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Spiritism

  What is Spiritism?

  • It is the set of laws and principles, as revealed by Superior Spirits, contained in the works of Allan Kardec, which constitute the Spiritist Codification: The Spirits' Book, The Mediums' Book, The Gospel According to Spiritism, Heaven and Hell and Genesis.

  • "Spiritism is a science which deals with the nature, origin and destiny of Spirits, as well as their relationship with the corporeal world."  Allan Kardec (Qu'est-ce que le Spiritisme?-Préambule)

  • "Spiritism realises what Jesus said of the promised Consoler, by bringing knowledge of those things which allow Man to know where he came from, where he is going and why he is on earth; so attracting mankind towards the true principles of God's law and offering consolation through faith and hope." Allan Kardec (The Gospel According to Spiritism - Chap.6 - Item 4)

 

  In the 19th century, the phenomenon of turning tables shook Europe. Elegant salons would hold soirees and tables became the subject of curiosity and extensive reports because they moved, rose in the air and even responded to questions by tapping the floor (typtology). The phenomenon caught the attention of a serious researcher, a famous follower of Johann Pestalozzi named Hippolyte Leon Denizard Rivail.

Rivail was a French teacher, fluent in several languages, author of French school textbooks and a man of rigorous scientific research method. His scientific mind was initially skeptical and did not immediately accept the phenomena of the turning tables, but rather studied them carefully, and noted that an intelligent force was behind the movements. He investigated the nature of this force, which identified itself as the "spirits of men" who had died.

 

  Rivail asked the Spirits hundreds of questions, analyzed the responses rationally, compared them to each other and set them in order, only accepting and disclosing what was rational and reasonable. This led to the publication of The Spirits' Book under the pseudonym of Allan Kardec. The teachings he published were of a scientific, religious and philosophical nature. This alliance of science with religion is well expressed in one of the maxims of Kardec, in the book "Genesis":

"Spiritism, marching hand in hand with progress, will never be overthrown because if new discoveries should demonstrate that it is in error upon a point, it would modify itself in regard to it. If a new truth is revealed, it accepts it. "

Allan Kardec

 

Spiritism around the World

 

  Modern day Spiritualist phenomena first appeared in Hydesville New York, through the sisters Kate and Margaret Fox, who received communication on the 31st March 1848, from the Spirit Charles B . Rosma. Thereafter spirits began to produce physical phenomena in Paris, France seeking to draw attention to God, to the existence of spirits and the spirit world.

 

  This is when Hippolyte-Léon Denizard Rivail appeared, an educator interested in studying these phenomena using scientific methodology. Through this investigation he began to gather a great volume of information and became the Codifier of Spiritist teachings. Under the pseudonym Allan Kardec he published, "The Spirits' Book" on April 18, 1857, the work that officially launched Spiritism to the world in its triple aspect of science-philosophy-religion. This was then followed by The Mediums' Book, The Gospel According to Spiritism, Heaven and Hell and Genesis, together known as the Spiritist Codification. Hipplolyte-Léon Denizard Rivail passed away on March 31, 1869, but Allan Kardec remains present and alive in the minds of many people.

 

  From France, Spiritist teachings transferred to Brazil, where it quickly spread and developed, primarily due to the work of the medium Francisco Candido Xavier, who continued the work of Allan Kardec, on a large-scale. He enriched Spiritist literature by writing over 400 books channeled from the spiritual dimension on a wide range of areas ranging from physics, poetry and prose to detailed historic novels, despite having only a primary school education. Expansion continues today through the work of the ISC (International Spiritist Council), FEB (Brazilian Spiritist Federation), and mainly due to the great work of the Brazilian speaker and medium, Divaldo Franco.

 

  Today, there are Spiritist groups on all five continents of the planet. It is most widespread in Brazil and is also prominent in Europe, where there are many Spiritist centres in Portugal, Spain, France, Germany and the UK. Spiritist centres are also to be found in the Americas, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Who was ​Allan Kardec?

  Hippolyte Léon Dénizard Rivail, better known by his nom de plume of ALLAN KARDEC, was born in Lyons, on the 3rd of October 1804, into an old family of Bourg-en-Bresse, that had been distinguished in the magistracy and at the bar for many generations. His father, like his grandfather, was a barrister of good standing and high character; his mother, remarkably beautiful, accomplished, elegant, and amiable, was the object, on his part, of a deep affection, unchanged throughout his life.

  Educated at the Institution of Pestalozzi, at Yverdun (Canton de Vaud), he acquired at an early age the habit of investigation and the freedom of thought of which his later life was destined to furnish so striking an example. Endowed by nature with a passion for teaching, he devoted himself, from the age of fourteen, to aiding the studies of those of his school friends who were less advanced than himself; he was so fond of botany, that he often spent an entire day among the mountains, walking twenty or thirty miles, with a bag on his back, in search of specimens for his herbarium. Born in a Catholic country, but educated in a Protestant one, he began, while still a mere boy, to meditate on how to bring about a unity of belief among the various Christian sects - a project of religious reform which he worked on in silence for many years, but necessarily without success, as the elements of the desired solution were not in his possession at that time.

 

  Having finished his studies at Yverdun, he returned to Lyons at the age of 24, with the intention of devoting himself to law; but various acts of religious intolerance to which he unexpectedly found himself subjected, led him to renounce the idea of studying for the bar, and to take up his abode in Paris, where he occupied himself for some time in translating Telemachus and other standard French books for youth into German. Having at length determined upon his career, he purchased, in 1828, a large and flourishing educational establishment for boys, and devoted himself to the work of teaching, for which, by his tastes and acquirements, he was peculiarly suited. In 1830 he hired, at his own expense, a large hall in the Rue de Sèvres, and gave free lectures on Chemistry, Physics, Comparative Anatomy, and Astronomy. These lectures, given over a period of ten years, were highly successful, attended by over five hundred people of every rank of society, many of whom subsequently became eminent in the scientific world.

 

  Always desirous to render instruction attractive as well as profitable, he invented an ingenious method of computation, and constructed a mnemotechnic table of French history, to help students remember the major events and discoveries of each reign.

The numerous educational works published by him include, A Plan for the’ Improvement of Public Instruction. submitted by him in 1828 to the French Legislative Chamber, who, although they extolled it did not act upon it; A Course of Practical and Theoretical Arithmetic, on the Pestalozzian System, for the use of Teachers and Mothers (1829); A Classical Grammar of the French Language (1831); A Manual for the use of Candidates for Examination in Public Schools; with Explanatory Solutions of various Problems of Arithmetic and Geometry (1848); Normal Dictations for the Examinations of the Hotel de Ville* and the Sorbonne, with Special Dictations on Orthographic Difficulties (1849). These works, highly esteemed at the time of their publication, are still in use in many French schools; and their author was bringing out new editions of some of them at the time of his death.

 

  He was a member of several learned societies; among others, the Royal Society of Arras, which, in 1831, awarded him the Prix d'Honneur for a remarkable essay on the question, “What is the System of Study most in Harmony with the Needs of the Epoch?” He was for several years Secretary to the Phrenological Society of Paris, and took an active part in the labours of the Society of Magnetism, giving much time to the practical investigation of somnambulism, trance, clairvoyance, and the various other phenomena connected with mesmeric action. This brief outline of his labours will suffice to show his mental activity, the variety of his knowledge, the eminently practical turn of his mind, and his constant endeavour to be useful to his fellow-men.

 

  When, in about 1850, the phenomenon of “table-turning” was exciting the attention of Europe and ushering in the other phenomena since known as “spiritist”, he quickly divined the real nature of those phenomena, as evidence of the existence of an order of relationships hitherto suspected rather than known - viz., those which unite the visible and invisible worlds. Foreseeing the vast importance, to science and to religion, of such an extension of the field of human observation, he entered at once upon a careful investigation of the new phenomena. A friend of his had two daughters who had become what are now called “mediums.” They were gay, lively, amiable girls, fond of society, dancing, and amusement, and habitually received, when “sitting” by themselves or with their young companions, “communications” in harmony with their worldly and somewhat frivolous disposition. But, to the surprise of all concerned, it was found that, whenever he was present, the messages transmitted through these young ladies were of a very grave and serious character; and on his inquiring of the invisible intelligences as to the cause of this change, he was told that “spirits of a much higher order than those who habitually communicated through the two young mediums came expressly for him, and would continue to do so, in order to enable him to fulfil an important religious mission.”

 

  Much astonished at so unlooked-for an announcement, he at once proceeded to test its truthfulness by drawing up a series of progressive questions in relation to the various problems of human life and the universe in which we find ourselves, and submitted them to his unseen interlocutors, receiving their answers to the same through the instrumentality of the two young mediums, who willingly consented to devote a couple of evenings every week to this purpose, and who thus obtained, through table-rapping and planchette-writing, the replies which have become the basis of the spiritist theory, and which they were as little capable of appreciating as of inventing.

 

  When these conversations had been going on for nearly two years, he one day remarked to his wife, in reference to the unfolding of these views, which she had followed with intelligent sympathy: “It is a most curious thing! My conversations with the invisible intelligences have completely revolutionised my ideas and convictions. The instructions thus transmitted constitute an entirely new theory of human life, duty, and destiny, that appears to me to be perfectly rational and coherent, admirably lucid and consoling, and intensely interesting. I have a great mind to publish these conversations in a book; for it seems to me that what interests me so deeply might very likely prove interesting to others.” His wife warmly approving the idea, he next submitted it to his unseen interlocutors, who replied in the usual way, that it was they who had suggested it to his mind, that their communications had been made to him, not for himself alone, but for the express purpose of being given to the world as he proposed to do, and that the time had now come for putting this plan into execution. “To the book in which you will embody our instructions,” continued the communicating intelligences, “you will give, as being our work rather than yours, the title of Le Livre des Esprits (THE SPIRITS’ BOOK); and you will publish it, not under your own name, but under the pseudonym of ALLAN KARDEC.¹ Keep your own name of Rivail for your own books already published; but take and keep the name we have now given you for the book you are about to publish by our order, and, in general, for all the work that you will have to do in the fulfilment of the mission which, as we have already told you, has been confided to you by Providence, and which will gradually open before you as you proceed in it under our guidance.”

 

  The book thus produced and published sold with great rapidity, making converts not in France only, but all over the Continent, and rendering the name of ALLAN KARDEC “a household word” with the readers who knew him only in connection with it; so that he was thenceforth called only by that name, except by his old personal friends, with whom both he and his wife always retained their family-name. Soon after its publication, he founded The Parisian Society of Psychological Studies, of which he was President until his death, and which met every Friday evening at his house, for the purpose of obtaining from spirits, through writing mediums, instructions in elucidation of truth and duty.

He also founded and edited until he died a monthly magazine, entitled La Revue Spirite, Journal ofPsychological Studies, devoted to the advocacy of the views set forth in The Spirit’s Book.

 

  Similar associations were speedily formed all over the world. Many of these published periodicals of more or less importance in support of the new teaching; and all of them transmitted to the Parisian Society the most remarkable of the spirit-communications received by them. An enormous mass of spirit-teaching, unique both in quantity and in the variety of the sources from which it was obtained, thus found its way into the hands of ALLAN KARDEC by whom it was studied, collated, co-ordinated, with unwearied zeal and devotion, during a period of fifteen years. From the materials thus furnished to him from every quarter of the globe he enlarged and completed THE SPIRITS’ BOOK, under the direction of the spirits by whom it was originally dictated; the “Revised Edition” of which work, brought out by him in 1857 (vide “Preface to the Revised Edition,” p. 19) has become the recognised textbook of the school of Spiritualist Philosophy so intimately associated with his name. From the same materials he subsequently compiled four other works, viz., The Mediums’ Book (a practical treatise on Medianimity and Evocations), 1861; The Gospel According to Spiritism (an exposition of morality from the spiritist point of view), 1864; Heaven and Hell (a vindication of the justice of the divine government of the human race), 1865; and Genesis (showing the concordance of the spiritist theory with the discoveries of modern science and with the general tenor of the Mosaic record as explained by spirits), 1867. He also published two short treatises, entitled What is Spiritism? and Spiritism Reduced to its Simplest Expression.

 

  It is to be remarked, in connection with the works just enumerated, that ALLAN KARDEC was not a “medium,” and was consequently obliged to avail himself of the medianimity of others in obtaining the spirit-communications from which they were evolved. The theory of life and duty, so immediately connected with his name and labours that it is often erroneously supposed to have been the product of his single mind or of the spirits in immediate connection with him, is therefore far less the expression of a personal or individual opinion than are any other of the spiritualistic theories hitherto propounded; for the basis of religious philosophy laid down in his works was not, in any way, the production of his own intelligence, but was as new to him as to any of his readers, having been progressively educed by him from the concurrent statements of a legion of spirits, through many thousands of mediums, unknown to each other, belonging to different countries, and to every variety of social position.

 

  In person, ALLAN KARDEC was somewhat under middle height. Strongly built, with a large, round, massive head, well-marked features, and clear grey eyes, he looked more like a German than a Frenchman. Energetic and persevering, but of a temperament that was calm, cautious, and unimaginative almost to coldness, incredulous by nature and by education, a close, logical reasoner, and eminently practical in thought and deed, he was equally free from mysticism and from enthusiasm. Devoid of ambition, indifferent to luxury and display, the modest income he had acquired from teaching and from the sale of his educational works sufficed for the simple style of living he had adopted, and allowed him to devote the whole of the profits arising from the sale of his spiritist books and from the Revue Spirite to the propagation of the movement initiated by him. His excellent wife relieved him of all domestic and worldly cares, and thus enabled him to consecrate himself entirely to the work to which he believed himself to have been called, and which he prosecuted with unswerving devotion, to the exclusion of all extraneous occupations, interests, and companionships, from the time when he first entered upon it until he died. He made no visits beyond a small circle of intimate friends, and very rarely absented himself from Paris, passing his winters in the heart of the town, in the rooms where he published his Revue, and his summers at the Villa Ségur, a little semi-rural retreat which he had built and planted, as the home of his old age and that of his wife, in the suburban region behind the Champ de Mars, now crossed in every direction by broad avenues and being rapidly built over, but which at that time was a sort of waste land that might still pass for “the country.”

 

  Grave, slow of speech, unassuming in manner, yet not without a certain quiet dignity resulting from the earnestness and single-mindedness which were the distinguishing traits of his character, neither courting nor avoiding discussion, but never volunteering any remark upon the subject to which he had devoted his life, he received with affability the innumerable visitors from every part of the world who came to converse with him in regard to the views of which he was the recognised exponent, answering questions and objections, explaining difficulties, and giving information to all serious inquirers, with whom he talked with freedom and animation, his face occasionally lighting up with a genial and pleasant smile, though such was his habitual sobriety of demeanour that he was never known to laugh.

 

  Among the thousands by whom he was thus visited were many of high rank in the social, literary, artistic, and scientific worlds. The Emperor Napoleon III, the fact of whose interest in spiritist-phenomena was no mystery, sent for him several times, and held long conversations with him at the Tuileries upon the teachings of THE SPIRITS’ BOOK.

Having suffered for many years from heart-disease, ALLAN KARDEC drew up, in 1869, the plan of a new spiritist organization, that should carry on the work of propagandism dissemination after his death. In order to assure its existence, by giving to it a legal and commercial status, he determined to make it a regularly constituted joint-stock limited liability publishing and bookselling company, to be constituted for a period of ninety-nine years, with power to buy and sell, to issue stock, to receive donations and bequests, etc. To this society, which was to be called “The Joint Stock Company for the Continuation of the Works of ALLAN KARDEC,” he intended to bequeath the copyright of his spiritist writings and of the Revue Spirite. But ALLAN KARDEC was not destined to witness the realization of the project in which he took so deep an interest, and which has since been carried out with entire exactitude by his widow.

 

  On the 31st of March 1869, having just finished drawing up the constitution and rules of the society that was to take the place from which he foresaw that he would soon be removed, he was seated in his usual chair at his study-table, in his rooms in the Rue Sainte Anne, in the act of tying up a bundle of papers, when his busy life was suddenly brought to an end by the rupture of the aneurysm from which he had so long suffered. His passage from the earth to the spirit-world, with which he had so closely identified himself, was instantaneous, painless, without a sigh or a tremor; a most peaceful falling asleep and reawakening a fit ending for such a life.

 

  His remains were interred in the cemetery of Montmartre, in presence of a great concourse of friends, many hundreds of whom assemble there every year, on the anniversary of his decease, when a few commemorative words are spoken, and fresh flowers and wreaths, as is usual in Continental graveyards, are laid upon his tomb.

 

  It is impossible to ascertain with any exactness the number of those who have adopted the views set forth by ALLAN KARDEC; estimated by themselves at many millions, they are incontestably very numerous. The periodicals devoted to the advocacy of these views in various countries already number over forty, and new ones are constantly appearing. The death of ALLAN KARDEC has not slackened the acceptance of the views set forth by him, and which are believed by those who hold them to be the basis, but the basis only, of the new development of religious truth predicted by Christ; the beginning of the promised revelation of “many things” that have been “kept hidden since the foundation of the world,” and for the knowledge of which the human race was “not ready” at the time of that prediction.

 

  In executing, with scrupulous fidelity, the task confided to her by ALLAN KARDEC, the translator has followed, in all quotations from the New Testament, the version by Le Maistre de Sacy, the one always used by ALLAN KARDEC.

– ANNA BLACKWELL – (Adaptation of the ”Translator’s Preface” – The Spirits’ Book)

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