Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Oskar Ernst Bernhardt" in French language version.

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books.google.com

  • (en) Bryan R. Wilson, The Noble Savages : The Primitive Origins of Charisma and Its Contemporary Survival, University of California Press, , 131 p. (ISBN 978-0-520-02815-9, lire en ligne), p. 114 :

    « ... but their prominence and relative success when compared with such figures as Louwrens van Voorthuizen (Lou) in Holland, Georges Roux in France, and Oskar Ernst Bernhardt in Germany and Austria, all of whom claimed to be the messiah—is striking. »

  • (en) Massimo Introvigne et Peter Clarke (dir.), Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements, Routledge, , 720 p. (ISBN 978-1-134-49970-0, lire en ligne), p. 244 :

    « A complicated esoteric work, which includes a history of the universe partially derived from the Theosophical Society (see Theosophy), and hinting at Berhnardt’s own messianic role, it found interested readers within the esoteric milieu (see Esoteric Movements). »

  • (it) Franco Cardini, Massimo Introvigne et Marina Montesano, Il Santo Graal, Giunti Editore, , 183 p. (ISBN 978-88-09-21274-9, lire en ligne), p. 142

    « Lo stesso Abd-Ru-Shin ha un ruolo messianico, su cui il movimento preferisce mantenere oggi una certa discrezione pubblica (anche se per i fedeli Abd-Ru-Shin altri non è che l’incarnazione di Parsifal). »

doi.org

dx.doi.org

  • (en) Zdenek Vojtisek, « Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 9, no 3,‎ , p. 61-79 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, lire en ligne, consulté le ) :

    « In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the “Conclusion” be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books. ... Four lectures and the “Conclusion” published in 1931 are omitted in the authorized postwar version. The reason for dropping three of the lectures is probably the same as the reason for omitting the “Conclusion” in 1937: they were too explicit in pointing to Bernhardt (Abd-ru-shin) as the Messiah. Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.28 »

  • (en) László Kürti, « Psychic Phenomena, Neoshamanism, and the Cultic Milieu in Hungary », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 4, no 1,‎ , p. 322-350 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322) :

    « Cultic milieu books, long familiar to Westerners, are being translated into Hungarian and sold in legitimate bookstores. The latest examples are Akashic Records by Victor Charon and The Message of the Grail by Abd-Ru-Shin [Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (1875-1941)]. Both are fashionable books involving esoteric worldviews with messianic claims, and both are widely distributed on the Hungarian publishing market. »

  • (en) Marloes Janson, Crossing Religious Boundaries: Islam, Christianity and ‘Yoruba Religion' in Lagos, Nigeria, Cambridge University Press, coll. « The International African Library », (ISBN 978-1-108-83891-7, LCCN 2020055275, DOI 10.1017/9781108979160.007, lire en ligne), « 6. Beyond Religion. The Grail Movement and Eckankar », p. 154 :

    « The Grail Movement was founded by the self-proclaimed Messiah Oskar Ernst Bernhardt... »

google.nl

books.google.nl

  • (en) Marloes Janson, Crossing Religious Boundaries: Islam, Christianity and ‘Yoruba Religion' in Lagos, Nigeria, Cambridge University Press, coll. « The International African Library », (ISBN 978-1-108-83891-7, LCCN 2020055275, DOI 10.1017/9781108979160.007, lire en ligne), « 6. Beyond Religion. The Grail Movement and Eckankar », p. 154 :

    « The Grail Movement was founded by the self-proclaimed Messiah Oskar Ernst Bernhardt... »

  • (en) Jamie King, Cults: Coercion and Control: The World's Most Notorious Cults (And the People Who Escaped Them), Summersdale, (ISBN 978-1-83799-281-2, lire en ligne), unpaginated :

    « Newspapers described how Bernhardt now called himself the Messiah of the Tyrol, and the Prophet of Vomperberg. »

interieur.gouv.fr

miviludes.interieur.gouv.fr

issn.org

portal.issn.org

  • (en) Zdenek Vojtisek, « Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 9, no 3,‎ , p. 61-79 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, lire en ligne, consulté le ) :

    « In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the “Conclusion” be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books. ... Four lectures and the “Conclusion” published in 1931 are omitted in the authorized postwar version. The reason for dropping three of the lectures is probably the same as the reason for omitting the “Conclusion” in 1937: they were too explicit in pointing to Bernhardt (Abd-ru-shin) as the Messiah. Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.28 »

  • (en) László Kürti, « Psychic Phenomena, Neoshamanism, and the Cultic Milieu in Hungary », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 4, no 1,‎ , p. 322-350 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322) :

    « Cultic milieu books, long familiar to Westerners, are being translated into Hungarian and sold in legitimate bookstores. The latest examples are Akashic Records by Victor Charon and The Message of the Grail by Abd-Ru-Shin [Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (1875-1941)]. Both are fashionable books involving esoteric worldviews with messianic claims, and both are widely distributed on the Hungarian publishing market. »

jstor.org

  • (en) Zdenek Vojtisek, « Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 9, no 3,‎ , p. 61-79 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, lire en ligne, consulté le ) :

    « In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the “Conclusion” be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books. ... Four lectures and the “Conclusion” published in 1931 are omitted in the authorized postwar version. The reason for dropping three of the lectures is probably the same as the reason for omitting the “Conclusion” in 1937: they were too explicit in pointing to Bernhardt (Abd-ru-shin) as the Messiah. Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.28 »

  • (en) László Kürti, « Psychic Phenomena, Neoshamanism, and the Cultic Milieu in Hungary », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 4, no 1,‎ , p. 322-350 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322) :

    « Cultic milieu books, long familiar to Westerners, are being translated into Hungarian and sold in legitimate bookstores. The latest examples are Akashic Records by Victor Charon and The Message of the Grail by Abd-Ru-Shin [Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (1875-1941)]. Both are fashionable books involving esoteric worldviews with messianic claims, and both are widely distributed on the Hungarian publishing market. »

loc.gov

lccn.loc.gov

  • (en) Marloes Janson, Crossing Religious Boundaries: Islam, Christianity and ‘Yoruba Religion' in Lagos, Nigeria, Cambridge University Press, coll. « The International African Library », (ISBN 978-1-108-83891-7, LCCN 2020055275, DOI 10.1017/9781108979160.007, lire en ligne), « 6. Beyond Religion. The Grail Movement and Eckankar », p. 154 :

    « The Grail Movement was founded by the self-proclaimed Messiah Oskar Ernst Bernhardt... »

odsa.com.br

  • « REFUTATION of the text "Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement" », The Day Without Tomorrow,‎ (lire en ligne) :

    « Vojtisek’s claim that “In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the ‘Conclusion’ be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books.” is false. Every author does have the right to revise his work when he sees fit, and when circumstances indicate such a need. Back then, removing the “Conclusion” had no intention to “calm” anyone, much less to hide anything. The statement “Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.” is plain slanderous. (...) Abd-ru-shin has always indicated that all peoples should progress on their own, without foreign interference. He specifically describes this concept in the lecture “The beauty of the peoples”. None of the dissertations taken from the original edition has the slightest racist nature; besides, they would be in direct contradiction to the previously mentioned lecture “The beauty of the peoples”. »

senat.fr

worldcat.org

  • (en) Zdenek Vojtisek, « Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 9, no 3,‎ , p. 61-79 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, lire en ligne, consulté le ) :

    « In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the “Conclusion” be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books. ... Four lectures and the “Conclusion” published in 1931 are omitted in the authorized postwar version. The reason for dropping three of the lectures is probably the same as the reason for omitting the “Conclusion” in 1937: they were too explicit in pointing to Bernhardt (Abd-ru-shin) as the Messiah. Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.28 »

  • (en) László Kürti, « Psychic Phenomena, Neoshamanism, and the Cultic Milieu in Hungary », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 4, no 1,‎ , p. 322-350 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2001.4.2.322) :

    « Cultic milieu books, long familiar to Westerners, are being translated into Hungarian and sold in legitimate bookstores. The latest examples are Akashic Records by Victor Charon and The Message of the Grail by Abd-Ru-Shin [Oskar Ernst Bernhardt (1875-1941)]. Both are fashionable books involving esoteric worldviews with messianic claims, and both are widely distributed on the Hungarian publishing market. »

zvojtisek.cz

  • (en) Zdenek Vojtisek, « Millennial Expectations in the Grail Movement », Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions, University of California Press, vol. 9, no 3,‎ , p. 61-79 (ISSN 1541-8480, OCLC 50633713, DOI 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2006.9.3.061, lire en ligne, consulté le ) :

    « In order to calm the public and hide his messianic claims, in 1937 Bernhardt ordered that the “Conclusion” be cut out of all unsold In the Light of Truth books. ... Four lectures and the “Conclusion” published in 1931 are omitted in the authorized postwar version. The reason for dropping three of the lectures is probably the same as the reason for omitting the “Conclusion” in 1937: they were too explicit in pointing to Bernhardt (Abd-ru-shin) as the Messiah. Of the omitted lectures, the fourth was probably unacceptable after the war due to ideas that might be considered racist.28 »