Dora Van Gelder

Dora van Gelder Kunz (April 28, 1904 – August 25, 1999) was an American writer, psychic, alternative healer,[1] occultist and leader in the Theosophical Society in America.[2] Kunz has published around the world in Dutch, English, French, German, Polish, Portuguese, and Spanish.

Biography

Dora van Gelder was born at a Dutch camp called Tjeweng[3] located about five kilometers south of Djombang city situated in the Dutch East Indies, which at that time was a Dutch colony and today is known as Java.[4] There she was raised at her father’s estate, a sugar cane plantation. Since she was a child, she claimed, she interacted with ethereal beings without knowing that clairvoyant ability was unusual. At eleven years old she moved to Mosman, a suburb of Sydney (Australia),[5] to study with someone knowledgeable about her abilities, the then-Anglican clergyman and psychic C. W. Leadbeater, who taught her ways to increase her supposed psychic skills.[2][6]

The Manor, a training center rented by Theosophical Society in Mosman, Sydney where Dora Kunz stayed for a while.[7]

Through Leadbeater she met Fritz Kunz, who used to accompany Leadbeater on his travels. In 1927, at the age of twenty-two, Gelder and Kunz married and moved to the United States where her American husband became the principal of a scholastic foundation and she became president of a corporation related to pedagogic supplies.[2] Soon after coming to the USA, the couple founded the first theosophical camp at Orcas Island in the state of Washington.[6]

According to Dora van Gelder there exist powerful beings called Devas which transmit and direct energy to the nature.[8] “Fairy and Griffon” by Gustave Moreau, 19th century.

For many years, Dora dealt with new methods in healing, particularly therapeutic touch,[9] which she co-developed in 1972 with Dr. Dolores Krieger,[10] a nursing professor at New York University,[11] which is said to promote healing, relaxation and lessen pain.[2][12] Therapeutic touch, stated Kunz, has its origin from ancient Yogic texts written in Sanskrit, which describe it as a pranic healing method.[1] Despite the opposition of many doctors and researchers who point TT as a pseudo-science, the technique is taught in approximately eighty colleges and universities in the U.S., and in more than seventy countries.[1]

Kunz philanthropically directed her clairvoyance towards helping physicians in complicated medical cases,[13] in particular aiding in diagnoses through her supposed capability of seeing the effects of diseases in the aura of the patients. More specifically she reported the existence of centers of energy in human body, also known as chakras, changing their colors according to diseases that affect matching endocrine glands.[14] Her followers believed she was able to predict some illness as many as eighteen months before symptoms manifest themselves.[6]

In 1975 Kunz became president of the Theosophical Society in America. In 1977 she published a book about her fairy experiences in her youth, “The Real World of Fairies”, in which she stated that throughout her life she always kept in communication with nature spirits.[2][8] According to her, in 1979 she saw fairies in Central Park in New York City, but due to the increasing pollution it was getting more difficult.[15] Kunz claims that devas are intimately connected with a vital energy, transmitting force to preserve and heal the Earth. She said as more people get involved with environmental causes, the better are the chances of communication between humans and devas.[8] In 1987 after completing twelve years as president of the Theosophical Society in America, she retired and devoted herself to lecturing and writing.[2][6]

In the 1920s walking on the shores of Mosman Dora Kunz says she met a friendly nature spirit worried about evil entities who had invaded the local area, and she managed to expel them. “Mosman's Bay” by Arthur Streeton, 1914.[5]

Criticism

The healing method, the "Therapeutic Touch" conceived by Dolores Krieger and Dora Kunz in the early 1970s using the "human energy field" was tested in 1996 by Emily Rosa. At age nine Rosa conceived and executed a scientific study of therapeutic touch which was published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1998. It was a critique of all of the studies related to TT she could locate in nursing journals and elsewhere. This made Rosa the youngest person to have a research paper published in a peer reviewed medical journal. She concluded:
"The more rigorous the research design, the more detailed the statistical analysis, the less evidence that there is any observed—or observable—phenomenon."

Works

Books

Interviews and lectures

See also


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Russell Targ, Jane Katra, Miracles of Mind:Exploring Nonlocal Consciousness and Spiritual Healing, 1999. pp. 166, 239, 240. ISBN 978-1-57731-097-6.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Ed. by J. Gordon Melton, Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology – Volume II, 2001. Gale Group, Inc. 5th Edition. p.1625. ISBN 0-8103-9489-8.
  3. J. van Dulm, W.J. Krijgsveld, H.J. Legemaate, H.A.M. Liesker, G. Weijers; Illustrated atlas of Japanese camps in the Netherlands East Indies, - East Indies Camp Archives. Netherlands Institute for War Documentation (NIOD). Retrieved 01/2011.
  4. Pedro Oliveira, Dora van Gelder Kunz’s Testimony, CWL World. Retrieved 01/2011.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Peter Read, Haunted Earth, 2003. p. 30. ISBN 0-86840-726-7.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Theosophical Publishing House, Dora van Gelder Kunz, Theosophical Society in America. 2010.
  7. Gregory John Tillett, Charles Webster Leadbeater 1854-1934: A Biographical Study, 1986. University of Sydney, Department of Religious Studies. Chapter 22, pp. 846-847.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Nathaniel Altman, The deva handbook: how to work with nature's subtle energies, 1995. pp. 18,19, 124. ISBN 0-89281-552-3.
  9. Tova Navarra and Adam M.D. Perlman, The encyclopedia of complementary and alternative medicine, 2004, p. 73. ISBN 0-8160-4997-1.
  10. Rosemary Guiley, Encyclopedia of mystical & paranormal experience, 1993, p. 69. ISBN 1-85627-322-9.
  11. Robert T. Carroll, Therapeutic Touch - the Skeptic's Dictionary. Copyright 1994-2009.
  12. Leonard C. Bruno, Therapeutic touch - Encyclopedia of Medicine. Article, 2001. Gale Research. Retrieved 01/2011.
  13. Von Braschler, Natural Pet Healing: Our Psychic, Spiritual Connection, 2003. pp. 2,3. ISBN 1-931942-07-2.
  14. Cyndi Dale, The Subtle Body: An Encyclopedia of Your Energetic Anatomy, 2009, p. 249. ISBN 1-59179-671-7.
  15. Gordon Stein, The encyclopedia of the paranormal, 1996, p. 266. ISBN 1-57392-021-5.

External links