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Kardec, was he a psychic?
Part 1 |
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It is very
common to
hear from
lecturers
and
coordinators
of doctrinal
studies the
statement
that Allan
Kardec
(1804-1869)
was not a
medium.
Although we
have nothing
to support
us, we found
this very
strange, for
our first
impression
was that he
was a
medium,
based on
something we
had read,
but we did
not know
exactly
where.
In literary
works -
Spiritists
or not - we
will
certainly
find this
opinion, as
for example
in The
table, the
book and the
Spirits,
in which its
authors, the
anthropologists
Marion
Aubree and
François
Laplantine -
the first, a
PhD in
anthropology,
and the
second her
teacher-advisor
- state:
The Book of
Spirits -
a work that
organizes a
collection
of data -
was not, as
said,
dictated by
the Spirits
- because Kardec
never was a
medium -
but it was
elaborated
with their
assistance;
two
especially
helped him:
Z, and above
all, the
Spirit of
Truth.
[...].
(AUBREE and
LAPLANTINE,
2009, page
44, emphasis
added).
Another
source in
which we
found this
was in the
work Mediumship,
written by
J. Herculano
Pires
(1914-1979),
who said:
"But Kardec
himself was
not a medium because
his mission
was
scientific
and not
mediumistic.
[...]".
(PIRES,
1987, page
24, emphasis
added).
Where did
these
mentioned
authors get
this from?
It is likely
that we find
the clue in
Herminio C.
de Miranda,
in his text
entitled
"Allan
Kardec and
the mystery
of a secular
fidelity",
of which we
copy:
Often the
attacks on
Kardec seek
support in
declarations
made by the
Scottish
medium
Daniel
Dunglas
Home. In the
book "Lights
and Shadows
of
Spiritualism,"
by Home,
Vartier goes
and fetch
the
following:
"It is known
that Allan
Kardec was
not a
medium. He
did nothing
but
“magnetize”
or
“psychologize”
people more
sensitive
than he".
(Spiritist
Community
site)
We went to
check on the
work Lights
and Shadows
of
Spiritualism,
English
version, and
there, on
page 224,
one can find
the
following
statement by
Home
(1822-1886):
"It is, or
it should be
well known,
that Allan
Kardec was
not himself
a medium.
He simply
magnetized
or used
psychology
on minds
weaker and
more
sensitive
than his”.
(1)
(Emphasis
added). In
this work,
Home does
not save
criticism to
Kardec,
although the
Encoder did
not treat
him in the
same way,
when, on
several
occasions,
he referred
to him.
Interestingly,
these two
authors,
quoted
above,
confirm
Home’s
position,
adding that,
in 1923, the
French
philosopher,
metaphysician
and social
critic Rene
Guenon
(1886-1951)
defends this
thesis,
which, of
course, was
also
absorbed by
Aubree and
Laplantine,
as can be
seen on page
44 of the
book The
Table, the
book and the
Spirits,
which we
copied
above. Let
us see what
they both
mention from
Guenon1:
Under the
power of his
strong will,
his mediums
were
typewriters,
which
slavishly
reproduced
his own
thoughts.
If, at
times, the
published
doctrines
were not in
accordance
with his
desires, he
corrected
them at will.
It is known
that Allan
Kardec was
not a medium. He
could
magnetize
people who
were more
sensitive
than him.
(GUENON,
1984, page
34 apud AUBREE
and
LAPLANTINE,
2009, page
113, italic
emphasis).
From the way
Aubree and
Laplantine
put it, the
impression
that one has
is that this
speech
belongs to
Guenon;
however,
when
confronted
with what
appears in
his work The
Spiritist
Error,
Portuguese
version, we
could see
that, in
fact, it is
from Home,
which Guenon
cites
mentioning
his source: "Les
Lumieres et
les Ombres
du
Spiritualisme, pages
112-114".
(GUENON,
2010, pages
37-38). It
is the same
work
mentioned by
Herminio de
Miranda, in
the French
version.
Unfortunately
many people
act naively
believing in
what others
say, without
worrying
about
whether it
is true or
not; with
this, they
often end up
as if
opening a
bag of
feathers on
top of a
hill,
spreading,
lies or
slander.
Let us see
how Kardec
qualified a
medium:
[…] Whoever
is capable
of receiving
or
transmitting
the Spirits’
communications
is thus a
medium,
whatever the
means
employed, or
the degree
of
development
of the gift,
from the
simple
occult
influence to
the
production
of the most
unusual
phenomena.However,
in its
ordinary
use, this
word has a
narrower
meaning, and
is generally
said of
people
endowed with
a very great
mediumistic
power,
either to
produce
physical
effects, or
to transmit
the thought
of Spirits
by writing
or by word. (KARDEC,
1993a, 29,
emphasis
added).
There are
two
situations
to classify
a medium:
one in a
broad sense
and the
other in a
narrow
sense. In a
broad sense
one can say
that we are
all mediums;
in a narrow
sense it
applies to
those in
which this
gift
manifests
itself in an
evident way,
producing
the
phenomena of
physical
effects or
transmitting
the thought
of the
Spirits;
they are
ostensible
mediums.
Kardec comes
back to this
subject
twice,
making it
even
clearer:
Every person
who feels
the
influence of
the Spirits,
in any
degree of
intensity,
is a medium. This
faculty is
inherent in
man. That
is why it
is not a
privilege,
and people -
who do not
have it at
least in a
rudimentary
state - are
rare. It can
be said,
therefore,
that we are
all more or
less
mediums.Usually,
however,
this
qualification
applies only
to those who
possess a
well-characterized
mediumistic
faculty,
which is
translated
by evident
effects of a
certain
intensity,
which
depends on a
more or less
sensitive
organization.
It should be
noted,
further,
that this
faculty does
not reveal
itself in
all the same
way. [...].
(KARDEC,
2006a, page
139,
emphasis
added).
Every person
who feels,
in any
degree, the
Spirits’
influence is
therefore a
medium. This
faculty is
inherent in
man, and
therefore is
by no means
an exclusive
privilege:
there are
also few in
which there
is no
rudiment. It
can be said,
then, that
everybody in
this world,
with very
few
exceptions,
is a medium;
nevertheless,
in practice,
this
qualification
applies only
to those in
which the
mediumistic
faculty is
manifested
by
ostensible
effects of
certain
intensity.
(KARDEC,
2006b, pages
62-63,
emphasis
added).
We will only
emphasize,
for we shall
always have
this in
mind, that
"Every
person, who
feels the
influence of
the Spirits,
in any
degree of
intensity,
is a
medium".
In the
Spiritist
Magazine,
year 1858,
we find:
This
faculty, as
we have
already
said, is
not an
exclusive
privilege;
it exists in
a latent
state,
and in
several
degrees, in
a multitude
of
individuals,
waiting only
for an
opportunity
to develop; the
principle is
in us by the
very effect
of our
organism; it
is in
Nature; we
all have it
in germ,
and it is
not far from
the day
when we
will see the
mediums
appearing
from all
points, in
our midst,
in our
families, in
the poor as
in the rich,
so that the
truth may be
known by
all,
because,
according to
what is
announced to
us, it is a
new era, a
new phase
that begins
for
Humanity.
The evidence
and the
Spiritist
phenomena
becoming
common, will
give a new
course to
moral ideas,
as steam has
given a new
course to
industry.
(KARDEC,
2001a, pages
60-61,
emphasis
added).
We conclude
that we are
all
potential
mediums,
since
mediumship
is a
characteristic,
or a
faculty, as
you wish,
proper to
Human
Nature. This
is what we
can also
find in
Channing
(Spirit),
who, talking
about the
mediums,
said:
All men are
mediums. All
have a
Spirit that
leads them
towards good,
when they
know how to
listen to
it. Either
some may
communicate
directly
with it,
thanks to a
special
mediumship,
or others
only listen
to the inner
voice of the
heart and
mind. This
matters
little, for
it is always
the same
familiar
Spirit that
accompanies
them. Call
it Spirit,
reason, or
intelligence;
it will
always be a
voice that
answers your
soul, saying
good words
to you. But
you do not
always
understand
them. ...
Listen,
therefore,
to this
inner voice,
this good
genius that
speaks to
you always,
and you will
gradually
hear your
Guardian
Angel
reaching out
to you from
the height
of Heaven. I
repeat: the
inner voice
that speaks
to the heart
is that of
the Good
Spirits. And
it is from
this point
of view that
all men are
mediums. (KARDEC,
2006a, pages
331-332,
emphasis
added).
But what we
propose here
is to find
out if
Kardec was a
medium in
the narrow
sense, that
is, if he
possessed
some
mediumistic
faculty by
which we
could
classify it
among the
various
types of
mediumship.
It was on
March 24,
1856, that
Kardec
became
involved
with a
mediumistic
phenomenon.
He was at
his house,
working,
when he
heard
repeated
beats, the
origin of
which was
unknown to
him. The
next day, in
a session at
Mr. Baudin's
house,
Kardec asks
Spirit Z
(Zephyr),
what had
happened to
him the day
before. The
answer was
"it was your
familiar
Spirit," who
identified
himself "For
you, I shall
call myself The
Truth"
(Kardec,
2006b, page
305), who
"wanted to
communicate
with you"
(Kardec,
2006b, page
304), and
clarifying
it said,
"What I had
to tell you
was about
the work you
were doing:
I did not
like what
you wrote
and wanted
to make you
drop it".
(Kardec,
2006b, page
305).
(The final
part of this
article will
be published
in the next
issue.)
References:
AUBREE, M
and
LAPLANTINE,
F. The
table, the
book and the
Spirits: genesis,
evolution
and the
present of
the
Spiritist
social
movement
between
France and
Brazil. Maceio:
EDUFAL,
2009.
GUENON, R. The
Spiritist
Error (L'erreur
Spirite).
Paris: Ed.
Traditionnelles,
1984.
GUENON, R. The
Spiritist
Error (L'erreur
Spirite). Sao
Paulo: Rene
Guenon
Institute,
2010.
HOME, D. D. Lights
and Shadows
of
Spiritualism.
London:
Virtue,
1878.
KARDEC, A. The
Book of
Mediums.
Sao Paulo:
Lake, 2006a.
KARDEC, A. Posthumous
Works. Rio
de Janeiro:
FEB, 2006b.
KARDEC, A. Spiritist
Magazine
1858.
Araras, SP:
IDE, 2001a.
KARDEC, A. Spiritist
Magazine
1859.
Araras, SP:
IDE, 1993a.
KARDEC, A. Spiritist
Magazine
1861.
Araras, SP:
IDE, 1993b.
KARDEC, A. Spiritist
Magazine
1867.
Araras, SP:
IDE, 1999.
PALHANO JR.
L. Dictionary
of Spiritist
Philosophy.
Rio de
Janeiro:
CELD, 2004.
PIRES, J.
H. Mediumship:
life and
communication.
Conceptualization
of
mediumship
and general
analysis of
its current
problems. Sao
Paulo:
EDICEL,
1987.
DONHA, J. A.
V. An
anthropological
X-ray of
Spiritism.
In the
newspaper
Abertura no.
149. Santos,
SP: Espirit
Net, June /
2000,
obtained in
the site:
Abertura
2000, access
on
03.17.2011,
at 08: 08hs.
GABILAN, F.
A. Intuition
or
Inspiration? In O
Semeador no.
760, May /
2000. Sao
Paulo: FEESP,
obtained by
Feesp
website,
access on
03.17.2011,
at 06:15 hs.
MIRANDA, H.
Allan Kardec
and the
mystery of a
secular
fidelity.
Available
at: community,
access on
03.14.2011,
at 22: 06hs.
Translation:
Eleni
Frangatos - eleni.moreira@uol.com.br