least in the great
figures, so crowded
and teeming with significant things that no biographer or historian could ever hope to seize it all or tell it. 9 February 1936” 368
I close by trying to express Kirpa
Ram's continuous state of being with the words of a sage and saint from his beloved
Kashmir, Khawja Habib:
"Whoever realizes
his true Self discovers the wine barrels,
Overflowing with joy, he becomes drunk And forgets his lower self;
He will no longer distinguish anyone
of the Hindu religion From a
Muslim."
365 Sylvia Cranston H.P.B. The Extraordinary Life and Influence
of H. Blavatsky ch. VI. Path Publ. House, Santa Barbara, 1994.
366 Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Himself and the Ashram, p. 24 and 686, Sri Aurobindo
Ashram, Pondicherry, 2011.
367 A. B. Purani, The life of Sri Aurobindo, p. 205, Sri Aurobindo Ashram,
Pondicherry, 1978.
368 Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Himself and the Ashram, pag 6, Sri Aurobindo Ashram,
Pondicherry, 2011.
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