There are a good number
of people in the
spiritist movement who
tend to criticize the
religious aspect that
the doctrine took on
when it left France and
entered Brazilian soil,
back in the 19th
century.
It is true that Kardec
never wanted Spiritism
to become a conventional
religion, with all the
rituals and hierarchical
fields that traditional
religions bring.
Kardec's idea has always
been of religion in the
sense of union around a
common cause, showing
that feeling is the
connection that joins
and rejoins the human
being with the divine
and not rites, images,
and objects.
Terefore, remembering
Kardec and his thesis,
there has always been a
group of people in the
spiritist movement who
criticize and criticized
this religious bias
adopted by Spiritism in
Brazil.
But this point existed,
exists and will continue
to exist and will not
take away the legitimacy
of an individual in
feeling and calling
themselves a spiritist
for this reason, whether
the critics want it or
not, especially because
Kardec has a very broad
definition of what it
means to be a spiritist,
even making comments
about individuals who
are spiritists without
knowing it.
It's been a while since
I read a work by Sandra
Jacqueline Stoll –
“Religion, science, or
self-help? Paths of
Spiritism in Brazil,” in
which the author
addresses not only the
development of Spiritism
from a religious
perspective, but also in
the field of self-help
and, still, in a science
or pseudoscience, all
this starting from 3
historical personalities
of the spiritist
movement.
In the religious field,
the author places the
figure of Chico Xavier
as the central point.
Chico, coming from
Catholicism, took,
according to the
researcher's work, to
Spiritism his strong
Catholic upbringing, his
monastic lifestyle and
detached from material
goods, his respect for
the saints and
unrestricted obedience
to his spiritual guide,
Emmanuel. A personality
like Chico Xavier
certainly influences an
endless number of people
to follow him, as his
examples speak very
loudly. Chico, for the
author, is one of those
largely responsible for
Spiritism entering more
deeply into the terrain
of religion in Brazil.
The other two
personalities are Luiz
Gasparetto and Waldo
Vieira. Let's begin with
Waldo Vieira. Chico's
partner in many
mediumistic works,
Waldo, at a given
moment, breaks with
Chico and Spiritism and
pursues a “solo career”.
For the author, Waldo
Vieira, by founding
Conscientiology and by
being a doctor, aims to
develop the scientific
field of Spiritism, and
even after breaking with
Spiritism, his name is,
due to the work already
carried out, directly
linked to the doctrine
codified by Kardec. So,
Waldo, over time, gained
followers who sought to
follow him in his desire
to give a scientific
tone to the studies of
metaphysical phenomena.
And finally, the author
talks about Luiz
Gasparetto, who with his
work in mediumistic
painting and his
television programs and
insertion in the media
in a more powerful way,
gave it a self-help
character to Spiritism,
a more pop view and
opened up, from there, a
dialogue with another
type of audience.
It is true that, like
Waldo Vieira, Gasparetto
and his family also
broke with Spiritism,
something that Chico did
not do, but it is
undeniable that the
names of Gasparetto and
Waldo Vieira will always
be associated with
Spiritism.
The author talks about
personalities in
Brazilian soil who, in
one way or another,
provided a very
different vision than
Kardec's original
proposal. The fact is
that today's spiritist
proposal, based on
Brazilian soil and
which, according to the
author, has these 3
figures as a starting
point with regard to the
paths that Spiritism has
taken in Brazil, differs
on several points from
the original proposal
prepared by Kardec. And
it makes sense that the
paths taken by Spiritism
in Brazil are not the
same as those traced by
Kardec on French soil,
as the differences are
already established in
the temporal aspect, in
addition, the cultures
are totally different
and, furthermore, the
profile of the followers
is also diverse. This is
just to talk about these
three points, so it
would even be strange if
Kardec's proposal
remained as it was when
it was created in the
19th century.
This is why, and now I
dare to express my
opinion, the criticisms
of some fellow
spiritists that
Spiritism has taken a
religious turn are idle.
And I say idle because,
in the face of an
atmosphere so different
from the French and so
plural in its aspects,
the idea would hardly
remain without any
modification. Just
translating from one
language to another can
create some gaps, let us
imagine this in the
time-culture-academic
and social formation
field of a society. It
would be unlikely,
therefore, that
Spiritism would not
receive influences from
its most robust leaders,
as in the case of the 3
personalities analyzed
by the researcher.
Considering this and
other studies, I
advocate the thesis –
again I opine – that we
can, yes, call Kardec's
proposal Kardecism,
given that Spiritism,
although many argue that
it is one, unfolded into
ideas which do not
always converge with
their origin, although
they have points in
common. (*)
The intention here,
however, is not a
discussion of a moral
order, of right or
wrong, of knowing who is
right or not, but simply
to offer elements so
that one can think about
the differences between
the original idea and
the idea that
established itself here
in Brazil based on these
3 personalities.
The most important
thing, however, is to
rescue the main concept
brought by Kardec and
the Spirits: the moral
improvement of man who,
through his individual
actions, causes the
transformation of
institutions and the
world. Without
remembering this
fundamental point, any
path that Spiritism or
spiritisms follow
becomes meaningless.
(*) Editor's
Note: Regarding the
idea that there would be
a doctrine of Allan
Kardec, or the so-called
Kardecism, the coder
himself wrote: “There is
this capital difference
between Spiritism and
other philosophical
systems: that these are
all the work of men,
more or less
enlightened, whereas, in
what you attribute to
me, I do not have the
merit of inventing a
single principle. It is
said: the philosophy of
Plato, Descartes,
Leibnitz; one can never
say: the doctrine of
Allan Kardec; and this,
fortunately, because
what value can a name
have in a matter of such
gravity?” (See What
is Spiritism,
Chapter I, Second
Dialogue: The Skeptic.)
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