The cycle of lectures now being published for the first time in
English has always presented some difficulties because of the two
lectures on the Mexican Mysteries, which form an important part of it.
In these lectures Rudolf Steiner provides some historical material
that not only cannot be confirmed like the prehistorical
material given in
Occult Science
and elsewhere but
appears to be even contrary to what is available to conventional
archaeologists and historians. In particular, there are two major
areas where at first sight Steiner would seem to have been in error,
and there appear also to be some errors in detail about the
characteristics of some Mexican deities cited by name. It is certain
therefore that critics of Rudolf Steiner will cite these anomalies and
label them errors, in the process attempting to discredit the kind of
spiritual investigation engaged in by him. To the best of my knowledge
which is admittedly not complete in no other lectures
given by Steiner at any time are there any comparable divergences from
accepted historical fact. With regard to the other material taken from
the Akasha Chronicle it must be said that much of it is startling and
of very great interest. But this is impossible to check or confirm
from the historical and archeological material available to us, but
there is also nothing in the historical record that can be said to
refute it.
In view of the fact that these lectures have long been available in
German, and some use has been made of them in English language
publications such as Carl Stegman's The Other America, it seems
necessary now to come to grips with these apparent anomalies or
errors. Rudolf Steiner gives the name of Vitzlipochtli to a great
initiate of the white path who succeeds in having a powerful black
magician crucified at the same period of time when Christ Jesus was
crucified on the Hill of Golgotha. This name, as it was transcribed in
1916 in Dornach where the lectures were given, is so close to that of
the evil god of the Aztecs some 1300 years later that the two names
must be regarded as the same. This evil god (Uitzlipochtli or
Huitzlipochtli) required human sacrifices, which were accompanied by
the tearing out of the hearts of the victims. Steiner gives a
different name to the evil god and says nothing here of the
heart, but insists that it was torn out; and he even adds that
this continued to be true in the time of the Spanish Conquest at the
beginning of the 16th century A.D., for which also all evidence of any
kinds is lacking.
It is by no means impossible that all Steiner's statements are
perfectly correct, but that evidence is unavailable because of the
maintenance of absolute secrecy in such dreadful mystery rites as
these. It is also more than possible that a bellicose conquering
people changed, over the period of some thirteen centuries, the image
of their god man of the period of the Mystery of Golgotha into an evil
god of war. In addition, over the same period the tearing out of the
stomach (the seat of the will) could have become the tearing out of
the heart (the seat of the feeling). It is not necessary for us to be
able to prove or confirm what Steiner tells us from the Akasha
Chronicle, but it does seem worthwhile trying to show that what he
says is not inconsistent with, and not contrary to what is revealed by
the very sparse surviving records, literary archeological and
it is entirely fair to stress the many centuries that elapsed between
the events referred to by Steiner and the Spanish Conquest when most
of the information was assembled by Spanish investigators, who
obtained it by questioning the Aztecs of that period.
It was therefore decided to ask Frédéric C. Kozlik,
docteur-ès-lettres, an anthroposophist who is familiar with the
Mexican historical and archeological material, to write an
introduction for these two lectures, mentioning such evidence as he
has been able to assemble that may be considered to support Steiner's
statements, particularly those that appear to be contrary to what is
officially accepted as history, and presenting such arguments as
seemed fitting to him to show why it is quite possible even for an
erudite scholar to accept what Steiner says in preference to going
along with the official history, so often called by Steiner a fable
convenue. It may be noted that in an article written subsequent to
this introduction Dr. Kozlik suggests that two different rites existed
in Mexico, one involving the excision of the heart and the other of
the stomach. His article was published in #11 of the Goetheanum
News, March 11, 1984.
The introduction which follows was translated by me from his rather
dense and packed French that I have in places, with his approval and
collaboration, simplified and even paraphrased to make it, as we hope,
more readily comprehensible by a non-specialist readership. Dr. Kozlik
wishes to make it clear that he is not trying to prove anything that
Dr. Steiner said, but only to offer hypotheses consistent both with
the evidence and with Steiner's revelations. It will be for the
readers themselves to determine how far they are willing to go along
with him on the basis of what he has presented.
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