Theos Casimir Bernard

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Theos Casimir Bernard
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Bernard, practicing yoga
Born 1908
Died 1947
Nationality American
Known for explorer, author, expert on Tibetan Buddhism

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Theos Casimir Bernard (1908–1947)[1] was an explorer, and author, known for his work on yoga and religious studies, particularly in Tibetan Buddhism.[2] He was the nephew of Pierre Arnold Bernard.

Biography

Bernard first trained in law, obtaining a bachelor's degree in 1931 and embarking on an internship in 1932, but decided instead to pursue an advanced degree at Columbia University.[3] There, according to 2010's The Madman's Middle Way, Bernard, who described himself as "the first white lama", became the first American to write a dissertation on the subject of Tibetan Buddhism.[4]

In 1936, he toured India and Tibet with his wife, Viola Wertheim Bernard[5] (half-sister of Maurice Wertheim), studying Tantric Yoga in an effort to master its fundamental principles.[6] On his return to the United States in 1937, his experiences were published across the country over several weeks by the North American Newspaper Alliance and Bell Syndicate.[7] This was followed by a series of lectures and radio appearances in 1939 and by the publication of the memoir Penthouse of the Gods.[8] Bernard was also featured in popular magazines, including a cover story in Family Circle in 1939, followed shortly by his second book, Heaven Lies Within Us, which explored Hatha Yoga under the guise of an auto-biography.[9] According to 2008's Barbarian Lands, many of the experiences Bernard describes in his books have recently been discovered to have been fabricated, based on the experiences of his father.[10] In 1939, Bernard opened the American Institute of Yoga and Pierre Health Studios.[11][12]

In 1947, he again visited northern India, and went missing in Pakistan in October 1947. He was declared dead several months later, though his body was never found.[13]

References

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  3. Hackett, 196–197
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  7. Syman, 123.
  8. Hackett, 687-690.
  9. Hackett, 695-701
  10. Hackett, 694-702.
  11. Hackett, 726-730
  12. Syman, 132
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Further reading

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