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Helena Roerich painted by her son George Roerich |
Helena
Roerich was born in Russia on February 12, 1879, the daughter of a prominent
architect. She was very sensitive and frequently ailing. During illnesses,
two very tall men would appear to her with help, but when the grownups
objected to her accounts of them, she learned to keep her thoughts to
herself. Her mother's sister, princess Putyatine, had an estate at Bologoye
where little Helena spent her summers. All the domestic animals rushed
to welcome her in the mornings when she would go out to feed them.
When
she met Nicholas Roerich, she found much in common with him and after
accompanying him to many exhibitions and concerts, they fell in love
and were married on October 28, 1901. Nicholas, one of the finest painters
of his day, with an unparalleled command of color, was also very spiritually
advanced. They had a happy family life together with their two sons,
George and Svetoslav.
In 1915, Nicholas became
ill with pneumonia and they left their home in Petersburg for a better
climate. In 1918 they went to England and in 1920 came to New York for
Nicholas' first exhibition in the United States. By this time Helena
was already in contact with Master Morya and the first Agni Yoga book:
Leaves of Morya's Garden was written.
During their eventful
life, they went to India where they organized their central Asiatic
expedition
through India, China, Tibet, Mongolia and other countries. Both her
husband Nicholas and son George wrote books about their adventures.
Although Helena was an active participant, few personal details are
known except that she never stopped writing, teaching, and helping others.
Besides the thirteen published Agni Yoga books, she wrote numerous letters
to disciples and aspirants all over the world. Some of these letters
are published in her Letters of Helena Roerich, volumes I & II.
She also wrote On Eastern Crossroads and Foundations
of Buddhism, using different pseudonyms for each one.
After
the death of her beloved husband Nicholas in 1949 she lived in "Crookety
House" in Kalimpong India, until her death in 1955. The house is
now being renovated into a small conference center.
Today thousands of people
are gaining help and inspiration from her books, especially from the
Agni Yoga series. Her books are seriously studied in every country of
the world.
Her memorial stupa can
be found near a monestery overlooking the Himilayan Mountains in Kalimpong.
Her books and those of
Nicholas Roerich are available through the White
Mountain Bookstore.
QUOTATIONS FROM HELENA ROERICH:
The following quotations
are from a few of the fourteen published Agni Yoga books that Helena
Roerich brought to the world. They and the two volume Letters of
Helena Roerich are available from the Agni Yoga Society, Inc., 319
West 107th Street, New York, New York 10025. All quotations are copyrighted.
All quotations are reprinted by permission from the Agni Yoga Society.
All rights reserved.
A center in the brain;
Centers of the shoulders; crown of the head:
April 11th
"The refraction of rays
yields sounds that enter into the symphony of the music of the spheres.
One may picture their crystalline quality of subtleness coupled with
the power of the whirlwind. There is a center in the brain that is called
the bell. Like a resonator it gathers the symphony of the world, and
it can transform the deepest silence into a thundering chord. It is
said: 'He who hath ears, let him hear.' Similarly the spinal chord is
called the spear, because if We wish to parry the blows We must strain
this channel. Similarly the centers of the shoulders are called wings,
because during a self-sacrificing podvig their rays intensify. The legend
concerning wings is highly symbolic. Likewise, it was a favorite custom
of the ancients to wear a round metal plate upon their breasts. The
crown of the head is termed the well, because the waves of outside influences
penetrate by this way. Everywhere in antiquity we see the covering of
the head connected with the symbol of the priest, whereas now this symbol
is replaced by the name of a business firm. So men have become spiritually
bald." (p. 104)
Self-confidence; self-conceit;
simplicity
April 9th
"Urusvati may calmly accept
everything. Inasmuch as self-confidence in action is blessed, so is
self-conceit ruinous. Self-conceit is hostile to simplicity. Even great
minds are subject to this malady and must return an additional time
to labor until they eradicate this husk. No member of the Brotherhood
suffers from this. One of the impeding conditions is lack of simplicity.
One can wear bast shoes and still not be simple. In simplicity one can
build the greatest Temple. Simplicity, beauty, and fearlessness - Christ
and Buddha spoke of nothing more. And it is a blessing of the spirit
vibrates to these Teachings." (p. 101)
Healing; Color; Flowers
January, 1924
"….Song brings us health,
and color will heal wounds. Therefore, I say, happy are those who understand
sound and color. From the very beginning the prophets have noted sound
and color. The ancient instruction about the ringing of bells is full
of meaning. Wreaths and garlands recall the understanding of healing
power. According to the color of his radiation, each one is attracted
to certain flowers. White and lilac have affinity with violet, blue
with the blue; therefore, I advise to keep more flowers of these colors
in the room. One can do this with living flowers. Plants wisely selected
according to color are more healing. I advise to have more freesias.
I love them too. Let these flowers serve as My Sign. Our Ray, with its
silveriness, is more reminiscent of white flowers. Urusvati brought
her flowers as an offering to Me. Color and sound are Our best repast."
(p. 79)
New Era…basis of
October 12, 1949
"…New Era, which is based
on cooperation, equal rights, respect for labor, enlightenment, and
on the perception of the beauty of Spiritual Leadership in its myriad
manifestations of primal, or psychic energy." (p. 225)
New Era…began
November 1, 1949
"The New Era began on
the 17th of October, when the enemy was driven out of our Solar System.
'The new constructive work will begin under My Rays.'" (p. 229)

ACCEPTANCE OF THE TEACHING OF
LIVING ETHICS-
"I am
also sufficiently acquainted with the gulf of human nature or consciousness,
and I know that no assurances can ever convince anyone. Only our personal,
inner conviction, which has its root in the accumulations of our past
lives, can help in discerning the truth. Therefore my affirmations also
will never be accepted by the doubting ones. I beg of you, be assured
that we do not attempt either to persuade or dissuade anyone, and we
rise up with all the power of our spirit against any forcing of the
books of Living Ethics on anyone, and more so any kind of authorities.
Each one must follow his path. Only he can deeply feel the truth of
the Teaching and become aflame in his heart to the Call of the Teacher,
who has in his former lives already approached the Teaching and the
Great Teachers. Among those who approach for the first time there are
always many waverings and doubts. But where doubt has made its nest,
the fires of the heart cannot be kindled. Doubt is the most frightful
poison. Nothing can be attained in any field of endeavor where there
is evidence of doubt. No discovery could have been made if the searcher
doubted the correctness of his theory; the proverb 'Faith moves mountains'
has a profound meaning. Man does not realize that throughout his entire
life he does things he believes. Precisely what to believe and how to
believe comprises the solution of the problems of being. Man's free
will or free choice molds his destiny." 1
FINDING THE TEACHER
"The great Covenant
`When the disciple is ready, the Teacher will appear' is understood
by only a few. Almost no one realizes that this readiness must contain
in itself some definite qualities and conditions. I have already written
about this, but I am glad to repeat it for you, with further comments.
"In the question of the
acceptance of a disciple, his karma plays the main role. Precisely,
in connection with discipleship it is most essential to realize the
law of Karma and to comprehend it in all respects. Thus, a person overburdened
with karma cannot hope to become a close disciple. Only those whose
earthly karma is almost completed can be accepted among the closest
disciples. There are few who realize what a heavy burden the Teacher
takes on by accepting a disciple.
"The Teacher will have
no doubt about the student, for accepted students are those who have
gone through and purified themselves through many fiery tests, and who
in this life have again displayed their readiness, devotion and self-denial
not in conditions of comfort but on the edge of the abyss. Precisely
those whose high spiritual centers are not only open but are undergoing
the fiery transmutation. Hence the small number of the closest disciples.
"You may ask what the
burden of the Teacher is. I assure you that it is terrible. By accepting
a disciple, the Teacher includes him in his consciousness and establishes
with him an invisible but active bond. From that very moment, the Teacher
knows at any instant what is happening to his disciple. He can even
know his fleeting thoughts, and can direct him accordingly. Therefore,
it must be understood how hard, how unbearable for the High Consciousness
of the Teacher would be any disharmonious vibrations caused by unpurified
thoughts of the disciple, how inadmissible under such a close, sacred
bond with the Teacher would be any still-not-outlived lust. Every disharmonious
vibration cuts into the current of this bond, and if repeated can break
it altogether. But each severing of the thread, occultly speaking, is
most painful and brings its consequences. Of course, the pain is entirely
different for the Teacher from what it is for the disciple. That is
why the acceptance of the disciple is carried out with the greatest
caution and is considered the granting of the greatest privilege."2
"You write that it is
clear to you that `it is not the disciple who awaits the Teacher, but
the Teacher who awaits the disciple,' but I must elucidate this very
categorical statement. For every creative activity, for every manifestation,
reciprocity and harmony are necessary. Therefore, if there is no expectation
there can be no answer. Where there is no expectation there is no striving,
but we are told to apply the most vigilant and intensive striving.
"Even so, the great Covenant
`When the disciple is ready, the Teacher appears' is seldom understood.
There are not many who ask themselves what this readiness actually is.
Should not this readiness consist of certain qualities? The trouble
is that people do not want to realize that at the foundation of this
readiness, and of all the achievements, there is the following of a
great ideal, involving a fiery transmutation of all our feelings, of
our whole character. People would rather give up various excesses and
thoughtlessly, mechanically perform their pranayama, than surrender
even one habit that stands in their way to spiritual achievement. But,
as it is said, mechanical ways have no value. The transformation of
the inner man cannot be achieved automatically, and this transformation
is the chief aim of all the true Teachings.'3
"...[A]nd their only consideration
is the concentration on the chosen Great Ideal, on the unwavering and
constant striving to approach it. Such concentration continues unceasingly.
Whatever such a yogi or disciple is doing, his thought is always occupied
by his Idea. Everything is performed in the name of this Ideal, and
he always feels in his heart the love and the presence of this Image.
This is the real concentration indicated by the esoteric philosophy,
which deals only with the inner world, the world of Nourmena.
"The same is true regarding
the prayer of a disciple; it is precisely this same unceasing striving
of the heart, and being in the presence of the chosen Image.
"When such a constant
presence of the chosen Image comes into the life of a disciple, when
there is no further deviation, then there is true readiness; the Teacher
appears and the disciple under observation is accepted.
"After accepting a disciple,
the Teacher creates an unseen union with him and includes him in his
consciousness. In other words, from that very moment the Teacher knows
everything about the disciple. He can know every thought and feeling,
even the most transient, and accordingly He can guide his disciple.
As for the disciple, his life, from the moment of his acceptance, becomes
entirely new. His dormant energies are awakened and their development
and transmutation are accelerated. A veritable battery of unseen but
powerful rays are directed toward him."4
LEAVES OF MORYAS GARDEN vol.
I:
"72. The Spirit of Christ
breathes across the desert of life. Like a spring It wears Its way through
the solid rocks. In the milky firmament It radiates in myriads of lights,
and rises upward in the stems of flowers."
"77. There is no love
greater than love."
"78. Naught occurs by
accident. My Power is with thee."
"83. Know to spread happiness
- condemn not."
"94. Prayers to the Creator
are offered not only in temples - the wax of the candle is consumed
in the labor of life.'
"183. Thou must aspire.
For the way of aspiration provides a new window, and the window leads
to the open. Who desires - receives. All things have their significance."
"232. The path of virtue
is not a singing of psalms but labor and service. If karma be diverted,
it will react against thee. The travail of the spirit is the one ladder
of the shortest way. The suffering of a decade is crowded into a day
in the lives of the chosen ones. Better a full cup of misery than a
life of mild sadness. Pay Thy accounts in the hostelries on the way,
and with obeisance they will carry Thy trunks onto the ships. O Lord,
give strength to my heart and power to my arm. Because I am Thy servant.
In Thy Rays I shall learn the eternal Truth of Being. In Thy Voice I
shall listen to the harmony of the World. My heart I give to Thee, O
Lord. Sacrifice it for the sake of the World. They will ask thee how
to traverse life. Answer: Like crossing an abyss upon a taut string—Beautifully,
carefully, and fleetly."
AGNI YOGA
"27. Homelessness is
a necessary attribute of the Teacher. The Teacher has a dwelling place,
but not a home. The Teacher enters life, but does not display conventionality.
The Teacher beautifies a discussion, but does not prolong it. He pities,
but does not bewail. The Teacher defends, but does not gesture. The
Teacher affirms, but is not confused. He forewarns, but delays not.
If necessary He smites, but never wounds. He is grateful, but does not
forget. He evaluates the motives, but does not show weakness. Cautiously
He guards, but does not oppress. He fears not, yet is not reckless.
And so, cherish the Teacher, Who is revealed for the growth of the spirit.
Consciously must the spirit be nurtured."
"44. Do not say, "I do
not remember." Say, "I failed to observe." Do not condemn the memory
but glance back at an impotent observation. People would sooner fall
downstairs than watch the steps."
Do not say, "I do not
know." Say, "As yet I have failed to learn." Nor age, nor health, nor
conditions of life, vindicate the funereal "I do not know. Audacity
in life teems with eagerness to learn.
Do not say, "I have decided."
Say, "This seems fit for the goal." It is easy to increase the goal-fitness,
but to change one's decision is unworthy.
Chiefly, do not invoke
unhappiness persistently, as is usually done.
HEART
"Whoever loves flowers
is on the heart's path. Whoever knows the striving to the summits is
on the heart's path. Whoever thinks purely is on the heart's path. Whoever
is ready for Infinity is on the heart's path. Thus shall we summon all
hearts to the realization of the Source. It is correct to understand
that the substance of the heart belongs to the Subtle and also the Fiery
World. One can perceive worlds within the heart, but not within the
mind. Thus, wisdom is contrary to intellect, yet it is not forbidden
to adorn the mind with wisdom."
1. Letters of Helena
Roerich vol. II (Agni Yoga Society, Inc.) pp 485.
2. Letters of Helena Roerich vol. I (Agni Yoga Society, Inc.)
p. 284.
3. Ibid., p. 247
4. Ibid., pp. 247-248.