Share This
Description
The mysterious Madame B.
Legend has it that the Blavatsky magician had several invisible friends
The great Russian philosopher Helena Petrovna Blavatsky - who lived in the 19th century - rescued important knowledge that was believed to have been lost. The life of this philosopher, marked by great adventures and, mainly, by a generous and disinterested service to Humanity, inspired and continues to inspire the lives of many seekers and thinkers such as Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Carl Jung, Fernando Pessoa, Gandhi, and Gustav Mahler.
Tibet is the highest region in the world, with an average altitude of 4900 meters, and is sometimes called "the roof of the world" or "the roof of the world". Since ancient times, it was considered a sacred and mystical place, where the great mysteries of humanity were kept.
Blavatsky recovered innumerable knowledge of this region and compiled it in his works, among them "The Voice of Silence".
The life and work of H.P.B. (as it is known), as well as his unique knowledge about the mysteries kept in Tibetan monasteries, will be mentioned in this work more medicinally as a true Reiki of witches and magicians, these mysteries of Tibet were something revocation for some concepts that later would be experienced by Philippe de Lyon
At a time when traditional Christianity was engaged in a debate with Darwin about evolution when people had to choose between blind faith and the laws of science, Madame Blavatsky proclaimed a spirituality that transcended both and pointed to the East. In the Orient itself, where science and Western colonialism were rapidly diminishing the influence of traditional religious philosophies, Madame Blavatsky was at least partly responsible for reviving Hinduism and Buddhism. In all of her writings, with her wild speculations and elaborate mythologies, there is a core of truth that few others were proclaiming at the time. Even the basic principles of the Theosophical Society, which seem common now, were surprised when it was formulated in the 1870s.
She did not take on a spiritual air. She smoked (smokes continuously and occasionally hashish) and had an obscene Rabelaisian mood.
In 1880, in Sri Lanka, Blavatsky and Olcott held the ceremony of "taking Pansil", the five lay Buddhist precepts, also taking refuge in Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha. "It was the first time that Sri Lankans saw a member of the ruling white race treat Buddhism with something that came close to respect"
Anagarika Dharmapala, the great defender of the Sri Lankan Buddhist revival, started at the Theosophical Society in Ceylon. He became a protégé of Madame Blavatsky and remained a staunch defender of her for the rest of his life. Occultist Arthur Sinnett, presumably under the influence of Koot Hoomi, wrote the important text Esoteric Buddhism.
Tag This Book
This Book Has Been Tagged
Our Recommendation
Notify Me When The Price...
Log In to track this book on eReaderIQ.