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| The Federation Of Damanhur |
982 Views |
| posted on Thursday, May 31, 2007 |
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ATLANTIS IN THE MOUNTAINS OF ITALY By Ross Robertson What Is Enlightenment Issue 36, April - June 2007
Original Link
WIE visits one of the world’s most successful communal experiments -- the Federation of Damanhur
-- and explores the ins and outs of esoteric spirituality, the secrets
of time travel, and what the utopias of tomorrow have to do with
yesterday’s golden age.
..............
What would you say
if I told you there was a place nestled in the foothills of the Italian
Alps, by the wild gray waters of the Torrente Chiusella, where dreams
are not just for children, and magic has not yet gone from the world? A
place where men and women live together in harmony with the land and in
tune with the cosmos, working and building, playing and cooking,
ringing out the evening’s greeting on conch shells that echo from
village to village across the forested valleys, gathering at night to
revive the lost rites of history’s great kaleidoscope of sacred
traditions in underground halls and temples under the moon? It is a
place washed by mysterious energies, where people seem to age more
slowly and latent creative abilities bubble up spontaneously in young
and old alike. A place where artists and artisans, merchants and
councilmen, poets and architects all walk the paths of a university
dedicated to the quest for esoteric knowledge and the spiritual
advancement of humankind. You might even hear stories of quantum
physicians plying the borders of matter and energy who claim to have
penetrated the information codes underlying human DNA; or psychic
technicians who speak of traveling the earth’s planetary energy lines,
slipping backward in time to set events in motion that may be destined
to change the course of the distant future . . .
What would you
say if I told you the story of a people, a vision, a whole society that
sounded less like anything you’ve ever heard of in this world and more
like something Gene Roddenberry dreamed up for an episode of Star Trek
-- one of those classic undisturbed planets, idyllically isolated from
the rest of the galaxy, where people wear colorful flowing robes, the
kids run right up to the crew of the Enterprise because they never
learned to be suspicious of strangers, and the atmosphere is perfumed
by a sort of quaintness and real dignity and also by a certain feeling
of doomed innocence? Would you even believe me if I told you this was
no science fiction utopia at all but was every bit as real as the stone
farmhouses and stone-covered hills of the Italian countryside that
surrounds it, just fifty kilometers north of the city of Torino?
..............
The First Spiritual Autonomous Region of the New World
"A
map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even
glancing at, for it leaves out the one country at which Humanity is
always landing. And when Humanity lands there, it looks out, and seeing
a better country, sets sail. Progress is the realisation of Utopias."
--- Oscar Wilde
Here at WIE, we’re lovers of innovation, fans of
the unusual, and suckers for the radical. So when we heard about an
intentional community in northern Italy’s Piedmont Alps so bold as to
call itself “the first spiritual autonomous region of the new world,”
suffice it to say it piqued our curiosity.
The more we learned
about this place, the more intrigued we became. For one thing, it’s no
small-time operation: More than a thousand people live there, spread
across an entire subalpine valley and deeply incorporated in the local
community, culture, and economy. Two, their society is based on
something that is all too rare in this cynical world -- unrestrained,
unabashed optimism -- and they have consciously dedicated their lives
to what they see as the reawakening of the divine within both the
individual and the larger collective. Three, perhaps more successfully
than hundreds if not thousands of other communal experiments founded on
utopian ideals over the last fifty years, they have not only stood the
test of time but prospered. Established in 1975, they seem to have
remained in a state of dynamic growth for more than three decades now,
boasting dozens of thriving businesses; their own daily newspaper;
their own currency, constitution, and government; their own schools,
political movement, and fire department; and, most of all, a spirit of
passionate self-reinvention that consistently refuses to be quenched.
And
there’s more. For all you esotericists out there, the citizens of the
first spiritual autonomous region of the new world also claim to be
inheritors of the mystical legacy of Egypt and Atlantis, guardians of a
lost and ancient knowledge they fervently believe is going to help
awaken and evolve human consciousness. All that Star Trek stuff I said
before about quantum technology and time travel and DNA codes and such?
It barely scratches the surface of their belief system. They’ve even
codified and immortalized their entire esoteric scheme into sacred
architecture, in the form of a gigantic chain of underground temples
that looks like it came straight out of the pages of Tolkien. But these
adherents of a philosophy so heady and complex it would take me every
page of this magazine to explain it are somehow, at the very same time,
unusually down-to-earth and refreshingly action-oriented. After all,
they excavated every last square inch of these “Temples of Humankind”
by hand, with no help at all from professional engineers. “The search
for the inner self and God,” they explain on their website, “is founded
on . . . a harmonious and continuous inner transformation, the
overcoming of personal limits, the capacity to measure ourselves
through action and practical work, [and] the respect for all forms of
life, be they subtle or physical.”
For all that, you probably
haven’t heard of them before. They kept a low profile over the years
for several reasons, not least of which is that they lacked permission
to be digging out a seventy-meter-deep, six-thousand-cubic-meter series
of tunnels and caverns underneath a local mountain [see the YouTube
link below for more information about this]. And they haven’t exactly
gotten a lot of good press for the whole time-travel thing. Italy is a
conservative country, nearly ninety percent Catholic, and this
curiously inspired group of occultist communitarians was probably wise
to play it conservative themselves. But you can’t keep a secret
forever, and in recent years they’ve opened their doors to the world
and are beginning to travel more and more to share their ideas and the
lessons of thirty years of hard work. Visionary artist Alex Grey has
taken an interest in the extraordinary painting, sculpture, and
glasswork of the Temples of Humankind, now recognized as an Italian
national treasure and featured in a new coffee table book
out last fall from Grey’s Chapel of Sacred Mirrors Press. They’ve got
twenty affiliated centers now in Italy, with twenty more in Europe,
Japan, and the United States. They’re stepping up their involvement on
the international stage, taking a leadership role in the Global Ecovillage Network and hosting a major conference next summer for the International Communal Studies Association called “Communities: Yesterday’s Utopia, Today’s Reality."
And they’re hard at work on their next temple project, a massive
thousand-seat underground amphitheater they plan to offer to the United
Nations.
Our interest was piqued all right. Remember, we’re
talking about more than one thousand people here. From everything we
could tell, they seemed to have tapped directly into something
remarkable, some deep creative drive that has kept them growing and
evolving all these years, aligned under the unifying banner of a shared
commitment to higher ideals. They also seemed to have devoted
incredible amounts of energy and attention to arcane philosophies and
sci-fi mythologies, not just one or two but whole grandiose hosts of
them, and although I’m as big a fan of a good sci-fi mythology as the
next guy, it wasn’t yet clear how it all fit together. In short, from
the communities of Auroville in South India to Findhorn in Scotland to
the Farm in Tennessee, you’d be hard-pressed to find a more fascinating
-- or more enigmatic -- example of the age-old utopian impulse
manifesting itself in modern times.
They call it the Federation
of Damanhur, and when the opportunity presented itself last summer to
spend a few days there, we simply could not pass it up.
Francis Bacon, Model Damanhurian?
"It
would be an unsound fancy and self-contradictory to expect that things
which have never yet been done can be done except by means which have
never yet been tried." --- Francis Bacon
I love this quote by
Francis Bacon because it captures what I love the most about Damanhur.
It’s the spirit of the place. It’s the adventurousness, the frontier
mentality, that certain je ne sais quoi of creative exuberance and
curiosity and seemingly endless goodwill, that in the end, I think,
defines them better than anything else. Truth be told, their lives are
so wildly multifaceted -- and in many ways, so ambiguous and so hidden
-- they’re a bit hard to define otherwise. That’s not going to stop me
from trying, but I thought I should at least warn you: When I first
drove up that twisty little road from the Piedmontese village of
Castellamonte on a muggy afternoon in July, past dark-canopied forests
and skinny lanes and fields the colors of an impressionist painting, I
scarcely appreciated how big a whirlwind of wonder and confusion I was
getting myself into.
That being said, whatever it was that I was
getting myself into, I think Francis Bacon would have approved. He’s
the type of guy who seemed wildly multifaceted himself, especially if
you believe the stories that say that in addition to being a
trendsetting seventeenth-century philosopher, ethicist, lawyer,
statesman, scholar, and astrologer, he was also the enlightened founder
of the esoteric Order of Rosicrucians and the true author of the plays
published under the pseudonym “William Shakespeare.” Bacon had a
curious and adventuresome spirit, too, as befits the man who invented
the revolutionary theory of observation and experimentation we know
today as the modern scientific method. What’s more, he was a
dyed-in-the-wool utopian idealist who penned one of the great classics
of the genre, The New Atlantis (1627). In a nutshell, he was inventive,
industrious, artistic, determined, and spiritually conscious -- all in
all, a pretty good model of the perfect Damanhurian. And this statement
of his could be their motto: “By far the greatest obstacle to the
progress of science and to the undertaking of new tasks and provinces
therein is found in this -- that men despair and think things
impossible.”
When I arrived at the broad marble steps of the
Olami welcome center, I was met by a keen-eyed woman named Gufo
(Italian for “owl”) who took me for a walk around the capital of
Damanhur. There, the Federation’s earliest inhabitants had built an
open-air temple with statues of sylvan gods in red clay and pillars of
white marble from Tuscany and ornate iron gates shaped in the symbols
of a sacred language purportedly from Atlantis. I saw shops and homes
and offices, solar arrays and old bits of Greek-looking statuary, chic
electric cars in the parking lots, jungle gyms and eco-friendly water
systems and spiral labyrinths of painted stone, and everywhere, signs
of construction and work in progress. They seemed to be building and
growing so fast, I felt like I was on an archaeological site, with
different eras of Damanhur’s history visible in the different planes
and angles of the landscape. “It has been difficult to write a book
about Damanhur,” Gufo admitted, “because by the time the book is
finished, Damanhur is different.”
The people we passed were
casually dressed, more or less, perhaps with a preference for vibrant
colors and flowing lines, and a few wore sashes of bright fabric at
their waists. Their smiles were warm, their manner relaxed yet
purposeful. We came to a building and entered a room probably twenty
feet square that was dominated by a kingly central table covered in
white cloth. Gufo peeled it back with a flourish, surprising me with
what had to be the world’s most colossal board game, a lavish homemade
version of Risk. She told me a group of thirty people had been playing
at least three nights a week for -- no joke -- fifteen years running!
It was a long-term political, social, economic, and historical case
study, she said, an in-depth exploration of the mechanisms of
population growth, migration, crisis, and war. And the esoteric twist
-- there is always an esoteric twist at Damanhur -- is that supposedly
everything the gamers were learning about human relationship and human
conflict was being “transmitted” psychically into the collective
knowledge banks of the race as a whole.
I’ll try to explain more
about the psychic transmission thing a little later on. For now, what’s
important is that Gufo was showing me an example of what the
Damanhurians call spiritual “research,” a word I heard a lot while I
was there. Research is the key to their spiritual lives, she said. It
is the practice of ongoing study, experimentation, and transformation
they apply to themselves and, more importantly, share with each other
every single day. They have research groups in the School of
Meditation, she explained to me, Damanhur’s very own esoteric mystery
school; there are the seven so-called Spiritual Ways, different paths
for integrating their research with their daily lives and livelihoods;
then there are the temples themselves, which I soon found out were
chock full of spiritual research laboratories of their own. And so on.
It was all a bit complicated, but Gufo -- perhaps noting the slight
glaze in my eyes -- said not to worry about it. In order to help me
understand just how central the spirit of research really is to the
spirit of Damanhur, she said, she was going to tell me the story of
their founder -- a man named Oberto Airaudi, aka Falco (falcon), an
esotericist and philosopher-poet and multidimensional Renaissance man
who reminded me, it just so happened, of that other esotericist,
philosopher-poet, and multidimensional Renaissance man I’d been
thinking about . . . a man named Francis Bacon.
Gufo’s tale, as recorded that day in my notebook, slightly embellished:
Oberto
Airaudi was born in 1950 in Torino. An unusual city. Home of the shroud
Jesus is said to have worn at the time of the resurrection. One time
residence of the world’s most famous soothsayer, Nostradamus. One of
three cities (with San Francisco and London) known to occultist lore as
the corners of an infamous triangle of black magic and paranormal
energies.
Whether or not Torino was the reason for it, Falco was
definitely not your average kid. Allegedly rolled eggs across the
kitchen floor as a toddler using only the power of his thoughts.
Remembers conjuring up ghostly apparitions to frighten his opponents on
the soccer field and attaching rockets to the sides of his bicycle to
see if he could fly. As the years went by, started having visions of
large subterranean cathedral dedicated to evolution of cosmos and
spiritual rebirth of human race. Tried (unsuccessfully) to build one by
himself out back in the family garden.
Key point: Over time,
began to funnel his interests in the further reaches of human potential
in more and more practical directions, incorporating the language and
attitudes of science into his investigations of psychic and spiritual
phenomena.
By age fourteen, experimenting with hypnosis,
levitation, and out-of-body travel; giving lectures on physics, math,
music, and esoteric philosophy to crowds of eighty or a hundred people;
and laying out the first rough principles used later to guide
development of Damanhur. Knew he was on to something when able to
convince two of his Jesuit teachers at school to quit in order to come
study with him. Opened center in Torino named after Horus,
falcon-headed Egyptian sky god whose name he also took for his own,
where he managed as many as thirty-six different esoteric research
groups at once, all of them pursuing independent projects
simultaneously.
Ran successful insurance business and developed
pranatherapy clinics and psychic healing courses all over Italy. Made a
rule for himself that he would 1) invent at least one new thing per day
and 2) read at least one book per day -- a rule he has kept ever since.
Established Damanhur, naming it after an Egyptian city that was the
site of a temple to Horus. Has now written over three hundred books and
countless articles, stories, and plays; sold in excess of fourteen
thousand of his own paintings; still gives at least two lectures a week.
I
think Francis Bacon would definitely have liked the guy. In his own
time, Bacon’s innovative methods of research and experimentation had
yet to become the foundation for science as we think of it today but
were instead associated with hermeticism, alchemy, and the occult -- a
connection echoed by Falco’s own empirical approach to esoteric
philosophy. Bacon’s New Atlantis even tells the story of a utopian
society ruled by a group of enlightened inventors who study alchemy,
healing, and life extension in caverns deep underground and whose
ultimate goal is “the knowledge of causes, and secret motions of
things; and the enlarging of the bounds of human empire, to the
effecting of all things possible.”
Bacon wrote about it. But by all appearances at least, Falco has actually tried to build the place.
The Secret Corridors of Time
"There
is a fifth dimension beyond that which is known to man. It is a
dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the
middle ground between light and shadow, between science and
superstition, and it lies between the pit of man’s fears and the summit
of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area
which we call the Twilight Zone." -- Rod Serling
No, this was
not the early 1960s and I was not trapped inside an episode of The
Twilight Zone, but there were times at Damanhur when it seemed like I
should be. Times when things just slipped a little bit sideways, and
the parameters of the everyday gave way to the territory of the
unexpected.
This was one of them. I was standing in the central
control room of the Temples of Humankind when I suddenly got the
feeling I had somehow landed on the set of a sci-fi adventure serial in
the early days of color television. Flasks and tubes for distilling
alchemical liquids huddled on a workbench. Beakers and bottles of
ingredients crowded the shelves on two walls. The room was lit only by
black light, the contents of said beakers and bottles being susceptible
to breakdown from regular incandescent light. Just outside the door was
the Hall of Spheres, where nine crystal globes filled with said
alchemical liquids stood on pedestals under a ceiling covered in
twenty-three-karat hammered gold leaf. Perfume-filled chalices rested
between them, a gallery of grails my tour guide went so far as to
suggest included the honest-to-goodness holy one. Across the Hall of
Spheres was Damanhur’s infamous time cabin, where some twenty or thirty
Damanhurians claim to have traveled back to visit the Stone Age. And on
the wall of the control room right in front of me, there was what you
might call, for lack of a better word, the master computer. Made up of
countless circuits of spiral wire, arcane symbols and schematics, a
tenth liquid-filled crystal globe, and one nine-key crystal keypad,
this command panel extraordinaire purportedly offered its operator full
control over the cosmic flows of energy and information passing through
the entire complex of the temples.
Standing there at the nexus
of what I was told were numerous kilometers of specialized copper
circuitry, I was actually standing at the center of Damanhur itself --
not just at the physical heart of their temple structure but also at
the heart of all their myriad forms of esoteric research, and even at
the heart of the overarching utopian mission that brought them to build
the temples here in the first place. You see, these subterranean
chambers were located in this particular place on this particular
mountain in this particular valley for a very particular reason. It all
dates back to the days when Falco was a teenage occultist wunderkind
living in Torino...
Of all young Oberto Airaudi’s many research
projects, perhaps his most important involved what he called the
“synchronic lines,” which he described as a planetwide system of subtle
energy and information currents that encircles the globe and links it
to the universe. “Synchronic lines are like rivers in which an infinite
amount of knowledge is stored,” he says, “as if they were a library
containing all that humankind has ever thought.” He actually spent his
late teens and early twenties mapping this global akashic network,
first by “projecting” his mind along the length of its astral highways,
then by blazing the trail physically on an extended
seven-continent-wide adventure. By the time he was finished, he’d found
but two places on earth where four major synchronic lines intersected
one another -- supercharged regions he called “shining knots,” which
allegedly served as access points for the entire system. The first was
high in the Tibetan Himalayas, and the second, to his apparent
surprise, was in a little valley in the Piedmont Alps just fifty
kilometers north of home. Its name was Valchiusella.
“By
carefully studying the flow of these energy channels,” Falco writes,
“one can foresee what will happen in the future and thus modify the
present.” By carefully studying the flow of these energy channels, the
Damanhurians seem to believe they can do just about anything. The
synchronic lines are the linchpin of their esoteric philosophy and the
lifeblood of their esoteric research. If you ever ask them where the
“information” they’re working with comes from -- where they got their
sacred language, for instance, or their knowledge of alchemy, or lost
Atlantean technologies, or healing, or divination, or any of the rest
of it -- they’ll say it came from the synchronic lines. And it is the
synchronic lines, in turn, which they believe allow them to transmit
all the fruits of their spiritual experiments and all the insights they
gain from research projects like the Risk game back out into society,
the world, the galaxy, and the universe at large. As Falco’s theory has
it, these akashic superconductors are attracted to natural features
like mountains, rivers, and caves, both natural and manmade. That, in a
nutshell, is why he came to Valchiusella to build the Temples of
Humankind. Essentially, the chambers are like hollow synchronic
antennae, deliberately excavated spaces within the mountain that
ostensibly pick up and draw in these rivers of infinite knowledge and
infinite potential, forming a living gateway through which the
Damanhurians can directly manipulate this cosmic power and by which
their efforts to evolve consciousness and transform the world can be
magnified a millionfold. Or something like that.
But that’s not
all. They say the synchronic lines are also gateways through time. And
at that very moment, I was essentially standing right on top of their
main junction box. No wonder I felt like I was phase-shifting back to
the sixties and hearing Rod Serling’s voice in my head.
Falco
moved to Valchiusella with a dozen or so of his closest students in
1977, and they broke ground on the temples in 1978. The workers
proceeded in secret and often in silence -- camouflaging the entrance
to the main passageway, masking the sounds of their hammers, removing
dirt and rock one small bucket at a time, and scattering it carefully
and inconspicuously about the forest floor so the neighbors wouldn’t
notice. The labor was intense, yet they saw it as a meditative
pilgrimage, an active metaphor for the journey deep within themselves.
The seventy or eighty Damanhurians who took part in this work over the
thirteen years their secret lasted speak convincingly of the power it
had in their lives. But then came the day in the fall of 1991 when the
authorities descended on them, with soldiers in helicopters,
threatening to dynamite the mountain unless they divulged the hidden
location of the temples. A disgruntled former community member had
turned them in.
Falco was unfazed. He simply showed the state
prosecutor in through the front door, and when the man emerged an hour
later, he had tears in his eyes and vowed to do whatever he could do to
help them stave off further trouble. It took them four years, but
eventually they got the Italian government’s seal of approval, and the
temples were legalized and opened to the public in 1996.
Inside
the Temples of Humankind, it was abundantly clear how proud the
Damanhurians were of their rich collective history, because it had been
recorded everywhere. The walls were like history books adorned with
paintings of many of the same people I met while I was there and many
of the same stories I just told you. These walls bore cosmic histories
also, panoramic visions of the birth and evolution of the universe and
allegorical scenes of war between good and evil in the hearts of men.
There were mosaics and statues of the gods and goddesses of Greece and
Rome, Sumer and Babylon, Hindu and Zulu, Aztec and Algonquin. And of
course, the omnipresent motifs of Egypt and Atlantis -- shifting sands
and swimming dolphins, warriors and dragons, scarabs and hieroglyphs,
Osiris, Anubis, and the falcons of Horus. These artists’ marvels were
not just mythological but technological as well. They had
eight-meter-wide domed ceilings of stained glass, backlit by neon. They
had secret doors like those in the pyramids of the pharaohs, except
these were motorized. Secret motorized drawbridges dropped from walls
and hidden motorized stairs dropped from the floor at the touch of
unseen remote controls. They even had strange subtle-energy healing
beds that looked like a cross between a CAT scan machine and the bench
Dr. Frankenstein used to bring his monster to life.
According to
my tour guide, these particular beds had brought countless cancer
patients into remission, but if there was actual evidence for it --
evidence, for that matter, for any of Damanhur’s esoteric claims -- the
Damanhurians weren’t telling. A few bits and pieces of information had
slipped out about purported archaeological finds allegedly verifying
traces of their visits to ancient times. A fellow named Gorilla is even
said to have returned from a foray through the secret corridors of time
with a large clump of prehistoric grass in his hand, understandably one
of their more celebrated bits of evidence. But the evidence I found
most convincing was the evidence that was literally all around me, writ
large across the temple floors, columns, stairs, and walls in mortar
and glass, metal and stone. According to Falco, most of what he needed
to know to build these underground halls came to him via esoteric
insight, through the quiet whispers of his intuition. And to my eyes,
the miracle was really that a group of laypeople -- none of them
architects, none of them engineers, none of them even professional
artists -- had built the temples in the first place. “I had a very big
head, so I thought I could do it,” Falco remembers. “In the Middle
Ages, they built cathedrals without being engineers or architects. So
if they made such things, why not us?”
Kicking Ass and Taking Names
"Damanhur
works as a human body. If there are parts that don’t work, the body
rejects them. This is a society of warriors, not peacemakers. Because
the Enemy is inside. It’s there, what we have to fight." -- Oberto
Airaudi, aka Falco
My favorite mural in the temples depicts what
Falco calls the Enemy of Mankind, an impersonal force of stasis,
inertia, and conditioning represented by an evil horde of faceless
warriors pouring over the plains like a dark tide. These gray soldiers
of the Enemy are locked in combat with the colorful citizens of
Damanhur, whose own faces are filled not with hatred or anger but with
laughter, determination, and a certain steely-eyed joy. “As the Enemy
can be identified with an absolutely negative force with a lot of power
but very little intelligence,” Falco explains, “the way to oppose it is
to use fantasy, invention, and creativity. You can consider the Enemy a
rigid and unavoidable opposition that can be contrasted only with
elasticity and fantasy.”
Just don’t confuse his emphasis on the
power of lightheartedness and imagination with being soft. On the
contrary, over and over again throughout Damanhur’s history, Falco has
not hesitated to shake things up when necessary in order to break
through the structures of habit and complacency that tended to form
between people over time. It first happened in 1983. Work on the
temples was hopping, and life at Damanhur had gotten comfortable. Too
comfortable. So Falco left. By the time he came back three months
later, he had a whole bevy of new recruits with him, and soon the
original group was vying with the younger one for his attention. His
response? Deliberately sowing dissension between them, he eventually
set up a no-holds-barred multiday version of the children’s war game
“capture the flag.” Predictably, the mock fighting heated up till it
hit fever pitch, but just as it threatened to come to actual blows,
Falco called a halt and made the two sides sit down with each other to
talk about their experience, and the rift between them finally
unraveled.
That’s how the Damanhurian tradition called the Game
of Life was born. It would become a central factor in the ongoing
evolution of their communal society, a way to optimize the development
of interpersonal relationships by playfully pushing against people’s
natural leanings toward rigidity, security, and isolation. Since then,
there have been many of these developmental exercises -- artistic
battles, traveling quests and journeys, wilderness survival challenges,
the fifteen-year-long Risk game, and more -- all emphasizing the
confrontation with and the breaking down of boundaries between people.
And the Damanhurians see the task of incorporating what they learn
through the Game of Life into the constantly shifting structures of
their community as a way for them to put their spiritual principles
into practice, principles that call them to seek change, embrace
uncertainty, and take personal responsibility for their own
transformation.
The more I learned about the Damanhurians’
willingness to consistently reinvent themselves as the community has
evolved over time, the more I got a sense of how they’ve been able not
just to survive but to thrive through the years while so many utopian
experiments before them have folded up shop or simply faded into the
history books. I’ve lived in several communities myself -- first on an
egalitarian farm in rural Missouri and now as a member of the dedicated
spiritual collective that is home to WIE -- and I know from experience
that getting people to come together, work together, and most of all
stay together for the sake of a larger common mission is not always
easy. For starters, one tends to have to work against the culture of
extreme individualism and narcissism that most of us are automatically
a part of simply by virtue of the times we’re living in, and that’s no
small thing, to say the least. But in the battle against all the
obstacles that inevitably confront those who try to forge extraordinary
societies out of ordinary individuals, with all our many human foibles,
frailties, and less-than-wholesome motivations, Damanhur has at least
one big advantage going for it: Falco himself.
I first met him
at a public lecture he gave to a crowd of about two hundred
Damanhurians while I was there, a lecture I expected would finally give
me the chance to see members of the community engaging with him
directly about some aspect or another of community life, maybe even
about their esoteric research if I was lucky. But what happened that
night was a good deal more radical than that -- and by the number of
mouths I saw dropping open in astonishment, not something that happened
very often. You see, just ten minutes into his talk, Falco abruptly
stood up, threw his microphone down on the table, and walked out of the
room. He was upset about the community’s reticence to make some long
overdue changes at one of their projects, changes having explicitly to
do with honoring their spiritual commitments. So upset, in fact, that
he issued an ultimatum promising to dump the whole venture or even kick
out the people who were dragging their heels if that’s what it took to
get things back on track.
“I can’t believe that people who are
making a spiritual journey decide to stop and don’t move from where
they are,” Falco said to me the next day when we sat down to talk about
his role as Damanhur’s spiritual teacher. “To stop for me means to go
backwards. This is what happened last night. So we will see what people
will be able to do in a very short time. Otherwise, I will have to
select a smaller group who will move forward very quickly and let the
others stay behind. But we still always try to push a certain edge that
will keep the others above a particular level. Unfortunately, this has
already happened many times in the past. We’ve had many moments in our
history when we had to increase the level, to make it higher. If we
hadn’t, everything would be superficial. So our system is very
selective. Someone who is not involved enough in the main things, who
stays on the side, is more and more on the side until we invite them to
leave.”
“That’s beautiful,” I said, immediately regretting my choice of words.
“It’s not beautiful,” he corrected me, “but it’s the reality.”
The
night before, someone had told me they felt Falco was being too harsh,
more like a father scolding his kids than the leader of a community of
mature adults. But when I mentioned this to him, he said, “That’s the
last thing I’m interested in. Many people who want a teacher are only
looking for a substitute for their parents. They only want reassurance,
but the goal is to become divinity. To grow, and not to look outside
yourself for what can only be found inside.”
“So would you say that your goal is to help people discover real independence?” I asked.
“Yes
-- and in that, to become able to live together with others. When we
speak about enlightenment, the idea is that people cannot be
enlightened alone. Enlightenment can happen only with the help of
others. In this way, we bypass the selfishness of the single individual
who only wants to be enlightened for themselves.”
In the Big Rock Candy Mountains
"One evening as the sun went down and the jungle fire was burning Down the track came a hobo hiking and he said boys I’m not turning I’m headin’ for a land that’s far away beside the crystal fountains So come with me we’ll go and see the Big Rock Candy Mountains"
-- Harry McClintock, aka Haywire Mac
There’s
an old country song called “Big Rock Candy Mountain” by a Tennessee
troubadour known as Haywire Mac that reminds me a little of Damanhur.
It’s a classic hobo ballad from the turn of the twentieth century, the
tale of a comic utopia where the lakes are made of whiskey, the cops
have wooden legs, the hens lay soft-boiled eggs, and there are always
plenty of boxcars to sleep in. The song is based on a famous medieval
paradise called the Land of Cockaigne (cakeland), a place where the
peasants get rained on by honey waffles, the fences are made of
sausages, and grilled geese fly right into your mouth.
Don’t get
me wrong. I’m not saying Damanhur is anything like these farcical lands
of plenty where everything is handed down free and easy on silver
platters from on high. To the contrary, the multifaceted success of
this utopian community may be outshined only by the scope of the
effort, daring, and dedication that built it. Yet Damanhur’s fondness
for forgotten civilizations and lost esoteric mythologies does imply a
certain fascination with the idea of paradise all the same. On one
hand, they’re some of the most practical-minded people you’ll ever
meet; on the other, they’ve clothed themselves in a sort of storybook
metaphysics, a great cosmic plot line that brings order and stability
to their world and infuses it with a mythic sense of nobility and
meaning. And perhaps the most interesting, most challenging, and most
confounding aspect of my time there was trying to sort through this
study in contrasts, to make sense of a society that was down-to-earth
and veiled in mystery all at the same time, working like gangbusters to
build a better future while concentrating great parts of its attention
on the cryptic antiquities of the past.
By the time I left, I
was still struggling with the question of how it all fit together. On
one side of the equation, the impressive testimony of Damanhur’s
accomplishments seemed virtually endless. They mint their own coins,
for Pete’s sake. They’re producing hand-painted textiles for some of
the top fashion houses in Milan. I got to see their new temple
structure -- or rather the incredible hole in the ground that will one
day be their new temple structure, a megalithic glass-domed auditorium
with a world-class library of esoteric books underneath, all connected
to the current temples by an underground train. And although it seemed
to me that it would take at least twenty years to complete it, they
said they would finish it in two. If I were a betting man, I wouldn’t
bet against them. They’ve triggered the economic, cultural, and
political revitalization of a whole district in the Piedmont Alps. They
count one local mayor and twenty-two council members from nine
different towns among them, and they have townships where none of them
even live asking them to run for office because of everything they’ve
done in their own region and all the national grant money they’re
bringing in. They’re so confident of their ability to foster healthy
communities that they even submitted a proposal to NASA offering to act
as consultants to the space program, to help with the design of future
orbital colonies.
The Temples of Humankind are now recognized by
the Italian Heritage Ministry, the regional beaux-arts authority, and
Guinness World Records; and with Alex Grey’s new book, Damanhur: Temples of Humankind,
now on the shelves, they may soon be reaching a broader audience. “We
just don’t see contemporary sacred spaces that are not aligned with
known world religions but that still articulate a devotional
relationship to the cosmos,” Grey told me when I got back to New York.
“We’ve been adrift for so long, and the story of art in the twentieth
century has been filled with such titanic egos. It’s all about me and
my new ‘ism,’ my own particular way of seeing the world. But the
temples of Damanhur are more than one man’s vision. This is coming from
all of them. I don’t know of anywhere else on the planet where artists
and artisans are working communally this way to create sacred space.
You’d probably have to go back hundreds of years, maybe even all the
way to the medieval craft guilds that built places like St. Mark’s
Basilica in Venice. It took them five hundred years to do those
mosaics. And I think it’s an astonishing achievement to begin to evolve
a community like this today.”
The flip side of Damanhur’s
undoubtedly astonishing achievements is that everything they’re doing
is based on the romanticized ideal of a long-gone golden age.“Through
learning about Atlantis and the fabled past of our planet,” they
explain, “we will have a better understanding of the ‘Great Plan’ that
has been unfolding through time to bring humanity to higher levels of
consciousness and harmonious living.” Damanhur’s version of the
Atlantis myth can be traced fairly directly to the late-nineteenth- and
early-twentieth-century exemplars of Western esoteric thought,
especially Madame H.P. Blavatsky, Rudolf Steiner, and the great
American psychic Edgar Cayce. Most of Damanhurian philosophy, in fact,
seems to come straight out of this same esoteric milieu, so I was
surprised when they told me it was all entirely original. Ironically
unaware of their roots in a philosophical tradition without which their
own ideas probably could never have existed in the first place, they
seemed comfortable ignoring history. We still haven’t found any
credible archaeological evidence for a historical Atlantis ten or
twelve or twenty thousand years ago, at least as far as I’m aware, but
if it did exist somewhere, it probably would have borne a greater
resemblance to the prehistoric cultures of the time than to the
futuristic techno-Eden the Damanhurians make it out to be. Plus, I
couldn’t help but notice that the paintings the time travelers profess
to have made of their visits to Atlantis showed an architecture more
like that of Mussolini-era Italy (with an Art Deco twist) than, say,
the world of Ancient Greece.
But perhaps the biggest drawback of
golden age thinking in general is its tendency to pull you out of step
not just with the past but with your very own times. I keep coming back
to the disconcerting experience of slipping back through time that I
had inside the temples, where intimate portraits of Damanhur’s communal
history were placed side by side with the sweeping frescoes of an
impersonal cosmic story. It was like another world down there, another
era of myth and magic that for a moment seemed to wrap me up in its
wide, enchanting arms. And that world surprised me. It was strangely
comforting to what I think of as an older (perhaps even ancient)
structure within my own psyche, a part of me that hungers for safety,
familiarity, and, above all, certainty in the midst of a
twenty-first-century life that is far too complex and far too insecure
for its liking. But that longing for existential security was
double-edged, because to another part of me, it felt claustrophobic,
stifling, almost as though I was being drawn back into the mind of the
mythic worldview of yesteryear, a state of consciousness where
everything was known, fixed, sorted out, and tucked into place --
including my own particular place in the overarching scheme of things.
As comforting as it initially seemed, when my fascinating excursion
through this subterranean wonderland came to an end, I was surprised at
how relieved I was to come back out into the air and the daylight again.
Still,
we do need some broader perspective to orient us in this age of
fragmentation, some larger context of shared purpose and common value
that can give us reasons for being that transcend whatever private
fears and dreams we each happen to be haunted or inspired by. And for
all its downsides, Damanhur’s golden age mythology is a pretty good
example of why. The Damanhurians are some of the happiest and
healthiest people I’ve ever seen. I mean, even the teenagers seemed
happy at Damanhur. The people I met were almost uniformly passionate
about a mission greater than themselves. Most of them came to Damanhur
when they were young and idealistic, and ten, twenty, even twenty-five
years down the road, most of them are very much idealists still. Life
is full, and full of challenges. They’re very busy, but they’re happy
to be busy because they feel themselves to be a part of something
inherently meaningful. They take care of each other, and even better,
they really seem to depend on one another. “It’s very difficult to see
yourself objectively,” one of them told me. “We tend to fall into
habits, to repeat the same situations and get stuck in our own ways of
thinking, and that’s why we need the others. You can always see
yourself in the mirror of relationships. It can be intense living this
way, but for us, living together is really the cauldron where the
alchemy of transformation takes place.”
In taking up the mantle
of the utopian dream with a fertile imagination and no small measure of
good old-fashioned perseverance, the Damanhurians stand out against the
cynical bottom line of contemporary culture -- and most importantly,
they’re doing it together. Whatever you think of their metaphysics, the
fact is, they’ve found a way to consistently tap into the deep strength
of soul and self that can be liberated through a sustained, committed,
and creative engagement with others. That’s what stuck with me the most
when I came out from the temples and onto the landing at Porta del
Sole, the “Gateway to the Sun.” The Damanhurians had first started
digging there on a warm August night almost thirty years ago, making
their first marks on the mountain with a single shovel and a pickaxe.
Falco had been waiting for the right sign to appear before he told them
about their real mission there -- to build a hidden temple beneath the
mountain -- and it had come that evening while they sat together around
a fire: a shooting star that blazed up and fell down in dazzling slow
motion across the summer sky.
Who can say where Damanhur’s star
is leading them now? I’m every bit as amazed and perplexed as I was
when I first set foot there, and I haven’t even told you the half of
it. Would you believe some say that Falco doesn’t just travel backward
through time but that he actually came from the future in the first
place? Six hundred years in the future, to be exact, when the world is
apparently on the verge of apocalypse and a messenger is chosen to
journey back to the past and set things aright. Your guess is as good
as mine on that one, but whatever light it is that ultimately guides
this modern-day utopian experiment, it seems to be growing brighter all
the time. “This temple you have seen has been made by less than a
hundred people,” Falco told me. “Now we are over a thousand. And we
like to think that if all goes well, our future achievements will be
proportional to that.”
..............
The Federation Of Damanhur Website
Oberto Airaudi, The Founder of Damanhur
Articles About Damanhur
Alan Steinfeld Interviews Damanhur Community Member On YouTube
Note: The actual interview begins about 1 minute into this clip.
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