There are many ideas that circulate about the Golden Dawn
which get parroted by people who are not in it, or have not researched it
correctly. Occasionally I get pissed
off with this because it often clouds an understanding of what the GD is all
about.
The Golden Dawn was free-masonic and founded by the SRIA
If anything the Golden Dawn was a reaction against
Freemasonry and SRIA. The GD founders wanted
women members and practical magic, both of these things were unacceptable to
masonry and the SRIA.
Just because its three founders were at various times in
their lives masons or members of SRIA, just does not make it a masonic or SRIA
off-shoot.
Westcott and Woodman were members of the General Medical
council, you can hardly say that the GD was “influenced” by medicine. All of them were at various times members of
Theosophical movement, and yet this thought is surprisingly lacking within the
GD. Mather’s connection with SRIA was peripheral,
and when the GD was formed Westcott was not the Grand Poohbah of that group
either. But even this is a blind.
Westcott and Mathers might have formed the Order of the
Golden Dawn, but they did not write the cipher manuscripts which are the
bedrock of the system. These were written by Kenneth McKenzie who was not a
member of SRIA when they were written and was only a peripheral mason.
Sure, there are similarities between masonry and the Golden
Dawn rituals, but the same could be said for most ritual magic based
systems. Masonry might be an influence
on some of the smaller details of the Golden Dawn ritual, but certainly not in
the overall picture.
Golden Dawn rituals are long and boring
The Golden Dawn initiation rituals are long, but not much
longer than similar rituals performed by other groups.
The Portal, 5=6 and 4=7 is very involved. However, that is because they are actually
doing something. Few people complain
about the lengths of these rituals, because anyone can see that their length is
necessary.
What people tend moan about is the rituals which appear in
Regardie’s Golden Dawn book which really take a very long time and involve long
invocations. Most people don’t realise
that these were penned by Regardie and were not official rituals. It is possible to do a good talismans
ceremony using the same formula as Regardie in a lot less time.
When Regardie showed his rituals to his Golden Dawn teachers
they were not exactly happy with them either.
They felt they were too involved and wordy. He put them in as examples of GD rituals for
his own reasons.
The Golden Dawn is based on a forgery
All magical groups are based on a lie of some sort, and I
cannot find a single one which does not have a skeleton in its cupboard of its
founding myth somewhere.
As it turns out Westcott did not forge the cipher
manuscripts, but he might have arranged to forge the letters from Fr Sprengel
which gave him authority to start the GD. However the teaching and the rituals were
created by him and Mathers inspired by the cyphers which were created by
McKenzie
The Golden Dawn groups are always fighting against each
other
This is a myth created during the 1990s when two businessmen
attempted to set up “GD businesses” based around a Golden Dawn temple
structure. They attracted a large number
of followers and treated other Golden Dawn groups as business rivals. They also
spent a lot of time slagging off each other. There were court cases about the Golden Dawn
name and all sorts of shenanigans which usually could be traced back to these
two people who were largely outside the Golden Dawn community.
As I pointed out here the Golden Dawn community has never actually been fighting amongst itself and
for the most part we get along with each other.
The Golden Dawn does not use modern Inner systems
This myth comes from those who see traditions as Inner
Light, SOL etc as deriving entirely from Dion Fortune. In fact Fortune’s own magical system was a
fusion of Golden Dawn technique with Theosophical philosophy. There
was not a signal magical technique used by Fortune, which was not used by the Golden
Dawn and its off-shoots. This includes mediumship, channelling, inner temples, inner
plane contacts, etc. While they might
not have adopted the Theosophical ideas of Fortune, they were very much behind
her methods.
There has been a tendency within some GD groups to purge
themselves of these techniques. Many of
them are following the advice of Israel Regardie who thought that they were
just messing around with their unconscious.
There was a respectable way of teaching such techniques which has been
largely lost within the modern GD tradition, but these have started to make a
comeback thanks to the work of Pat Zalewski, and the re-connection with Dion
Fortune’s current with the GD one.
The Golden Dawn ended in 1901
The Original Order of the Golden Dawn split into three different forms at the beginning of the 20th century - the Stella Matutina (magical), Holy Order (mystical) and AO (quasi magical-masonic) . Of these forms the last, Whare Ra (SM), shut down in 1978. Immediately a new form of the GD expressed itself and the Modern GD began. In many ways the modern GD has been spending the last few decades rediscovering what the original orders already knew and intergrating it into modern practices. Either way the GD did not die ever.
Only the Original Golden Dawn was pure and the real thing, modern groups know much
less.
The Golden Dawn itself only latest a few years and it was in
a constant state of evolution. If you
were to find original Golden Dawn documents and build an order on them you
would be lacking in most of the magical techniques and teachings which were
evolved later. Many modern golden dawn
groups were formed from reading these later works from around the 1920s and
1930s. Additional material has come from
the New Zealand temple of Whare Ra which only closed in the 1970s. Now new
names are bringing in interesting developments in the form of knowledge that
was unavailable to Mathers and Westcott. Egyptian and Hebrew material which had
not been seen has been integrated along with a playing down of Christian magic
(in some groups).
Groups are able to slot this teaching into the filing
cabinet of training and structure set up by the original Golden Dawn. There are Golden Dawn based groups which
know a lot more than the original order and are infinitely better than version
1.0.
The rituals that Regardie wrote are a complete c***up. They remind me of Wiccan rituals written by people who insist that everything must be brought in, but do not understand any individual part well enough to make it actually work. While I have used Regardie samples, their use was accompanied by a red pen (I trimmed a lot off of them to bring them down to the point that ADHD [well, rumored ADHD] could cope with them).
ReplyDeleteThe work of Dion Fortune has been underestimated by the GD. It is very advanced, and I still can tune into the enormeous amount of power coming from her legacy. But in order to appreciate Dion Fortunes work one has to be willing to step out of the scientific research mind, and be willing to use trance, hypnosis and other techniques to get access to the subconscious mind. This is specialist work, and not something to dabble with.
ReplyDeleteInteresting post Nick. Personally I gained a lot from Dion Fortunes work early on in my studies and it never ceases to amaze me when infighting occurs in GD based groups. It always looks like a school playground fallout. :)
ReplyDeleteI dont think the GD leaders fight nearly as much as people think they do. Having watched the GD wars for the last 25 years I can say that it is actually one or two people doing the most shouting... occasionally people who are attacked by these crazies respond. while the majority of GD leaders (who often disagree with with each other) actually get on (sometimes even working together see http://nick-farrell.blogspot.com/2013/06/flying-rolls-book-reveals-golden-dawn.html ).
ReplyDeleteIf you compare this with other traditions i have been involved with (such as those who evolved out of the UK Inner Light tradition) the conflict is there, but everything is managed to be kept secret. This is partly because those group leaders have been launching magical attacks against one another and want that work to be kept under wraps. In other words it is just as childish just less public.
I put of a few of the stories in my book about Magic Groups Gathering the Magic http://www.amazon.com/Gathering-Magic-Creating-Century-Esoteric/dp/1905713096 .
I am fairly sure that there is not a single group out their which has not had some form of political inflighting in its family tree and the GD is no exception.
Nice apologetic essay in defense of GD traditions. However i still think like Regardie that one should keep off such Dion Fortune techniques as, channelling, hypnosis etc. I can remember our GD neophyte oath warning us not to put our mind in a state of passivity by either drugs, hypnosis or mesmerism.
ReplyDelete