Difference between revisions of "Argentina, Theosophy in"

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The last decade of
+
In the last decade of the nineteenth century, a group of people imbued with the Masonic ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity greatly influenced the political and economic organization of Latin American nations. Especially in Argentina they set an example of moral conduct in public office that inspired later generations.  
the 18th century saw the appearance of a group of very
+
special people, bred in the ideals of Liberty, Equality and
+
Fraternity. Known as the Generation of the 90’s, they
+
greatly influenced the political and economic organization
+
of the Latin American nations. But, above all, they
+
laid the foundations of an American culture and thought.
+
Especially in Argentina they set, from public office, an example
+
of moral conduct which was the inspiration of the
+
generations to come.
+
  
In this environment flourished the first Theosophical
+
The first Argentine Theosophical Lodge, named Luz (“Light”), was founded in Buenos Aires on January 7, 1893. Its first president was Antonia Martinez Royo. Meetings took place on Sunday afternoons and most of the members were well-known public persons: deputies, senators, writers, scientists, and teachers, among whom were Federico W. Fernandez, Alejandro Sorondo, Leopoldo Lugones, Alfredo B. Palacios, Joaquin V. Gonzalez, Jose Ingenieros, and Rodolfo Moreno, all famous in Argentine history. Subsequently, lodges were formed in neighboring countries: Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay and Brazil. As there were three lodges working in Buenos Aires when Henry S. Olcott visited that city in 1901, he suggested the foundation of a South American Section, with Luis Scheiner as his correspondent, although that Section did not come into being until 1930.
Lodge “Luz” (Light), which was founded in Buenos Aires,
+
on January 7, 1893. Its first President was Antonia Martinez
+
Royo and the house where it was established could be
+
seen up to 1953 almost unchanged. Meetings took place on
+
Sunday afternoons and the main feature of this period was
+
that most of the members were well-known public persons:
+
deputies, senators, writers, scientists, teachers,
+
among them Federico W. Fernandez, Alejandro Sorondo,
+
Leopoldo Lugones, Alfredo B. Palacios, Joaquin V. Gonzalez,
+
Jose Ingenieros, Rodolfo Moreno, names that can be
+
found nowadays in any book concerning Argentine history.
+
  
Argentina has been the center of the theosophical
+
On July 6, 1919, representatives from eight Argentine Lodges, one from Uruguay, and one from Paraguay, representing 264 members, formed the Argentine Section of the Theosophical Society. The first General Secretary was Federico Valles Vargas, and the following General Secretaries succeeded him: Mario Martinez de Arroyo, Alfredo Escardo, Annie Mannie Gowland, Adrian Madril, Arturo Montesano Delchi, Carlos Stoppel, Honorio Folquer, Raul Wyngard, Jose Maria Olivares, Mariano Calvo, Enrique Gossweiler, Nazareno Rimini, Andrea Ponde, Luis Spairani, Manuel Farinish, Juan Vinas, Juan Cassibba, Juan Carlos Palmeri, Nora Spairani, Silvia Blajer, Jorge Cesano, Silvia Liliana Pastore, and Jorge Garcia.
movement in South America. Consequent upon the establishment
+
of Lodge “Luz” in Buenos Aires other Lodges
+
were formed in neighboring countries: Uruguay, Chile,
+
Paraguay and Brazil. As there were three Lodges working
+
in Buenos Aires when Henry OLCOTT visited that city in
+
1901, he suggested the foundation of a South American
+
Section, appointing Luis Scheiner as his correspondent,
+
but this did not take place until 1930.
+
  
On July 6, 1919, the representatives from eight Argentine
+
Argentine journals by their years of initial publication have been 1895: ''Luz Astral''; 1898: ''Philadelphia''; 1905: ''La Verdad''; 1912: ''La Estrella De Occidente''; 1913: ''La Cruz Del Sur''; 1917: ''Ondas Buddhicas''; 1919: ''Teosofia En El Plata''; 1944: ''Revista Teosofica Argentine''; 1958: ''Teosofia''; 1972: ''America Teosofica''; 1981: ''Informativo Teosofico''; 1990: ''Cambios''. Since 1947, a Spanish translation of ''The Theosophist'' has been published and distributed to all Spanish-speaking countries. From 1947 to about 1966, almost all the articles published in ''The Theosophist'' were translated and republished in this Spanish-language journal.
Lodges, one from Uruguay and one from Paraguay,
+
making a total of 264 members, formed the Argentine Section
+
of the Theosophical Society. Several magazines were
+
published. The first General Secretary was Federico Valles
+
Vargas and the following General Secretaries succeeded
+
him:<br>
+
  
:Mario Martinez de Arroyo<br>
+
This translation project was coordinated, and most of the translations made, by Mr. Salim Webber from the Lodge in Río Cuarto City. The magazines once published were delivered under subscription. Then in 2006 a project was accepted by the National Assembly for translating into Spanish ''The Theosophist'' and other English Theosophical literature. The Project started with Elaine Grassano and Alicia Salinas from Córdoba city translating the articles and making them available through the Argentine web page: www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar.[http://www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar.] Though the group of volunteers who are part of the project has varied in size over the years, it continues and is being improved little by little.
:Alfredo Escardo<br>
+
:Annie Mannie Gowland<br>
+
:Adrian Madril<br>
+
:Arturo Montesano Delchi<br>
+
:Carlos Stoppel<br>
+
:Honorio Folquer<br>
+
:Raul Wyngard<br>
+
:Jose Maria Olivares<br>
+
:Mariano Calvo<br>
+
:Enrique Gossweiler<br>
+
:Nazareno Rimini<br>
+
:Andrea Ponde<br>
+
:Luis Spairani<br>
+
:Manuel Farinish<br>
+
:Juan Vinas<br>
+
:Juan Cassibba<br>
+
:Juan Carlos Palmeri<br>
+
:Nora Spairani<br>
+
:Silvia Blajer<br>
+
:Jorge Cesano<br>
+
:Silvia Liliana Pastore
+
  
 +
In 1954 there were 65 Lodges, 98 groups, and 1531 members. In 1992 there were 500 members, working in 28 Lodges in Argentina and one Lodge in Paraguay. Premises in the following cities belong to the Section: Buenos Aires, Rosaria, Cordoba, Mendoza, San Rafael, Carlos Paz, Mar del Plata, Rio Cuarto, San Lorenzo, and La Plata. The General Secretary and the National Council work in Buenos Aires. The National Journal ''Cambios'' is published quarterly and is sent to members, public libraries, schools, and universities. The Department of Information, in the city of Rosario, prepares slides, audio-visuals, and videos for rent and distribution among Lodges and for the public. Workshops and training courses are held all over the country to train members in group work, lecturing, study techniques, and research. In 1985 the Theosophical Society took part in an Educational Congress organized by the Argentine National Government, presenting a project on education based on Theosophical principles.
  
Journals. Pre-Sectional.<br>
+
Since 1990, an annual international book fair is held in Buenos Aires. About a million people visit this fair, which provides an opportunity to sell books, distribute leaflets, and present programs. More recently, similar activities have been started in towns inland. A summer school is held for a fortnight every year, and a winter school for a week. These are usually conducted at the Theosophical Center in San Rafael, Mendoza in west Argentina. National gatherings are held in various parts of the country all year long. Radio programs are broadcast in several cities. The Argentine Printing Press, founded in 1953, has published dozens of Theosophical books in Spanish and distributed them to other Spanish-speaking countries.  
:1895: ''Luz Astral''<br>
+
:1898: ''Philadelphia''<br>
+
:1905: ''La Verdad''<br>
+
:1912: ''La Estrella De Occidente''<br>
+
:1913: ''La Cruz Del Sur''<br>
+
:1917: ''Ondas Buddhicas''
+
  
 +
Young people have taken an active part in the Argentine Section from an early time. In 1962 an Argentine Federation for them was formed, and in 1973 an Inter-American Federation was founded and was active for several years. The main characteristic of this youth movement is that it is not separate from the Section’s activities but participates actively in everything carried on by the national organization. A Round Table was founded in 1905 and is still working in several cities. The Theosophical Order of Service has also been working in Argentina for a long time.
  
From 1919 on<br>
+
The South American Federation, which functioned between 1930 and 1962, held its first congress in Argentina in April 1930. The idea of a federation that included the whole of the American continent was cherished by Argentine members. Juan Vinas, a well-known lecturer, started traveling through various countries in order to strengthen the links between them. Finally, when the Inter-American Federation was formed in 1972, Luis Spairani, from Argentina, was elected as its first president. He gave the Federation a strong impulse which set the direction of the work in the years to come.
::''Teosofia En El Plata''<br>
+
:1944: ''Revista Teosofica Argentine''<br>
+
:1958: ''Teosofia''<br>
+
:1972: ''America Teosofica''<br>
+
:1981: ''Informativo Teosofico''<br>
+
:1990: ''Cambios''
+
  
  
Since 1947, the translation into Spanish of ''The Theosophist''
+
Nora Spairani<br>
has been undertaken and published regularly and distributed
+
Maria Rosa Martinez Garcia
to all the Spanish-speaking countries.
+
  
In 1954 there were 65 Lodges, 98 Groups and 1531
 
members. Acharacteristic of this period was the formation
 
of many Lodges that lasted only for a short time.
 
  
In 1992 there were 500 members, working in 28
+
External links: www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar.[[http://www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar]]
Lodges in Argentina and one Lodge in Paraguay. The premises
+
in the following cities belong to the Section: Buenos
+
Aires, Rosaria, Cordoba, Mendoza, San Rafael, Carlos
+
Paz, Mar del Plata, Rio Cuarto, San Lorenzo and La Plata.
+
  
The General Secretary and the National Council work
 
in Buenos Aires. The National Journal ''Cambios'' is published
 
quarterly. It is sent to members, public libraries,
 
schools, universities, etc. An important activity is carried
 
on by the Department of Information, in the city of
 
Rosario, which prepares slides, audio-visuals, and videos
 
for rent and distribution among Lodges and for the public.
 
Workshops and training courses are often held all over the
 
country to train members on group work speech, study
 
techniques, research, etc. In 1985 the Theosophical Society
 
took part in an Educational Congress organized by the
 
Argentine National Government, with the presentation of a
 
project on education based on theosophical principles.
 
  
An outstanding event in the activities of this Section
+
© Copyright by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila
since 1990 is the participation in an International Book
+
Fair, which is held in Buenos Aires every year. About a
+
million people visit this Fair and it is a good opportunity to
+
sell books, distribute leaflets and programs of activities in
+
the different centers. Lately, similar activities have been
+
started in inland towns.
+
 
+
A Summer School is held for a fortnight every year,
+
and a Winter School for a week. National gatherings are
+
held in different parts of the country all year long. Radio
+
programs have been broadcast for the last ten years in several
+
cities.
+
 
+
The Argentine Printing Press was founded in 1953, and
+
dozens of theosophical books have been printed in Spanish
+
and distributed to the Spanish-speaking countries. Books
+
are not only sent to the Sections but also to public bookshops.
+
 
+
The Argentine Section is building, little by little, a
+
camp — Colonia Teosofica — in San Rafael, province of
+
Mendoza, a region near the imposing mountain range of
+
Los Andes. The design includes a five-wing star shaped
+
building to be used for dormitories, dining room, lecture
+
room and library. At present three wings have been built
+
and Summer and Winter Schools are held there, with the
+
presence of members from different provinces and also
+
from neighboring countries, such as Brazil, Uruguay,
+
Bolivia and Chile.
+
 
+
Young people took an active part in the Argentine Section
+
from an early time. In 1962 an Argentine Federation
+
was formed and then an Inter-American Federation (1973)
+
which was active for several years. The main characteristic
+
of this movement was that it was not apart from the Sectional
+
activities but participated actively in everything carried
+
on by the National officers. At present, several groups
+
are working in the country and holding Summer and Winter
+
Camps.
+
 
+
The ROUND TABLE was founded in 1905 and it is still
+
working in several cities.
+
 
+
The THEOSOPHICAL ORDER OF SERVICE has also been
+
working for a long time. In 1990 it was revitalized thanks
+
to the appointment of a new Director and the implementation
+
of new activities.
+
 
+
The South American Federation which worked between
+
1930 and 1962 held its first Congress in Argentina,
+
in April 1930.The idea of a Federation that could include the whole
+
of the American continent was always cherished by the Argentine
+
members. Juan Vinas, a well-known lecturer,
+
started traveling through the different countries in order to
+
strengthen the links between them. Finally, when the
+
Inter-American Federation was definitely formed in 1972,
+
Luis Spairani, from Argentina, was elected as its first President.
+
He gave the Federation a strong impulse which set
+
the direction of the work in the years to come.
+
 
+
[[Contributors|N.S.]]
+

Latest revision as of 22:31, 4 February 2013

In the last decade of the nineteenth century, a group of people imbued with the Masonic ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity greatly influenced the political and economic organization of Latin American nations. Especially in Argentina they set an example of moral conduct in public office that inspired later generations.

The first Argentine Theosophical Lodge, named Luz (“Light”), was founded in Buenos Aires on January 7, 1893. Its first president was Antonia Martinez Royo. Meetings took place on Sunday afternoons and most of the members were well-known public persons: deputies, senators, writers, scientists, and teachers, among whom were Federico W. Fernandez, Alejandro Sorondo, Leopoldo Lugones, Alfredo B. Palacios, Joaquin V. Gonzalez, Jose Ingenieros, and Rodolfo Moreno, all famous in Argentine history. Subsequently, lodges were formed in neighboring countries: Uruguay, Chile, Paraguay and Brazil. As there were three lodges working in Buenos Aires when Henry S. Olcott visited that city in 1901, he suggested the foundation of a South American Section, with Luis Scheiner as his correspondent, although that Section did not come into being until 1930.

On July 6, 1919, representatives from eight Argentine Lodges, one from Uruguay, and one from Paraguay, representing 264 members, formed the Argentine Section of the Theosophical Society. The first General Secretary was Federico Valles Vargas, and the following General Secretaries succeeded him: Mario Martinez de Arroyo, Alfredo Escardo, Annie Mannie Gowland, Adrian Madril, Arturo Montesano Delchi, Carlos Stoppel, Honorio Folquer, Raul Wyngard, Jose Maria Olivares, Mariano Calvo, Enrique Gossweiler, Nazareno Rimini, Andrea Ponde, Luis Spairani, Manuel Farinish, Juan Vinas, Juan Cassibba, Juan Carlos Palmeri, Nora Spairani, Silvia Blajer, Jorge Cesano, Silvia Liliana Pastore, and Jorge Garcia.

Argentine journals by their years of initial publication have been 1895: Luz Astral; 1898: Philadelphia; 1905: La Verdad; 1912: La Estrella De Occidente; 1913: La Cruz Del Sur; 1917: Ondas Buddhicas; 1919: Teosofia En El Plata; 1944: Revista Teosofica Argentine; 1958: Teosofia; 1972: America Teosofica; 1981: Informativo Teosofico; 1990: Cambios. Since 1947, a Spanish translation of The Theosophist has been published and distributed to all Spanish-speaking countries. From 1947 to about 1966, almost all the articles published in The Theosophist were translated and republished in this Spanish-language journal.

This translation project was coordinated, and most of the translations made, by Mr. Salim Webber from the Lodge in Río Cuarto City. The magazines once published were delivered under subscription. Then in 2006 a project was accepted by the National Assembly for translating into Spanish The Theosophist and other English Theosophical literature. The Project started with Elaine Grassano and Alicia Salinas from Córdoba city translating the articles and making them available through the Argentine web page: www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar.[1] Though the group of volunteers who are part of the project has varied in size over the years, it continues and is being improved little by little.

In 1954 there were 65 Lodges, 98 groups, and 1531 members. In 1992 there were 500 members, working in 28 Lodges in Argentina and one Lodge in Paraguay. Premises in the following cities belong to the Section: Buenos Aires, Rosaria, Cordoba, Mendoza, San Rafael, Carlos Paz, Mar del Plata, Rio Cuarto, San Lorenzo, and La Plata. The General Secretary and the National Council work in Buenos Aires. The National Journal Cambios is published quarterly and is sent to members, public libraries, schools, and universities. The Department of Information, in the city of Rosario, prepares slides, audio-visuals, and videos for rent and distribution among Lodges and for the public. Workshops and training courses are held all over the country to train members in group work, lecturing, study techniques, and research. In 1985 the Theosophical Society took part in an Educational Congress organized by the Argentine National Government, presenting a project on education based on Theosophical principles.

Since 1990, an annual international book fair is held in Buenos Aires. About a million people visit this fair, which provides an opportunity to sell books, distribute leaflets, and present programs. More recently, similar activities have been started in towns inland. A summer school is held for a fortnight every year, and a winter school for a week. These are usually conducted at the Theosophical Center in San Rafael, Mendoza in west Argentina. National gatherings are held in various parts of the country all year long. Radio programs are broadcast in several cities. The Argentine Printing Press, founded in 1953, has published dozens of Theosophical books in Spanish and distributed them to other Spanish-speaking countries.

Young people have taken an active part in the Argentine Section from an early time. In 1962 an Argentine Federation for them was formed, and in 1973 an Inter-American Federation was founded and was active for several years. The main characteristic of this youth movement is that it is not separate from the Section’s activities but participates actively in everything carried on by the national organization. A Round Table was founded in 1905 and is still working in several cities. The Theosophical Order of Service has also been working in Argentina for a long time.

The South American Federation, which functioned between 1930 and 1962, held its first congress in Argentina in April 1930. The idea of a federation that included the whole of the American continent was cherished by Argentine members. Juan Vinas, a well-known lecturer, started traveling through various countries in order to strengthen the links between them. Finally, when the Inter-American Federation was formed in 1972, Luis Spairani, from Argentina, was elected as its first president. He gave the Federation a strong impulse which set the direction of the work in the years to come.


Nora Spairani
Maria Rosa Martinez Garcia


External links: www.sociedad-teosofica.com.ar.[[2]]


© Copyright by the Theosophical Publishing House, Manila