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| Periodical: | The Bridge | The Brifge to Freedom |
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| Summary: |
From Pat Deveney's database:
Bridge to Freedom, The. The first volume (April 1952-March 1953), called simply The Bridge, was printed and distributed in sheet format in Havana, Cuba, because its "one man staff" (Frank/Francisco C. Pita) lived there. It moved to Philadelphia in 1953 because of "political disturbances" and published in journal format as The Bridge to Freedom, with Pita still as General Manager. These early issues were scarce and when it became desirable to reprint copies their content was reproduced and from an audio tape of their content and retyped. The journal and the Bridge to Freedom Activity of which it was the organ reflected the contact of Geraldine Innocente (1917-1961) with the Ascended Masters of Guy and Edna Ballard's "I AM" movement, which had fallen on hard times and been reduced to fewer than 200 active members after the death of Guy in 1939 and the six-year legal struggle of Edna against the fraud charges brought by the federal government. Innocente was a member of a small I AM group on Long Island in 1944 when, as Alice Schutz (Alice Beulah Schutz Booras, "A.D.K. Luk," 1905-1994), recounted: "One night in 1944, Geraldine Innocente and her mother were sitting in their home before the fire in the fire place (which the Master Morya likes). Suddenly Geraldine was aware of a Presence in the room which startled her for a bit. Then she realized it was Master Morya. She said to her mother (who was not aware of His Presence), 'Master Morya is here.'. . . In 1945, Morya told Geraldine that the Lord Maha Chohan would like to give a series of Discourses thru her. She thought it over and consented to do it. He came to the group of 13, known as the Inner Circle, once a week to give instruction in an endeavor to awaken their (sleeping) consciousness; and from then on they were in continuous communication with the Masters." Soon Innocente, Schutz and Mildred Myneta Taylor Boos ("Mary Myneta," 1903-1983), the Group Director of the New York I AM movement, "formed the triangle at the top of this New Endeavor" and in March 1952 they were given permission from the Masters to make known this new revelation to the world. Florence A. Kurz Ekey (1899-1968), who had been head of the Philadelphia I AM group and been indicted alone with Edna Ballard, joined Innocente's work reluctantly in 1951 after Master El Morya interceded with the Karmic Board to bring her in, and she became the associate editor of the journal as assistant to "Thomas Printz," the pseudonym of Master El Morya. The journal was not originally intended to replace Edna Ballard's Voice of the "I AM," but to supplement it, but Ballard still dismissed it as "psychic" and plagiarism, and excommunicated all of her students who chose the Bridge to Freedom over her own movement. It took a letter from the Master El Morya himself to Mrs. Ballard before the journal could be published, but she never approved the new revelations. The Bridge to Freedom movement continued the Ballards' claim that this was a New Age, one in which for the first time since the sinking of Atlantis, the Masters could begin to make public the real nature of cosmic reality and its structure under the Great White Brotherhood, and the path to ascension through the Violet Ray that erases karma. The Masters' communications here and in innumerable offshoots of the Bridge Activity were a bewildering labyrinth that would require a scorecard to unravel and keep track of: the arrays of colors, qualities, activities of the seven open and five secret Rays, the Seven Elohim, the Seven Archangels, various Chohans, the Angelic Host, devas, vibrational frequencies, Violet Flame Cauldrons, Cherubim, Seraphim, secret Retreats, Sacred Fire, Flames, Elemental Beings, planets, Suns, Spheres or Realms, World Teachers, Manus, Ascended Masters, the Karmic Board, root races, Sanat Kumar, Lord Gautama, etc. and et al., all with detailed descriptions of which ray, color of flame and musical keynote belonged to each, together with the degree of initiation each has passed or is awaiting, which is the "twin-ray" of which, and most importantly, in a display of one-upmanship, which Messenger or Accredited Messenger credits which of them in the grand hierarchies of the universe. Nor are these celestial personages and entities static: Gautama Buddha replaces Sanat Kumara as Lord of this world while Lord Maitreya takes Buddha's place; Jesus and Koot Hoomi, once Chohans of the Sixth and Second Rays respectably now function as World Teacher; and Saint Germain (now proclaiming himself Eolia and radiating the Golden Liquid Snow of Eolian Consciousness and Light of the Central Sun) continues to direct the Seventh Ray while Godfre-Ray King and Lotus King (Guy and Edna Ballard) become Chohan of the Seventh Ray The journal had as occasional companion publications Thomas Printz' Private Journal (1952-1961), a weekly newsletter of the "Esoteric Teachings from Our Lord Maha Chohan), and Hope/Hope Magazine (1953-1961?), a dollars-want-me bimonthly journal under the direction of Master Serapis (HOPE=health, opulence, peace, enlightenment). After Innocente's death in 1961, ruled a suicide from an overdose of drugs, the Bridge to Freedom continued until 1979, with Lucy Latham Wilson Bennett Littlejohn (1901-1995), Innocente's amanuensis and perhaps partner, as Messenger. She brought Peter Leach-Lewis into the movement in 1971 and he assumed control of it 1979-1986 and transformed it into the New Age Church of the Christ with Hope/Hope Magazine as its organ, December 1979-1990. It also published the weekly Shamballa Letter (1979-1989) with further discourses by various masters. After his departure the movement took up the name Bridge to Spiritual Freedom and moved to Payson, Arizona, where it published the Bridge Journal (1991-2004) and City of Light (2005-2015). Numerous groups branched from the Bridge to Freedom and started their own organizations, usually with their own journals. Frances Ekey started the Lighthouse of Freedom in Philadelphia in 1954 (the beginning of a new cycle under a new Chohan) and brought in as messenger Mark L. Prophet (1918-1973), a staff member of Bridge to Freedom who had met Master El Morya on the Soo Line Railroad. He broke away from Ekey in turn in 1958 to start the Summit Lighthouse with the weekly Pearls of Wisdom (1958-current) as its organ. He married Elizabeth Clare Wulf Prophet (1939-2009) in 1961 and after his death the organization became the Church Universal and Triumphant, which continues today. Alice Schutz had been an early member of I AM and had traveled with the Ballards and helped arrange their teachings, and then become Geraldine Innocente's amanuensis and the editor of Thomas Printz's Private Bulletin. She was the repository of decades of printed and circulated material on the Masters' revelations and went on to become the messenger of the Law of Life teachings, publishing the Law of Life Enlightener/Enlightener (1979-1995) under the name A.D.K. Luk (Alice Djwal Kul Luk) from Oakland, Florida and then Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She also supplied the impetus and material for Annette and Werner Schroeder to start the Ascended Master Teaching Foundation (AMTF) whose goal was to republish the original Bridge to Freedom and I AM material from Mount Shasta, California. They published the monthly The Spiritual Caravan, begun in 1980, on their activities, with occasional messages from the Masters. Schutz's collections and her received messages also were used as the basis for Theodore ("Ted") M. Pierce's Temple Notes published in Yarnell, Arizona. Mary Myneta, the last of the original three foundation stones of the Bridge to Freedom, moved on in 1958 to take part of Mark Prophet's Summit Lighthouse, and then formed the Sanctuary of the Master's Presence in New York and began issuing The Mentor, published for her by Wayne H. Taylor in Florida and then by her from Scarsdale, New York. Taylor was the president of Sologa, Inc. and published its organ, Solograph (1961-1973), before moving to New Mexico to start the City of the Sun commune and publish its journal, The Golden Dawn (1971-1992?). Myneta then became a regular contributor and editor of The Father's House (1969-1979?) and a messenger of the Masters for Ruby Focus (1963-1977?). Master El Morya returned the favor by praising Myneta's work: "Then came My project, The BRIDGE TO FREEDOM, which still stands on the Holy Grounds of Long Island. Beloved Mary Myneta is one of the flourishing seeds of LOVE from these days. She is THE MENTOR. Oh, how We love her! " Hamilton College; LOC; University of Sydney. On the diaspora of the Bridge to Freedom impetus, "The Bridge to Freedom Activity (Geraldine Innocente") https://iapsop.com/exhibits/bridge_to_freedom_activity/ Here is a list of journals associated with the movement:
I AM
Bridge to Freedom
Offshoots
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| Issues: | Bridge V1 N1 Apr 1952 |
| Bridge V1 N2 May 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N3 Jun 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N4 Jul 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N5 Aug 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N6 Sep-oct 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N7 Nov 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N8 Dec 1952 | |
| Bridge V1 N9 Jan 1953 | |
| Bridge V1 N10 Feb 1953 | |
| Bridge V1 N11 Mar 1953 | |
| Bridge V2 N1 Apr 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N2 May 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N3 Jun 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N4 Jul 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N5 Aug 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N6 Sep 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N7 Oct 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N8 Nov 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N9 Dec 1953 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N10 Jan 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N11 Feb 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V2 N12 Mar 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N1 Apr 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N2 May 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N3 Jun 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N4 Jul 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N5 Aug 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N6 Sep 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N7 Oct 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N8 Nov 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N9 Dec 1954 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N10 Jan 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N11 Feb 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V3 N12 Mar 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N1 Apr 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N2 May 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N3 Jun 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N4 Jul 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N5 Aug 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N6 Sep 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N7 Oct 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N8 Nov 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N9 Dec 1955 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N10 Jan 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N11 Feb 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V4 N12 Mar 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N1 Apr 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N2 May 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N3 Jun 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N4 Jul 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N5 Aug 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N6 Sep 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N7 Oct 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N8 Nov 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N9 Dec 1956 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N10 Jan 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N11 Feb 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V5 N12 Mar 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N1 Apr 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N2 May 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N3 Jun 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N4 Jul 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N5 Aug 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N6 Sep 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N7 Oct 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N8 Nov 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N9 Dec 1957 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N10 Jan 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N11 Feb 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V6 N12 Mar 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N1 Apr 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N2 May 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N3 Jun 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N4 Jul 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N5 Aug 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N6 Sep 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N7 Oct 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N8 Nov 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N9 Dec 1958 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N10 Jan 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N11 Feb 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V7 N12 Mar 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N1 Apr 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N2 May 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N3 Jun 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N4 Jul 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N5 Aug 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N6 Sep 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N7 Oct 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N8 Nov 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N9 Dec 1959 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N10 Jan 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N11 Feb 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V8 N12 Mar 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N1 Apr 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N2 May 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N3 Jun 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N4 Jul 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N5 Aug 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N6 Sep 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N7 Oct 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N8 Nov 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N9 Dec 1960 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N10 Jan 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N11 Feb 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V9 N12 Mar 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N1 Apr 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N2 May 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N3 Jun 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N4 Jul 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N5 Aug 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N6 Sep 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N7 Oct 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N8 Nov 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N9 Dec 1961 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N10 Jan 1962 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N11 Feb 1962 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V10 N12 Mar 1962 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V11 N2 May 1962 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V11 N11 Apr 1962 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V16 N1 Apr 1967 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V16 N1 May 1967 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V16 N3 Jun 1967 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V20 N10 Jan 1972 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V21 N6 Sep 1972 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V22 N6 Sep 1973 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V23 N5 Aug 1974 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V24 N8 Nov 1975 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V24 N10 Jan 1976 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V25 N10 Jan 1977 | |
| Bridge To Freedom V25 N2 May 1977 | |
| Bridge Journal V26 N11 Feb 1978 | |
| Bridge Journal V28 N1 Apr 1979 |
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