Spiritualist Association of Great Britain explained

The Spiritualist Association of Great Britain (the SAGB) is a British spiritualist organisation. It was established on 10 July 1872.[1] [2]

History

The SAGB grew out of the Marylebone Spiritualist Association (founded 1872). The story of the association's early struggles "to propagate spiritual truths in the Marylebone area of London" is told in an SAGB publication, "One Hundred Years of Spiritualism", which also states that Queen Victoria allegedly held several séances after the death of the Prince Consort.[3]

A famous and outspoken supporter of the SAGB was Arthur Conan Doyle, who (according to his obituary in the New York Times) in later years "often expressed a wish that he should be remembered for his psychic work rather than for his novels".[4] [5] [6]

Serving the principles of the Spiritualist movement, and open to members and non-members alike, the SAGB offers rooms where the public, whether Spiritualist or not, may sit for readings with spirit mediums. Sunday services are free and include a public Demonstration of mediumship. Private 30-minute sittings are available daily during opening hours for a fee. They may be recorded if the client wishes. The nature of the sittings is strictly limited by a policy which states that the mediums are "to try to provide evidence of survival [of the spirit after death] and not to predict the future."[7]

The library of the SAGB was named after the spiritualist William Crookes.[8]

The SAGB's current headquarters is at the Victoria Charity Centre at 11 Belgrave Road, London.[9] [10]

Beliefs

As an organization, the SAGB describes their goals as:

The SAGB and its mediums abide by the following seven principles of belief:

Notable members and supporters

Controversy surrounding Headquarter relocation

The SAGB historic headquarters at 33 Belgrave Square was sold in 2010 for 6 million pounds. It relocated to a new home in the Victoria Charity Centre at 11 Belgrave Road, London, near Victoria Station.[9] [10] In 2013, the Charity Commission for England and Wales launched an investigation in to the sale of the property, after discovering that the subsequent owners sold the property for 21 million pounds shortly after purchasing it from the SAGB. The Committee published a report of its findings on 30 March 2017. The Commission's report concluded SAGB's trustees had failed to fulfil their legal duties and responsibilities towards the charity, and that ‘the failures and breaches were not minor or technical in nature’ but ‘amount to basic and serious mismanagement’.[15] The charity responded to the Commission's report claiming that they "could not have foreseen what would happen in future" regarding property prices.[16] S.A.G.B headquarters are now at 341,Queens town Road, Battersea, London SW8 4LH

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Louise . Emma . A Concise History of Spiritualism . Critical-thinking.org.uk . 2014-04-07.
  2. Web site: Victorian Spiritualism . Victorianweb.org . 2013-11-14 . 2014-04-07.
  3. Web site: United Kingdom . Spiritualist Association of Great Britain: Information from . Answers.com . 2014-04-07.
  4. Web site: Conan Doyle Dead From Heart Attack . Nytimes.com . 1930-07-08 . 2014-04-07.
  5. News: Teller of Tales . Nytimes.com . 1930-07-08 . 2014-04-07.
  6. Web site: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Victorian Spiritualism . Victorianweb.org . 2013-11-14 . 2014-04-07.
  7. http://www.spiritualistassociation.org.uk/Sittings/sittings.html "Private Sittings"
  8. [Janet Oppenheim|Oppenheim, Janet]
  9. http://www.spiritualistassociation.org.uk/History/history.html "History of the SAGB (1872-2015)"
  10. Web site: The Spiritualist Association Of Great Britain (Formerly The Marylebone Spiritualist Association) Limited | Non-Terminal Disease - Medical Research Charities | Charity Directory . Charity Choice . 2014-04-07.
  11. Web site: The Principles of Spiritualism . Spiritualist.tv . 2014-04-07.
  12. http://www.spiritualistassociation.org.uk/7%20Principles%20of%20SAGB/7%20principles%20of%20sagb.html "Principles of SAGB"
  13. Stemman, Roy. (1972). One Hundred Years of Spiritualism: The Story of the Spiritualist Association of Great Britain, 1872-1972. Spiritualist Association of Great Britain. p. 66.
  14. Borklund, Elmer. (1977). Contemporary Literary Critics. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 307.
  15. "Charity Commission finds basic and serious mismanagement in selling land at charity", Charity Commission, GOV.UK, accessed 30 March 2017
  16. http://www.thirdsector.co.uk/regulator-finds-serious-mismanagement-spiritualist-association-great-britain/governance/article/1429100 "Regulator finds serious mismanagement at the Spiritualist Association of Great Britain"