Occultist Aleister Crowley, Pasadena JPL's Jack Parsons & Scientology's L.Ron Hubbard
"That's the way they all became the BABALON Bunch©"
Brother Jack Parsons:
by Paul Rydeen
The Magickal Scientist and His Circle
Kenneth Grant gives a good description of Parsons in The Magical Revival:
"Imbued with the idea of the Kingly Man, as that expression is understood
in the Cult of Thelema [Crowley's invention], Parsons bent his not
inconsiderable energies, physical and intellectual, to the discovery of
his True Will.
Born on October 2, 1914, in Los Angeles [descendant of a HellFire Club
founder, according to Michael Hoffman], he lived a lonely childhood, due
in part to his parents' broken marriage. He spent a great deal of his
youth reading and day-dreaming, and nurturing a growing resentment of all
interference, especially of the kind posing as "authority." He developed
strong revolutionary tendencies and when he encountered Crowley's writings
-- which he first did through Wilfred T. Smith -- he was instantly alive
to the significance of Thelema. He joined Smith's Agape Lodge [OTO],
and, at the same time, became a Probationer, 1ø = 10ø, of the A:. A:.
Smith was a member of Frater Achad's
(Charles Stansfeld Jones) OTO lodge in Vancouver. He met
Crowley there in 1915. Smith moved to
California in 1930. He immediately founded the Agape Lodge in Pasadena.
Frater Achad kept the Vancouver lodge open during this period,
under a different name. It would later close. In "Alchemical Conspiracy
and the Death of the West" Michael Hoffman writes of Parsons.
Hoffman tells us that the Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO) had a temple on
nearby Mount Palomar. The
local Indians regarded the mountain as holy. Hoffman says, "The OTO
believed that Palomar was the sexual chakra of the Earth."
Parsons commuted regularly between Palomar and Pasadena. The Mount
Palomar Observatory opened in 1949. Smith probably consecrated his
temple on Palomar soon after his move to California in 1930, before
the Observatory was planned.
Parsons first met Smith in 1939. He joined the Agape Lodge in 1941. Parsons
was to be its head during the turbid 1940s (ca. 1942-1947). Smith was known
in the Lodge as Frater Velle Omnia Velle Nihil (aka Fra. 132). He was an
expatriate Englishman. Smith had a reputation for womanizing that equalled
Crowley's. Parsons saw Smith as a second father. The two stayed close
throughout their lives.
Smith wrote to Crowley in March, 1941, "I think I have at long last a really
excellent man, John Parsons. And starting next Tuesday he begins a course
of talks with a view to enlarging our scope. He has an excellent mind and
much better intellect than myself...John Parsons is going to be valuable."
Soror Estai (actress Jane Wolfe) had been with Crowley at Cefalu
[Italian island where Crowley had previously set up residence before
being kicked out by the local authorities] before coming to California.
She recorded her first impression of Parsons in her Magical Record for
December, 1940:
"Unknown to me, John Whiteside Parsons, a newcomer, began astral travels.
This knowledge decided Regina [Kahl] to undertake similar work. All of
which I learned after making my own decision. So the time must be
propitious. Incidentally, I take Jack Parsons to be the child who 'shall
behold them all' [i.e., the Mysteries. See the Book of the Law I: 54-55].
"26 years of age, 6'2", vital, potentially bisexual at the very least,
University of the State of California and Cal. Tech., now engaged in Cal
Tech chemical laboratories developing 'bigger and better' explosives for
Uncle Sam. Travels under sealed orders from the government. Writes
poetry -- 'sensuous only', he says. Lover of music, which he seems to
know thoroughly. I see him as the real successor of Therion [Crowley].
Passionate; and has made the vilest analyses result in a species of
exaltation after the event. Has had mystical experiences which gave him
a sense of equality all round, although he is hierarchical in feeling and
in the established order."
Parsons' father died in 1942. He left his son a mansion in an expensive
part of Pasadena. This may have been his way of making up to his son for
his childhood. Parsons shocked the staid residents of this well manicured
neighborhood when he started renting out rooms to less-than-desirable
tenants. "Only atheists and those of a Bohemian disposition," his newspaper
ad stated. The frequent visitors, noisy parties, and questionable goings-on
raised many eyebrows. Parsons needed the extra income these renters paid.
His progress with rockets had yet to yield any success.
Alva Rogers was a long-time resident of the Parsons house on Orange Street.
Rogers became associated with the house after attending several science
fiction meetings there. Parsons held these informal meetings regularly on
weekends. Rogers wrote, "Mundane souls were unceremoniously rejected as
tenants. There was a professional fortune teller and seer who always wore
appropriate dresses and decorated her apartment with symbols and artifacts
of arcane lore. There was a lady, well past middle age but still strikingly
beautiful, who claimed to have been at various times the mistress of half
the famous men in France. There was a man who had been a renowned organist
in the great movie palaces of the silent era. They were characters all.
[From the rent they paid] Jack admitted that he was one of Crowley's main
sources of money in America."
At one point local police came to investigate an alleged backyard ceremony.
A pregnant woman had reportedly jumped nude through a fire nine times. The
police made it clear how absurd they thought the claim was. Parsons easily
assured them of his community standing. He was an important rocket scientist
with a professional reputation to uphold.
Burton Wolfe writes of a sixteen-year-old boy who reported Parsons to the
police. He told them that Parsons' followers had forcibly sodomized him
during a Black Mass at the house. The police investigated. They found
Parsons' cult to be little more than an organization dedicated to religious
and philosophical speculation, with respectable members such as a Pasadena
bank president, doctors, lawyers, and Hollywood actors." At one point the
FBI became involved after receiving some anonymous letters. One bore the
signature, "An American Soldier." The police again cleared Parsons of all
charges. They would later stand by their findings when further accusations
arose.
Wilfred Smith's mistress of many years was Regina Kahl. She was also his
High Priestess of the Gnostic Mass. Separate photos of her and Smith are
in The Equinox Vol. III, no. 10. Smith had a charming personality, a strong
affinity for the opposite sex, and what Grant calls "something more than an
aptitude for magick." One of Smith's conquests was Soror Grimaud, aka Helen
Northrup. She was Parsons' first wife.
Helen bore Smith a child in 1943. Crowley decided that was enough of Smith's
sexual infidelity. His affairs were a detriment to the Order. Crowley
expelled him through an ingenious means. Crowley drew up a horoscope for
Smith based on the unusual circumstance of his birth. Smith's horoscope
had a complex of eight planets. One could interpret this horoscope as if
Smith were an avatar of some god. This was something Crowley had found in
only one other instance, that of Shakespeare.
Crowley sent Smith on a Grand Magical Retirement to find the god within
himself. Crowley wrote Liber Apotheoosis (aka Liber 132) for Smith to use
as his guide. Smith's Retirement took place on Temple Hill at Rancho Royale,
not Mount Palomar. Helen accompanied him. Crowley formally expelled Smith
in late 1943. Parsons then became Acting Head of the Lodge. Regina Kahl
would die during Smith's Magical Retirement, in late 1945 or early 1946.
Her untimely death deeply depressed him.
Parsons divorced Helen in 1943. In the meantime he struck up a relationship
with her younger sister Betty. Like Helen, Betty acted as Parsons' priestess
at the Gnostic Mass. She was also his partner in the performance of 9th
Degree magic. This is the magic of inducing altered states through prolonged
sexual ecstasy. At Parsons' urging the teenage Betty left the University of
Southern California (USC), to her parents' chagrin.
Enter "Frater H." Grant refers to him as "a confidence trickster who had
wormed his way into the OTO on the pretense of being interested in Magick."
He was "still at large [1972], having grown wealthy and famous by a misuse
of the secret knowledge which he had wormed out of Parsons." Other writers
refer to him merely as "Frater X." The late Frater X's identity is now
clearly a matter of public record. I see no reason to do anything other
than call him by name. He was L.Ron Hubbard:
philosopher, world traveller, science fiction author, and founder of Scientology.
Parsons was young and impressionable. He had gone through repeated upheavals
during his short life. He was vulnerable. Hubbard made a big impression on
him. Parsons forgot his obligation and violated his oath to the Order. He
revealed to Hubbard the secrets of the highest grades of the OTO.
Parsons wrote to Crowley in July, 1945, "About three months ago I met
[Hubbard], a writer and explorer of whom I had known for some time [because
he wrote science fiction]...He moved in with me about two months ago, and
although Betty and I are still friendly, she has transferred her sexual
affections to him...We are pooling our resources in a partnership that will
act as a limited company to control our business ventures. I think I have
made a great gain, and as Betty and I are the best of friends there is little
loss...I need a magical partner. I have many experiments in mind..."
The magical partner Parsons envisioned was to be his partner in a 9th Degree
working. Grant writes, "Having lost confidence in women, Parsons decided to
attract an Elemental Spirit to take Betty's place..." These spirits are
called Elementals because of their association with the four elements of the
ancients. To summon one requires a large amount of magical energy, the kind
generated by an 8th Degree working. The practice of the 8th Degree is a solo
sexual rite.
Says Grant, "The instructions that accompany the eighth Degree of the OTO
contain methods for evoking an Elemental, or familiar spirit. It is said to
be an easy matter to attract such a spirit because the souls of the elements
desire constantly to be absorbed into the cycle of human evolution, this
being the only way in which they can achieve salvation and perpetuity of
existence. On being appropriated by a human organism, the elemental finally
becomes absorbed in the immortal principle in man." Compare Jim Morrison's
remark to an interviewer that the air around us is full of spirits. "They
know we exist, and envy us our bodies."
Grant quotes from the instructions for the 8th Degree, written about the
adept desirous of performing such an operation:
"This being said, it is enough; for to have them is but the pains to call
them forth from their homes. And the Spirits of the Elemental Tablets
given by Dr. Dee and Sir Kelley are the best..."
In 1943 Parsons published a brief poem in the Oriflamme, an OTO
publication. At this point it bears repeating:
Symonds and Wilson have documented that narcotics and hallucinogens were a
basic staple of Crowley's magical diet. It is easier to induce astral
vision when one alternately dulls and excites the senses by chemical means.
One cannot underemphasize the role of drugs here. I suspect
they were a part of the Babalon Working. Combined with sex magick, this
makes a powerful tool.
Using the "Angelick" language channelled by Elizabethan astrologer John Dee
and his scribe Edward Kelley, Parsons began his operation. He recited the
Seventh Aire (or Aethyr) in the original Enochian. Per Crowley's advice,
he kept diligent records. Parsons would later compare some of the curious
results to Kelley's own criminal life. The surviving fragments of Parsons'
Babalon Working are now the property of the OTO. Parsons' second wife
Marjorie Cameron holds the copyright to Freedom Is A Two-Edged Sword.
The preliminaries began January 4, 1946 at 9 pm. Prokofiev's Violin Concerto
played loudly on the phonograph. The formal working would begin the
following evening. Russell Miller refers to it as eleven nights of "talisman
waving." Later that month Parsons would write Crowley describing his
progress. He noted a spontaneous windstorm as a curious side-effect. It
began the second day and lasted throughout the Babalon Working. Parsons
awoke on the sixth day of the Working, January 10. He heard nine loud,
unexplainable knocks. I note a similarity to the nine regular knocks that
Whitley Strieber felt confirmed the existence of his Visitors
[interesting correlation here, no? -B:.B:.]. Parsons got out of
bed. He noticed a lamp lay smashed on the floor. The knocks were repeated on
the 15th.
January 15 was the eleventh and final day. Hubbard perceived a spirit
"clad in a black robe and having an evil pasty
["grey" -B:.B:.] face." Grant says this was Smith, who
had failed to identify the god within himself. Grant says Smith astrally
attacked Parsons in revenge. The electricity went out as they began
invoking and something struck Hubbard on the right shoulder. It knocked
a candle from his hand. "He called me," Parsons wrote, "and we observed
a brownish-yellow light about seven feet high. I brandished a magical
sword, and it disappeared. Ron's right arm was paralyzed for the rest
of the night." Parsons awakened later that night after hearing a
"buzzing, metallic" ["alien" -B:.B:.]
voice. The voice cried, "Let me go free!" Parsons sleepily
performed the brief magical operation (nonsexual) known as the License
to Depart. It is in the Goetia, or Lesser Key of Solomon. Smith's
spirit was free to return to his body.
Parsons wrote Crowley, "I have diligently followed the VIIIth Degree
instructions as:
The rite ended with Parsons commanding the spirit to appear in human form.
On January 18 they went into the Mojave Desert to recuperate. Parsons
turned to Hubbard at the end of the trip and said simply, "It is done."
On February 23, 1946 Parsons triumphantly wrote to Crowley, "I have my
elemental! She turned up one night after the conclusion of the Operation,
and has been with me since." The Elemental was Marjorie Cameron,
sprung from Parsons' head like Sophia from the Godhead or Pallas Athena
from Zeus. She adopted the magical name "Candida,"
[candida -- a vaginal and occasionally intestinal parasitic yeast/fungus
-B:.B:.] calling herself "Candy" for short. Soon she
married Parsons, and helped him with his magick.
Crowley sent Parsons an admonishment about Cameron. He reminded him of
Eliphas Levi's advice that, "The love of the Magus for such things
[Elementals] is insensate and may destroy him." Be aware that Crowley
considered himself to be the reincarnation of Levi. Crowley also claimed
to have intervened personally on Parsons' behalf, presumably on the astral
plane. He does not say. It is possible Crowley knew someone who could send
a girl like Cameron to Parsons. Cameron was from New York, though she had
been born in Iowa and raised in the "Cthulhu Country" of Wisconsin. Crowley
had spent some time in New York during World War I. Cameron spent most of
her February back in New York visiting her mother. Hubbard was out of town
on business.
On February 28, Parsons made a solo trip back to the desert and received
Liber 49 in an unexplained manner. Jacques Vallee says Parsons claimed to
have met a Venusian there in 1945 or 1946. Without the exact date,
one cannot tell if the Venusian was the implied source of Liber 49. Parsons
took this to be an affirmation of the need to produce a magickal child.
When Hubbard returned he channelled a message from a red-haired, green-eyed
angel ordering them to "Light first flame at 10pm, March 2, 1946. The year
of Babalon is 4063." That would be 2118 BC, the significance of which I
have not determined. Cameron returned from New York and moved in with
Parsons. She was now to be an integral part of the Babalon Working. After
Parsons' initial contact with the Beyond, Hubbard began acting as seer.
Parsons called him Scribe in his notes. I do not know whether Hubbard
actually participated in the higher workings of the OTO. Based on other
sources I will discuss shortly it is clear he was present when Parsons did.
The operation began as directed on March 2. That evening a fire started in
Parsons' chimney. Later he decided it had occurred when he had smashed an
image of Pan as a sacrifice. The idol had been a favorite personal
possession. The papers containing the Seventh Aire that he burned may have
had something to do with the fire as well. Parsons expressed his confidence,
but wrote, "Now I can do no more than pray and wait."
Between the second and fourth of March, 1946, Parsons recorded in a letter
to Crowley what he described as "the most devastating experience of my life.
I believe it was the result of the IXth Degree working with the girl who
answered my elemental summons. I have been in direct communication with one
who is most Holy and beautiful, mentioned in The Book of the Law. I cannot
write the name at present." Secretly he did write her name. He called her
Babalon. [Hence the latter-day "BVM" apparitions
of Fatima, Lourdes and Medjugorje (read: strife-torn Bosnia) which, though
ostensibly benign, caused "the most devastating experience of Parson's life"
and ushered in the current wave of "UFO/ET" phenomenology via the soon
afterward Roswell crash, Ken Arnold and George Adamski (et al) sightings --
giving birth to the modern "UFO" mythos. All this from the apocalyptic
"great whore of Babylon." -B:.B:.] The one identified
in The Book of the Law is the Egyptian goddess Nuit. In Liber 49 Babalon
says she is the incestuous daughter of Nuit and Horus. Her
avatar on earth is the Scarlet Woman. Babalon is not mentioned in
The Book of the Law. The Scarlet Woman is.
Parsons documented the working in The Book of Babalon, of which a little
survives. Liber 49 he came to see as a heretical fourth chapter of The
Book of the Law. There are only three. He saw the four chapters as
corresponding to the four letters of the ineffable name of God: YHWH, the
Hebrew Yod He Vau He. He assigned one chapter to each letter and to what
each letter represented. Unknown to Parsons, Frater Achad would proclaim
the Aeon of another goddess in Vancouver, the Egyptian Maat.
Crowley expelled Achad from the Order as well.
Excerpt from:
I shall I write of the mystery and the terror, of the wonder and pity
and splendor of the sevenfold star that is
Babalon? I shall tell of the tragic life of her most devoted disciple
and beloved son, Jack Parsons. In doing so, I will correct previous
misconceptions while correlating the known facts and wild legends that
lie in several far-flung sources.
"I hight don Quixote, I life on peyote,
marijuana, morphine and cocaine.
I never know sadness, but only a madness
that burns at tle heart and the brain.
I see each charwoman, ecstatic, inhuman,
angelic, demonic, divine.
Each wagon a dragon, each beer mug a flagon
that brims with ambrosial wine."
Return to Liber BABALON Master Index
Jack Parsons and the Fall of Babalon [$7.00 postpaid]
Paul Rydeen
P.O.B. 1371, Kerrville, TX 78029-1371.


