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The
following document is (C) 2000 by Doug Thompson.
Permission is hereby granted to reproduce this document in whole or
in part in non-commercial applications with no restrictions whatsoever. 1. What is the Thetford Version (HLC)
and where did it come from? The
Thetford Version of the Course, sometimes called the HLC (Hugh Lynn Cayce)
version is described by Kenneth Wapnick as Helen's second retyping (1).
The dictation of the Course was completed in September 1972
(2). In the summer of 1971
Helen and Bill had begun to add chapter divisions and subheadings and
remove personal material that had been given to Helen and Bill along with
the Course . (3) This editing
was principally done by Bill Thetford (4) with Helen mostly just doing the typing, worrying some about
grammar but not at all about content. That was specifically left to Bill. Helen
wrote of this in her unpublished autobiography: "I
assumed the attitude of an editor whose role is to consider only form and
disregard content as much as possible.... Bill was adamant in opposing any
changes at all, except for deleting the too personal early references and
correcting actual typing errors.. I
wanted to change just about everything, but I knew that Bill was right.
Any changes I made were always wrong in the long run, and had to be
put back. The strictly
editorial attitude not only helped me get through a long and difficult
job, but also proved to be the most helpful, as far as the actual material
was concerned. It had a way
of knowing what it was doing, and was much better left exactly as it
was." (5) (emphasis mine) Bill
Thetford, we can see, was adamant that no changes be made other than
correcting typing errors and removing specifically personal material.
Helen made many changes and then returned the material to its
original form in this initial editing process. This
14 month process (6), begun in the summer of 1971, would have ended in the
fall of 1972 which is when the scribing of the third volume, the teacher's
manual, ended. (2) The
editing was underway when the Voice began dictating the third volume on
April 12, 1972 (7). Ken
writes in "Absence": "After
scribing was completed [September
1972], Helen and Bill prepared a copy of the manuscript for Hugh Lynn
[Cayce]. This, incidentally,
was the manuscript I first saw, and which Helen, Bill, and I always
referred to as the 'Hugh Lynn version.'" (8) Ken
adds a most curious footnote as an afterthought to this statement: "This
appellation should not be taken to suggest that there were other versions
of the Course; it referred only to the latest typing of the
manuscript." (9) Just
what Ken means by "versions" here is unclear since there are
indeed quite a number of "versions" in existence. Ken
first saw this "Hugh Lynn version" in May of 1973 (10). It would have been finished some time between the end of the
scribing in September 1972 and May of 1973 when Ken says he first read it.
Hugh Lynn Cayce received a copy of this version, likely shortly
after it was completed. Since it was already called the Hugh Lynn version in May of
1973 according to Ken, it had likely been completed and given to Hugh Lynn
Cayce some time prior to that. Robert
Skutch states that between September 1972 and March 1973, Bill provided
the completed Course to Hugh Lynn Cayce and 3 other people. (11) This
is not the only version of the Course Hugh Lynn had seen. Ken
writes in "Absence": "Helen
and Bill were to return to Virginia Beach shortly after the Course began
[1965], and over the years developed a helpful friendship with Hugh Lynn
Cayce, who was extremely supportive of Helen. Helen and Bill made copies of the as-yet-incomplete manuscript for
him, and he was obviously impressed with what he read. Helen and Bill later told me that Hugh Lynn felt that his
father Edgar had something to do with the transmission of the
Course." (12) Robert
Skutch states that Helen and Bill showed the unfinished manuscript of the
text to Hugh Lynn Cayce in New York during the first year of the scribing,
which would have been some time in 1965 or 1966. (13) There
is indication, therefore, that Hugh Lynn Cayce was periodically provided
with partial fragments of the Course from early in the scribing until the
completed, edited version was presented to him some time between September
of 1972 and March of 1973. Some
time after receiving this courtesy copy, Hugh Lynn Cayce deposited it in
the ARE (Association for Research and Development) library of the Edgar
Cayce The
edition of the Thetford Version (or HLC) published on the net in January was made from this public domain
copy at the ARE library. It
was typed into computers and proofread 4 times by volunteers and contains
no editing, even the original spelling mistakes are preserved. There are, however, several typing errors in the January 2000
version. The
Thetford Version (or HLC) then is the outcome of the first complete
editing of the notes Helen took in dictation and the original typescript
Bill Thetford produced from those notes. It is not the original typescript but is the closest thing to it
which is presently available to the public. 2. What is the relationship between the Thetford Version (HLC) and
other versions of the Course? There
are quite a few different editions of the Course in existence. The most well known are the FIP (Foundation for Inner Peace) First
and Second editions of 1976 and 1996, respectively and the CIMS (Course in
Miracles Society) edition of the HLC text in 2000. The
"Nun's Version", which is very close to the First Edition was
widely distributed and photocopied by Judith Skutch beginning in the
Spring of 1975. Some months
after this photocopying in the public domain began, copyright notices
began to appear and by December 1975, a copyright was obtained, the
legality of which is questionable since at least a few hundred, and
probably a great many more copies had already been released and were
circulating in the public domain. A
variety of unpublished versions and fragments also exist in at least a few
copies. 1) Original shorthand notes (9/65-9/72) 2) Urtext (original Thetford Typescript, possibly containing some
editing and possibly existing in multiple versions with varying degrees of
corrections) 3) Helen's first re-typing, (late 1972) 4) The Thetford Version (nicknamed the HLC) (9/72-3/73) (Helen's 2nd
re-typing) 5) Intermediate edited versions, editors' working papers (1973-1975) 6) The Nun's Version (Jan or Feb 1975) (25% of the first five chapters
removed) 7) The Xerox Edition (June 1975) (substantially identical to the
above) **
The idea of and application for copyright occurs here 8) The "Freeperson Press" edition (August 1975) (a
photo-reduced version of the above) 9) The "First Edition"
(6/75) (few changes from the above) 10)
The "Second Edition" (1996) (substantial but minor
changes) 1) Hugh Lynn Cayce 2) Personal friend of Bill (probably Charles Parrish) 3) Personal friend of Bill (identify unknown but fragments of the copy
survive) 4) Father Michael 5) Cal Hatcher 6) Ken Wapnick (May 1973) 2) Removal of roughly 25% of the first five chapters and substantial
rearrangement of the rest, the 53 miracle principles were abridged to 50,
etc. 3) The addition of small amounts of material not found in the Thetford
Version, probably from the urtext. 4) A few alterations of chapter and section divisions and titles. 5) Significant word substitutions which alter the meaning of the text.
"Spiritual Eye" is replaced by "Holy Spirit", for
instance, evenwhere it doesn't fit. "Foolish Journey" is replaced by "useless
journey", and many others. 6) Re-working and re-arranging sentences and paragraphs. While
the product of the Editorial Era, the various nearly identical versions of
1975, are very close to the Thetford Version, retaining most of the
structure, chapter and section divisions and titles, it is not entirely an
edit of the Thetford Version, as evidenced by the addition of
small amounts of material not found in the Thetford Version. The editors
appear to have made some reference to an earlier, pre-1973 version while
being strongly influenced by Bill Thetford's formatting and structural
decisions. 3. But I've always heard there were "virtually no changes?" You
not only heard it, you can read Helen Shucman's own words in the preface
to the Second edition: "Only
a few minor changes have been made. Chapter
titles and subheadings have been inserted in the Text, and some of the
more personal references that occurred at the beginning have been omitted.
Otherwise the material is substantially unchanged." - Helen
Shucman (16) While
this may reflect Helen's memory of the editing, during which she
"invariably" fell asleep, according to Ken, this recollection of
Helen's is not corroborated by the evidence. (27) In
the 1987 FIP video Bill Thetford, Ken Wapnick, Judith Skutch, and Charles
Parrish all face the camera and speak the words "virtually no
changes" in their descriptions of the editing process. Bill and Ken and probably Charles all had seen the 1973 Thetford
Version (the HLC) and the 1975 Version. Judith may not have seen the earlier material at the time she made
that statement. When
the Thetford Version finally resurfaced in January of 2000, there was
considerable astonishment and consternation when it was discovered that
the first five chapters were 25% smaller and substantially re-written with
numerous other word substitutions and changes throughout the text. The
claims that the editing made no changes of significance are many and
conspicuous. In
"Absence" Ken goes into considerable detail about how they
worried about commas and capitalization but nowhere suggests that large
portions of material, other than personal material were removed. The
official story of the Editorial Era was "virtually no changes"
and it was never seriously challenged or doubted by anyone other than Bill
Thetford himself, and that only in private. Hugh Prather makes the following remarkable comment in July of 1999 "First,
a disclaimer: The information I give here about the early days of the
Course is sprinkled with a few direct observations but comes primarily
from many conversations my wife Gayle and I had with Bill Thetford over
the years. If there are any inaccuracies, please chalk these up to my
faulty memory of what Bill told us, because nothing here is taken from
books and biographies about the Course. "Bill
thought it amusing that many "official" details about how the
Course came were not what he recalled, even though he was by that time the
only one alive who had been there from the beginning. For instance, once
he laughed and said, "Now they're saying the Course came over a
period of ___ years. I always thought it was ___ years." For reasons
that I hope will become clearer as we go along, my purpose is not to
correct historical details and for that reason I am not getting into them.
"Getting into details" instead of getting into God is what
causes all the trouble. "The
lesson for Gayle and me [sic] was that although Bill disagreed with some
of the "facts" that were being recorded about his and Helen's
lives, and some of the actions that were being taken in the name of the
Course, he did not feel the need to impose his position on other people.
However, please note that he did have a position on these and many other
subjects, and, primarily as a form of humor, he often would voice his
position. "It
simply isn't possible to have an ego and yet have no position, no
opinions, no attitudes. In fact, when we look at our minds honestly, we
see that we have mixed feelings and multiple opinions about almost
everything. It is how we respond to our positions, to our own points of
view--not staying unaware of them--that determines our sense of wholeness
and peace. Bill's gentle example was: Do not become preoccupied with your
position--which you inescapably will do if you try to force it on someone
else. "In
1978, Gayle and I met Bill Thetford, Judy and Bob Skutch, Jerry Jampolsky,
and several other people associated with the Course, all of whom were
living in Tiburon at the time. Even though there was an underlying sense
of family and mutual support among these people, several of them seemed to
be wrestling with two contrasting attitudes toward the Course . One was
that the Course needed protecting and promoting. In those days, this point
of view was still quite weak because the original thinking--during the
period when the Course was being turned over to The Foundation for Inner
Peace--was that "the Course is for everyone" and shouldn't even
be copyrighted, which of course would mean that no one organization could
control it. " At
the time Ken became involved with Helen and Bill, in May 1973, "Helen and Bill were each firmly convinced that the
other -- now more than ever -- was the cause of all problems and failures:
past, present, and future." (17) Bill,
being a passive-aggressive personality, avoided confrontation (18) and was
quickly supplanted as "Editor-in-Chief" of the Course by Ken, as
was his policy of "virtually no changes." This idea, this "Virtually no changes" was Bill's idea
and is reflected in his Version of the Course. The words were kept by Ken and Helen in their subsequent editing,
but the idea was left behind. On
February 19, 2000, Ken told the Salt Lake Tribune "A
lot of changes had to be made because Helen's hearing was not all that
good," he said. "The early material was not polished or
well-written and had a number of inconsistencies." Schucman
became better at discerning the words as the dictation continued. "If
you have a faucet that hasn't been used for a long time and turn it on,
you first get a lot of rust and impurities. Helen's experience in the
early weeks and months was like that," he said. But,
Wapnick insists, no editing was done without Schucman's approval. "
The editing that Helen and I completed was Helen's work," Wapnick
said this week. "Any thought that it was I who did the editing could
only be held by someone who clearly did not know Helen." (18) The
story changes when the long-suppressed evidence is produced. Bill,
for his own reasons, rightly or wrongly chose not to challenge Ken's and
Helen's "story" and their departure from his policies in public
or directly, though his relationship with her deteriorated after Ken
became involved. Bill
certainly did challenge the story in private however. 4. Did Jesus author the Course? On
February 19, 2000 the Salt Lake Tribune reported: "Kenneth
and Gloria Wapnick, executive directors of the Foundation For A Course in
Miracles [FACIM] of Roscoe, N.Y., which holds the book's copyright, say
the early manuscript is nothing but a rough draft. They believe they are
protecting Schucman's interests by keeping the draft out of the public. "If
you are an author, and you have written several drafts, you want the
finished product published," Kenneth Wapnick said this week.
"This was Helen's working draft. It was never meant to be
published." (19) Here
as in sworn testimony in court, Ken asserts that Helen is the author of
the Course. Yet in the 1987
Video he states the following: "One
of the things I was most impressed with about the course was that Jesus
was the author of it. I just
could not believe that anyone else could have written it. It was very clear to me that Helen could not have written it and I
just could not imagine it having any other source than Jesus
himself." Somewhere
between then and now, Ken's opinion on authorship of the Course has
changed somewhat. Helen's
opinion on the authorship, quoted in the Video and in Robert Skutch's
"Journey" from her autobiography was fairly clear: "At
several points in the writing the Voice itself speaks in no uncertain
terms about the author: Jesus. My
own reactions to these references which literally stunned me at the time
have decreased in intensity and are now at a level of wonder and
acceptance." - Helen Shucman (20) Skutch's
rendition of this quote in "Journey" is subtly different. "At
several points in the writing the Voice itself speaks in no uncertain
terms about the Author. My
own reactions to these references, which literally stunned me at the time,
decreased in intensity until they reached a level of mere indecision.
I do not understand the events that led up to the writing. I do not
understand the process and I certainly do not understand the authorship.
It would be pointless for me to attempt an explanation." - Helen
Shucman (21) Ken
reports the existence of at least three versions of Helen's autobiography.
(22) Perhaps the authors of
the video were quoting from a different version than was Robert Skutch.
While the video stresses the authorship of Jesus as a major theme,
Skutch's book downplays that element, suggesting it without affirming it.
Perhaps this explains the slight difference in the quote from
Helen, as Skutch's is not quite as definite about the author being Jesus. The
Course itself is clear that the Biblical Jesus is the author. One may believe or disbelieve the Course, but it does in no
uncertain terms identify the author with biographical details of Jesus of
the New Testament, frequently quoting the New Testament, sometimes in the
language of "when I said [quote from NT]." Quoted
here from the COA vs. FIP lawsuit pleadings is the nub of the issue: First,
COA: 11. Dr. Schucman believed that she was scribing the actual words of
Jesus as communicated in a voice to her, a process she described as a form
of rapid inner dictation. Upon information and belief, Dr. Schucman
expressly disavowed that any part of the text or organization of A Course
in Miracles invoked her own creativity, expressing instead the belief that
the voice would not allow her to inject her own creativity into the work.
The
response from Ken's Lawyers: 11. Defendants admit that Dr. Schucman believed a voice had
communicated with her and that she described the process of her authorship
as a form of "rapid inner dictation." Defendants deny the
remaining allegations contained in paragraph 11 of the Complaint. (23) This
is one of numerous statements made since the litigation began, by FIP,
FACIM or Dr. Wapnick, denying the authorship of the Course by Jesus. The
"official story" has curiously changed with the affirmations of
Jesus' Authorship made over the past 25 years now being resoundingly
denied, under oath, in Court. 5. Did Jesus Direct the editing? While
Ken Wapnick and Robert Skutch have maintained that any changes were made
at Jesus' instructions, just how those instructions were received or how,
when Ken and Helen both agreed on a change they sought to check with Jesus
is less clear. Robert
Skutch tells us that whenever a difference of opinion arose between the
two editors, Helen and Ken, they'd both seek guidance and always end up in
agreement. No mention is made
of how changes on which the two agreed were checked with Jesus. There
is certainly nothing suggesting anything resembling an "inner
dictation" mentioned with regard to the final editing. Ken
describes the process thus: "Our
basic procedure was that early in the morning I would read through the
material we would cover later that day, or review our previous day's work.
I would pencil in those corrections and changes I thought were
necessary. Helen and I would
then go over these together, after which I would go back over what we had
done, and re-present this to Helen. This
procedure went back and forth in these early chapters, until we felt it
was the way Jesus wanted it." (24) At
this juncture one might well ask what is the difference between
"feeling it was the way Jesus wanted it" and "agreeing this
is the way it should be?" Ken
goes on: "We
both felt his presence guiding us in this work, and it was clear for the
most part that our personal preferences and concerns played no important
role in these decisions. I added the qualifying phrase "for the most
part," as Helen did feel that Jesus allowed her the license to make
minor changes in the form, as long as the content itself was not affected.
This license only extended itself to questions of punctuation,
paragraphing, capitalization, and minor word changes (such as switching
"that" for "which," and vice versa; see more below),
but never to the inclusion or exclusion of important material." (24)
(emphasis mine) Helen
and Ken believed they were being guided by Jesus. We must now ask what
each of them might have meant by that. Ken as claimed in court that Jesus of the New Testament whom the
Course itself claims as its author is not its author, that Jesus is a
"mere symbol" Helen used to "symbolize the abstract love of
God" and that Helen is the author and as in the quote from the Salt
Lake Tribune, that Helen and not Jesus wrote the book and directed the
editing. Insofar as
"Jesus" is mere a symbol for Helen in Ken's view, what
difference could there be for him between Helen agreeing to a change and
"Jesus" agreeing to a change? As
for Helen, how did she understand or come to discern "the way Jesus
wanted it?" Ken
offers us a clue: "A
cute yet strange aspect to our editing recurred every once in a while,
when after reading a particularly difficult passage Helen would turn to me
in laughter, explaining that she did not have the remotest idea what the
words meant. And so I found
myself in the rather unusual situation of explaining the Course to
[her]." (25) Not
understanding it herself, and not obtaining an explanation from
"Jesus" she asked for and got an explanation from Ken who, at
the beginning of the editing where most of the changes were made, was
himself a Course novice, having only been exposed to it for a few months. The
"belief" in the direction of Jesus appears to be little more
than that the pair were both in agreement and comfortable with the changes
they ended up making. There
was no process of consultation with Jesus nor any way in which the severe
reservations with some of the changes voiced by other scholars
subsequently could have been considered. It
appears necessary to at least consider the possibility that both editors
were self-deluded about Jesus' role. There was no "supernatural
voice" offering information that was its own best argument for its
authority. There appears to
have been some wishful thinking and in one case at least, a serious
factual error: Ken
writes: "The
content of the Course was never jeopardized as a result of our
editing." (26) The
HLC provides irrefutable textual evidence that the content was very
significantly altered and the meaning reversed in a few cases, changed in
many others, and the material suggestive of God having created matter,
spacetime and bodies as teaching devices for the mind and to further the
Atonement went missing. In
many cases the iambic pentameter of the original was destroyed by the
editing and in a few cases the substitution of "Holy Spirit" for
"Spiritual Eye" results in an obviously incorrect, or at least
dramatically altered meaning. Yet
Ken asserts that when changes destroyed the poetic meter, the original
form was restored. In the
view of many, his report is incorrect here also. While some changes may have been reversed, as suggested by both
Helen and Ken in various places, many were not, as we can now see from the
HLC. As
for Helen's supervision and even participation in the process of
discerning "the way Jesus wanted it" Ken writes: "We
did most of the editing either in Helen's offices at the Neurological
Institute and Black Building, at my studio apartment, or at Helen's
apartment, the last being Helen's favorite place. Thus we would often sit
together on her living room couch and work. Invariably, however, Helen
would start to fall asleep. We
would be editing, and suddenly I would look to my left, and there Helen
would be, slumping in the corner ..." (27) The
claim to divine inspiration of the original dictation has, as its
strongest support, the quality of the material itself which allows for no
plausible explanation other than a supernatural source. The claim to
divine direction of the editing, however, has as its greatest weakness,
the lack of quality in the work. Not only has the process been
misrepresented, Ken has taken strenuous measures to cover up and suppress access to the primary textual sources which contain
the evidence of what really did happen. Up
to 1998 or 1999, while some readers dismissed the idea of Jesus being the
author as impossible, mostly because their personal beliefs did not admit
the possibility of a human personality, such as Jesus, speaking from
beyond the grave, there was no argument that the Course claimed in its own
pages authorship by Jesus. Readers
were really left with the choice to accept or reject the Course's own
claims as to its own authorship, claims affirmed repeatedly by Helen,
Bill, Ken and Judith. Recently
however, Ken's story has changed, and he has variously affirmed Helen as
the author and sometimes "another Jesus" as the author.(28)
The
latter claims about authorship may be at least partly inspired by a rash
of lawsuits in which authorship is a central dispute. It would appear that "divinely authored" or anonymous
material is not eligible for copyright protection. To defend the validity of the copyright, which is necessary for Ken
to maintain his several lawsuits, Ken must convince the court, at least,
that the copyrighted material is of human rather than divine origin. Although
Ken affirmed Jesus as the author of the Course for two decades in
innumerable verbal and written statements, it has been suggested by some
that he never actually meant "Jesus of Nazereth" whom we know
from the New Testament, but always understood Helen's "Jesus" as
a "mere symbol" which Helen used to refer to "the abstract
love of God." (28) He's
also stated that the abstract content came from an otherworldly source but
that the form, the specific words, came from Helen. Yet at other times, most recently in the Salt Lake Tribune
interview, he affirms that Helen heard "the words" and not just
abstract ideas. There
are thus two views, at least, on the authorship of the Course. The most obvious and most strongly supported from material in the
Course itself, and probably the view held my most Course students is that
Jesus did indeed resurrect after his execution in A.D. 29 and remains
"alive" as his human self, though without a body, and that he
can dictate messages to people who are present in space and time in
bodies. This view has been characterized by Ken as "simple
minded" (28) and he offers another view in which "another
Jesus" (28) provided abstract content to Helen which she then put
into form in her own words. This
latter view is flatly contradicted by many of Helen's own statements in
which she states that she received the precise wording, occasionally got
some words wrong, and was specifically told to change specific words
later. She further states that she often had no idea what the words
meant at the time she heard the Voice utter them. This would seem to argue against the idea that she received
an abstract content which she then put into her own words. The
question of authorship of the Course has been extensively discussed and
will likely be debated and disputed for a long time to come. While some
Course teachers suggest that the value of the teaching isn't altered by
the student's beliefs about authorship, others point out that since the
Course unambiguously claims authorship by Jesus, (Helen's words) rejecting
that aspect is a rejection of the authority and authenticity of the whole
work. The
depth of irony in this dispute will not escape the notice of many readers.
The strongest proponent of the "authority" of the
1975 abridged edition, who rejects the HLC as flawed and full of errors,
is also the one who, more than anyone else, questions the authorship by
Jesus and thus the underlying "divine" authority. If Jesus is not the author of the words, in Ken's view, what does
he mean when he says that Jesus directed the editing and that the abridged
form is as Jesus wished it to be? In
the view of this writer, Helen did indeed channel a disembodied spirit who
clearly identified himself as Jesus of Nazereth. Few
if any channelers claim 100% accuracy, and that claim can't be made for
the Course. By all accounts,
what was originally received contained errors that required fixing. The question from that view becomes "is the subsequent editing
and abridgement by Helen and Ken a correction of a flawed work or a
curruption of the same?" To
a very real extent this is a question which each person who wonders about
it must answer for him or her self. Scholarship,
through a careful study and comparison of the original with the subsequent
renditions, can sometimes produce powerful evidence for one view or the
other. In some cases it is
simply a matter of personal impressions, which rendition "rings
true" for the reader. Unfortunately,
this comparison and study of the original and subsequent redactions is
forbidden by Dr. Wapnick who is in physical possession of the primary
sources without which scholarship is severely hampered, indeed for the
most part impossible, and refuses to permit any access to the material.
While the HLC has been widely circulated, Ken has taken extreme
legal measures to remove it from circulation and to suppress the document. 6) Why is the HLC being suppressed? Ken's
motives for this fear-filled protectiveness "of Helen's privacy"
are probably as complex as the material being suppressed and his own
psyche. It is beyond the
scope of this paper to engage in a detailed effort to explain them. A few possible motives do suggest themselves however: 1) "The Story" of the Course's editing that has been
popularly promulgated is now known to be false and incomplete from the
textual evidence of the HLC. Whatever actually did happen between Helen's "taking
notes" from 1965 to 1972 and the 1975 publication of the Course, is
at least partly revealed by the discrepancies between the original
dication and the final published abridgement of it. It is a story Ken apparently doesn't want to be known and he cites
as a reason, the protection of Helen's privacy. There
would seem to be a secret shared by Helen and himself which Ken feels
honour bound to protect. We
don't know the truth but we do know that what we've been told, while
almost certainly partly true, is not the whole truth and that there are
things we have not been told and which Ken is determined we shall not find
out. 2) The copyright itself is probably part of Ken's motivations.
He now owns it and due to the commercial success of the Course,
that copyright is worth some millions of dollars. A 1998 appraisal valued it at US$2.8 million. There is a blunt
commercial reality here. Were
the HLC offered for sale freely in the open market alongside the later
abridged edition, it would certainly cut into the sales of the latter and
reduce it's commercial value. Indeed
one might wonder who would buy Ken's abridgement if the unabridged
original were available? Given
that Penguin/Viking purchased exclusive rights to the Course for a five
year period for US$3 million, that large publisher would have reason to
ask Ken for at least some of its money back should the commercial value of
the abridged edition decline as the result of the publication of a
previously unsuspected unabridged original. At
the very least this presents an emormously tricky commercial and
contractual problem and understandably Ken hired the best IP lawyers he
could find to handle the problem. Who
would not seek expert legal advice when faced with such a dilemma? 3) Ken's actions at the moment are probably significantly influenced
by the advice of his IP lawyers for whom "The Works" in question
are simply a commercial commodity and whose interest is confined to the
protection of their client's commercial interests. For them it's all a problem of legal tactics, manouvres, and
technicalities. Needless to
say they are far more concerned with what a judge or jury might be
convinced is true than what actually IS true. Their concern is money, period.
The circulation of the HLC is a commercial threat in their view. According to Sandy Hodes, one of Ken's lawyers, in a conversation
with myself, Penguin's "only interest is money" and Ken is under
"enormous pressure" from Penguin. 4) The value of the HLC and other versions of the Course, right back
to Helen's original notes, from a scholarly, historical and theological
perspective is obviously enormous from the point of view of Course
scholarship. But such
"values" do not easily translate into dollars and cents. Open Course scholarship and academic investigation and debate about
the Course is something to which Ken has sometimes paid lip service but
has never been willing to encourage or participate in. He has maintained
that he is THE Course Scholar and his interpretation is definitive and
correct, even where it can be proven false. As the only Course scholar with access to the primary
sources, his position as sole authority and "Official Teacher"
is to some extent unassailable. Insofar
as "information is power" and the primary sources, including the
HLC are the crucial information in this instance, as long as he can
suppress it, he can effectively render scholarship by others impossible.
This makes any serious challenge of his interpretation and
recollection of the "facts" by the facts themselves,
significantly problematic for other Course scholars. Over
the past 25 years Ken has claimed and been accorded by many Course
students this "special status." By virtue of it his net worth has increased from US$10,000 in 1975
to approx US$9,000,000 in 1998. The
HLC represents a challenge to Ken's prestige and his interpretation of the
Course as well as a threat to his income from Course-related sources.
There lies a motive to suppress the HLC, the primary sources and as
a consequence of that suppression, Course scholarship in general. The copyright is the only legal device he has available to conduct
that suppression and the HLC, which is a public domain document in the
view of several IP lawyers, is most certainly a threat to his copyright. Who
can know the mind of another man? Many
have observed that one can know a man better by his actions than by his
words. However Ken
understands the problem, one thing is indisputable: he doesn't want people
to know about, read, study, quote or publish Helen's autobiographies,
Helen's notes, the urtext, the HLC or any Course-related material produced
before he arrived on the scene in 1973. He's drawn the curtains on the Course's origins and he's published
his version of events and he's got the millions necessary to erect huge
legal barriers in the path of those scholars interested in such questions
as the Course's origins and authorship. We don't know exactly what it is that he's trying to hide, nor
exactly why he's trying to hide it, but we do know he's trying to hide
something! The
HLC does offer clues at to what he's trying to hide. It has only been widely available since January of 2000, and at
this time (May 2000) scholarly work on the document has only just begun
and very little has been published. Indeed,
if Ken's current attempts to suppress the HLC in court are successful,
very little may ever be legally published. There is however some scholarly consensus already that the material
removed from the HLC significantly alters the thought system of the
Course, notably in regard to creation and the purpose of the physical
universe. How significant this "different thought system"
might prove in the long run is a matter of speculation. What is not a matter of speculation is that the existence of
this material which offers a "different thought system" was
systematically denied, not just by Ken, but also by Judith, Helen and
Bill. One
thing they did not want us to know and which was consistently and
adamantly denied for 25 years is that the content and thought system of
the Course was changed significantly between 1973 and 1975. Again, whether that is correction or corruption is open to
question. What's not open to question is that there were significant
changes and that we have been told otherwise. What's also not open to question is that Ken is doing his utmost to
prevent these facts from being known and those changes from being read,
quoted, studied and published. What
we are supposed to believe is that Helen was wrong in her opinion that a
resurrected Jesus of Nazereth dictated the Course to her, that what she
took down was flawed and incorrect in many places, and that Ken and she
corrected the errors under the guidance of the same "another
Jesus" who didn't dictate the words of the Course. That's the current story, which is substantialy different than the
story that was told for 25 years, that there were "virtually no
changes" in the words "Jesus" (there was only one Jesus
until quite recently) dictated. The
HLC must be suppressed because neither story is corroborated by its
textual evidence. Whatever
the truth as to the Course's origins and authorship, it is something Ken
isn't telling and doesn't want anyone else to find out. Endnotes: 1) Absence p 359 2) Absence p 330, Journey p 80 3) Journey
p 78 4) Absence 329 5) Shuchman's autobiography quoted in Absence, p 329 6) Journey p 78 7) Absence p 330 8) Absence p 127 9) Absence p 127 10)
Absence p 335 11)
Journey p 85 12)
Absence p 127 13)
Journey p 62 14)
Journey 15)
Bill's statement on Video 16)
Preface to the Second Edition 17)
Absence p 333 18)
Salt Lake Tribune: Peggy Fletcher Stack 19)
ibid 20)
Video 21)
Journey pp 134-135 22)
Absence??? (can't find) 23)
Whitmore's web site 24)
Absence p 362 25)
Absence p 363 26)
Absence p 364 27)
Absence p 361 28)
3/3/99 New York Deposition of Ken Wapnick Bibliography: Absence
from Felicity: The Story of Helen Shucman and Her Scribing of A Course in
Miracles, Kenneth Wapnick, (Roscoe, N.Y.: Foundation for A Course in
Miracles, 1991) The
Complete Story of the Course. D. Patrick Miller, (Fearles Books, 1997) Journey
Without Distance, Robert
Skutch, (Celestial Arts, 1984) The
Story of A Course in Miracles, video, (Foundation for Inner Peace, 1987) Ken
Wapnick's Deposition, March 3, 1999, New York District Court A
Course in Miracles (second edition), Helen Schucman, (Foundation for Inner
Peace, Viking, New York 1996) Jesus'
Course in Miracles, Jesus of Nazereth, (Course in Miracles Society, Omaha
2000.) The
Course in the 21st Century, Hugh Prather, (Published on the Internet in
various places, July 1999.) The Salt Lake Tribune, Peggy Fletcher Stack, Feb 19, 2000 |
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