Introduction
The first specialized course for medical
practitioners given by Rudolf Steiner took place at Easter,
1920. Several medical students also participated: Helene
von Grunelius (18971936), Manfred von Kries (1899-1984),
Henk and Madeleine [‘Maddy’] van Deventer
(1888-1983). At an advanced age, Madeleine van Deventer
wrote an article in which she recorded her memories:
Die anthroposophisch-medizinische Bewegung in den
verschiedenen Etappen ihrer Entwicklung [The
Anthroposophical Medical Movement in its Various Stages of
Development] (Arlesheim, 1982). The following material was
taken from her article and also from Wer war Ita
Wegman [Who was Ita Wegman] Volume I, by J. E.
Zeylmans van Emmichoven, 1990.[1]
From the
beginning, a number of medical students took part in the
medical courses. [...] During the third course which took
place in the autumn of 1922 in Stuttgart, there were about
fifteen students. We often gathered in the cafés of
Stuttgart. Intense conversations took place there. It had
been clear to us for quite some time already, that although
Rudolf Steiner's medical lectures satisfied our need for
knowledge, they did not meet our humanity. We had repeatedly
asked the physicians of the Stuttgart Clinic to request of
Rudolf Steiner that he give other lectures to deal with the
more human-moral aspect. The answer was: “We can't do
that because we haven't yet fully understood the value of
what he has already given us.” Where-upon we answered:
“We can't wait for that. Who knows how long Rudolf
Steiner will still be among us.” We knew, with that
assurance which youth may have, that his time was measured,
and that it would be unpardonable if he did not hear the
questions which would enable him to deal with the more
intimate aspect of medical work. When we realized that the
path via the ‘older physicians’ led nowhere, we
decided to appeal to Rudolf Steiner directly. So after
discussing it amongst ourselves we decided to submit the
following question at the end of the Stuttgart Course, during
the time set aside for questions: “Is it not possible
to show us students a way of becoming anthroposophical
physicians even while we are still students?” The paper
with the question on it was ignored by the discussion leader.
It floated down under the table. Rudolf Steiner asked,
“What is that note?” He was told, “It is a
question from some students.” The only thing left to us
was to turn to Rudolf Steiner directly. After the discussion
we asked for a meeting with him and were asked to come the
next day. Of the fifteen students, only four of us were
present the next day (October 29, 1922) in front of Rudolf
Steiner's apartment [...]
We brought
forth our concern as well as we could. We said quite openly
that we weren't able to do much with the lectures in this
cycle; they seemed to us to be directed entirely toward the
older physicians. We hoped to be able to understand more
later, but for now we were unable to find our way there. We
were searching more for what was human and moral. One of us
mentioned medical school experiences. To get anything
positive out of the negative aspects of university teaching,
a high level of spiritual knowledge was already necessary.
Another voiced the hope that there might be lectures
concerning what was generally human with the subtheme of
‘Medicine’, just as there had recently been the
Pedagogical Youth Course [The Younger Generation, GA
217] which had dealt with the generally human from the
perspective of world history.
Rudolf
Steiner listened intensely and then said: “If you want
to form a humanitarian group of people, effective in the
culture as the pedagogues want to be, that is a contradiction
in terms. You see, for the pedagogues, the pedagogy itself
could be completely absorbed in what is generally human. That
is not possible in your case. You can gather either as a
humanitarian group with general cultural tasks, or as medical
practitioners and physicians. Both together cannot exist in
this form. You may not forget the purely medical within the
purely human. Also, the pedagogues are in quite a different
situation: through their profession they have maintained a
much stronger connection to the living human being, the
child. Through their work they really cannot lose touch with
the human being. But the academic medicine of today is
entirely dead, has no connection at all to the human being
and has no idea what happens when it concerns itself with a
sick person.
In your case
it is actually an entirely different matter. You feel in
yourselves a vast abyss across which you have to find a
bridge. You must find the bridge from the medical-scientific
to that which is moral, loving. You see, if, for example, I
speak of that which I call the warmth organization of the
human being, then for the moment that is an abstraction for
you. But you must find the bridge, so that you experience
this warmth organization in such a way that out of the
experience of this warmth differentiation in the individual
organs, you find your way to what is morally-warm.
We will have to arrive at the point where that which we call
a ‘warm heart’ can be felt into the physical
realm itself. You must find the way out of the
scientific-physiological into the spiritual-moral and out of
the spiritual-moral to the anatomical-physiological. Such a
group of people, that have a ‘warm heart’ and who
know right into the physical sphere how the ego in themselves
works on the warmth organization, such a group will then be
able to affect its surroundings out of much deeper warmth
forces; it will be able, through these forces of love, which
work into the physical realm, to affect the culture. On the
other hand, if such people sink down, in spite of all, to the
level of philistines, of narrow-mindedness, then it will
become clear that sclerotic and other forces will become
effective in a most radically destructive manner, much more
destructive than for others!
Gather up
fifty, sixty, seventy medical students who share your
attitude, and bring them to me and I shall talk to you more
of this. Naturally, they will have to be younger medical
people, for you see, to the older ones, I really cannot speak
of these things. But gather up fifty, sixty, seventy young
medical students for me, they must be medical people, and
young, of course not schematically according to age; for,
indeed, there are old people, too, who are still young. Well,
you understand what I mean, bring them to me and I will give
a course for you to which one might give the theme:
‘The Humanizing of Medicine.’ ” (The
quotations are unfortunately not exact. They were recorded
later from memory.)
With that we
were dismissed and the search for the young medical people
began. [...] All inquiries flowed to Helene von Grunelius who
carefully filtered and appraised them.
1923 saw
several additional conversations with Rudolf Steiner in
connection to our goals. I remember a meeting in the
carpentry shop with Rudolf Steiner, Ita Wegman and the
assistant physicians from the Clinic. Besides myself and my
brother there must have been one or two other students there.
The theme was Rudolf Steiner's indication that we ought to
take a notebook and on the left hand side write what the
professor says, or a good case history, while on the right
hand side we were to transpose the medical symptoms into the
language of the human sheaths. As an example, Rudolf Steiner
gave the following: ‘The patient has edema of the lower
half of the body’, would be transposed into:
‘Weak etheric in the lower half of the body’. It
was advice which we did not follow enough, for we lacked
confidence. [...]
Helene von
Grunelius was, as van Deventer put it, ‘the soul’
of this group. That this was so can also be surmised from her
invitation for medical students to the planned course which
was to take place in Dornach in January, 1924:
Arlesheim, August, 1923
In the
meantime you will have heard more about the incredibly
significant lecture cycle held by Dr. Steiner from June 10
to 17, 1923, in Dornach [The Anthroposophical
Movement, GA 258]. Through these lectures we
anthroposophists should be moved to self-awareness. Why did
we become members of the Anthroposophical Society, and are
we conscious of the responsibility we have thereby taken on
in relation to the spiritual world? If a society like the
Anthroposophical Society is to be truly vital and capable
of fulfilling its task in the world, then it must always
follow a straight path toward its goals. That means that
everything that is wanted and worked for in such a society
must arise from the heart, the very center of Anthroposophy
itself. Dr. Steiner emphasized this most particularly when
he came to speak of the scientific tendencies which have
sprung up within the anthroposophical movement in the last
years. This is where our self-awareness must begin.
For a long
time now, we younger physicians have felt that our medical
movement is proceeding along a strongly intellectual track.
We became particularly conscious of this during the medical
course held in Stuttgart in October, 1922 [in
Fundamentals of Anthroposophical Medicine, GA 314,
Mercury Press]. With the exception of Dr. Steiner's
lectures, these lectures, as regards the direction of their
thoughts, might just as well have been given at any
university. Inwardly, we rebelled against them because we
perceived that the human being was not considered in his
totality; warmth of heart and the pure will forces were
ignored. We, however, really wanted to be able to stand
within medicine as anthroposophists, meaning, as complete
human beings. We perceived that all our medical work would
get the proper impetus only if it arose directly out of the
basic impulses of the anthroposophical movement.
We will
find our way to true healing in the present time only if we
really recall the core of what is anthroposophical. First
of all, we must become conscious of our true humanity, and
as physicians, especially of our will to heal. It is just
Anthroposophy that gives us the possibility of acquiring
those capacities which reveal the relation of every single
thing in the outer world to the human being, so that we are
then able to direct the forces of the outer world to the
sick human being, so that they support his own forces of
healing.
Another, no
less important, task of the physician will be to accompany
the human being as steady advisor, showing him how he can
overcome the tendencies toward illness slumbering in him
because of his onesided soul development, only by unfolding
his entire human nature. For ruling the individual human
being as well as all of contemporary culture are the
destructive forces of the brain and of the intellect,
striving toward decline. But if we want to be effective in
the ascent of development we must develop in ourselves
forces of the future, forces which will make us capable of
true healing. We can only acquire perceptions of the human
being which are necessary for such working by deepening our
studies of the physical and chemical processes on the one
hand, and on the other hand, by attempting to grasp, in a
living way, the soul-spiritual in the other human being.
Only then will we gain a real view of how these realms
relate to each other in the human being. Then we will be
able to see and to show how the soul-spiritual works into
the physical structuring and differentiating, and how this
physical in the human being can and must, in turn, be
transformed into the soul-spiritual through the efficacy of
moral impulses in the warm force of heart.
The task
which we physicians must carry within the anthroposophical
movement is so great, that only if we unite all our forces
can we even attempt it. With the rebuilding of the
Goetheanum, a new medical science must also be rebuilt, a
humanizing of medicine.
If you
would like to work with us in this way, please inform us in
detail soon, so that we may begin our work together as soon
as possible and meet during the fall or the Christmas
holidays.[...]
On November
1, 1923, Helene von Grunelius wrote to her friend Madeleine
van Deventer in Utrecht:
[...II was
in Arlesheim from Friday evening until today (Thursday). I
went there to inquire about the course, since we are now up
to thirty-five people. After talking it over with Dr.
Wegman, Dr. Steiner committed himself for eight days
immediately after the Delegates Conference at Christmas (it
will last from December 24 to January 1) in other words
from January 2 to 9. I think this will be an opportune time
for everyone. I gave him the list. He had no comment (about
the names). Dr. Wegman thought he would consider it more
closely in a few days, and comment on the individuals and
ask questions. So he might cross people off the list if he
has the impression that their attitude is not active enough
and they're not really ready to follow through courageously
on all he intends to bring (at least that's my impression).
He expects total work from us. He said: initiative is
necessary. There probably are individuals who have it, but
it ought to come about that an entire group develops
initiative. And that ought to be possible with a group of
young people. Then he said how much the continuation and
success of our work depends on its being spread in the
outer world. We are now at a stage in the medical movement
when it is mostly enthusiasm that can be effective, for we
haven't much to show yet by way of success in healing.
[...] We
can't say anything to the people yet about the course,
because we have to wait to see whether Dr. Steiner will
have anything to say about the list in the next few days.
In any case, only people who have been invited by us or Dr.
Steiner can take part in the course (we've already invited
Steffen and Wachsmuth). If others ask us, we will say that
we are not dealing with a 'medical course' but a particular
study amongst a small group with Dr. Steiner. I gave my
point of view about the Stuttgart physicians first and also
mentioned how the medical conference in September had
affected us, whereupon Dr. Steiner said: yes, they would
actually be disturbing, if they were present. This judgment
was very clear, as was the whole opinion he had of them,
which wasn't exactly lofty. We agreed that we would not say
anything about this statement, and if the Stuttgart
physicians are insulted or complain, we, ourselves, will
take the responsibility. I will try to prepare them as
carefully as I can for the fact that we will not invite
them to the course. [...]
Grunelius'
unadorned language reflects the mood clearly. How things
stood with those taking initiative for the first ‘Young
Doctors' Course’ is evident. Their resistance to the
older physicians was no doubt intensified by Dr. Steiner's
remarks. On December 5, she wrote another letter to van
Deventer with quotations from a letter of Ita Wegman's which
show her attitude toward these students.
Dear Maddy,
[...] Enclosed is the final (meaning, from our point of
view, just about final) list. [...] Names underlined in red
are those who have definitely committed themselves to the
course. People responded very quickly and enthusiastically.
[...] In the meantime, I did hear from Dr. Wegman. She says
that, as regards the list, it is very difficult for her and
also for Dr. Steiner, since both of them don't know all the
people, to say whom they want and whom they don't want.
Actually the organizers, meaning you and Maddy van
Deventer, should choose the people, invite them and take
responsibility for making sure that the people you have
invited really understand what it's all about. [...]
“What I gather from Dr. Steiner is that the emphasis
of the course will be on the morally-human and the
anthroposophical in medicine, in other words, mainly for
those still studying, and for the young physicians, who,
during their studies and the beginning of their practice
did not find what they sought as satisfaction in their
profession and their studies. So the main focus will be on
this not-being-satisfied. Therefore, you must choose people
who are really asking and seeking in this way. From what I
can tell, not much by way of therapy will be given in this
course.” [...]
By the way,
we did not send a form letter, instead I wrote personally
to everyone. In this case it surely was better and more
effective. [...]
At the
moment I am circulating the December, 1920 lectures [of
December 17, 18 and 19 in GA 202, The Bridge between
Universal Spirituality and Physical Man][2] and Hygiene [Health Care As a Social
Issue, April 7, 1920 in GA 314][3] amongst the people, so that everyone will
have read them by the time the course starts. [...]
Regarding
The Bridge lectures [included in this volume] M. P.
van Deventer has this to say:
In
discussions between Helene von Grunelius and myself, we
realized the significance of the lectures we had both heard
in December 1920, which were later published and became known
by the title The Bridge. The role of the warmth organization
as mediator between soul and body appeared to us to be of
fundamental significance. The Bridge lectures were available
only in the Archives. However, upon being asked, Rudolf
Steiner immediately gave us permission to duplicate and
distribute them to all future participants for common
preparation.
In late
summer Rudolf Steiner asked me about the state of the
preparations. In the course of the conversation he suddenly
became very serious and requested that I tell him exactly
what we really wanted. He demanded utter clarity of
consciousness. I attempted to speak about the path which we
already wanted to embark upon during our studies. I was too
reticent, however, to speak about meditative practices.
Afterwards I had the feeling as if I had failed an exam. I
immediately wrote to Helene von Grunelius and asked her to go
to Dornach as soon as possible and continue the
discussion.
This
continuation took place in late Fall 1923. Helene complained
that it was impossible for her to follow the advice of
keeping a notebook because she wouldn't know whether what she
wrote on the right side was correct. Rudolf Steiner answered:
“That doesn't matter. In the course of time you'll
correct yourself; besides, you can send the notebooks to me.
However, if you would like to gain greater certainty, I can
give you a meditation.” Then he gave her the Warmth
Meditation and told her that she could pass it on to all
future participants. He himself would give it to Dr. Wegman.
He called it a chain meditation (passed on from person to
person by word of mouth), not a circle meditation. And he
desribed it as the path of the physician towards beholding
the Etheric Christ. [...]
In Dec. 1923
we could again report to Rudolf Steiner. By then we had
unfortunately only found 30 participants. “Why
shouldn't I speak to 30 people,” he said. As a date he
gave us the week immediately following the Christmas
Foundation meeting, beginning January 2. We wrote this to all
participants and invited them at the same time to come
already December 24 to participate in the Christmas
Foundation meeting.
In this way,
all were immediately united with the new stream which began
with the new founding of the General Anthroposophical Society
and the founding of the High School for Spiritual Science.
The ‘Course for Young Doctors’ was thus the first
event of the High School for Spiritual Science at the
Goetheanurn in Dornach.
Notes:
1. The English
translation of that book, and thus much of the text in
this introduction, was done by Dorit Winter and has been
published in 1994 by Mercury Press.
2. These three lectures
are included in this book starting on p. 221.
3. Available from
Mercury Press
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