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== Founder of an order ==
== Founder of an order ==
In 1922, Russell founded the [[Choronzon Club]], advertising it as a 'short cut to initiation" in the pages of Occult Digest. In 1931, the group changed its name to G.B.G (for "Great Brotherhood of God" or "Gnostic Body of God")[8][9] It was initially structured as a correspondence course.[10] G.B.G was headquartered in Chicago. Russell received half of all initiation fees collected. The fees were used to support the neighborhoods.
In 1922, Russell founded the [[Choronzon Club]], advertising it as a 'short cut to initiation" in the pages of Occult Digest. In 1931, the group changed its name to G.B.G (for "Great Brotherhood of God" or "Gnostic Body of God") It was initially structured as a correspondence course. G.B.G was headquartered in Chicago. Russell received half of all initiation fees collected. The fees were used to support the neighborhoods.


Inspired by Ida Craddock, Russell developed his own curriculum of sex magick.[9] In the 1960s, disciple Louis T. Culling published these in two works entitled The Complete Magickal Curriculum of the Secret Order G.'.B.'.G.'. and Sex Magick. The first two degrees, "Alphaism and Dianism", reportedly draw upon Ida Craddock's work Heavenly Bridegrooms. Culling writes that Dianism is "sexual congress without bringing it to climax" and that each participant is to regard their partner not as a "known earthly personality" but as a "visible manifestation of one's Holy Guardian Angel.
Inspired by Ida Craddock, Russell developed his own curriculum of sex magick.[9] In the 1960s, disciple Louis T. Culling published these in two works entitled The Complete Magickal Curriculum of the Secret Order G.'.B.'.G.'. and Sex Magick. The first two degrees, "Alphaism and Dianism", reportedly draw upon Ida Craddock's work Heavenly Bridegrooms. Culling writes that Dianism is "sexual congress without bringing it to climax" and that each participant is to regard their partner not as a "known earthly personality" but as a "visible manifestation of one's Holy Guardian Angel.

Revision as of 15:19, 19 November 2023

C. F. Russell

CFRussell.jpg
"At his desk focus on his work, probably mathematics or writing"
Background information
Birthdate: Jun 19, 1897
Born as: Cecil Frederick Russell
Location: Greenwood, Massachusetts
Date of death: Jun 12, 1987 - at age 90
Location: California
Occupation: Occultist, Author, Mathematician

Cecil Frederick Russell (1897–1987) was an American occultist. Russell was a member of the A∴A∴ and Aleister Crowley's O.T.O. magical order. Russell later founded his own magical order, the G.B.G. (variously explained as "Great Brotherhood of God" or "Gnostic Body of God").

Early life

Russell was born in Greenwood, Massachusetts, on June 9, 1897; his family later moved to Orlando, Florida. At the age of 19, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy.

From April 22, 1917, to December 12, 1918, Russell was a hospital attendant at the U.S. Naval Academy Hospital. While serving as a Pharmacist Mate aboard the USS Reina Mercedes[Note 1], Russell injected himself with cocaine, resulting in a dishonorable discharge from the US Navy.

Russell disputes this in his autobiography, stating he pretended so in hope of receiving a transfer to the medical facility, followed by a medical discharge. The war had ended, and Russell wished to unite with Crowley.

Disciple of Crowley

Crowley in Golden Dawn garb

In June 1918, Russell met Crowley in New York and was initiated into the third-degree of Crowley's magical order Ordo Templi Orientis. Russell took the magical name of Frater Genesthai.

From November 1920 to Autumn 1921, Russell lived at Crowley's abbey in Cefalu, Sicily. Crowley's diary records:

Now I'll shave and make up my face like the lowest kind of whore and rub on perfume and go after Genesthai [Russell] like a drunken two-bit prick-pit in old New Orleans. He disgusts me sexually, as I him, as I suspect…[T]he dirtier my deed, the dearer my darling will hold me; the grosser the act the greedier my arse to engulph him!

Russell's account of the magical working is in P.117-118 in Znuz is Znees volume 2.

Founder of an order

In 1922, Russell founded the Choronzon Club, advertising it as a 'short cut to initiation" in the pages of Occult Digest. In 1931, the group changed its name to G.B.G (for "Great Brotherhood of God" or "Gnostic Body of God") It was initially structured as a correspondence course. G.B.G was headquartered in Chicago. Russell received half of all initiation fees collected. The fees were used to support the neighborhoods.

Inspired by Ida Craddock, Russell developed his own curriculum of sex magick.[9] In the 1960s, disciple Louis T. Culling published these in two works entitled The Complete Magickal Curriculum of the Secret Order G.'.B.'.G.'. and Sex Magick. The first two degrees, "Alphaism and Dianism", reportedly draw upon Ida Craddock's work Heavenly Bridegrooms. Culling writes that Dianism is "sexual congress without bringing it to climax" and that each participant is to regard their partner not as a "known earthly personality" but as a "visible manifestation of one's Holy Guardian Angel.

In San Francisco, Russell was visited by fellow Thelemite Wilfred Talbot Smith. Unable to find work in Vancouver, Smith headed to Los Angeles in California, United States. On the way, he stopped at San Francisco, where he met with Cecil Frederick Russell, a Thelemite who had departed from the Crowleyan orthodoxy to found his own group, the Choronzon Club, and who would later head the O.T.O's California chapter, the Agape Lodge. Smith, however, disliked Russell and later claimed that he had been unnerved when Russell began expressing a sexual interest in children. Many of Russell's followers would later join Smith's organization.

Russell was denounced by OTO leader Crowley, who, in a document dated April 15, 1934, described Russell as a "thief, swindler, and blackmailer."

In 1938, the GBG dissolved.

As Genesthai (Russell) continued separately for the rest of his 90 years of life to teach after establishing nearly 100 members across the United States under the name of the G.'.B.'.G.'. . He mostly taught logic, mathematics, and projective geometry as a more robust way of attaining enlightenment. Volume 3 of Znuz is Znees describes most of his inventions in that area. He even taught Zen Artwork with watercolors, hand-painting the pages for the members of the time. Except for his last six months, he would send out a page of instruction every week.

Later life

In 1944, Russell published Provenance, described as "the only twentieth-century occult text to center around the subject of book-collecting". From 1970 to 1972, Russell published his memoirs entitled Znuz is Znees: Memoirs of a Magician. He died in 1987.

Selected works

  • Book chameleon: A new version in verse. (1940)[1]
  • Provenance (1944)[2]
  • Barbara Cubed: The manual of pure logic (1944)[3]
  • Tropermic calculus (1944)[4]
  • Grammar of changes (1944)[5]
  • Manual of Electro-combinational Engineering (1945)[6]
  • Znuz is Znees: Memoirs of a magician (1970)

References

  1. Russell, C. F. (1940). Book chameleon: A new version in verse.
  2. Russell, C. F., Schimmel, S. B., Schimmel, C. F., & Frank W. Tober Collection. (1944). Provenance. Los Angeles: Bookhaven Press.
  3. Russell, C. F. (1944). Barbara cubed: The manual of pure logic. Los Angeles: Times-Mirror Press.
  4. Russell, C. F. (1944). Tropermic calculus. Los Angeles: Printed for the author & his friends.
  5. Russell, C. F. (1944). Grammar of changes. Los Angeles: Times-Mirror Press.
  6. Manual of Electro-combinational Engineering Times-Mirror Press, 1945

Notes

  1. USS Reina Mercedes (IX-25) was an unprotected cruiser of the Spanish Navy that was captured in Cuba in 1898 by the U.S. Navy during the Spanish–American War. She was refurbished and used by the U.S. Navy as a non-self-propelled receiving ship at Newport, Rhode Island, and subsequently as a detention vessel and barracks ship for the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, until 1957.
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