Address
at a Monthly Assembly, June 10, 1920
[Rudolf Steiner had suggested that the students
gather at the school for a brief celebration instead of the monthly
day off from school that was the custom in
Baden-Württemberg.
The mood of the course of the year was to form the background for this
event and the classes were to show each other what they had been working
on in recitation, drama, music, and eurythmy, or in foreign languages,
gymnastics, and so on. Rudolf Steiner also gave a talk at these
assemblies whenever he could be in Stuttgart.]
Dear children!
Last time I was able to be here, I told you how gladI am
when our dear friend Herr Molt comes to pick me up
in Dornach, where the school
for big people, for grown-ups, is being built.
[The wooden building of the Goetheanum, the Free School of
Spiritual Science, was under construction from 1913–1921.]
Then I can be with you again for a little while and see what you are doing.
And why am I so glad when Herr Molt
comes to bring me here? Because it makes me think,
“Now I am going to the school that was founded for our dear
children” — that is, for you who are here because you
long to become capable people who are ready for life.
Because I have only been here for a
short time, I have not been able to see much yet — just the
tiny little folks in the first grade, and the eighth grade —
but what I did see gave me great pleasure. I saw how patiently and
lovingly the first grade teacher had helped the children make some
progress, and I was privileged to spend a very nice lesson with the
eighth grade students. They were hearing about what human history
tells us of how human beings on earth are involved in an evolution,
an ongoing progress, that is driven by the spirit: Something that
lives in human history gives us the desire to work on into the
future, the spirit in which this was being conveyed to the souls of
our dear young friends in the eighth grade was very beautiful. I am
looking forward to seeing all the other classes, too. I am always
pleased when I see how what our friend Herr Molt
planted here is beginning to develop.
You entered this school when the
fall was approaching. At that time we tried to think about what
we would experience here and what we wanted to foster — love
for each other, love for our teachers, love for God, who speaks to us
from everything. And now, while you have been enjoying what your
teachers presented to you each morning, you have also been
experiencing what comes up out of the earth, what the spring draws
out of it. You have seen the trees growing green. And now we remember
what we hear when we go out into the woods. We hear the
songbirds, and we are glad.
But today we have
also heard something else, something for which I am especially
thankful. We have heard you, under the direction of your teachers,
express something that comes from inside of you. We can hear
the birds singing out in the woods, and we can also hear what you
have expressed to us, but there is a difference between them.
We are glad when
we hear the little birds singing. But we know that something else is
present when we hear what you perform for us. This is something that
we call the human soul. It is your human souls that speak to us and
sing to us. This is what human beings make out of what speaks to them
out there in nature. In the woods, we hear the birds, but when you
sing many other things that are heard come toward us out from the
human soul.
But there are also other things out
there in nature. You see how the plants grow and the trees turn
green. All of this is called forth by the light. Light floods the
entire universe. Light and warmth are what call everything up out of
the earth, all those things that delight your eyes and hearts. What
sounds in your ears, brought to you through the patience and
persistence of your teachers, what travels through the world as light
and then enters your eyes — we hear all of this resounding from
you, not only when you sing and dance, but also when you tell what
you have learned to calculate and what you have learned about
everything that is human. In your souls, this turns to light. And
just think what the plants would be without the sun. They would not
be able to come out of the ground. They would always remain roots
that would not be able to develop flowers, and it would be dark. This
is what it would be like for you if you went through the world
without ever finding a school where you could learn something. You
would be like a plant that never finds the sun. The soul finds
its sun in people from whom it can learn something.
This is why we are so glad that a school like this has been founded as
a result of Herr Molt's
insight, and why you are so glad to be able to be in a school that
you love. Seek the light of the soul, just as the plants seek the
light and warmth of the sun!
I do not want to always say the same
things to you, because I also do not want to always hear the same
things when I come, but there is one thing that I want to hear from
you again and again. You must answer me; this is what I am most
curious about. And so I ask you, children, do you still love your
teachers? [“Yes!” shout the children.]
That is what I want to hear from the majority of you. This is what
you are meant to take up into your souls. Love for your teachers will
support you as you go out into life. Again and again, each time I
come here, I would like to experience that you have made progress in
learning, but I would also like you to show me that you have continued
to love your teachers. You can be sure that in the great building that
is being built for grown-ups in Dornach, where
big people are meant to learn something, we all think about
the Waldorf School here, and we think of it with love and joy. There
are a lot of people who are thinking of the Waldorf School with love
today, and they are thinking, “How good and capable these
people will grow up to be, since as children they were filled with
love for their teachers.”
Oh, there is something I must tell you —
Frau Steiner sends her greetings, since she
cannot be here today.
There is a spirit
that is always meant to prevail here, a spirit that your teachers
bring to this place. From the spirit of the cosmos, they learn to
bring this spirit here to you; they take in what St. Paul said with
all of their souls. The spirit of Christ prevails throughout our
school; whether we are doing arithmetic, reading, writing, or whatever
we do, we do it with the attitude that the Christ awakened in us:
“I am with you always, even unto the
end of the world.”
[Matthew 28:20.]
This is the spirit
that is meant to prevail here, and it will do so through what your
teachers bring to you with love, patience and endurance. May it
prevail through what lives in your souls!
Be with this
spirit when you are in your class, and think of it when you leave. Be
glad in your souls that you are coming back to the Waldorf School
where the sun is lit for you, the sun that people need for life.
If there is someone among you who
does not pay attention, there should be one of you who can go to that
person and lovingly say, “Hey, hard work and paying attention
get us up the mountain of life. Upward, friend! You should always be
going up the mountain of life.”
[In the original German, this is a reference to a song
sung by the students at the beginning of the assembly.]
This is how each of you should help the friend who falters a little
— all of you for each one, all for one, one for all, lovingly.
Love needs to be present among you, for each other and for your teachers.
This is something we want to cultivate as part of the good spirit of the
Waldorf School.
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