This was a long time ago and seems nearly forgotten now but the Gold riddle has never really been solved. This article is commendable in attempting to figure out a black magical rogue sufi, and the effort always fails.
The account correctly throws doubt on Gold and with Gold it is best to have never met him. The issue of all these different paths or schools is all nonsense and misses the point of disinformation in process.
The problem here is that God may be fake or whatever but the same
judgment then applies to Gurdjieff. This point the authors here will never understand..
I have often wondered at the sadism and cruelty of the Gold/Gurdjieff strain, but the riddle is resolved in seeing the new right in action now: the seeds were sown long ago and figure like Gurdjieff and then Gold are caught up
in the neo-fascist exploding in the era of Trump. After so many years of confusion the riddle seems to suddenly solve itself as the effort produces a disastrous social result.
This piece from long ago now is commendable in one way but I doubt if you can reject Gold and embrace Gurdjieff.
In my experience every account here has failed and these perps have gotten away with the whole thing.
Consult a related post here on the issue of the ‘work’ and as prefiguration of
the concentration camp. Strange, but in retrospect we can see the way that Gurdjieff in connection with fascist sources in creating a s range booby trap for seekers.
The reincarnation of Ouspensky is a notable mystery. But the strong rumor is that he learned of what he had done and was appalled and declared implacable emnity on Gurdjieff. Intimations existed at the end of his life. His strange death is connected with this.
So keep in mind that Ouspensky is in his next life an enemy of the very teaching he produced. Gurdjieff was gruesomely a psychopath of some kind. He seduced a notable Russian intellectual semi-celebrity and created a teaching for him to teach and then make into a book. Once done Ouspensky was expendable and cashiered out of the said path or group. The operation was an immense success for a man such as Gurdjieff who could barely write and intelligent paragraph of any kine. His books are atrocious junk and in all of their something important was trashed: the old Samkhya .
Consult the booklet Samkya Ancient and Modern for this aspect. As a bridge Samkhya now has a permanent troll under that bridge. As Bennett shows in his flawed DU what might have been is an immense rendering of Samkhya in a modern form. But the utterly second rate intellect of Gurdjieff could only produce a fake version cluttered with nonsense things like the law of three and the law of seven, entirely bullshit and now a barrier to any outsiders who wish to study it.
These people front dangerous spiritual fascists unseen and working through fronts like Gurdjieff and Gold and many others no doubt. They wish to destroy the modern world and in the philosophy of Kali Yuga see the destruction of modern civilization as an operation against time.
They are doomed to fail because modernity is a far superior age to those it followed, whatever its limits now.
The Gurdjieff Journal—Fourth Way Perspectives
All That Glitters…
Crazy Wisdom and Entrepreneurialism in the Spiritual Schools of E. J. Gold
E. J. GOLD PUBLISHED HIS SECRET TALKS with Mr. G. in 1978. It was a blatant hoax, as was a film on the same subject and another book. Gold explained in a recent interview in Gnosis magazine, “I don’t believe that prank hurt anybody. It was just intended to prod some people into doing the right thing.” The right thing in Gold’s estimation was to make Gurdjieff’s Third Series of writings public. But as anyone familiar with the subject knows, the Third Series had been published three years before Gold’s pseudepigraphic rip-off. More to the point: Gold’s interest was mercantile—as J. Walter Driscoll the compiler of Gurdjieff: An Annotated Bibliography, pointed out in a letter to Gnosis. “Gold’s bogus Secret Talks was used,” he wrote, “to attract people into his groups and was there proffered as authentic teaching material that superseded Gurdjieff’s writings. He followed this with a privately circulated second volume of Secret Talks (1979) and an eighteen-volume series of Related Workbooks (1980) that were distributed to his followers; some ‘joke prod.’ Please exercise stricter and more responsible discrimination in selecting interview candidates and verifying their claims.” The Gnosis editor quickly backed off saying he was “in no position to say how Secret Talks was originally marketed, since I simply don’t know…. As for Gold’s authenticity as a teacher, I have no way of evaluating it.” That it is well-known that Gold never was in the Work, yet set himself up as a self-appointed Fourth Way teacher (which he now denies) whose antics are said to have hurt a great number of people is apparently of no matter. What follows may give a basis for evaluation.
Eugene Jeffrey Gold, whose declared aim is “the education of the universe, one idiot at a time!” is the founder of the Institute for the Harmonious Development of the Human Being (IDHHB), the permanent and underground name of his organization based in Grass Valley, California. Most of his followers, however, initially encounter the master and his movement under different names and wearing a disguise, for since 1963 Gold has created, directed and closed down a bewildering number of short-lived “spiritual schools.” Rarely lasting longer than a year, these spiritual centers open up in different cities in the U.S. and Canada, where they disseminate freshly printed literature, hold classes—and then close abruptly, often without leaving a forwarding address. Techniques taught in these “schools” range from astronaut training, sufi storytelling, Hassidic dancing, Gurdjieff’s Sacred Gymnastics, Ethiopian martial arts, Gestalt training, biofeedback, to the Tibetan science of soul travel. Once a sufficient number of “students” are gathered and regularly attending classes, Gold will tour the centers across the U.S. and Canada, appearing one year in a turban and dhoti as “Pir al-Washi, the Sufi Master,” then the following year in blackface as an Ethiopian warrior and, more recently, sporting a fez and fake moustache as he lectured to “Work Groups” as the mysterious “Mr. G.”
To describe Gold’s movement as “experimental” and “eclectic” is a feeble understatement. To observe these characteristics in a new religion is, of course, nothing new—for Wallis (1984), Robbins and Bromley (1992), Ellwood (1973), Stone (1976) and others have explored and analyzed the eclectic, ephemeral and experimental aspects of new religious life. The IDHHB, however, provides a particularly exaggerated and striking example of these qualities. Its founder, moreover, appears to be deliberately planning each spiritual school with built-in obsolescence, so that his organization bears a closer resemblance to street theater or a fly-by-night circus than to the well-established Hari Krishnas or the Church of Scientology. Gold’s charismatic title has also undergone a series of transmutations: from “Mother Beast” to “Pir al-Washi,” to “Just Jeff” to “Mr. G.” to the current, affectionate “E. J.” This pattern is not so unusual if one examines the changing titles of Rajneesh (Gordon, 1987), of Werner Erhard (Stone, 1982) and of Da Free John (Feuerstein, 1991), but while the institutions of these founders are far from static, Gold exceeds them by a wide margin. The table of Gold’s “spiritual schools” below will demonstrate the enormous range of his experimentation:
Gold’s “Spiritual Schools” | ||
Name of Organization | Duration | Tradition/Theme |
le Maison Rouge | 1963–64 | Gurdjieff, shamanism |
Cowachin | 1972 | Gestalt therapy |
Le Jardin Electronique | 1972 | Biofeedback, sci fi |
Shakti! the Spiritual Science of DNA | 1973–74 | Bardos, genetics |
Anonymous | 1974 | Survivalism, street theatre and charity |
Wud-Sha-Lo | 1974 | Ethiopian martial arts |
Center for Conscious Birth | 1975 | Natural childbirth, Lamaze, shamanism |
Bunraku Theatre | 1976 | Japanese puppet shows |
Institute of Thanotology | 1977 | Tibetan Book of the Dead |
Work Groups | 1978 | Gurdjieff |
Fourth Way Schools | 1979 | Gurdjieff, sufism |
The Gabriel Project | 1984 | Gourmet feasts, readings, theater |
Internet Teaching | 1995 | Electronic gaming, angels |
Institutionalizing “Holy Madness”
In attempting to explain Gold’s peculiar brand of charisma in sociological terms, the most relevant framework (aside from Weber’s familiar observations (1946) on “ethical” versus “exemplary” prophets), is found in Georg Feuerstein’s recent book, Holy Madness. Feuerstein (1991) embarks on perhaps the first systematic study of spiritual masters whose teaching methods involve pranks, ordeals of terror and ritual obscenity. He finds in the lives of these “crazy wisdom” gurus authentic “relics of an archaic spirituality,” and explains their controversial tactics as techniques designed to shock their disciples out of preconditioned responses and social conditioning. Gold himself acknowledges his affiliation with this particular sadhana, for he refers to his spiritual movement as “the heartless school of E. J. Gold,” and his sudden outbursts of temper and off-colour jokes are explained as “the way of malamah,” or “the sufi way of blame.” The absurd and outrageous ordeals which students undergo are spiritually validated by core group leaders as “the quick way of head bashing and ego-squashing” (Gold, 1977). Many more colorful examples of “holy madness” might be found among the founders of new religious movements, but the career of Gold appears to be a particularly interesting case, because his organization is the only example (to my knowledge) which clearly reflects and closely embodies the “crazy wisdom” pedagogy. Gold has apparently succeeded in institutionalizing the “holy madness” type of charisma which, more than any other type, is intrinsically opposed to, and resistant toward, the process of institutionalization and routinization (Weber, 1946; Feuerstein, 1991).
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