HOW THE SOCIETY IS RUN
WHO PAYS?
A FEW facts may be useful to stimulate and interest by way
of chronicle. The Theosophical Society entered on its sixteenth
year in November, 1890. It was founded without cash, it has worked
in every quarter of the world; by its efforts the thought of
the day has been affected in both East and West, all in the face
of ridicule, without capital, and with but small contributions
in its first ten years. How, then, has it been run, and who pays?
It has been run on faith, and the few have paid while the many
have benefitted. Those few never begrudged the money, deeming
it a duty to spend and be spent in a great and noble effort.
But now that we have passed the fifteenth milestone and entered
on the dawn preceding another important era in our history, it
is surely time that more liberal contributions by those who have
means should be made, and that those who can each spare a small
sum, but hitherto have spent all on self or family, should donate
that infinitesimal amount to enable the seed so carefully and
painfully sown to be tended and made to yield a harvest.
Ever member knows, or ought to know, that in the office of
the General Secretary an enormous quantity of work is done. Not
mere formal official work - for of that there is minimum - but
good, honest, painstaking work in attending to the needs of the
whole body and of each and every member who indicates a want.
Tracts by the hundred thousand sown over the land. Who paid?
A few earnest men and women in money or work. Would our general
treasury have permitted this? Every month a carefully prepared
copy of the Forum is sent each member, and a carefully
written article to each Branch. The printing of these, some $27
per month, was paid for by the treasury. Who paid for the labor,
the intellect, the hire, the interest, the sympathy of the editor
and assistants? No one but himself. And yet he, too, paid out
largely in cash for the privilege of working in a noble cause.
Every day occupied from nine o'clock to four in receiving, reading
and answering with care and theosophic interest the numerous
letters from members and enquirers. Who paid? No one; it was
free. When, then, did the Forum have the needful mental
attention? At night, when the hard work of the day was over.
For what profit? For no worldly profit, but at a loss of pleasures
of the theater, the music hall, the favorite study, while careless
members in every corner almost hesitated to pay their dues.
Has the Society a complete record of its numerous members,
of when and where admitted, and by whom endorsed? Yes, accurate
in every particular. Who did it? The same persons in the same
day's work. Who paid? No one, not even the treasury. And yet,
indeed, some captious persons would even berate these unfortunate
slaves of theosophy for an occasional whiff of the fragrant weed
- their only dissipation. Thus the work goes on from day to day
and week to week, no matter whether the members pay or not, and
also in the face of many annoyances caused by the failure of
Branch officials to read or follow the rules. But there is still
other work done for the cause. Many persons talked with about
theosophy, many articles written for the papers so that the name
of theosophy may be made more widely known. When is that done,
and who pays? In the evening, and it produces no pay.
Is pay desired, is it right to ask for it, is it the object
of this to grumble at so much outlay? Not at all. But members
ought to know these facts so that they may understand that a
few persons in fact furnish the money for the very large expenses
of the Society. This ought not to be so. One great reason why
it should not be is that, when the necessary money is given by
but a few, the resulting special karmic benefit flows to and
follows after those few persons, whereas if the whole Society
gave the means, not only greater work would be done, but also
to every member would be recorded in the great karmic ledger
the credit for such acts.
And just now there are great opportunities arising. The American
Section should have in its special pay a number of learned men
- they are called pandits - in India for the purpose of sending
translations to us for general use and the education of the people
in respect to what has been and is being done in the great cause
of philosophy in Eastern lands. The present state of the general
treasury will not permit of this now, although the amount of
money per month needed for the object is not very large. We have
in India from the efforts of Col. Olcott a library which will
one day be a great institution. We ought to have the staff of
pandits there too, for the especial use of this Section. It remains
to be seen whether we shall be able to accomplish this. There
is no reason why we should not. Other societies are able to get
the money for all sorts of purposes, such, for instance, as paying
the salaries of useless missionaries to people who cannot be
converted and better unconverted. And we need also theosophical
apostles.
Turn now to London. There we see that by the noble sacrifices
of the few there is a headquarters, a real building, in which
the work is carried on unceasingly. How could they ever have
gotten a house if Mrs. Annie Besant had not given one to them,
and how could they ever have produced the mass of literature
given out by H.P. Blavatsky for our benefit if the Society had
depended upon paid work for the procurement of it? See how much
the English government and the colleges pay for the work of such
men as Max Müand others, which, although it is good work
in its way and has been going on for many years, has made no
sensible change in the people by its weak and wavering impact
upon their minds. Yet in fifteen short years the efforts of H.P.
Blavatsky, Col. Olcott, and others have made the entire world
look with longing and respect and hope to the vast stores left
to us by the ancient philosophers of the East. And all of this
by the few for no pay and for no honor, and in the face of calumny
and scorn from the world at large.
Is it not the duty of every member of the Society to now,
if never before, give what he can in time, money, and effort
for the pushing on the work so well begun?
A few practical words. There is hardly a man or woman in the
Society who is not able to spare in the course of the year at
least five dollars. It may be saved by men in a hundred different
ways, and by women in ways they know. The accumulation of these
small sums would in the end be enough to carry on the various
old plans so long in use, and forward others just formulated
and to be made in the future. And such contributions given to
a cause that has no dogma, no creed to enforce, no particular
set of bishops and ministers to feed and pamper, would carry
with them a force and energy great enough to make the name of
theosophy known to every human being in the world, and at last
to bring about the realization of the first object of the Society
- the brotherhood of man - among men, which now sadly enough
resides above, in the ideal, in the field of the stars.
William Q. Judge
Path, March, 1891
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