Welcome noble viewers 
to A Journey through 
Aesthetic Realms 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
Today, we will introduce 
a brief history of 
the Theosophical Society 
through a presentation by 
the Theosophical Society 
in America 
and an interview 
with Mr. Daniel Noga, 
the Member Services 
Coordinator at 
the Theosophical Society 
in America.
All over the world, 
from ancient times 
until the present, 
a timeless wisdom has 
been given to humanity 
by such great teachers 
as Lao Tzu, Confucius, 
Zoroaster and Christ. 
Other teachers, followers 
of those great ones, 
have carried on their work. 
In modern times, 
one such follower was 
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. 
When she arrived 
on the shores of 
the United States in 1873, 
she had completed years 
of world travel 
and exploration. 
Her many years abroad 
had been nothing less than 
a spiritual pilgrimage. 
She had absorbed 
deeper ideas 
gleaned from such 
great Western thinkers 
as Pythagoras and Plato, 
and from such 
Eastern philosophers 
as the Buddha.
A small band 
of like-minded seekers 
gathered around her. 
Among them 
was an attorney and 
gentleman correspondent 
from New York, 
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott. 
Together they would form 
the Theosophical Society. 
Henry Olcott was a man 
of many accomplishments. 
By the time he met
Madame Blavatsky, 
he was an attorney 
in New York City.
Helena Blavatsky 
was born in 1831 
of a noble Russian family. 
As a child and teenager, 
she was strong willed 
and impulsive. 
Perhaps the crucial element 
of her character 
came from the model 
of independence 
offered by her mother. 
Married to the Russian 
official Nikifor Blavatsky 
when she was 
only 17 years old, 
Young Helena 
almost immediately 
left her husband to travel 
extensively through 
the Orient, Eastern 
and Western Europe and 
the Americas, seeking out 
those experienced 
in esoteric knowledge. 
On her 20th birthday, 
while in London, she met 
her spiritual teacher, 
Mahatma Morya, 
who would guide her 
in her later work 
with Theosophy. 
She studied Buddhism 
and Hinduism first hand, 
and with the help 
of a Tartar shaman 
is reported to 
have crossed the border 
into Tibet. 
In the 1850s, 
her adventurous spirit 
even brought her 
to the United States 
where she traveled from 
New York to Chicago, 
continuing westward 
by covered wagon with 
a caravan of pioneers. 
Finally, in 1873, 
at the age of 42, 
Madame Blavatsky 
was ready to share with 
the world her insights 
gained from those 
marvelous adventures. 
Mahatma Morya, 
the spiritual teacher whom 
Madame Blavatsky 
met in London, was 
a handsome Rajput prince 
who was part 
of an Indian delegation 
visiting Queen Victoria 
of England. 
Though there were 
no outward signs of him 
being a spiritual master, 
Madame Blavatsky 
recognized him 
immediately as 
the master of her dreams. 
A picture of Master Morya 
was drawn 
by German painter 
Hermann Schmiechen 
under the direction 
of Madame Blavatsky. 
Apart from 
Mahatma Morya, 
Madame Blavatsky 
also received 
telepathic instructions 
from another Master by 
the name of Koot Hoomi, 
one of 
the Ascended Masters 
who is helping humankind 
reach higher levels 
of consciousness. 
These two masters 
helped her to write 
her important works, 
“Isis Unveiled” and 
“The Secret Doctrine.”
One of the first things 
that Blavatsky did 
in the United States was 
to investigate spiritualism, 
interest in which 
was sweeping 
America and Europe. 
She went 
to the Eddy farmstead 
in Chittenden, 
Vermont, where 
remarkable phenomena 
were taking place. 
It was there that 
she met Colonel Olcott, 
reporting the events for 
a New York newspaper. 
Soon, however, 
their interests would go 
in a different direction 
from that of spiritualism. 
Blavatsky eventually 
made her home 
in New York City where 
she and Olcott continued 
to meet regularly 
with others who 
shared their interests. 
Mr. Daniel Noga 
is the Member Services 
Coordinator 
at the headquarters of 
the Theosophical Society 
in America 
in Wheaton, Illinois.
The Theosophical Society 
is an international 
membership organization 
that was originally 
founded in 1875 
in the state of New York. 
The three main co-founders 
were Helena Petrovna 
Blavatsky, Colonel 
Henry Steel Olcott 
and William Quan Judge.   
William Quan Judge was 
one of the cofounders; 
he was originally
from Dublin Ireland 
and he came here 
to the United States when 
he was 21 years old and 
got into commercial law, 
and he also helped 
to co-found the Society. 
Many people 
joined the new Society, 
among them, 
the well-known inventor 
Thomas Edison, 
and the noted author 
and platonic scholar 
Dr. Alexander Wilder. 
A friend of
Madame Blavatsky’s, 
Wilder helped her 
with the editing 
of her 1,300 page work, 
“Isis Unveiled.”
After three years 
in New York, 
Madame Blavatsky and 
Colonel Olcott decided 
to expand the Society’s 
efforts abroad, and 
in late December 1878, 
set sail for India. 
The attitude 
with which they came 
is demonstrated 
by that account of 
how Olcott, when arriving 
on the soil of India, 
bent down 
to worship that soil. 
They felt that from India 
had gone out 
a great deal of wisdom, 
which is even now contained
in the profound teachings 
not only of 
the Hindu tradition, but 
Buddhist, Jain, and so on. 
There was a spirit 
of tolerance as well here, 
of universality. 
India gave 
a place of shelter 
to many different people. 
It was 
in the tradition of India 
to try to understand 
different points of view, 
different cultures, 
and to synthesize them 
into a whole. 
And this I think is central 
to the work of 
the Theosophical Society. 
Perhaps all this was
in their mind, 
when they came to India, 
and they established 
their headquarters here.
One of Olcott’s 
greatest achievements, 
in keeping with 
the society’s second object, 
was his work to 
re-establish Buddhism 
in Southeast Asia, 
and Ceylon, the island 
now called Sri Lanka.  
He organized 
the first Buddhist schools 
in Ceylon and obtained 
government grants 
from England 
such as were given 
to Christian schools. 
Today there are over 400 
Buddhist institutions 
in Sri Lanka and portraits 
of Colonel Olcott 
hang in many of them. 
Working with 
the Buddhist High Priest 
Sumangala in 1889, 
he helped design the 
Buddhist flag, now flown 
in some 60 countries. 
When we return, 
we will find out more 
about the noble goals of 
the Theosophical Society. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back 
to our program on 
the history and teachings of 
the Theosophical Society. 
After the passing of 
the two main founders of 
the Theosophical Society, 
Helena Blavatsky 
in 1891,
and Henry Steel Olcott 
in 1907, two disciples 
of Helena Blavatsky, 
Annie Besant 
and William Quan Judge, 
emerged as 
the new leaders of 
the Theosophical Society. 
Another prominent disciple 
of Helena Blavatsky was 
the English clergyman, 
clairvoyant and author 
Charles L. Leadbeater, 
who became a vegetarian 
upon meeting 
Madame Blavatsky 
and followed her to India. 
After Helena Blavatsky 
passed on, 
Charles L. Leadbeater 
became a close co-worker 
of Annie Besant. 
In 1895, 
one year after meeting 
Charles W. Leadbeater, 
Mrs. Annie Besant 
also became clairvoyant. 
Together, they explored 
the universe, matter, 
thought-forms, auras, and 
the history of humankind
through the gift of their 
clairvoyance, and wrote 
several books together.
Charles W. Leadbeater 
and Annie Besant were 
also dedicated promoters 
of the vegetarian lifestyle. 
In his article, 
Vegetarianism 
and Occultism, 
Mr. Leadbeater 
listed many reasons 
for abstaining from meat, 
and concludes: 
“Let us free ourselves 
from complicity 
in these awful crimes 
[of killing animals], 
let us set ourselves to try, 
each in our own
small circle, 
to bring nearer that bright 
time of peace and love 
which is the dream 
and the earnest desire 
of every true-hearted 
and thinking man. 
At least we ought 
surely to be willing 
to do so small a thing 
as this to help the world 
onward towards 
that glorious future.”
Likewise, 
Dr. Annie Besant wrote 
about the importance of 
keeping a vegetarian diet 
for spiritual purification.
“As we carry on
the purification 
of the physical body 
by feeding it on clean 
food and drink and 
by excluding from our diet 
the polluting blood 
and flesh of animals, 
alcohol and other things 
that are foul and degrading, 
we also begin to purify 
the astral vehicle and 
take from the astral world 
more delicate 
and fine materials 
for its construction.”
In 1909, 
during one of his walks 
on the beach of the river 
at the headquarters of 
the Theosophical Society 
in Adyar, India, Charles. 
W. Leadbeater met
a young boy by the name 
of Jiddu Krishnamurti. 
Being clairvoyant, 
he was impressed 
with the pure aura 
of Krishnamurti 
which he described as 
the "most wonderful aura 
he had ever seen, 
without a particle 
of selfishness in it."
Charles W. Leadbeater 
and Mrs. Annie Besant 
believed that Krishnamurti 
was to become 
the World Teacher whom 
they expected to come. 
They started the Order 
of the Star in the East, 
to prepare members 
for the coming of 
a great spiritual message, 
which it was thought 
would come 
through Krishnamurti. 
She adopted the boy 
as her son and he was 
educated in England. 
In 1929, however 
Jiddu Krishnamurti 
renounced the role 
as the World Teacher that 
he was expected to play 
and dissolved the Order 
of the Star in the East. 
From then on 
until his passing in 1986, 
Krishnamurti 
travelled worldwide 
to teach his message 
of self-reliance and
self-knowledge and 
became a highly esteemed 
spiritual teacher.
In the constitution of 
the Theosophical Society, 
three main objects 
were declared.  
Mr. David J. Noga 
elaborated on them 
as follows: 
The first object 
of the Society is to form 
a nucleus of the universal 
brotherhood of humanity, 
without distinction 
of race, creed, sex, caste 
or color, which is 
basically a way of saying 
that the organization 
is intended as a place for 
people to come together 
and put this ideal of 
brotherhood into practice.  
The Society recognizes 
the unity of all humankind, 
that which 
we all hold in common 
and brings us together. 
So, one, 
a purpose of the Society 
is this brotherhood 
and the practice of that, 
not just in functions 
of the Society but 
in our day-to-day lives. 
The second object 
is to encourage 
the comparative study 
of religion, science 
and philosophy, 
to realize that there are 
many different valid paths 
towards truth 
and understanding 
and that it’s important 
to honor them all, 
and in fact to compare 
what each one says, 
to see what comes out 
at the end as being held 
in common by all three. 
And then finally, the third 
object is to investigate 
hidden laws of nature, 
and the unexplained 
sort of powers 
latent in humanity,  
the higher faculty 
that unfolds through 
spiritual realization. 
It could be even argued 
that the practice of 
brotherhood is a power 
that’s latent in humanity. 
Once it’s unfolded, 
the power that it has 
is tremendous to change 
the world around us. 
Spiritual 
self-transformation 
and self-realization are 
also powers that unfold 
as we develop spiritually.
Thank you, 
esteemed viewers, 
for joining us today 
on A Journey through 
Aesthetic Realms. 
Please join us 
next Sunday, June 13 for 
the second and final part 
of our program on 
the Theosophical Society.
 
Coming up next is 
Our Noble Lineage, right 
after Noteworthy News. 
May Heaven’s 
love and light 
guide you always.
Greetings and welcome 
to the continuation of 
our program introducing 
the Theosophical Society 
with Mr. Daniel J. Noga, 
the Member Services 
Coordinator of 
the Theosophical Society 
in America.
As a relatively recent 
movement that 
has strived to embrace 
the timeless wisdom, 
the Theosophical Society 
has no particular practice, 
nor ceremony nor rite. 
Rather, it extends to 
its members the freedom 
to follow 
their own traditional 
religious customs.
Because Theosophy 
is not incompatible with 
religions, members are 
encouraged to take part 
in their regular 
religious ceremonies. 
So, members do things 
like meditation, 
or attend church if they 
happen to be Christian or 
temple if they’re Jewish, 
mosque if they’re Muslim. 
Theosophy claims that 
regardless of one’s religion, 
we should be 
spiritually aware. 
Why is spiritual awareness 
important to 
our daily lives?
Spiritual awareness sort of 
brings a recognition 
of that unity that 
we have discussed, 
in distinction to purely 
religious awareness, 
whereas spiritual 
awareness is more open 
and inclusive in 
bringing people together.
Meditation 
and spiritual practice 
are encouraged by 
the Theosophical Society. 
The specific method, 
however, may vary 
among individuals.
The attitude of the Society 
is that its members are 
to be able to seek 
for themselves and sort of 
determine for themselves 
what the best path is. 
But most forms of 
meditation have the effect 
of expanding 
our awareness. 
Even a simple meditation 
like mindfulness of 
breathing makes us more 
aware of our own breath, 
it makes us more aware 
of our own actions 
in general.
And it brings 
sort of a clarity 
and a peace of mind. 
And it’s from this
foundation that some of
the other consequences 
flow, a deeper 
understanding of unity. 
So, what is the ultimate 
message of Theosophy?
The message that comes 
through most strongly 
and most often is 
the emphasis on unity. 
Unity of all things, 
that even though we all 
appear to be separate, 
we’re really all one. 
And from that, 
I would say that 
the most important object 
is brotherhood, which is 
the practical expression 
of that unity, that way of 
actually not just saying 
but demonstrating that 
we’re all one. 
One of the main 
objectives of the 
Theosophical Society is 
to “encourage the study 
of Comparative Religion, 
Philosophy, and Science.” 
The main intention 
behind that is the idea 
that truth is something 
that has to be 
approached from 
more than one angle. 
So in other words, 
the Theosophical Society 
recognizes the validity 
of the scientific, 
the religious and the 
philosophical methods of 
approaching truth, 
and sort of professes that 
to arrive at 
a clearer picture of truth, 
we need to have 
a worldview that combines 
all three of these 
and sort of takes them all 
into account.
In accordance with 
this objective, 
from 1975 onwards, 
then president of the 
Theosophical Society 
Mrs. Dora Van Gelder 
Kunz organized yearly 
science seminars 
which take place at 
the Olcott Estate, the 
American headquarters of 
the Theosophical Society 
in Wheaton, Illinois. 
The seminars explored 
fascinating topics of 
science and spirituality, 
cycles, evolution, and 
unfolding consciousness. 
In 1981, His Holiness the 
14th Dalai Lama attended.
The Theosophical Society 
has had a long history of 
providing charitable and 
humanitarian services. 
The Theosophical Order 
of Service (TOS) 
was founded in 1908 
by Annie Besant, 
the second president of 
the Theosophical Society. 
TOS’s motto is “to unite 
all who love in the 
service of all that suffer.” 
Some of the early 
expressed objectives 
of TOS were:
1. To minimize the sum 
of misery in the world;
2. To forget self 
in working for others;
3. To eliminate selfishness 
and substitute love 
as the rule of the world;
4. To live to the highest 
that is within us. 
Today, 
the Theosophical Order 
of Service is established 
in many countries around 
the world and strives to 
provide medical missions 
and disaster relief, 
establish orphanages 
and schools, provide 
scholarships, rehabilitate 
malnourished children, 
care for the disabled, 
prevent cruelty to animals, 
and promote 
vegetarianism, etc.
Mr. Noga spoke about 
the environmental and 
charitable principles 
that guide 
the Theosophical Society.
Learn to honor 
our natural resources 
for what they are. 
Recognize that they are 
limited and that 
we need to share them 
rather than to 
hoard them for ourselves. 
One of the other core 
principles of Theosophy 
is selflessness, 
service to others and 
sharing in the wealth 
of not just the world, 
but the universe 
in spirituality and ideas. 
The problems that we see 
in the environment 
stem from a materialistic 
attitude, that sort of looks 
at the world around us 
as just matter to be 
played with, dominated 
or taken over. 
There’s this attitude 
by science that we’ll 
someday dominate nature. 
Theosophy instead 
points to the idea that 
since we’re all connected, 
we can’t even separate 
ourselves from the 
environment around us. 
And that if we were to 
recognize that we’re one 
with our environment and 
that there’s harmony 
that exist between us 
and the environment, 
then we would reverse 
the position that we have 
in relationship to 
our planet. 
When we return, we’ll 
find out more about the 
Theosophical Society’s 
views on vegetarianism 
and meet some of 
history’s famous people 
who were shaped 
by Theosophy. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
A Journey through 
Aesthetic Realms 
and our program briefly 
introducing the principles 
and history of 
the Theosophical Society.
The Theosophical Society 
has played an important 
role in the promotion 
of vegetarianism, 
based on reasons of 
universal compassion 
as well as 
spiritual well-being.
We do promote 
vegetarianism on principle. 
And actually, here 
at the national center, 
we don’t allow meat 
on campus at all, and all 
of the meals that we serve 
here are vegetarian.  
The Society’s founder, 
Helena Blavatsky, 
was a vegetarian 
and explicitly advised 
Theosophy members to 
abstain from eating meat 
for the following reason:
“When the flesh of 
animals is assimilated 
by man as food, 
it imparts to him, 
physiologically, some 
of the characteristics of 
the animal it came from... 
We advise 
really earnest students to 
eat such food as will 
least clog and weigh 
their brains and bodies, 
and will have 
the smallest effect in 
hampering and retarding 
the development of 
their intuition, their inner 
faculties and powers.”
Other prominent 
members of the 
Theosophical Society 
who advocated 
a vegetarian diet were 
Dr. George Arundale 
and his wife Mrs. 
Rukmini Devi Arandale. 
Dr. Arundale, who was 
a bishop of the Liberal 
Catholic Church in India 
and the third president of 
the Theosophical Society, 
said this about the value 
of the cruelty-free living:
“One way leads to 
destruction. 
It is the way of 
the tolerance to cruelty, 
if not the active 
engagement in it. 
It is the way of 
hunting for sport, 
the way of vivesection, 
the way of killing 
for self-adornment, 
the way of killing 
animals for food, 
the way of making slaves 
of animals without 
thought for their 
happiness and well-being. 
This is the way the world 
has been treading. 
The other way leads to 
salvation. 
It is the way of 
harmlessness, the way 
of the recognition 
of brotherhood with 
all creatures, 
the way of tenderness 
and compassion, 
the way of service and 
not of selfishness.”
Dr. George Arundale’s wife,
Rukmini Devi Arundale, 
was a classical dancer 
of Bharatnayam and 
founder of the famous 
Kalakshetra Academy of 
Indian Dance and Music 
in Chennai, India. 
She was also 
the vice president of the 
International Vegetarian 
Union for 31 years.
The Theosophical Society 
has had a deep influence 
on many distinguished 
individuals who shared 
the ideals of 
inclusiveness, unity, and 
brotherhood among all.
There are some pretty 
big historical figures who 
have professed to be 
influenced by Theosophy. 
Mohandas Gandhi 
was one.  
It’s very clear that his 
actions had a wide effect 
on the world, and 
as did the effects of 
some of the early 
Theosophical members, 
like Annie Besant, who 
was once the president of 
the Theosophical Society. 
She actually worked with 
Gandhi in India towards 
the liberation of 
the Indian people. 
And there are 
other examples: 
Maria Montessori, 
the educator, spent 
some time living at the 
Society’s international 
headquarters in India, 
at Adyar, 
and it’s certain that 
Theosophy influenced
her teaching methods. 
And the same with 
Rudolf Steiner and 
his Waldorf education.  
Austrian-born 
Dr. Rudolf Steiner was 
the General Secretary of 
the German section of 
the Theosophical Society. 
He later founded 
the Anthroposophical 
Society which brought
forth the Waldorf schools,
a new method of organic 
vegetable farming, 
the Camphill movement 
assisting people 
with special needs, 
and a new holistic 
medicine approach. 
Other influential 
individuals who were 
deeply influenced by 
Theosophical thoughts 
include Irish poet and 
Nobel Prize winner 
William Butler Yeats, 
American author of 
children’s books 
L. Frank Baum, 
Russian composer 
Alexander Scriabin, and 
accomplished painters 
Paul Gauguin from France, 
Piet Mondrian 
from the Netherlands, 
and Wassily Kandinsky 
of Russia.
Today, the ideals of the 
Theosophical Society 
continue to appeal to 
the open-minded. 
Keeping pace 
with current issues, 
its members carry on 
the work of 
their predecessors to 
bring greater fellowship, 
peace, and tolerance 
in our world. 
What does the Society 
view as some of the most 
prevalent problems today 
and how should 
these issues be resolved?
One of the issues that 
the Theosophical Society 
in America has 
recently been paying 
close attention to is 
interfaith and dialogue.  
The society, not just now, 
but in the past, has been 
active in the promotion 
of interfaith dialogue. 
In this day and age 
there are many different 
religions, philosophies. 
Theosophy calls for 
unification of people 
and ideas. 
How can this be done 
and what would be 
a good starting point?
I think a very good 
starting point is  simple 
open-minded inquiry, 
to lay ourselves open to 
different possibilities and 
even to possibly seek out 
different possibilities. 
Occasionally make 
a special effort to 
step outside of our own 
personal comfort zones; 
get some exposure to 
different experiences and 
different ideas and 
really try to understand 
where other people 
are coming from. 
Some would argue that 
we have been created 
differently from 
one another and achieving 
unity or oneness is 
an ideal and not a reality. 
How would you 
respond to this?
Many of the realities that 
we see around us
started out as ideals. 
There was a time 
in history, when the idea 
that people could be 
free individuals, was not 
very popular and now it’s 
something that we really 
sort of take for granted. 
So, whenever we have 
an ideal that doesn’t exist, 
I think that becomes 
a challenge for us to 
make that ideal happen, 
and it’s something that 
we need to carry out 
in our everyday lives. 
We thank Mr. Noga and 
the Theosophical Society 
in America for explaining 
the noble minded 
principles and
past and present 
endeavors of 
the Theosophical Society. 
By joining together, 
may our shared dream 
of a harmonious planet 
be realized soon.
Thank you, gentle viewers, 
for your presence on 
A Journey through 
Aesthetic Realms. 
Coming up next is 
Our Noble Lineage, right 
after Noteworthy News. 
Blessed be the Divine 
spirit in everyone.