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The Masters and Madame Blavatsky

THE BUNGALOW BY THE SEA – THE MASTER IN THE TRAIN – AN INDIAN MAHATMA IN A NEW YORK
BANK – A STRANGE VISITATION – THE PSYCHOMETRIC EXPERIMENT

Here is a collection of five true stories clearly illustrating the closeThe Masters and Madame Blavatsky
nature of involvement between H.P. Blavatsky and the Masters of the Wisdom. Hundreds of such stories
exist and are documented but just five have been chosen for this particular article.

It was always maintained by Madame Blavatsky (referred to as HPB throughout the rest of the article)
that the Masters are living in physical bodies right here on Earth, albeit in purposeful seclusion and
isolation from the toxicity of everyday life. The modern idea of “Ascended Masters” is a false one and
has been thoroughly explored and examined on this site in the article titled The Danger and Deception
of Channelling.

HPB always refused to accept praise or adoration or to acknowledge that there was anything special
about herself. She would often self-effacingly say, “I am just a poor old woman who knows very
little”…yet she was infinitely more than that and she knew it. Please see the articles Who are you,
Madame Blavatsky? and Words from The Masters about H.P. Blavatsky in this regard.

It is hoped that the following short anecdotes – all factual – will be a source of interest and inspiration to
many.

THE BUNGALOW BY THE SEA

One day, soon after relocating to India, HPB had to have a personal meeting

The seafront at Bombay (Mumbai) today.


on the physical plane with her Guru, the Master Morya, who she had not seen in the flesh for some
time. She told her young native helper Mooljee to drive her somewhere in a small carriage but would
not tell him from the start the exact destination. Instead, as they set off from the headquarters of the
Theosophical Society, she would give him a particular direction at each road junction that they came
to…right here, then left here, then straight on, etc. Passing through the city of Bombay, they came to a
suburb, then travelled through a wooded area, often changing direction, until finally they neared the
seashore.

Eventually HPB told Mooljee to stop. They had reached the gates of a private estate with a rose garden
at the front and an attractive bungalow in the background. Mooljee was mystified by the fact that he, as
a Bombay resident, had never seen, noticed, or even known of the existence of this magnificent
property before. He felt even more mystified when HPB firmly and repeatedly instructed him that under
no circumstances whatsoever was he to follow after her or try to go up to the house. Instead, he was to
wait there for her, until she had finished her business.

From a distance he watched as she walked up to the front door, which was opened for her by a very tall
and impressive looking Indian man, bearded and dressed entirely in white. It was the Master M. They
both entered the bungalow and soon Mooljee noticed some gardeners at work in front of it and called
to them through the gate. They came up to him but refused to tell him the name or any details about
the owner, as they had been forbidden from doing so, having been sworn to secrecy.

After a long time, HPB exited the house and stood for a few moments on the step with the Master. One
of the gardeners cut a bunch of roses and took them over to the Master, who promptly gave them to
HPB, telling her that they were a gift from him for Colonel Olcott, her associate and one of the co-
founders of the Theosophical Society. Saying farewell, she returned to the carriage, where Mooljee was
waiting and was taken back home.

Later in the day, she explained to Olcott that the bungalow belonged to the Great Brotherhood and
served as a temporary residence for any of the Masters who might at times have cause to be visiting or
travelling through the Bombay area, just as we know the Master Hilarion did on occasion, as was written
by the Master Koot Hoomi. She said that it was one of several homes around the world which they used
in this way and that it was protected by a “maya” (which literally means “illusion” in Sanskrit) which was
a controlled arrangement of the atmosphere in such a way that only the very few who were meant to be
able to see and find it would be able to do so.
Mooljee was convinced, however, that he would be able to find it again and took Col. Olcott with him to
retrace his route with the expectation of coming again to that particular place. But, try as he might, he
was never able again to find that bungalow by the sea.

THE MASTER IN THE TRAIN

About a month after the bungalow incident, namely April 1879, the Master M. suggested to HPB that
she pay a visit to the famous Karli cave temple, taking Col. Olcott with her. They set off by train with
Mooljee and two other helpers, Babula and Baburao.

The train stopped at Khandalla and they headed off towards where they would be staying for that night.
Mooljee, however, returned to the Khandalla station in order to speak with the station master about
something. While standing on the platform he heard his name being called and turned to see a train that
had just pulled in but which was headed for Puna, in which was sat the same tall bearded Indian man
dressed in white who he had previously seen from the gates of the mysterious bungalow.

“These are for Colonel Olcott,” said the Master M., handing a bouquet of roses to Mooljee, who
promptly took them to the rest house and gave them to their intended recipient. Olcott, awestruck by
the generosity and kindness displayed towards him by the Master, wanted to write a note of thanks but
didn’t know how it could be delivered to him.

HPB took the note that Olcott had written, passed it on to Mooljee, and told him to start walking down
the road with it. “But there’s no name or address on it!” protested Mooljee. “How can it be delivered or
posted?” HPB simply insisted that he go.

After walking a little way down the road, the Master suddenly appeared directly in front of him, as if out
of thin air. Receiving the letter from the hands of the young man, he told him, “Now go back.” Mooljee
started walking back but couldn’t resist the natural temptation to look back over his shoulder. There was
no-one there. The Master, still on the train to Puna, had apparently momentarily projected his astral
double in order to receive the note of gratitude.

AN INDIAN MAHATMA IN A NEW YORK BANK

Not long after HPB’s first book “Isis Unveiled” was published and while she was still living in New York in
the USA, prior to going to India, she received word from the Master M. that he wished Col. Olcott to do
some business for him in another part of the country. Whatever it was, it sounded as if it would take
weeks and Olcott felt concerned and reluctant because of the amount of money he would lose as a
result of being away from his work in New York for so long.

HPB asked him how much he would be likely to lose and he answered $500 for each month of absence.
She reflected on the matter and told him that since he was not a pledged chela he did not have to go if it
would mean neglecting his own business and that the Master would understand. Eventually, however,
he decided to go.

When he returned to New York after two months, he called at the

The "Lamasery" building in New York where H.P. Blavatsky rented an apartment and wrote "Isis
Unveiled."

The “Lamasery” building in New York where H.P. Blavatsky rented an apartment and wrote “Isis
Unveiled.”

bank in order to check the balance of his account. The written bank statement which was given to him
showed two credits of $500 each, which puzzled him greatly. Asking where that money had come from,
he was told that an unusually tall man of Indian appearance, with long flowing black hair, black beard,
and very piercing eyes had been in the bank…an extremely unusual sight in 1870s New York!

According to the bank employee, this man had asked the receiving teller to fill in the deposit slip for him
when depositing the money into Col. Olcott’s account, as he said he was not sufficiently familiar with
the English language to know what he was supposed to write on which parts of it.

A STRANGE VISITATION

In 1870, HPB’s family – then living in Odessa, Ukraine, which was at that time spoken of as being part of
Russia – had all but given up hope of ever hearing from her again. In the summer of 1868 she had been
summoned to go to Tibet by the Master M. in order to receive indepth tuition and training from the
Masters in preparation for her great mission as their Messenger to the world. Her relatives had heard
nothing from her or about her since her departure and were afraid that she was probably dead.
One day in November, her aunt Nadezhda Fadeyeva received a strange visitation which in later years
she wrote about as follows…

“…when my niece was at the other side of the world…not a soul knew where she was – which grieved us
greatly. All our researches had ended in nothing. We were ready to believe her dead, when – I think it
was about the year 1870, or possibly later – I received a letter from him, whom I believe you call “KH,”
which was brought to me in the most incomprehensible and mysterious manner, by a messenger of
Asiatic appearance, who then disappeared before my very eyes. This letter, which begged me not to fear
anything, and which announced that she was in safety – I have still at Odessa. … Pray excuse me, but it is
difficult, not to say impossible for me, to comprehend how there can exist people so stupid as to believe
that either my niece or yourself have invented the men whom you call the Mahatmas! I am not aware if
you have personally known them very long, but my niece spoke of them to me, and at great length,
years ago. She wrote me that she had again met and renewed her relations with several of them, even
before she wrote her Isis. Why should she have invented these personages? For what end and what
good could they have done her if they had no existence? … If I, who have ever been, and hope ever to
continue to be a fervent Christian, believe in the existence of these men – although I may refuse to
credit all the miracles they attribute to them – why should not others believe in them? For the existence
of at least one of them, I can verify. Who, then, could have written me this letter to reassure me at the
moment when I had the greatest need for such comfort, unless it had been one of those adepts
mentioned? It is true that the handwriting is not known to me; but the manner in which it was delivered
to me was so phenomenal, that none other than an adept in occult science could have so effected it. It
promised me the return of my niece – and the promise was duly fulfilled.”

This letter which was handed to her was written in French, the reason being that French was the main
language of the Russian aristocracy and HPB’s family all belonged to the high echelons of that
aristocracy, with one of her grandmothers actually being a princess. Translated into English, the letter
says…

“The noble relatives of Mad. H. Blavatsky have no cause whatsoever for grief. Their daughter and niece
has not left this world at all. She is alive and desires to make known to those whom she loves that she is
well and feels very happy in the distant and unknown retreat she has chosen for herself. She has been
very ill, but is so no longer; for owing to the protection of the Lord Sangyas [the Tibetan name for
Buddha] she has found devoted friends who take care of her physically and spiritually. Let the ladies of
her house, therefore, set their minds at rest. Before 18 new moons shall have risen – she will have
returned to her family.”
“A Ravine in Tibet” painted by the Master K.H.’s chela Djwhal Khul to show the homes of the Masters.
HPB lived with the Master K.H. and his sister during her stay in Little Tibet, in the region of the Kunlun
and Karakoram Mountains.

“A Ravine in Tibet” painted by the Master K.H.’s chela Djwhal Khul to show the homes of the Masters.
HPB lived with the Master K.H. and his sister during her stay in Little Tibet, in the region of the Kunlun
and Karakoram Mountains.

Although the letter was unsigned, it was written in the handwriting of the Master K.H., as evidenced by
this same handwriting being used ten years later by that particular Master when he began his lengthy
and publicised correspondence with several Theosophists. The Master K.H. and his handwriting were
therefore both known to HPB’s family a full five years before the Theosophical Society was even
founded. How then can it be claimed that HPB invented the Masters out of her own imagination in order
to draw attention to herself and the Theosophical Society?!? Besides, the Kuthumpas (followers of
Kuthumi) still exist today, based mainly near Lahaul and Ladakh in the Trans-Himalayan region of the
Karakoram mountains and until relatively recently even had their own website.

THE PSYCHOMETRIC EXPERIMENT

In Austria, in 1886, the prominent Theosophist Franz Hartmann was conducting a series of
psychometrical experiments via an elderly German peasant woman who had proved to be remarkably
clairvoyant.

Amongst other things, he handed her a letter which he had received from one of the two main Masters
who were most closely involved with the Theosophical Movement and with HPB. Many people around
the world received letters from the Masters during those days, the letters usually appearing in a very
unusual and mysterious fashion, sometimes seemingly materialising out of thin air.

The letter Hartmann had received had appeared suddenly and instantaneously on his desk one day. The
clairvoyant woman had so far been able to accurately and perfectly describe the senders and scenarios
involved with other letters – regular normal letters from everyday people – that Hartmann had received
and in those cases he was already personally acquainted with the people who had written to him and
knew full well from the start who those particular letters were from. But it was with great anxiety that
he handed her the Mahatma Letter. Who was it really from? Was it really from a Master? Was there
really a hidden esoteric Brotherhood of Adepts somewhere in the Himalayas, who were working with
and through HPB and the Theosophical Movement?
The old woman held the letter to her forehead, not having been told anything at all about the nature of
the letter or who it was supposed to have come from, and immediately exclaimed, “Ah! What is this? I
never saw anything so beautiful in my life!” With physical eyes closed, she began to see with her inner
eye and described it all to Hartmann…

With intricate detail, she told how she saw a temple of oriental appearance on top of what looked like
“a high but artificially made elevation or hill.” In her vision she found herself walking up some steps
leading to the temple and entered inside it. Although it would take far too long to relate here all the
details of what she saw (they can be found in full in the book “HPB: The Extraordinary Life and Influence
of Helena Blavatsky” by Sylvia Cranston), one thing which was of particular interest to Hartmann was the
woman’s description of two men who she saw standing together in the temple. One was a tall and “very
fine-looking gentleman” of Indian appearance, dressed all in white. The description she gave of the
other suggested a shaven-headed or bald-headed monk wearing dark robes.

Directly below the temple ceiling she noticed three levels of panels which contained various strange
characters and symbols. She naturally didn’t understand their meaning at all but consented to draw
them in detail on a piece of paper for Hartmann. Finally, after describing various other things, the
clairvoyant began to laugh happily and said, “What a funny sight! There are lots of queer people! They
are little women and children. They wear such funny dresses, and have fur caps on their heads. … Now
the whole scene dissolves into a cloud.”

Afterwards, Hartmann wrote a letter to HPB describing in detail the things the woman had said and
seen. He mentioned about the strange symbols seen on the panels but didn’t enclose the drawing of
them. In her reply to him, she said that the temple described by the woman sounded very much like the
private temple of the Panchen Lama near Shigatse, Tibet, and that many of the details provided were
entirely accurate, including the part about the temple being built on an artificial elevation. She said that
she had never personally been allowed inside the temple while she was staying with the Masters near
Shigatse in the late 1860’s but that she had seen it from the outside and had its interior described to
her. The tall man in white she thought to be the Master M. and assumed that the shaven-headed man
with him must have been a lama or priest of some description. She also drew some detailed and highly
intricate Tibetan characters and symbols and sent them to Hartmann with her letter, saying, “Ask her
whether it is this she saw.”

To Hartmann’s profound astonishment and awe, those drawn by HPB were 99% identical to those drawn
by the old German peasant woman during her psychometric vision!
HPB didn’t explain the meaning of the various characters but Wesley Needham of the Tibetan collection
at Yale University has done so, after analysing those drawn by both HPB and the German woman. The
Tibetan letters in the top panel spelt the mantra “Om tram ah hri hum,” while the lower characters were
the bija or seed syllable mantras connected with the five Dhyani Buddhas spoken of in Tibetan
Buddhism. In her biography of HPB, Sylvia Cranston wrote, “Thus it is confirmed that an unlearned
German woman could reproduce in Tibetan seed-syllables a sacred Buddhist mantra of which she had
likely no previous knowledge. The catalyst for this remarkable feat and her accompanying visions was, as
we have seen, an occult letter reputed to be from one of HPB’s teachers in Tibet.”

Some of the Tibetan characters drawn by HPB.

Some of the Tibetan characters drawn by HPB.

The articles The Great Tsong Kha-pa and Alaya – The Universal Soul include some further information
about the Panchen Lama and Tibetan Buddhism in the light of statements made by HPB and the
Masters. The new article Damodar and the Hall of Initiation is also closely related to some of these
things.

~ BlavatskyTheosophy.com ~

“And now – goodbye. Behave yourselves like true theosophists – children of Light and Pragna, and
accept the sincere blessings and good wishes of your fast departing, hapless friend and brother H.P.
Blavatsky.”

~ from The Letters of H.P. Blavatsky to A.P. Sinnett ~

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