• LETTER FROM GERMANY No. 2

    From Bill D@RICKSBBS to All on Thu Apr 16 06:18:19 2026
    LETTER FROM GERMANY No. 2

    by
    Frater U.'.D.'.


    *In these letters I am taking a diachronic look at German
    occultism past and present, mixing current news with historical
    titbits illustrating among other things the strong relationship
    between German magic and the Anglo-Saxon world. (For linguistic
    reasons as well as for convenience's sake I will generally
    include Swiss and Austrian occultism under this heading - no
    imperialist takein intended!)*


    The accentuation of this second letter will lie on the more
    contemporary aspects of magic in the German speaking countries.
    The pre-war magical setup had been a very lively affair: a
    colorful hotpotch of irregular freemasonry and theosophy; yoga;
    astrology (of an intellectual calibre never surpassed
    internationally since, if we can trust an English expert like
    Ellic Howe); Mazdaznan, a quasi-yogic religious cult originally
    founded by Otto(man) Hanish in the USA, with its myriad of
    dietetic rules and a strong emphasis on physical exercise and
    pranayama, purporting to have derived from Iranian Zoroastrism
    and still rumored to be extant in some of the more obscure
    corners of the Western world; thelemic lodges of the O.T.O., and
    other Crowleyites; the Fraternitas Saturni (FS); the Order of
    Mental Building Masters (under Ra-Ohmir Quintscher), which later
    fused with the FS; a variety of groups (often quite tiny
    organisations with a cultural impact reciprocal to their actual
    size) of the "blood and soil" flavor espousing runic lore and
    racial/Arian mysticism, the most notable being the Guido von List
    Society (which included the Armanen Order) and Jrg Lanz von
    Liebenfels's ariosophic Ordo Novi Templi (Order of the New
    Temple, ONT); plus the usual riffraff aspiring to more or less
    vaguely defined "spiritual" or "esoteric" goals with a strong
    Eastern bias, to name but the highlights of this era.
    With the arrival of Hitler and National Socialist rulership
    all "secret orders", whether genuinely clandestine operations or
    "secret" only by claim, where banned along with political parties
    (barring, of course, the NSdAP) and where consequently deprived
    of all publicity. This process was basically completed by 1935
    with the exception of the astrologers' associations, which in
    1937 even became part of the workers' union temporarily, until
    they, too, were abolished and persecuted in 1941 following Rudolf
    Hess's misguided flight to England which was purported to have
    been incited by his personal astrological counselor. In a later
    letter I will cover the question of Nazi Occultism in a more
    comprehensive manner. Suffice it here to state that the magical
    scene in Germany and Austria was practically defunct from 1935 at
    the latest and was unable to recover until well after the war
    when the more dire material needs in these devastated countries
    had been coped with.
    Gregor A. Gregorius (1888-1961), the Berlin bookseller whose
    conventional name was Eugen Grosche, had founded the FS in 1928,
    as mentioned in my *Letter from Germany No. 1*. He had been a
    communist of sorts with a one year arrest during Nazi
    dictatorship to prove it. (He had even moved into Swiss exile and
    later went to Italy where he was arrested by the fascists and
    turned over to the German authorities on their categorical
    request. Interestingly enough, his Gestapo arrest warrant
    declares his "contacts with the internationally renowned
    Freemason Aleister Crowley" as one of the prime reasons for his
    internment.)
    Immediately after the war he became a "cultural commissary"
    of the German Communist Party in the then time Soviet Zone (the -
    Eastern - *German Democratic Republic* was only founded in 1948,
    as was the - West German - *Federal Republic of Germany*) but was
    later expelled on reasons of "bourgeois tendencies", a standard
    accusation in Stalinist times.
    He next moved to West Berlin, where he set up a bookstore
    and renewed his international contacts, getting together a number
    of pre-war members and re-registering the FS as a formal
    institution in 1948. In 1950 he started publishing the monthly
    *Bltter fangewandte okkulte Lebenskunst* ("Magazine for
    Applied Occult Arts of Life"), a curious title veiling the most
    comprehensive, extensive and encylopedic periodical on the
    magical arts in Western history. While openly sold in bookstores,
    it was the official organ of the Fraternitas Saturni and included
    inlets (handed out to members only) covering internal affairs
    such as graduations, membership lists, syllabi &c.
    The publication mode of this foretime monthly magazine was
    later changed to bi-monthly appearance and it existed till 1963,
    totalling 164 issues of some 3,500 pages of text and
    illustrations. Gregorius retained editorship until his death and
    it was only in concurrence with internal squabbles and schisms
    within the order itself that it ceased publication two years
    after. It has never been published in English (or any other
    language apart from German, for that matter), though Stephen
    Flowers quotes extensively from it in his excellent *Fire and
    Ice* (Llewellyn Publications).

    The English speaking world would really be in for a surprise
    or two should this magazine be published in translation one day.
    True to say, the general tenor of its articles is biassed towards
    the more traditionalist approach to magic and the majority of
    essays may well be considered to be somewhat pedestrian, as
    magazines generally go; but then again never before (or after)
    has Western magic produced such a treasure house of knowledge
    surpassing even Aleister Crowley's famous *Equinox* in scope,
    practicability and diversity. There is many a pearl of wisdom to
    be found here for anyone interested in the conventional mode of
    magic, and it is to be hoped that some American or English
    publisher will be bold enought to take the risk of publishing it
    in translation one day.
    Nor where the *Bltter* the order's only publication. Well
    before the war Gregorius edited the magazine *Saturn Gnosis*,
    which was taken up again after the FS's post-war reconstitution
    and is still being published on an irregular basis; other
    magazines included *Vita-Gnosis* and *Der magische Weg* ("The
    Magical Path"). However, these periodicals were strictly
    promulgated for members only and are very hard (and costly!) to
    come by for outsiders.
    Today, order membership has decreased considerably compared
    with the fifties, but this is not, as one might suppose, due to
    lack of interest. On the contrary: while fluctuation in the
    order's purported heyday used to be exorbitant (appr. 50% per
    year!), it has been reduced to almost nil now due to its rigid
    initiation policy. For unlike the O.T.O., the FS is not obliged
    by its own constitution to accept any candidate willing (or
    purporting) to give it a try. Consequently, only very few
    applicants ever make it into the order's august ranks, and it is
    safe to say that the Fraternitas Saturni still constitutes the
    paragon of traditionalist, conventional magic in the German
    speaking world of today.



    However, magic comes in many masks. Especially the younger
    generation amongst today's magicians has lost interest in the
    dogmatic and traditionalist approach or is, at least, striving to
    incorporate more modern techniques and beliefs as well. This is
    mainly the doing of what I have named the "Bonn Group" of
    magicians operating between 1979 to 1981 in a formal framework
    and individually actively contributing to the advancement of
    magical theory and practice ever since.
    When I founded the Horus Bookshop with two partners in Bonn,
    in 1979, the current wave of esotericism had not quite begun yet,
    and while interest in the occult arts was undeniably mounting,
    business then was sluggish enough to provide ample time for other
    activities. Thus, a group of some fourteen people (male and
    female) interested in practical magic assembled in the bookshop's
    backroom every other week or so to constitute what was
    tentatively termed the "Working Group for Experimental Magic".
    Most of us were then still studying at university (as did I
    beside my career as a not yet quite successful entrepreneur in
    the book business), and quite a few have later finished their
    academic studies with doctorates or masters' theses in various
    fields running from Physics to Comparative Literature, from
    Indology via German and English Literature to Comparative
    Religious Studies, Medicine, Psychology and Social Studies; while
    the tiny minority of our professional people were all working in
    the medical field. Thus, intellectual standards were pretty high
    even by the academic yardstick and a wide reading knowledge could
    be relied upon.
    A few members where well worn experts of some ten years'
    standing, some, such as myself, had only begun to work on
    practical magic proper about a year or so before, complete
    beginners being only few. Our group convened primarily for
    practical work in various traditions covering a broad spectrum
    ranging from Franz Bardon's system via the Golden Dawn,
    Freemasonism and Kabbalism to Crowleyan, Tibetan, Voodoo, Wiccan,
    neopagan and shamanic techniques. Experiments included telepathy,
    hypnosis, astral travel, kabbalistic path workings, rune magic,
    tarot readings, sigil magic, the use of astrology for practical
    magic and rituals, rituals, rituals. Rituals indoors, rituals
    outdoors, rituals in caves and basements in the woods and in the
    living room (only a few could afford their own temple rooms then,
    and these were usually too small to encompass us all), rituals
    for love and for healing, for death and for smiting foes, for fun
    and profit, rituals with drugs and without, and lots of rituals
    just to gain experience or for the pure, uninhibited heck of it.
    In addition to our regular meetings practical research was
    augmented by additional work on a more individual basis or in
    smaller groups which gladly reported on their results and
    discussed new and old approaches towards the Black Arts. Topics
    thrashed out covered physics and Thelema, trance techniques and
    sigil magic, Crowley and Gurdjieff, the pro and cons of
    hallucinogenics in ritual, the psychological rationale behind
    analogies and correspondences, behind the synchronicities of
    oracle readings from tarot cards to horoscopes (most of us
    sporting a strong Jungian bias at that time), sex magic, and a
    pile of others - far too many to list here. Most important was
    our basic tenet, "if it works, use it; if it doesn't work, don't
    believe it", which made all the difference when compared to the
    more dogmatic, cramped and inhibited approach to be noted in
    traditional magical orders, of whom none of us was a member then.
    Yet, it was not so much the existence or the practical and
    theoretical work of the Bonn Group as such but rather the
    publicistic impetus it created, which came to be responsible for
    the German magical scene as we know it today. While formal
    meetings had been abandoned by 1982, a few members having moved,
    lost interest or concentrated on more eremitical work, a hard
    core of some ten people continued to work together casually in a
    different format, and it was at my instigation that Jrg Wichmann
    (a former Wiccan) began to publish the now almost legendary
    *Unicorn* magazine in the same year, which concentrated on
    mythology and practical magic on a quarterly basis.
    Granted that *Unicorn* was never a commercial success, it
    wasn't quite a loss making venture either. It was right here, in
    the very first issue, that I formulated the basic tenets of what
    I termed "Pragmatic Magic" in contrast to "Dogmatic Magic".
    Having been influenced, as had been all members of the Bonn Group
    sooner or later, by the English and American authors of the
    seventies (notably Regardie, Conway, Butler, Skinner, King, Grant
    plus the only then rediscovered Austin Osman Spare), and based on
    our own varied practical experiences with all sorts of creeds and
    techniques, it was not hard to propagate a pragmatic spirit.
    This, however, had been totally unheard of until then in the
    conventional magical scene of the German speaking countries
    (embracing, let us not forget, some 74 million people then and
    appr. 90 million people today, after German reunification). It is
    no exaggeration to say that we virtually *created* the German
    magical scene. For while of course lots of people all over the
    country had been working in more or less splendid isolation
    before, it was only now that the thread had been put in the brine
    for a real scene to crystallize. Though the lion's share of
    published material was covered by members of the Bonn Group such
    as J rg Wichmann, the editor-in-chief, myself, Peter Ellert,
    Harry Eilenstein and Mahamudra, *Unicorn* was able to gain the
    favour of a number of internationally renowned high calibre
    authors as well, in spite of the fact that articles were
    remunerated only symbolically. Moreover, many leading figures in
    the magical and fringe-magical scene such as Alex Sanders, Michael
    Harner and Harley Swiftdeer were presented in comprehensive
    interviews in the mag, thus exerting a notable influence by way
    of popularizing their teachings.
    The magazine lasted for three happy years until it ceased
    publication in 1985 after 13 issues. Readers' participation and
    loyalty to the mag turned out to be unusually high - which again
    paved the way to its successor, *Anubis*, founded, edited and
    published by myself at the end of 1985 and handed over to another editor-cum-publisher the following year. This magazine is still
    extant albeit in a more sporadic publication mode and has put out
    15 issues to date.


    It may be regarded as characteristic for the evolution of a
    magical scene that I was able to introduce a column titled
    "Golems Gossen Glosse" ("Golem's Gutter Glossings") much on the
    same line as the British *Lamp of Thoth*'s column "Golem's
    Gossip" - right from the very first issue of *Anubis* for there
    would have been hardly any point in trying to report on
    internecine affairs without the appropriate social foundation for
    such gossip, i.e. a scene lively, colorful and diversified enough
    to supply the necessary information and interested in it as well.
    Golem's Glossing soon became the mag's most popular column, and
    while I myself am no contributor to the now Vienna based *Anubis*
    any longer, the continued existence of this periodical goes to
    show that the German magical scene has matured enough to compete
    with the - nowadays far less - picturesque setup in the U.K.
    (which used to be *the* prime benchmark for comparison well into
    the eighties).
    Thus, the "Bonn Group" may well be viewed as the instigator
    and nucleus of the modern German magical scene in the eighties.
    The influence of the Magical Pact of the Illuminates of
    Thanateros (IOT) and of Chaos Magic will be covered at some
    length in the next Letter from Germany, so before I end this
    instalment I would like to give a short summary of Wicca and
    Paganism in the German speaking world today.
    Wicca, at least in its formalized aspects (schools,
    traditions &c.), being a strictly English phenomenon from its
    inception, it is not surprising that the German Wicca scene has
    done little but imitate its compeers in the British Isles.
    Contacts with the U.K. were and still are pretty strong, but it
    is a moot point whether the majority of German speaking Wiccans
    are adherents of the Gardnerian or rather the Alexandrian school.
    My impression is that these distinctions, hotly debated though
    they were in the England of the seventies and early eighties,
    have been watered down on the Continent, while there is hardly
    any "hereditary" scene worth mentioning at all. If German pagans
    do pretend to being "hereditary" (whatever such claims may be
    worth), they are usually on the ariosophic or runelore side and
    not involved in the craft.
    German Wicca used to be strictly a closed shop affair
    dominated by cliqueish squabbles and infights, until the well
    known Hamburg based lady journalist Gisela Graichen published a
    bestselling hardcover, *Die neuen Hexen. Gespr che mit Hexen*
    ("The New Witches. Conversations with Witches") in 1986, in which
    she claimed (albeit misguidedly) that there were some 20,000
    active Wiccans in Germany alone, while 200 would then have been a
    more realistic figure.
    Little did she fathom that the handful of people she had
    interviewed constituted about half of the then active and
    articulate Wiccan set in Germany. However, facts published
    commonly being regarded as facts true, (paradoxically
    *especially* by the publishing profession, who should really know
    better, strange as this may sound to the layman), other German
    publishers took her at face value and felt attracted by this
    seemingly vast and expanding market. Thus bookshops were suddenly
    inundated with literature on the topic in the following year or
    two and witchcraft became the dernier cri with those mainstream
    people who were either totally new to the occult or had only been
    dabbling with it on the fringe.
    While not a Wiccan myself, I, too, was instrumental in
    getting an anonymous paperback on the cult published in 1987 with
    one of Germany's major paperback and mass market publishers, a
    minor bestseller which was to give some spunk to the hitherto
    somewhat parochial, simplicistic Wiccan scene, reducing the
    strong goddess-bias in favor of a more balanced approach
    *including* the male element on an "equal rights" basis, giving
    hints on magazines to read and modes of contacting covens: *Das
    Hexenbuch. Authentische Texte moderner Hexen zu Geschichte, Magie
    und Mythos des alten Weges* ("The Witches' Book. Authentic Texts
    by Modern Witches on History, Magic and Myth of the Ancient Way";
    now out of print).
    It was also during this post-feminist era that museum
    exhibitions centering on witches, traditional herbal medicine and
    "Wise Women" began to crop up like mushrooms overnight in all
    three German speaking countries, especially so in holiday
    resorts, as if sponsored by various Boards of Tourism ... and a
    Wiccan biassed German magazine like *Mescalito* gained hordes of
    new subscribers attracted by the boom. Today, interest in the
    craft has waned again like the moon, but it is anybody's guess
    how many people have really stuck to their guns and would
    consider themselves to be active Wiccans.
    As in other countries, most contemporary German adherents of
    pagan ideals are primarily concerned with ecological and ethnic
    issues, tending to opt for Green politics, and the majority are
    certainly suckers for the Gaia hypothesis and Rupert Sheldrake's
    once so popular, rather overestimated "theory" of morphic fields
    (which he himself seems basically to have renounced in the
    meantime). But these fairly simple doctrines seem to represent
    the acme of intellectuality within this scene already. Both, the
    Wicca cult and neopaganism in general, being primarily of an
    avowedly *religious* nature, they do not tend to develop original
    magical theories and practices of their own and may thus be
    fairly disregarded in a history of magic proper. Their influx on
    modern magic has been negligible, not to be compared with the
    influence of neoshamanism as presented by popular American
    workshop speakers, the most notable amongst whom have certainly
    been Don Eduardo Calderon Palomino from Peru and Alberto Villoldo
    and Michael Harner from the USA.

    ==================================================================

    *In the next Letters from Germany:*

    * "Edition Magus" and the German Magical Revival * "Germanic
    Chaos": a moot look at the IOT and Chaoism * Ludwig Staudenmaier:
    an early pioneer who demanded chairs for experimental magic at
    German universities during the Kaiserreich * Aleister Crowley in
    Germany * Ariosophism and Nazi Occultism: some basic
    misapprehensions cleared * Runic lore in Germany yesterday and
    today * early American influences on the O.T.O. * "Vorsprung
    durch Technik": Computer Magic made in Germany * the magician as
    a cyber punk: Cyber Magic * Clan Animals: an Afro-Austro-German
    neo-tradition * the Eastern Diaspora: magic after reunification *
    the European conflict: "Ice Magic" or The Might of Cold versus
    Bourgeois Boy Scout Idylls * "Ever-glowing embers": the Witch
    Hunt is still on &c.

    -+-
    * Origin: ChaosBox: Nothing is true -> all is permitted... (2:243/2)

    Bill Dean
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
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