Abd-ru-shin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (b. April 18, 1875 in Bischofswerda, Saxony, Germany; d. December 6, 1941 in Kipsdorf, Ore Mountains, Germany) is best known as the author of the Grail Message. A first version published in 1931 under the pen name Abdruschin is available at edition Bernhardt [1]. A modified posthumous edition in three volumes was first published in 1949 under the pen name Abd-Ru-Shin and is available from Grailmessage.com [2].

A variety of organisations seem to have been inspired by Abdruschin's ideas: philosophy clubs and associations (most prominently the Grail Movement; for one example see [1]) have been formed by readers of the Grail Message. Abdruschin himself neither formed or formally supported any religious or spiritualist organisations nor is he known ever to have been a member of one. On the contrary his work seems to place a high value on individual responsibility and self-discovery.

After a brief commercial training Abdruschin began his literary activity while still a young man. This often led him to foreign countries. In 1915 he was interned in England. Released in 1919, he first went to Dresden, later to Bavaria and in 1923 began to write the first lectures of the Grail Message. In 1928, he settled on Vomperberg in the Tyrol.

There he wrote the Work ""In the Light of Truth: The Grail Message". Perhaps due to the book's focus on individualism and human free will he was labelled a "dangerous" element by the Nazi authorities and exiled from Austria in 1938. He was kept under surveillance until his death in 1941.

The Grail Message is his best-known work and continues to be read widely. It has been translated into over 20 languages.

[edit] References

  1. ^ In the Light of Truth- Original | Great edition 1931
  2. ^ In the Light of Truth: The Grail Message- Edition in three volumes