VI
Stuttgart,
February 27, 1923
The background mood
out of which I shall be addressing you today is not the same as that
that prevailed on earlier occasions when I was privileged to speak
here. Since New Year's Eve 1922, that mood is conditioned by the
dreadful picture of the burning Goetheanum. The pain and suffering
that picture inevitably causes anyone who loved the Goetheanum
because of its connection with anthroposophy are such that no words
can possibly describe them.
There might seem to
be some justification for feeling that a movement as intent on
spiritual things as ours is has no real reason to grieve over the
loss of a material expression of its being. But that does not apply
in the case of the Goetheanum we have lost. It was not an arbitrary
building for our work. During its erection, a process that went on
for almost ten years, I often had occasion to explain that a
structure that might suitably have housed some other spiritual or
similar movement would not have been appropriate for our
Anthroposophical Movement. For, as I have often said, we are not just
a spiritual movement, which, as its membership increased, found
itself with a number of people in its ranks who wanted to build it a
home in some conventional style or other. The point here was that
anthroposophy is built on a spiritual foundation that is not
one-sidedly religious or scientific or artistic. It is an
all-embracing movement, intent on demonstrating every aspect of
mankind's great ideals: the moral-religious, the artistic, and the
scientific ideals. There could, therefore, be no question of erecting
any arbitrary type of building for the Anthroposophical Movement. Its
design had to come from the same source from which anthroposophical
ideas receive their shaping as an expression of the spiritual
perspective gained on the anthroposophical path of knowledge, and it
had to be carried out in artistic harmony with that outlook. For
almost ten years many friends worked side by side with me trying to
incorporate and demonstrate in every single line, in every
architectural and sculptural form, every choice of color, what was
flowing from the wellsprings of anthroposophical investigation,
anthroposophical life, anthroposophical intention. That was all
incorporated there, and the building was intimately associated with
the artistic and scientific striving in the Movement. Friends who
attended eurythmy performances in the Goetheanum will surely have
felt how, for example, the architectural forms and decoration of the
auditorium harmonized with and responded to eurythmic movement. It
was even possible to have the feeling that the movements of the
performers on the stage there were born of those architectural and
plastic forms. If one stood on the podium speaking from the heart in
a truly anthroposophical spirit, every line and form responded and
chimed in with what one was saying. That was our goal there. It was,
of course, a first attempt, but such was our goal, and it could be
sensed. That is why those who worked on the Goetheanum at Dornach
have the sensation that the very feelings they put into their efforts
went up in the flames of New Year's Eve. It was just this intimate
connection of anthroposophical feeling and will with the Goetheanum
forms — forms that were artistically shaped by and for
spiritual contemplation and that can never find a substitute in any
thought forms or words — that makes our grief at the loss we
have suffered so immeasurably deep.
All this ought to
become part of the memories of those who grew to love the Goetheanum
and to feel the intimate connection with it just described. We must,
in a sense, build a monument to it in our hearts in memory form. Even
though the very intimacy of our connection with it is the reason why
we are now shelterless, we must seek the more intensively for a
shelter in our hearts that will replace the one we have lost, We must
try with every means at our disposal to rebuild in our hearts, for
all eternity, this building that has been lost as an external source
of artistic stimulation. But the terrible flame into which all the
lesser flames of New Year's Eve were drawn is there in the background
of every effort yet to be made in the field of anthroposophy. Though
living, spiritual anthroposophy came to no harm in the fire, a great
deal of work that we had been trying to accomplish for anthroposophy
in the present day world was brought to naught.
I do believe, though,
that if what we experienced on that occasion becomes properly rooted
in our members' hearts, the grief and pain we suffered can be turned
into strength to support us in everything we are called upon to
accomplish for anthroposophy in the near future. It is often the case
in life that when a group of people find themselves faced by a common
disaster, they are united by it in a way that gives them strength and
energy to go on together in effective common action. Experience, not
grey theories or abstract thoughts, should be the source on which we
draw for the strength needed for our anthroposophical work.
My dear friends, I
want to add these comments to those I will be making in connection
with the theme I have had to choose for this conference, to a
description of the conditions that must prevail in anthroposophical
community building. I would like to include them not only because
they are graven on my heart, but because they point to a fact on
which we would do well to focus our attention in these coming days. A
great deal of sacrifice and devotion went into the work on the
Goetheanum. The impulses from which that sacrifice and devotion
sprang have always been there to count on in the two decades of our
work, wherever anthroposophy really lived. They were born of hearts
filled with enthusiasm for anthroposophy, and the Goetheanum was the
product of deeds done by anthroposophically-minded individuals.
Though, for a variety of reasons, we are thinking — are having
to think — today about how to regenerate the Society, we should
not forget on the other hand that the Society has been in existence
for two decades; that a considerable number of people have undergone
experiences of destiny in their common work and effort; that the
Society is not something that can be founded all over again. For
history, real history, history that has been lived and experienced,
cannot be erased. We cannot begin something now that began twenty
years ago. We must guard against any such misconceptions as these as
we proceed with our current deliberations. Anyone who has found his
way into the Society over the years certainly sees plenty to find
fault with in it, and is justified in doing so. Many a true and
weighty word has already been uttered here on that score. But we must
still take into account the fact that the Society has been effective
and done things. There are certainly people enough in the Society who
can express the weight of their grief and sorrow in the words,
“We have suffered a common loss in our beloved
Goetheanum.”
It makes a difference
whether a person joined the Society in 1917 or later, and whether
one's relation to it is such that these grief-stricken words issue
from long and deep experience in it. That should influence our
deliberations. It will do much to tone down the feelings that some of
our friends had good reason to express here. I heard someone say (and
I certainly felt the justice of the remark), “After what I have
listened to here I will go home unable to continue speaking of
anthroposophy as I used to when I was still full of illusions.”
Part of what that sentence conveys will disappear if one considers
how much those individuals who have been anthroposophists for two
decades have gone through together, and how much they have had to
suffer with each other recently, because that suffering is the
product of a long life in the Anthroposophical Society. The load of
worry we are presently carrying cannot wipe out all that human
experience; it remains with us. It would still be there even if
events here were to take a much worse turn than they have taken thus
far. Are we to forget the depths for the surface? That must not be
allowed to happen in a spiritual movement born of the depths of human
hearts and souls. What has come into being as the Anthroposophical
Movement cannot rightly be called sunless. Even the sun sometimes
suffers eclipse.
Of course, this
should not prevent our dealing with the situation confronting this
assemblage in a way that enables us to provide anthroposophy once
again with a proper vehicle in the form of a real Anthroposophical
Society. But our success in that depends entirely on creating the
right atmosphere.
It will, of course,
be impossible for me to cover the whole situation today. But in the
two lectures I am to give I shall try to touch on as much of what
needs to be said as I possibly can. Some things will have to be left
out. But I do want to stress two matters in particular. Those are the
pressing need for community building in the Society and the
symptomatic event of the entrance into the Anthroposophical Movement
of the exceedingly gratifying youth movement. But in anthroposophical
matters we have to develop a rather different outlook than prevails
elsewhere. We would not have taken our stand on ground that means so
much to many people if we could not see things in a different light
than that in which the modern world habitually views them.
Community building!
It is particularly noteworthy that the community building ideal
should be making its appearance in our day. It is the product of a
deep, elemental feeling found in many human souls today, the product
of a sense of definite relationship between person and person that
includes an impulse to joint activity.
A while ago, a number
of young theologians came to me. They were preparing to enter the
ministry. They were intent above all else on a renewing of religion,
on a renewal permeated through and through by the true Christ force,
such as to be able to take hold of many people of the period in the
way they long to be taken hold of but cannot be by the traditional
confessions as they are today. I had to bring up something that
seemed to me to have vital import for the development of such a
movement. I said that a suitable method of community building must be
found. What I had in mind was to develop a religious and pastoral
element capable of really uniting people. I told these friends who
had come to me that religious community could not be effectively
built with abstract words, the usual kind of sermon, and the meagre
remnants of a divine service, which are all that most contemporary
churches have to offer. The prevailing intellectualistic trend that
is increasingly taking over the religious field has had the effect of
saturating a great many present day sermons with a rationalistic,
intellectualistic element. This does not give people anything that
could unite them. On the contrary, it divides and isolates them, and
the social community is reduced to atoms. This must be easy to see
for anyone who realizes that the single individual can develop
rationalistic and intellectualistic values all by himself. Simply
attaining a certain cultural level enables an individual to acquire
increasingly perfect intellectual equipment without depending on
anyone else. One can think alone and develop logic alone; in fact,
one can do it all the better for being by oneself. When one engages
in purely logical thinking, one feels a need to withdraw from the
world to the greatest possible extent, to withdraw from people. But
the tendency to want to get off by oneself is not the only one man
has. My effort today to throw light on what it is in the heart's
depths that searches for community is called for by the fact that we
are living in a time when human nature must go on to develop the
consciousness soul, must become ever more conscious.
Becoming more
conscious is not the same thing as becoming more intellectualistic.
It means outgrowing a merely instinctual way of experiencing. But it
is just in presenting anthroposophy that every attempt should be made
to portray what has thus been raised to a clear, conscious level in
all its elemental aliveness, to offer it in so living a form that it
seems like people's own naive experiencing and feeling. We must make
sure that we do this.
Now there is one kind
of community in human life that everyone over the entire globe is
aware of, and it shows that community is something built into
humankind. It is a type of community to which a lot of attention is
being given in modern cultural and even political and economic life,
and this in an often harmful way. But there is a lesson of sorts to
be learned from it, though a primitive one.
In a child's early
years it is introduced into a human community that is absolutely
real, concrete and human, a community without which one could not
exist. I am referring to the community of human speech. Speech is the
form of community that we might say nature presents to our
contemplation. Speech — and especially our mother tongue
— is built into our whole being at a time when the child's
etheric body is not yet born, and it is our first experience of the
community building element. We can lay it to the rationalism of our
age that though people nowadays have some feeling for languages and
nationality and conceive folk groups in relation to the language they
speak, they do so from the political-agitational standpoint, without
paying any heed to deep and intimate underlying soul configurations,
to the tremendous aspects of destiny and karma attached to a language
and to the spirit behind it, all of which are the real and intrinsic
reason why human beings cry out for community. What would become of
us if we passed one another by without hearing resounding in the
other's words the same life of soul that we ourselves put into those
same words when we use them? If everybody were to practice just a
little bit of self-knowledge, we would be able to form an adequate
picture, which I cannot take the time to develop now, of all we owe
to language as the foundation of a first, primitive building of
community.
But there is a
community building element still deeper than language, though we
encounter it more rarely. On a certain level, human language is
indeed something that unites people in community life, but it does
not penetrate to the deepest levels of soul life. At certain moments
of our life on earth we can become aware of another community
building element that transcends that of language. A person feels it
when his destiny brings him together again with others whom he knew
as children. Let us take an ideal example. Someone finds himself in
later life — in his forties or fifties, say — in the
company of several companions of his youth or childhood whom he has
not seen for decades but with whom he spent the period between his
tenth and twentieth years. Let us assume that good relationships
prevailed among them, fruitful, loving relationships. Now imagine
what it means for these individuals to share the experience of having
their souls stirred by common memories of their youthful life
together. Memories lie deeper than experiences on the language level.
Souls sound more intimately in unison when they are linked by the
pure soul language of memories, even though the community experience
they thus share may be quite brief. As everyone knows from such
experiences, it is certainly not just the single memories that are
summoned up to reverberate in the souls of those present that stir
such intimate soul-depths in them; it is something quite else. It is
not the concrete content of the particular memories recalled. An
absolutely indefinite yet at the same time very definite communal
experiencing is going on in these human souls. A resurrection is
taking place, with the countless details of what these companions
experienced together now melting into a single totality, and what
each contributes as he enters into the others' recollections with
them is the element that awakens the capacity to experience that
totality.
That is how it is in
life on earth. As a result of pursuing this fact of soul life into
the spiritual realm, I had to tell the theological friends who had
come to me for the purpose described that if true community were to
come of the work of religious renewal, there would have to be a new
form of worship, a new cultus, suited to the age we live in. Shared
experience of the cultus is something that quite of its own nature
calls forth the community building element in human souls. The
Movement for Religious Renewal understood this and accepted the
cultus. I believe that Dr. Rittelmeyer spoke weighty words when he
said from this platform that such a development of community could
conceivably become one of the greatest threats to the
Anthroposophical Society that the Movement for Religious Renewal
could present. For the cultus contains a tremendously significant
community building element. It unites human beings with one another.
What is it in this cultus that unites them, that can make a
commonality out of separate individuals atomized by intellectuality
and logic, and that most certainly will create commonality? For that
is surely what Dr. Rittelmeyer had in mind, that this is the means of
building community. Since community, however, is also a goal of the
Anthroposophical Society, the Society will have to find its own way
of building it if the Movement for Religious Renewal is not to pose a
threat to it from that angle.
Now what is the
secret of the community building element in the cultus developed for
the Movement for Religious Renewal with that specific end in
view?
Everything that comes
to expression in the various forms of worship, either as ceremonial
acts or words, is a reflection, a picturing of real experiences, not
earth experiences, of course, but real experiences in the world
through which man makes his way before he is born; in other words,
experiences of the second half of his path between death and rebirth.
That is the part of the cosmos he passes through from the midnight
hour of life after death to the moment when he descends again into
life on earth. In the realm thus traversed are found the beings, the
scenes, the events faithfully reflected in all true forms of worship.
What is it, then, that a person is experiencing in the cultus in
common with others whom some karma or other has brought together with
him? For karma is so intricately woven that we may ascribe all
encounters with our fellow men to its agency. He is experiencing
cosmic memories of pre-earthly existence with them. They come to the
surface in the soul's subconscious depths. Before we descended to
earth, we and these others lived through a cosmic lifetime in a world
that reappears before us in the cultus. That is a tremendous tie. It
does more than just convey pictures; it carries super-sensible forces
into the sense world. But the forces it conveys are forces that
concern man intimately; they are bound up with the most intimate
background experiences of the human soul. The cultus derives its
binding power from the fact that it conveys spiritual forces from the
spiritual world to earth and presents supernatural realities to the
contemplation of human beings living on the earth. There is no such
reality for man to contemplate in rationalistic talks that have the
effect of making him forget the spiritual world, forget it even in
subconscious soul depths. In the cultus he has it right there before
him in a living, power-pervaded picture that is more than a mere
symbol. Nor is this picture a dead image; it carries real power,
because it places before man scenes that were part of his spiritual
environment before he was incarnated in an earthly body. The
community creating power of the cultus derives from the fact that it
is a shared, comprehensive memory of spiritual experiences.
The Anthroposophical
Society also needs just such a force to foster community within it.
But the ground this springs from need not be the same for the
Anthroposophical Movement as for the Movement for Religious Renewal.
The one by no means excludes the other, however; the two can co-exist
in fullest harmony provided the relationship between them is rightly
felt.
But that can be the
case only if we acquire some understanding for a further community
building element that can be introduced into human life. Memory,
transposed into the spiritual realm, rays out to us from the form the
cultus takes. The cultus speaks to greater depths than those of
intellect: it speaks to man's inwardness. For at bottom the soul
really does understand the speech of the spirit, even though that
speech may not be fully consciously perceived in present day earth
life.
Now, in order to
grasp the further element that must come to play a corresponding role
in the Anthroposophical Society, you will not only have to
contemplate the secrets of language and memory in their relationship
to community building; you will also have to consider another aspect
of human life. Let us study the condition in which we find a dreaming
person and compare it with that of someone going about his daytime
activities wide awake.
The dream world may
indeed be beautiful, sublime, rich in pictures and in significance.
Nevertheless, it isolates people here on earth. A dreaming person is
alone with his dreams. He lies there asleep and dreaming, perhaps in
the midst of others awake or asleep, the content of whose inner
worlds remains completely unrelated to what is going on in his dream
consciousness. A person is isolated in his dream world, and even more
so in the world of sleep. But the moment we awake we begin to take
some part in communal life. The space we and those around us occupy
is the same space; the feeling and impressions they have of it are
the same we have. We wake at hand of our immediate surroundings to
the same inner life another wakes to. In waking out of the isolation
of our dreams we awaken, up to a certain point at least, into the
community of our fellowmen, simply as a result of the way we are
related to the world around us. We cease being completely to
ourselves, shut in and encapsulated, as we were when absorbed in our
dream world, though our dreams may have been beautiful, sublime,
significant. But how do we awaken? We awaken through the impact of
the outer world, through its light and tones and warmth. We awaken in
response to all the various impressions that the sense world makes on
us. But we also wake up in ordinary everyday life in the encounter
with the external aspects of other human beings, with their natural
aspects. We wake up to everyday life in the encounter with the
natural world. It wakes us out of our isolation and introduces us
into a community of sorts. We have not yet wakened up as human beings
by meeting our fellow men and by what goes on in their innermost
beings. That is the secret of everyday life. We wake up in response
to light and tone and perhaps also to the words someone speaks in the
exercise of his natural endowment, words spoken from within outward.
In ordinary everyday life we do not wake up in the encounter with
what is going on in the depths of his soul or spirit, we wake up in
the encounter with his natural aspects.
The latter
constitutes the third awakening, or at least a third condition of
soul life. We awaken from the first into the second through nature's
impact. We awaken from the second into the third at the call of the
soul-spiritual element in our fellowmen. But we must first learn to
hear that call. Just as a person wakes up through the natural world
surrounding him in the right way in everyday life, so do we wake up
rightly at a higher level in the encounter with the soul-spirit of
our fellowmen as we sensed light and tone on awakening to everyday
life. We can see the most beautiful pictures and have the most
sublime experiences in our isolated dream consciousness, but we will
scarcely be able to read, for example, unless highly abnormal
conditions prevail. We are not in a relationship to the outer world
that would make such things possible. We are also unable to
understand the spiritual world, no matter how many beautiful ideas we
may have garnered from anthroposophy or how much we may have grasped
theoretically about such matters as etheric and astral bodies. We
begin to develop an understanding for the spiritual world only when
we wake up in the encounter with the soul-spiritual element in our
fellowmen. That is where the first true understanding of
anthroposophy sets in. Yes, it is indeed necessary to base our
understanding of anthroposophy on what can be called a waking up in
the encounter with the soul and spirit of another person.
The strength needed
to achieve this awakening can be created by implanting spiritual
idealism in human communities. We talk a lot about idealism these
days, but it has become a threadbare thing in the culture and
civilization of the present. For true idealism exists only where man
reverses the direction he takes when, in presenting the cultus, he
brings the spiritual world down to earth; when, in other words, he
consciously makes himself capable of lifting to the
super-sensible-spiritual, the ideal level, what he has seen and
learned and understood on the earthly level. We bring the
supernatural down into a power-permeated picture when we celebrate
the ritual of the cultus. We lift ourselves and our soul life to the
super-sensible level when our experiences in the physical world are
experienced so spiritually and idealistically that we come to feel we
have experienced them in the super-sensible world itself and that what
we perceive here in the sense world suddenly comes all alive on being
lifted to the ideal level. It comes alive when properly permeated
with our wills and feeling. When we ray will through our inner being
and infuse it with enthusiasm, we carry our idealized sense
experience in a direction exactly opposite to that taken when we
embody the super-sensible in the ritual of the cultus. Whether the
anthroposophical community be large or small, we can achieve what I
am characterizing when, infusing living power into the spiritual
ideas we form, we put ourselves in a position actually to experience
something of that awakening element, something that doesn't stop at
idealizing our sense experience and leaving it at the stage of an
abstract thought, but that endows the ideal with a higher life as we
live into it and make it the counterpart of the cultus by raising it
from the physical to the super-sensible level. We can achieve it in
our life of feeling by taking care to imbue everything we do for
anthroposophy with thoroughly spiritualized feeling. We do this when,
for instance, we feel that the very doorway we reverently enter on
our way to an anthroposophical assemblage is consecrated by the
common anthroposophical purpose being served in the room it leads to,
no matter how mundane the setting. We must be able to feel that
everybody joining with us in a communal reception of anthroposophy
has the same attitude. It is not enough to have a deep abstract
conviction of this; it must be inwardly experienced, so that we do
not just sit in a room where anthroposophy is being pursued, a group
of so and so many individuals taking in what is being read or spoken
and having our own thoughts about it. A real spiritual being must be
present in a room where anthroposophy is being carried on, and this
as a direct result of the way anthroposophical ideas are being
absorbed. Divine powers are present in sense perceptible form in the
cultus celebrated on the physical plane. Our hearts and souls and
attitudes must learn similarly to invoke the presence of a real
spiritual being in a room where anthroposophy is being talked of. We
must so attune our speaking, our feeling, our thinking, our impulses
of will to a spiritual purpose, avoiding the pitfall of the abstract,
that we can feel a real spiritual being hovering there above us,
looking on and listening. We should divine a super-sensible presence,
invoked by our pursuit of anthroposophy. Then each single
anthroposophical activity can begin to be a realizing of the
super-sensible.
If you study
primitive communities, you will find another communal element in
addition to language. Language has its seat in the upper part of man.
But taking the whole man into consideration, you will find that
common blood is what links members of primitive communities. Blood
ties make for community. But what lives there in the blood is the
folk soul or folk spirit, and this is not present in the same way
among people who have developed freedom. A common spiritual element
once entered groups with common blood ties, working from below
upward. Wherever common blood flows in the veins of a number of
people, there we can discern the presence of a group soul.
A real community
spirit is similarly attracted by our common experiencing when we
study anthroposophy together, though it is obviously not a group soul
active in the bloodstream. If we are able to sense this, we can form
true communities.
We must make
anthroposophy real by learning to be aware in anthroposophical
community life that where people join in anthroposophical tasks
together, there they experience their first awakening in the
encounter with the soul-spiritual element in their fellows. Human
beings wake up in the mutual encounter with other human beings. As
each one has new experiences between his encounters with these
others, and has grown a little, these awakenings take place in an
ever new way as people go on meeting. The awakenings undergo a
burgeoning development.
When you have
discovered the possibility that human souls wake up in the encounter
with human souls, and human spirits wake up in the encounter with
human spirits, and go to anthroposophical groups with a living
awareness that only now have you come awake and only now begin to
grow together into an understanding of anthroposophy, and on the
basis of that understanding take anthroposophical ideas into an
awakened soul rather than into an everyday soul asleep to higher
things, then the true spirit of community descends upon the place
where you are working. Is truth involved when we talk of the
super-sensible world, yet are unable to rise to awareness of a
spiritual presence and of this reversed cultus? We are firmly
grounded in our understanding of things of the spirit only when we do
not rest content with abstract spiritual concepts and a capacity to
express them theoretically, but instead grow into a sure belief that
higher beings are present with us in a community of spirit when we
engage in spiritual study. No external measures can bring about
anthroposophical community building. You have to call it forth from
the profoundest depths of human consciousness.
I have described part
of the path that leads to that goal, and tomorrow we will follow it
further. Descriptions of this kind are intended to show that the most
important thing for any further development of the Anthroposophical
Society is that it become absorbed in a true grasp of anthroposophy.
If we have that grasp, it leads not only to spiritual ideas but to
community with the spirit, and an awareness of community with the
spiritual world is itself a community building force. Karmically
preordained communities will then spring up as an outcome of true
anthroposophical awareness. No external measures for achieving that
can be indicated, and a person who offers any such is a
charlatan.
Now these matters
have been understood to some degree during the two decades of
anthroposophy's development, and quite a good many members have also
understood them in a spiritual sense. I will perhaps return to this
subject and discuss it more fully tomorrow when I continue with these
reflections and go on to point out a further goal. For now, I would
like to add just a few words on matters that may have been occupying
you after hearing my description of the spiritual bases of
anthroposophical community life. On the one hand, things in the
Anthroposophical Movement are really such as to necessitate my
describing them as I have done. The Anthroposophical Society may
present this or that appearance in a given phase. But anthroposophy
is independent of anthroposophical societies and can be found
independently of them. It can be found in a special way when one
human being learns to wake up in the encounter with another and out
of such awakening the forming of communities occurs. For one
undergoes ever fresh awakenings through those with whom one finds
oneself foregathered, and that is what holds such groups together.
Inner, spiritual realities are at work here.
These matters must be
increasingly understood in the Anthroposophical Society. Every
consideration brought up in connection with the Society's welfare
ought really to be pervaded with forces intimately related to
anthroposophy itself.
It was deeply
satisfying to me, after spending weeks attending larger and smaller
conclaves where preparations were being made for these delegates'
meetings, and listening there to debates reminiscent of the ordinary,
everyday kind of rationalistic considerations in which parliaments
and clubs engage, to go to an assemblage of young people, a meeting
of young academicians. They, too, were pondering what ought to be
done. For a while the talk was about external matters. But as time
passed, it changed, all unaware, into a truly anthroposophical
discussion. Matters that first appeared in an everyday light took on
aspects that made anything but an anthroposophical treatment
impossible.
It would be ideal if,
instead of dragging in anthroposophical theories in an artificial,
sentimental, nebulous way, as has so often happened, a down-to-earth
course were to be pursued. Taking life's ordinary concerns as a
starting point, the discussion should lead to the conclusion that
unless anthroposophy were called upon, no one would know any longer
how to go about studying such subjects as physics and chemistry. This
spirit could serve to guide us.
But no solution will
be found by tomorrow evening if things go on as they have up to this
point; they can only lead to a state of tremendous, tragic chaos. The
most important thing is to avoid any sentimental dragging in of all
sorts of matters, and instead fill our hearts with anthroposophical
impulses, conceived in full clarity.
As things are now, I
see two parties, two separate groups of human beings sitting in this
room, neither of which in the least understands the other, neither of
which is able to take the first small step toward mutual
understanding. Why is this the case? It is because what one side is
saying issues inevitably from the experience of two whole decades, as
I explained briefly earlier today, and the other side takes no
interest whatsoever in that experience. I say this not in criticism,
but in a spirit of concerned pleading. There have been occasions in
the past when well-meaning people, in their own way genuinely
enthusiastic about anthroposophy, have simply cut across our
deliberations with such comments as, “What possible interest
can these reports have for us when they keep on being served up at a
moment when the important thing is that people unacquainted with the
great dangers the Society faces want to learn about them?”
Here, on the one side, we see an elemental, natural interest in the
life of the Anthroposophical Society, a life that may have certain
familial characteristics, but that has the good aspects of the
familial as well. On the other side we find no interest in that life,
and instead just a general conception of an Anthroposophical
Society.
As things stand
today, both points of view are justified, so justified that unless we
can quickly develop a wholly different form of discussion, the best
thing we could do (I am just expressing my opinion, for the decision
will have to be made by the Society) would be to leave the old
Society as it is and found a union of free anthroposophical
communities for those who want something entirely different. Then
each party could carry on in the way that suits it. We would have the
old Society on the one side, and on the other a loose but closely
related confederation of free communities. The two societies could
work out ways of living together. It would be better to solve the
problem this way than to continue on in the hopeless situation that
would present itself tomorrow evening if the discussion were to go on
as it has thus far. So I ask you to put on the agenda the further
question whether you would not prefer to avoid the false situation
that would develop from keeping the two groups welded together,
regardless of whether things stay as they have been or undergo some
modification. If the situation remains as it is, with each side
failing to understand the other, let us go ahead and set up the two
suggested groups within the one movement. I say this with an anxious,
a very anxious heart; for surely no one will deny that I understand
what it is to feel concern for our anthroposophical undertaking and
know what it means to love it. But it is better to have two devoted
sisters, each going her own way and united only by a common ideal,
than to settle for something that would again lead in short order to
a state of chaos.
My dear friends, you
simply must not let yourselves overlook the fact that it is the
various single enterprises that are causing our troubles. That should
have been worked out in clearest detail. I am certainly not stating
that the last Central Executive Committee accomplished a great deal
more, materially, than the one before it, not any more, that is, than
I accomplished when I was similarly active at the center in my role
as General Secretary. But that is not the question. The real question
is: What should have happened, anthroposophically speaking, after all
the various enterprises were started here in Stuttgart? This will
have to be answered. We cannot at this point dissolve what has been
brought into being. Once these enterprises exist, we must find out
how to keep them flourishing. But if we fail, as we have in the past
four years, to learn how to go about this in an anthroposophical
spirit, if we introduce enterprises as foreign bodies into the
Anthroposophical Movement, as we have done, these institutions that
have been in existence since 1919 will ruin the whole
Anthroposophical Movement. They will ruin any Central Executive
Committee, no matter what name it is given.
We should therefore
keep our discussions objective and impersonal, and try to reach some
clarity on what form the Society ought to take, now that it embraces
all these institutions, and among them one as wonderful as the
Waldorf School. Not a single word has yet been spoken on this
subject, for those who are most familiar with what is going on in
Stuttgart have thus far kept fairly silent. I would particularly like
to hear what the two members of the Central Executive Committee would
say to this.
[The members of the Central Executive Committee were
Ernst Uehli, Emil Leinhas, Dr. Carl Unger.]
(I am not including Herr Leinhas, the third member, as
he was the only one who helped me in a problematical situation and
who continues to help. Indeed, for his sake I hardly like to see him
go on devoting himself to the Central Executive Committee, ideally
fitted for it though he is.) It is not a question of these two
gentlemen defending themselves, but simply of saying what they think
about the future shaping of the Anthroposophical Society, which is
capable of amalgamating the enterprises that have been in existence
since 1919; otherwise, it would have been an irresponsible deed to
launch them. We cannot leave it at that, now that they exist.
These are very, very
serious questions. We have to deal with them and discuss them
objectively and impersonally. I meant what I said objectively, not as
an attack on any member or members of the Central Executive
Committee. Nobody is being disparaged, but in my opinion these
problems, thus again sharply enunciated by me, had to be brought up.
If the two proposed societies are to be established, the group that
would be a continuation of the old Anthroposophical Society could
make itself responsible for the projects the Society has undertaken,
and the other group, that feels no interest in them, could pursue a
more narrowly anthroposophical path.
This is what I wanted
to put before you in a brief sketch. Tomorrow at twelve I shall speak
in detail about matters of business.
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