"It's Up To Ourselves"
A Mother, A Daughter, and GURDJIEFF
A Shared Memoir and Family Photo Album
by Jessmin and Dushka Howarth
Preface:
References
to “The Fourth Way,” “The Enneagram,” “Harmonious Development,”
and so forth, appear everywhere nowadays and the name of G. I.
Gurdjieff, the man who originally introduced most of these
concepts to the West in the early 1900s, is often used as a
commercial attention grabber.
The 1985 publication of
Gurdjieff: An Annotated
Bibliography, a 363-page volume,
drove this home to many of us. Identifying and briefly summarizing
the existing books and articles about this philosopher and writer,
who had died in 1949 almost completely unknown except to a small
coterie of pupils and admirers, it lists the astonishing number of
one thousand seven hundred and forty- three publications (in
English and French) And every year the list increases.
Unfortunately, of the now almost three thousand
publications about Gurdjieff and his work presently available, one
can with discrimination and a clear conscience recommend only a
very small percentage to the serious reader. Most of them are
inept, misguided or, worse, sometimes really destructive. The
saleability of the Gurdjieff name has resulted in an avalanche of
spurious imitations. Hundreds of writings and public presentations
are offered nowadays by people who never knew the man himself or
had direct experience of his teaching. However they realize that
by using his name they increase credibility and sales for their
own work.
For years many of us laughed at this profiteering, clumsy
and blatant as it was. However such shameless exploitation not
only produces ugly distortions but is cruelly unfair to those
many good people who have worked quietly and faithfully for years
to preserve the integrity and continuity of this valuable, and to
them personally, sacred system of ideas.
In the Americas and in Europe of the 1920s, Asian and
even Near- Eastern culture, thought and religious practices were
almost unrecognized, or were,
at best, suspect. But the “Gurdjieff Teaching," reconciling as it
does Eastern spiritual ideas and contemporary scientific
discoveries, was practical and free of mystical trappings and
cultish atmosphere. It attracted the attention and active
participation of educated, successful-in-life adults, and
evidently satisfied a deep need in an era of weakening
traditions and modern challenges. Today that interest intensifies
and continues.
In more
than twenty-five countries around the world thousands of
serious, discriminating people come together regularly in
large, active groups to support each other’s attempts to
verify and put into practice “The Work,” as it has come to
be known. In truth, it is no easy panacea! So for many of
these pupils it has been difficult to accept that what
started out as such a private, if not down right secret
personal study is now widely discussed, and eagerly
investigated by the media. It is publicly revealed
internationally not only in numerous books and magazines
but also in TV documentaries and feature films, (notably
the award-winning Meetings With Remarkable Men directed by
Peter Brook), and ever more widely (and mostly
inaccurately) on the internet...
Despite increasing popular interest
in Gurdjieff, much less is known about an essential part
of his rich legacy: the extensive and exacting series of
physical exercises now called simply “The Movements,”
which have been variously described as “Sacred Dances,”
“esoteric gymnastics,” or, as Jacques Maritain, the French
theologian called them, “meditation in motion.”
In order to introduce his
new ideas to the West, Gurdjieff briefly showed his
Movements to the general public in Paris in late 1923,
with skillfully prepared, elaborate theatrical
performances in colorful ethnic costumes, a
thirty-six-piece orchestra and an informed commentary by
the respected English editor and critic, A.R. Orage.
Smaller scale demonstrations were presented in various
cities of the United States in 1924.
A small number of articles
appeared in the American and European press at that time
(see Chapter 4) but another twenty-five years would pass
before any further mention of Gurdjieff appeared in print.
In certain circles these
demonstrations attracted attention and comment and people
who expressed interest were offered the opportunity to
join small study groups. However as soon as the American
tour was completed, those early Movements (and another
hundred or so that were developed later) were withdrawn
from public access.
Since then Gurdjieff’s
students have maintained a constant effort to preserve and
protect the Movements undistorted and to prevent their
indiscriminate use. These are strong methods which must be
used in the context of an ongoing practice of
self-observation, “work on oneself,” and a careful
synthesis of physical, emotional and psychological
experience.
Gurdjieff’s emphasis after
1917 on Movements as an integral part of his teaching
greatly discomfited some of his more intellectual
followers. This included the Russian P. D. Ouspensky whose
scientific mind demanded (and then was fully satisfied
with) logical, precise explanations and formulas, which
precious material he accurately reformulated both orally
and in voluminous writings, thereby earning gratitude from
many followers and readers.
However, it was often the
Movements that attracted Westerners to the Work and many
of these gained understanding, and often had profound
experiences from working with Movements long before they
learned of the “Ideas” through verbal expositions. Notably
my mother, Jessmin Howarth, and her friend and colleague,
Jeanne de Salzmann, both of whom abandoned successful
dance and teaching careers after being exposed to
Movements, to devote their lives to Gurdjieff’s “System”—
before reading any books, hearing any lectures or group
discussions. They continued actively instructing and
preserving the Work, especially the Movements, until their
respective deaths at the ages of ninety-two and one
hundred and one.
When my mother first
encountered Gurdjieff in 1922, he and a group of thirty or
so followers had just arrived in Paris by a long and
difficult route, driven out of Russia by the Revolution.
Though formerly of the intelligentsia and aristocracy,
these “refugees” had few European contacts or readily
marketable skills and no financial resources. They spoke
little French or English and even their legal status was
uncertain.
Mother, on the other hand,
orphaned at an early age and having endured a grim
childhood in Victorian England, had the good fortune and
talent to be sent as a teenager to cosmopolitan pre-World
War I Dresden for advanced violin studies. There a
multi-national community of avant-garde artists and
performers at the Dalcroze Institute in Hellerau welcomed
her into their midst. With their encouragement and
collaboration, she developed her other talents in the
fields of dance, pantomime, and physical therapy, changing
her life’s direction.
Ten years later, at the time
of Gurdjieff’s arrival, Mother, then thirty, was already
at the peak of a career as choreographer for the Paris
Opera, a sought-after teacher of Dalcroze Eurythmics and
pantomime, and an esteemed veteran of the history-making
theatrical experiment, Jacques Copeau’s Vieux Colombier.
How unlikely the meeting,
much less the relationship, of these two, Gurdjieff and
Mother! And how difficult for me, a result, to understand
years hence... [Excerpt]
In October of 2003
The Gurdjieff International Review
published advance
excerpts of this book.
"It’s
Up to Ourselves" by Jessmin & Dushka Howarth |
“As the
years pass, I become increasingly, and painfully,
aware of how few of us are still around who actually
knew Mr. Gurdjieff, spent time with him, shared meals,
or traveled with him. Simple, human aspects of his
life are being forgotten, misconstrued, or blown up
out of all proportion...
[Excerpt]
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