Part Two: The Procedings of
the Conference
Meeting
of the Vorstand of the General Anthroposophical Society
and of the General Secretaries of the National Societies
together with their Secretaries and the Swiss
Branches
29 DECEMBER, 8.30 IN THE
MORNING IN THE GLASS HOUSE
DR STEINER:
My dear friends!
I would now
like to open the meeting of the General Secretaries and the
representatives of the Swiss branches. The best thing to do
will be to include in the agenda our discussion about
rearranging the affairs of the Swiss Anthroposophical
Society. Wishes concerning this were expressed during the
last meeting of delegates
[ Note 58 ]
and in the course of our
further discussions about the General Anthroposophical
Society it will be a good thing to take these various wishes
into account in the hope that a satisfactory arrangement can
be found concerning the relationship of the branch at the
Goetheanum and indeed of the General Anthroposophical Society
as a whole. Would you now please speak to this point on the
agenda. Suggestions at the other meeting were voiced very
energetically indeed.
Dr
Hugentobler speaks on this point and asks questions.
DR STEINER: With regard to these matters
we must take into account that basically they can all be
traced back to a question of tact. It all started at a
meeting of delegates of the Anthroposophical Society in
Switzerland in the summer,
[ Note 59 ]
when the Swiss members felt
themselves to be drowned out by members who happened to be in
Switzerland at the time. They felt they were being pushed
aside. Everything they felt thus comes down to a question of
tact. The Swiss members felt that the others talked much too
much, that they themselves had not been able to get a word in
and that people from elsewhere had given them all kinds of
advice which failed to take account of the situation in
Switzerland. The whole matter obviously stems from that
meeting. At the last meeting of delegates the matter was
cogently discussed, but on the other hand a great deal was
brought forward which people found impossible to understand.
As I was in the chair at that meeting of delegates I know how
certain things said met with absolutely no understanding, so
it would be a good thing if the wishes expressed then could
be brought forward again in a comprehensible form. This is
what I hope from today's meeting. Who would like to
speak?
Herr
Geering-Christ explains his point of view.
DR STEINER: That is quite right. The
matter is not at all complicated if you look at the facts,
and Herr Geering has put it very clearly. If the matter is
properly faced it will find a perfectly simple solution. I
should also like to add that the whole matter has been put on
a new footing by the foundation of the General
Anthroposophical Society of which Herr Steffen, being the one
who will represent the Swiss element within the General
Anthroposophical Society, is the Vice-president. The whole
matter has been placed on a new footing as a result of the
institution of this Vorstand. Looking at the structure as a
whole it becomes obvious that part of the trouble at the
meeting of delegates in the summer, which made for such bad
feeling,
[ Note 60 ]
stemmed from the fact that at that time the German council saw
itself as the ‘Vorstand’ for the worldwide Society
and behaved accordingly. This was what hurt the feelings of
the Swiss delegates, was it not? So there are several
contributory factors, which Herr Geering suggested in one way
or another at the end of his speech. There is an
administrative matter for the Swiss Anthroposophical Society
which will naturally be settled at a meeting of Swiss
members. So on the one hand there are the affairs of the
Swiss Society and on the other there is a question of tact. I
do hope that these matters of tact will be settled in the
near future.
The General
Anthroposophical Society, within whose framework our present
discussions lie, can of course only discuss the arrangement
of the relationship between the branch at the Goetheanum and
the Swiss Anthroposophical Society. This is what we ought to
be discussing today. Everything else should be left to a
meeting which the Anthroposophical Society in Switzerland
will hold. This question of bringing order into the
relationship between the branch at the Goetheanum and the
Anthroposophical Society in Switzerland is something that can
concern us very much. At the last meeting of delegates on 8
December 1923, when the wishes on this matter were expressed,
I believed that a solution could be found. You will agree
that for external and internal reasons the branch at the
Goetheanum cannot be seen by the outside world as something
separate from the Swiss Society. But I thought that the
solution could lie in arranging matters internally in such a
way that the branch would have neither a seat nor a vote, or
at least not a vote, at meetings of delegates of the
Anthroposophical Society in Switzerland.
Today,
however, I believe that the view expressed by Herr Geering is
very much justified, namely that a change in this direction
is not necessary. The moment our Swiss friends can come to a
general conviction that they could get on perfectly well with
the branch at the Goetheanum when other things are not
allowed to interfere, at the moment when our Swiss friends
can come to that conviction, there will, I believe, be no
need to change anything. I would like you to have a specific
discussion on whether there are any wishes that lie in this
direction. Once this question has been fully discussed it
will then be a matter for the Anthroposophical Society in
Switzerland, who will elect their General Secretary or
whatever kind of officer they may want to have. Once this has
been discussed we shall actually have completed our
consideration of the Swiss affair. I think the difficulty is
partly due to the Swiss council having not been particularly
strongly consolidated so far. The chairmen of the various
branches had simply been nominated as the council. Obviously
a council like this is a rather elastic entity and nobody
really knows what it is, since the council does not function
properly. If a properly functioning council can come into
being in the Swiss Society, the whole matter will sort itself
out. I do not believe that it will be possible for those not
living in Dornach to form a majority in Dornach. So I would
ask you to seize on a formulation which will bring about a
change in the relationship of the branch at the Goetheanum
with the Anthroposophical Society in Switzerland.
Herr
Schweigler has something to say.
DR STEINER: Does anyone else wish to speak to this
point?
HERR GEERING-CHRIST: Could we now proceed
to a vote among the Swiss delegates?
DR STEINER: I was just about to ask the
Swiss friends whether they agree with the aims set out by Dr
Hugentobler, Herr Geering and Herr Schweigler. Would those
Swiss friends who do, please raise their hands. (They
do.)
This is a
clear expression of the wish of our Swiss friends to keep the
branch at the Goetheanum within the bosom of the Swiss
Anthroposophical Society. All the other questions are matters
for the Swiss Anthroposophical Society and do not belong in
this meeting. So we have dealt with the matter that needed
attention within the framework of the General
Anthroposophical Society.
Does anyone
else wish to speak about these questions while they can be
discussed at this smaller meeting?
Fräulein
Dr Vreede, as the secretary of the branch at the Goetheanum,
states that of the 150 members of the branch 70 are in fact
Swiss members.
Dr Grosheintz
wishes to speak.
DR STEINER: That is quite correct. In a
Society such as ours it will never be possible to avoid the
appearance of questions in every field which have to be
settled by tact alone. You will remember that in
The Philosophy of Freedom
tact plays a special part among the moral principles. However
much may be regulated by means of statutes, I am actually
convinced that pedantic statutes can be the source of much
that has to be settled by tact. So I do agree that if things
are carried out in the manner suggested by Dr Grosheintz just
now, we shall manage things alright by means of tact. Much
will depend on this.
Frau Weiss
asks a question.
DR STEINER: I do not think that Dr
Grosheintz meant this in a statutory way. He was speaking of
something that has to be applied in each case as it arises if
it is felt to be necessary. And this is exactly what I mean
by a ‘question of tact’. You have to have at your
fingertips a sense for what might be necessary. I am
altogether of the opinion that in the management of a society
not much can be achieved by a pedantic head. It may have its
place elsewhere, certainly, but in the management of a
society such as the one to be founded here a pedantic head is
quite harmful. What we need are sensitive fingertips. The
more we can manage the Society through our sensitive
fingertips the better will things be.
Mr Monges
asks whether the relationship of Honolulu to the General
Anthroposophical Society is to be similar to that of the
branch at the Goetheanum.
DR STEINER: Honolulu belongs to the
General Anthroposophical Society. It has nothing to do with
all these questions. Everything we have been discussing up to
now has concerned the relationship between the branch at the
Goetheanum and the Anthroposophical Society in Switzerland.
The branch in Honolulu has nothing to do with the branch at
the Goetheanum nor with the Anthroposophical Society in
Switzerland.
Does anyone
else wish to speak about anything, for instance matters which
could do with a preliminary airing prior to the general
discussion with all the members? Somebody might wish to bring
up a point for preliminary discussion in this smaller
circle.
HERR LEINHAS: There was the matter of the
contribution to be paid to the General Anthroposophical
Society.
DR STEINER: Perhaps I could ask Dr Guenther Wachsmuth to
report on this.
Dr Wachsmuth
reports.
DR STEINER: It will not help us much, my
dear friends, if we discuss whether every country should
participate in paying membership contributions. It will only
help us if they do all pay. There is very little point in
knowing now whether they will pay or not. The only fruitful
thing to do is to take the general picture as the basis and
to endeavour from this general picture to state a figure
which promises to be sufficient for the General
Anthroposophical Society to achieve what it has to achieve. I
would therefore be in favour of stating a standard figure and
then leaving open, of course, what the groups, the national
groups, can agree to in practice. Of course the figure can be
exceeded by an unlimited amount, approaching, though never
achieving, the lavish scale on which Carnegie
[ Note 61 ]
acted. And less can also be
contributed, for instance by the countries with very weak
currencies, down to what in mathematics is termed the
vanishing point. In practice we shall see what can be done. I
do not know how closely it will be possible to approach the
scale of Carnegie, but I am quite certain that the vanishing
point, as they say in mathematics, will have a definite part
to play. Therefore, having regard to all that we can know
today, I do believe that a standard figure should be fixed
and that deviations from this can be arranged in individual
discussions. So I think it would be right to lay down that
each group should pay 12 Schillings for each of its members,
that is 1 Schilling per month. I can assure you that even if
this Schilling is really contributed we shall have the
greatest difficulty in carrying out the things we intend to
do here. This must not be allowed to weigh on people. For
those who cannot pay, the amount will have to be reduced, and
we shall have to reduce our plans accordingly. But I do
believe that we could agree on a standard contribution, from
the groups, of 12 Schillings per member. Any other
arrangement would lead to the Anthroposophical Society being
able neither to live nor die, so that once again for
financial reasons nothing worthwhile would be achieved. We
shall be criticized and people will not understand that we
cannot achieve anything if our hands are tied.
So this is
not intended to be an absolute demand. It is a general
standard. If it turns out to be impossible, it nevertheless
expresses what we would need; and we shall then simply have
to reduce it. This is perfectly possible. But I do think that
it is necessary to make a statement of where one stands.
Mr Collison
asks about a joining fee.
DR STEINER: The joining fee would not be
included in this. It is something that goes into the general
fund. But the calculation can be made on the basis of the
subsequent contributions. I am simply reckoning with a
monthly amount for every member of 1 Schilling, or annually
12 Schillings. This is what I am reckoning with. Perhaps I
may be allowed to disclose that the Vorstand did consider
this but only spoke in pictures regarding how these matters
might be settled. My suggestion is what has come to me
personally as a result of those pictures.
Mademoiselle
Sauerwein explains her point of view.
BARONESS DE RENZIS: That would amount to
50 Lire. It would be utterly impossible for Italy!
Mademoiselle
Sauerwein replies.
DR STEINER: Of course this may be so. It
would simply mean that the standard contribution for
individual groups would have to be set at a sufficiently low
level. But I do not see that this means we cannot set the
standard at the level that seems to us necessary after making
some very exact calculations. What will happen in reality?
Try to imagine it! I can say that under the conditions
pertaining at present there will definitely be payments from
not more than at most three to four thousand members, or
rather payments will not be made for more than three to four
thousand members. If you picture this to yourselves you will
also have a picture of the amount we shall have at our
disposal here each year. So you see the only sensible thing
to do is to set the level of membership contributions like a
budget. To set the level without regard to the future is
pointless. If we want to make calculations we have to make
them with figures. We have to be able to count on a certain
income. If this income fails to appear we are then obliged to
replace the shortfall from other sources in another way,
perhaps from voluntary contributions and so on. Simply to fix
an amount which bears no relationship to what we need here
seems to me impossible. If we are to fix an amount —
otherwise we might as well go straight to voluntary
contributions — then it must be on the basis of what we
need here. No other basis can be fruitful.
Fräulein
Schwarz asks some questions.
DR STEINER: The
Verein des Goetheanum
can only receive contributions towards the rebuilding of the
Goetheanum. And the rebuilding of the Goetheanum has nothing
to do with the administration of the Anthroposophical
Society. These are two quite separate things. I presume you
are referring to the membership fee for the
Verein des Goetheanum?
The relationship of the Anthroposophical Society to the Verein
des Goetheanum is something that can still be discussed
during this conference. With regard to the membership of the
Verein I think some kind of method will have to be found if
those gathered here in any way wish it. You have to consider
that with regard to the rebuilding of the Goetheanum the
membership fees for the Verein are so minimal as to be almost
negligible. The membership contributions are almost
negligible! And in future they will be negligible; in the
past they were at least used for the most part for the
payment of interest on loans. But for the building of the
Goetheanum in future it will not be possible to get involved
with loans. A sinking fund (à fonds perdu) will be the
only option. So then the membership contributions to the
Verein des Goetheanum
will have to be put to a use other
than that of paying interest. We shall be speaking about the
building of the Goetheanum. In future perhaps it will be
possible to bring about an agreement with the Ceneral
Anthroposophical Society. This is a question that would go
too far for the moment, since we have not yet got beyond the
matter of the membership contribution.
Does anyone
wish to speak to the question of the membership
contribution?
Mr Kaufmann
explains that a little while ago Dr Wachsmuth had mentioned
an amount of 7 Schillings for the contribution and that the
English delegates had come with the mandate to agree to 7
Schillings.
DR STEINER: If the method I have suggested
is chosen, then it will encompass every other method. But I
merely maintain that it is impossible to mention a sum from
the start in the knowledge that it will be no good for
anything. Whether or not something is obligatory is not so
much the point. The point is that the amount can be counted
on under all circumstances. In the picture that has emerged
we have certainly counted — or I have certainly counted
— on the countries with strong currencies treating the
amount more or less as though it were obligatory. To go below
the nominated sum would require individual negotiations. But
if we want to go below it now, it would have been better if
we had started by negotiating the amount in the first place.
We could have started the discussion by considering the
amount — I know this would have gone against our moral
sense — and once the discussion had revealed that the
General Anthroposophical Society could not be maintained we
could have decided not to found it in the first place. There
is no other way but to think realistically. We cannot found a
Society which is incable of surviving. But now I have said
that it will be possible to give less than the stated amount
and then the centre here will have the task of raising the
difference. This statement makes the payment of the
membership contribution no hardship at all, for it is simply
a statement of what is actually needed. I should be sorry if
the matter of the membership contribution were to create a
mood of dissatisfaction. But it is not necessary for this to
happen, my dear friends. However, it is on the other hand
necessary that the general enthusiasm for our cause which
rightly exists, and which has been expressed over the last
few days, should not come to grief over the bagatelle of the
membership contribution. That would be
‘ahrimanic’. My dear friends, people are so quick
to say this in other settings!
Dr
Büchenbacher recounts that the Free Anthroposophical
Society in Stuttgart made it possible for a colleague to
exist by paying him 2, 5 or 10 percent of the weekly
payments. He says that though conditions in Germany are very
difficult, nevertheless if everybody pulls his or her weight
things can be managed.
DR STEINER: I should merely like to point
out that discussion leading to such matters cannot really
belong in our present agenda. I am convinced that if we were
to listen to all the pros and cons of paying or not paying
the contribution we should of course hear as many justified
reasons as there are people in this room, and later, in the
meeting with all the members, that would mean eight hundred
justified reasons. Surely we cannot make this the content of
our discussion. If we are to continue, we must discuss how
else we are to manage. We must discuss from the point of view
of the General Anthroposophical Society how else we are to
manage. I can see no possibility of managing in any other
way. It seems likely that we shall not get what we need, but
I see no way of managing with less. However, I do see a
possibility that the special wishes might be taken into
account. Assume that not a single group can pay the required
amount. So instead of 36,000 Schillings we should receive
5,000 Schillings, and then we shall have to see how to
replace the 31,000 Schillings with something else. Above all
it will be an uncomplicated and obvious situation. But it
will be different from situations elsewhere; we cannot
proceed by fixing budgets. Imagine a national budget being
fixed if every citizen is allowed to pay whatever he likes!
You cannot fix a national budget in this way! Or can you,
Duke of Cesaro? Can you ask each citizen what he wants to pay
per year or do you have to fix a sum and tell him what he
must pay?
THE DUKE OF CESARO: You can, but you can't
force him!
DR STEINER: This is just it; we shall not be able to
enforce anything! And this can be the very reason why it
might be much more easy to agree than if it were a matter of
being forced. We have taken into account the matter of not
being forced.
Mr Collison
asks whether this might not be a bit of an obstacle as
regards acquiring new members.
DR STEINER: Suppose a group was in a position in which it
could only expect a yearly sum of 4 Schillings or 4 Francs
from each member. If this were the case it would of course
not be able to pay 12 Schillings or 12 Francs to us. Perhaps
it could pay only 2 Schillings or even nothing. The question
of how to deal with new members is a matter that is left
entirely to the groups, who will then say to us: We cannot
pay more than so much for each member. Under these
circumstances it will always be possible to manage.
Herr
Ingerö declares on behalf of Norway that about 3,000
Schillings per year could be paid.
Dr Zeylmans
van Emmichoven declares that taking Holland as a whole, the
sum will be met.
DR STEINER: This is how the matter was
always handled during the time when we were still the German
Section of the Theosophical Society. Individual members were
not forced to pay, but the groups were able to pay the full
sum to the German Section by making up any shortfall out of
larger payments by some members. In those days, though, the
contributions were far smaller. This is no longer possible
today. I have often described to you the conditions under
which it was possible to manage with the old, modest
contributions. I have described to you how
Luzifer-Gnosis
was produced and sent out in the early days.
[ Note 62 ]
These are conditions which
cannot be brought back today. So all in all, so far as I can
see, there can be no other picture than that of needing 12
Schillings in the future for each member of the General
Anthroposophical Society. Is there any member of the Vorstand
who thinks differently?
FRAU DR STEINER: No indeed. While I was
closing down the publishing company and our flat in Berlin
recently I was so interested to find the endless envelopes
again, all addressed by hand by Dr Steiner, while each entry
in the post book had been checked by me. We saw to every
little detail ourselves and then carried the whole mailing to
the post office in a laundry basket. These memories came back
to me in Berlin. Nobody likes doing things like this these
days. But it was most interesting to look back and experience
once again how every detail was attended to by Dr Steiner and
myself in those days.
DR STEINER: These are things which simply
come about and there is no point in arguing about them. You
didn't argue about them; you didn't even talk about them.
These things are simply there, to be done out of the
necessity of the moment. But once something comes under
discussion you simply have to state how much you need. It is
only possible to discuss something if you have a proper
basis. Does anyone else wish to speak about this?
FRAU PROFESSOR BÜRGI: I wish to
commit myself to paying the contribution on behalf of the
Bern branch.
HERR HAHL: I wish to agree to what has
been said.
DR STEINER: My dear friends, we must adjourn the meeting
now so that we can go to the lecture. I shall announce when
and where we shall continue.
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