Amado Crowley Explained

Amado Crowley (26 January 1930 – November 2010) was the pseudonym of an English occult writer and magician who claimed to be the secret illegitimate son of occultist and mystic Aleister Crowley (1875–1947). During a period of over thirty years, from the early 1970s through 2000s, he published and self-published many books and recordings.[1]

Biographical details

Amado Crowley initially announced himself to the occult world via his adopted name in 1971, when he was past the age of forty, through a statement sent to the publishers of the encyclopedia on the subject, Man, Myth & Magic.[2] However, it would later be inferred from his 1991 book, The Secrets of Aleister Crowley, that his name was registered at birth as Andrew Standish, though this has not been confirmed.[1] [3] [4]

Like Aleister Crowley, Amado used and taught a syncretic mix of Western magical techniques along with Eastern methods including meditation and yoga. However, he maintained that the cornerstone of Aleister's religion of Thelema, The Book of the Law, was a fraud and that The Book of Desolation, a purported text given to him by Aleister, is the only true Crowleyan holy writ.[5] The book has yet to be published and has only been seen by one other person other than Crowley, the writer, musician and filmmaker Jason Brett Serle.[6]

Crowley's biographers have found no documentary evidence regarding Amado's claim of descent from Aleister Crowley, and the claim is universally dismissed as bogus by Crowley scholars. Gerald Suster wrote:

According to his website, he died in February 2010.[7]

Publications

References

Notes and References

  1. Evans (2007), pp. 230-231
  2. Evans (2007), p. 240
  3. Book: Crowley, Amado. Diamond Books. 0-9517528-0-4. The Secrets of Aleister Crowley. 1991.
  4. Web site: Howard. Mike. Gerald Gardner: The Man, the Myth & the Magick. The Wica. 2010-06-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20100618033248/http://www.thewica.co.uk/MH4.htm. 18 June 2010 . live.
  5. Evans (2007), p. 232
  6. Book: Crowley, Amado. Liber Alba: The Questions Most Often Asked of an Occult Master. Twicen Books. 2002. 160. 978-0954313906.
  7. Web site: Welcome. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130505174615/http://amado-crowley.net/. 5 May 2013. amado-crowley.net.