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A CALL FOR A NEW SOCIETY
by John G. Bennett
Continuous Education is founded
on the principle that human beings are capable of unlimited self-perfecting
from birth to death and beyond. Self-perfecting is three-fold: bodily,
mental and spiritual. It gives meaning to our lives as individuals;
but there is also a continuous education of the human race to enable
us to become truly human -- which we are still pretty far from being.
Progress in self-perfecting is not automatic; it
requires use of the right methods and the determination to persevere
against all discouragement. Very few people can achieve it alone;
and, for this reason, 'Schools of Wisdom' have existed from time
immemorial to provide instruction and to create environments in
which all can contribute to the common aim. Although such schools
have always been present they are little in evidence except in times
of crisis and-change, when they extend their activities to enable
more people to prepare themselves for the task ahead.
We are now in such a period, and more and more people
are looking for methods and guidance to help them with their own
problems. They wish to be of service, but can see only too plainly
that things have gone wrong for lack of 'know-how' and are afraid
of doing harm where they mean to do good. Sensible people are acutely
aware that something has gone wrong with humanity. Our present society,
based on great institutions that control economic resources and
political power, tends to strengthen the materialistic and egoistic
sides of human nature, We need a new kind of society in which-concern
for needs of others and of Nature as a whole will predominate over
self-interest and fear. One obvious need for such a society is to
change our eating habits so that the whole world can be kept from
starvation. We need to be more self-sufficient and less dependent
upon vast inhuman organisations.
All agree that the world is facing a food crisis,
though few admit its true gravity. The artificial stimulation of
agriculture by mechanisation and synthetic fertilisers is impoverishing
the soil. There is another scarcely noticed effect: work on the
land has lost its charm and become intolerably dull. There is in
developed and undeveloped countries alike a flight from the land
that cannot be reversed unless life on the land is made exciting
and rewarding as it was in ancient times. It is useless to call
for more effort to produce food and deny the producers a worth-while
life. It is typical of great institutions to ignore the human factor.
Unfortunately, even in small societies, concern for the general
welfare is paid lip-service rather than readiness to make the sacrifices
that are needed.
Unfortunately, concern for others can be translated
into effective action only by those who are working for their own
self-perfecting. Only people who sincerely wish to give rather than
take, to overcome their own weaknesses rather than exploit the weaknesses
of others, can create a society that will survive in the hard times
ahead. The hard times are themselves a necessary factor in self-perfecting.
This is one reason why schools of wisdom can become active when
mankind is approaching a time of crisis. The task ahead is now very
clear. We must demonstrate that communities engaged in food production
can provide a really good way of life. This calls for a new kind
of society. We believe it can be created from small beginnings.
THE CLAYM0NT SOCIETY
The task is to create a community that will be able
to maintain itself under difficult economic and social conditions.
For this, it must produce the main necessities of life: food, shelter,
clothing, recreation, and as the foundation of it all, a shared
spiritual quest for self-perfecting. This announces the creation
of a new society, sponsored by The Institute of Comparative Study
of History, Philosophy and the Sciences Ltd. of London, England.
This was incorporated in 1946 to do research into the factors that
make for progress and retrogression in human individuals and societies.
It has investigated most of the psychological, religious and spiritual
movements of our time and also the traditional methods preserved
in the Schools of Wisdom. It has, in the course of twenty-eight
years, developed and tested a unique system for training men and
women in the way of self-perfecting. This has been applied at the
International Academy for Continuous Education established four
years ago at Sherborne House in England. The success of the method
has led to a demand for similar facilities in the USA.
To meet the demand, the CLAYMONT SOCIETY FOR CONTINUOUS
EDUCATION is being incorporated-in the State of West Virginia.
It is intended to go far beyond the basic training now available
at Sherborne. The task will be to create, within-three to five years,
a fully integrated society, the members of which will be committed
to self-perfecting and to service to Nature and their fellow-men.
To meet the needs of the present crisis in human affairs, the Claymont
Society will make itself largely self-sufficient in the provision
of food, shelter, clothing and other necessities of life. It will
do so partly by intensive food production and partly by the adoption
of a system of diet that enables the requirements of the human organism
to be satisfied with the minimum consumption of foodstuffs in short
supply such as animal proteins.
The chief problem in any community is to achieve unity
of purpose and harmony among people of different temperament and
cultural background. It is above all essential to eliminate the
conflicts that come from desire for power of some and the laziness
and self-indulgence of others. This can be achieved only if there
is a right balance between people at different stages of self-perfecting.
The society will be composed of four categories of members.
The first category consists of those undergoing training
prior to admission as full members. These are called 'Candidates'.
The candidates will receive an all-round training identical with
that of the Sherborne Academy and contribute an important work force
for the needs of the community.
The second category consists of specialists who are
responsible for administration, teaching and for the direction of
all operations requiring skill and specialised know-how. They have
power to make executive decisions but share in all the duties that
do not call for specialised know-how.
The distinguishing mark of the society is the role
of the two remaining categories. These are elders whose long experience
and high personal qualities enable them to act as guides and counsellors
to the Candidates and Specialists. They have no executive function
but they exercise authority within the community by virtue of their
qualities. The first category -- called Counsellors -- not only
advise individuals but are teachers particularly as regards spiritual
exercises. Their most important role derives from their own experience
of spiritual realities and the resulting ability to give confidence
to seekers that the path of self-perfecting is in fact open to them.
The fourth category comprises those rare men and women who have
direct spiritual insights and powers that enable them to bring the
entire society into contact with the spiritual world. They are called
Initiates.
At Claymont Court we can count upon the presence of
members of the first three categories. Those of the fourth need
not be in permanent residence as their guidance is required only
for the general strategic direction of the enterprise. As the society
grows, Counsellors and Initiates will appear.
CLAYMONT COURT
The property comprises 418 acres of land and buildings
all of which can be used for the purposes of the society. It is
situated in the fertile and picturesque Shenandoah Valley, Jefferson
County, West Virginia within four miles of Charles Town and twelve
miles from Harpers Ferry, one of the historical landmarks of the
USA. It is readily accessible from Washington (58 miles), Baltimore
(62 miles), Philadelphia, New York and Pittsburgh. Dulles International
Airport is within forty minutes by car.
The mansion built in 1838 is a fine example of late
colonial architecture with a very large ballroom, six reception
rooms, eleven bedrooms and seven bathrooms. The house has two servants'
wings capable of housing twenty to thirty people. There are also
extensive out-buildings and three tenant houses in good repair.
An even more useful feature for the purposes of the
society is a vast barn and auxiliary buildings 420 ft. in length
and including an octagonal theatre 107 ft. across that was erected
for showing and selling cattle at auction. This is to be converted
into living quarters, lecture rooms, studios theatre for the Candidates'
course.
The geological formation is a dense grey limestone
that outcrops in many places. The land is partly arable and grazing
and partly woodland. With ample labor available it can produce enough
food for a community of 10,000 people. There are two springs on
the property producing more than five hundred million gallons a
year, enough to supply a town of 10,000 inhabitants. The
water comes from the limestone formation and is hard, pure and suitable
for all purposes. Very extensive vegetable production can be assured
by irrigation. Forty-eight acres of land have been zoned and registered
for fairly dense occupation to give over a hundred private dwellings.
There are, at present, no planning regulations in
Jefferson County and we shall be free to undertake any kind of activity,
educational, agricultural or small-scale engineering that is permitted
by our own charter.
THE PROJECT
The long-term aim of the Society is to demonstrate
that a viable social structure can be founded upon the principle
of continuous education. Claymont Court is large enough and has
sufficiently varied resources to enable a model society to be established
embodying all the main activities required for self-sufficiency
and a harmonious and creative life.
The term 'Fourth Way School' was, used by Gurdjieff
to distinguish the type of society we are creating at Claymont.
It has also been called by Bennett in his Dramatic Universe,
a 'Psychokinetic Society', to indicate that its members believe
in human perfectibility. A school of the Fourth Way exists solely
to carry out an allotted task and to train people for this purposes.
The task at Claymont is to demonstrate that a predominately food-producing
society can enjoy fully satisfying conditions of life on all planes:
physical, intellectual and spiritual.
A. Training of Candidates. All who wish
to form part of the permanent community will be required to pass
through a training period of not less than ten months. The school
will use the methods and follow the programme of work at
Sherborne House. Teacher-specialists will be available both for
general instruction and for private teaching. The Candidates will
learn all the basic skills required in a self-sufficient community.
The purpose of the course is to help Candidates in
their work of self-perfecting, to give them confidence in the reality
of the spiritual world and to train them to become specialists able
to teach others and to serve Nature.
It must be emphasised that the course demands hard
work, discipline and the readiness to sacrifice comforts and prejudices.
Those who apply for admission are carefully examined to test the
sincerity of their commitment.
B. Specialists, Thirty to forty specialists
will be required for the school and to direct the technical work
of the society. They must combine special skill in their chosen
line of activity with a thorough grasp of the method and the ability
to use it to instruct others. Specialists include:
i) Administrators and Accountants.
ii) Teachers in the school. The teaching includes
Gurdjieff's sacred dances, psychological and spiritual exercises,
the study of man and societies, contact with Nature.
iii) Practical skills, domestic horticultural,
agricultural, building construction and maintenance.
iv) Art. including music and drama, spinning and
weaving, pottery.
v.) Health, diet, natural medicine and physiotherapy.
Specialists must not only be highly trained, but also
able to set an example of self-discipline. Their membership in the
community implies that they are committed to their own self-perfection.
C. Research and Development. Fourth
Way Schools are geared to the needs of the time and place of their
activity. They look at the present and future and are ready to put
away traditional ideas and methods if they no longer fit the needs
of the time.
At this time, we need new forms of society that will
be infinitely more flexible than the large institutions that are
trying to run the world. The society of the future is likely to
be less dependent upon large organisations to produce and distribute
the necessities of life and will produce for itself nearly all it
consumes. This will create a demand for a new intermediate technology
making use of the know-how of modern industry, but applying it to
small-scale operations. Dr. Schumacher has put forward plans for
intermediate technology suitable for communities of the size that
is right for a complete Fourth Way School and we already have small
teams of workers engaged in projects for alternative sources of
energy. Other projects include the production of clothing and furniture
efficiently without requiring large installations.
The Research and Development projects will include
ecological and environmental studies.
The projects to be undertaken will be chosen with
regard to their potential value to other communities and to the
improvement of village life in developing countries. Candidates
with scientific and engineering background will have the opportunity
of specialising in a branch of Intermediate Technology that interests
them.
D. Families. Claymont should be able,
at an early stage, to support a hundred families engaged in food
production and intermediate technology. The main line will include:
I. FOOD PRODUCTION - the aim would be to,
establish a balanced diet based mainly upon vegetable proteins.
There will, therefore, be a relatively small number of cows and
sheep. It is hoped to apply new technologies such as Dr. Todd's
"Culture of Algae" to supply a large fish farm. The community
will produce and grind its own wheat. Small-scale food production
being labor-intensive, will occupy a large proportion of the population.
II. INTERMEDIATE TECHNOLOGY devices for using
alternative sources of energy. Small-scale production of utensils,
furniture, fabrics and paper will be developed partly from our own
research and partly from exchange with other societies.
III. COTTAGE INDUSTRIES such as spinning, weaving,
furniture making and also fine crafts.
IV. PRINTING AND PUBLISHING - especially the
society's own literature.
Members wishing to make their home at Claymont will
be required to go through the Basic Course for Candidates and to
be approved by the appropriate specialist as regards practical skill.
They must be recommended by a Counsellor of the society at Sherborne,
Claymont and elsewhere.
Families will include Specialists teaching the Candidates'
Course, also workers in research, health and other sections of the
society.
Approved families will be allotted one third to half
acre sites and will be responsible for building their own houses.
It should eventually be possible to take 200-300 families, including
those of Specialists.
E. Education of Children. A school for
children of all ages will be started as soon as enough families
have been established. The aim will be to provide an all-round education
and training with a strong bias towards practical skills. This will
be a model school based on the principle of human perfectibility
and organised to bring out the latent potential of each individual
child. The teachers will be qualified specialists. The most important
and sadly neglected part of education is the integration of children
into the family life by way of service and the acquisition of practical
skills.
Children from outside the society will be accepted
providing their parents subscribe to the basic concept.
F. Health. The society has no doctrinaire
views on health and diet, but the majority of its members favour
the use of natural medicine. It is intended to provide specialists
in natural diet, homeopathy, acupuncture, and hydrotherapy. The
Academy at Sherborne has investigated and strongly supports the
principles and methods advocated by Dr. Chandra Sharma, Consultant
and Medical Director of the Ramana Health Centre and it is hoped
that his guidance will be available to enable Natural Medicine to
be developed at Claymont.
We believe that the return to the land will create
an increasing demand for natural diet and natural medicine. An immense
body of knowledge and experience is available, but there are few
qualified practitioners. It is hoped that Claymont will attract
members of the medical profession interested in gaining first-hand
knowledge of the principles and practice of natural Medicine.
G. Spiritual Direction. The society
will be open to believers of all religions, who will be free to
practice their own form of worship, but adherence to an institutional
religion is not obligatory. There will be an overall spiritual direction
based on the principle of human perfectibility The highest standards
of living are required for accelerated self-perfection and all members
of the society will be expected to take part in the spiritual disciplines
and exercises started in the Candidates' Course and continued throughout
life.
The creed of the society is that we men have been
brought into existence to serve God through Nature and our follow-men.
This is the doctrine of Reciprocal Maintenance according to which
everything that exists, including man, serves a cosmic purpose which
is one integral whole. As Nature serves man, man must serve Nature;
but he cannot see far enough into the future to know what is required
of him and must therefore look for guidance to the Higher Spiritual
Powers.
Divine Service and the act of worship are the means
by which man can be connected with guidance and higher sources of
energy. The society will have its own liturgical forms of worship
that will supplement, rather than replace, those of the great world
religions. It is hoped that the experience that has been gained
over the years will contribute to the revitalising of religion.
INNER AND OUTER RELATIONSHIPS
Membership in the society is open to all without restrictions
of age, sex, race, creed or cultural status. The intending member
must satisfy the society that he or she is sincerely committed to
the task of self-perfection and is prepared to accept the discipline
that this entails. Residents at Claymont, apart from the transient
visitors, must possess or acquire some special skill enabling them
to contribute to the material needs of the society. This skill may
apply to any of the activities described in the previous section
and, of course, includes manual labor as agricultural or building
and domestic workers.
There will be three classes:
1. Full Resident Members.
2. Full Non-resident Members who accept all the obligations
of membership but live and work outside Claymont.
3. Associate Members who have not been through the
Candidates' Course.
Only full members vote at the Annual Meetings.
The fundamental principle of service to Nature requires
that the society and all its members should seek to understand the
needs of our natural environment and be committed to its conservation.
Service to the human environment is an integral part
of the wider concept of service to Nature. It is very hard to be
a man, and self-perfecting is an immense undertaking. Man is still
immature, yet he imagines himself competent to manage his affairs.
We should not regard man as being a privileged being entitled to
pollute and destroy the natural environment for his own selfish
benefit. Nevertheless, the society will not engage in polemic or
propaganda. It will be essentially non-political and seek good relationships
with all parties and interests, especially those in the area of
its activity,
It is hoped that the project at Claymont will be the
forerunner of similar communities in other parts of the USA and
also in Europe, it may also be possible to help in the development
of a prosperous village life in the developing countries, nearly
all of which are threatened by the flight from the land. If mankind
is to have a future, it must be based on respect and love for our
Mother Nature.
Sherborne House
November, 1974
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