Abbé Faria (
Abade Faria in
Portuguese), or
Abbé (
Abbot)
José Custódio de Faria, (30
May 1746 - 20 September 1819), was a colourful
Goan Catholic monk who
was one of the pioneers of the
scientific
study of
hypnotism, following on from
the work of
Franz Anton Mesmer.
Unlike Mesmer, who claimed that hypnosis was mediated by "
animal magnetism", Faria understood that it
worked purely by the power of
suggestion.
In the
early 19th century, Abbé Faria introduced oriental hypnosis to Paris
.
He was one of the first to depart from the theory of the "magnetic
fluid," to place in relief the importance of suggestion, and to
demonstrate the existence of "
autosuggestion"; he also established that
what he termed
nervous sleep belongs to the natural order.
From his earliest
magnetizing
séances, in 1814, he boldly developed
his doctrine. Nothing comes from the magnetizer; everything comes
from the subject and takes place in his
imagination (i.e., the Indian concept Sammohan
Bhavana shakti
[33819]); generated from within the mind. Magnetism is
only a form of
sleep. Although of the moral
order, the magnetic action is often aided by physical, or rather by
physiological, means - fixedness of look and cerebral
fatigue.
Faria changed the terminology of mesmerism. Previously focus was on
the "concentration" of the subject. In Faria's terminology the
operator became "the concentrator" and
somnambulism was viewed as a lucid sleep.
The
Indian
method of hypnosis used by Faria is command,
following expectancy.The theory of Abbe Faria is now known as
Fariism
After-years
Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault
(1864-1904), the founder of the
Nancy
School, and
Emile Coué
(1857-1926) father of applied
conditioning, developed the theory of
suggestion and
autosuggestion and made them therapeutic
tools.Afterwards
Johannes Schultz
developed these theories as
Autogenic
training.
Origins
José
Custódio de Faria was born in Candolim, District of Bardez in Goa
, Portuguese
India
, on May 31, 1746. He was the son of
Caetano Vitorino de Faria, an Goan Saraswat Brahmin Christian of Colvale
village, and
Rosa Maria de Sousa of Candolim
village, and
had an adopted sister, Catarina, an orphan. Caetano was in
turn a descendent of Antu
Shenoy of Colvale,
a Hindu
Saraswat Brahmin who
converted to
Christianity in the 16th
century.
Since his parents could not get on with each other, they decided to
separate and obtained the Church's dispensation.
Caetaro Vitorino
joined the seminary to complete his studies
for the priesthood (which he had interrupted
to get married), and Rosa Maria became a nun,
joining the St. Monica convent in Old
Goa
, where she rose to the position of prioress.
Lisbon
The father had great ambition for himself and his son.
Hence, Faria reached
Lisbon
on 23 December 1771 with his father at the age of
25. After a year they managed to convince the
King of Portugal,
Joseph I, to send them to
Rome
for Faria Sr. to earn a doctorate in theology, and
the son to pursue his studies for the priesthood.
Eventually, the son too earned his doctorate, dedicating his
doctoral thesis to the
Portuguese Queen,
Mary I of
Portugal, and another study, on the
Holy
Spirit to the
Pope.
Apparently His Holiness was sufficiently impressed to
invite José Custódio to preach a sermon in
the Sistine
Chapel
, which he himself attended.
On his return to Lisbon, the Queen was informed by the
Nuncio of the Pope's honour to Faria Jr. So, she too
invited the young priest to preach to her as well, in her chapel.
But Faria, climbing the pulpit, and seeing the august assembly felt
tongue tied. At that moment his father, who sat below the pulpit,
whispered to him in
Konkani:
Hi
sogli baji; cator re baji (they are all vegetables, cut the
vegetables). Jolted, the son lost his fear and preached
fluently.
Faria Jr., from then on, often wondered how a mere phrase from his
father could alter his state of mind so radically as to wipe off
his stage fright in a second. The question would have far reaching
consequences in his life.
Participation in conspiracy
He was
implicated in the Conspiracy Of
The Pintos during 1787, and left for France
in
1788. He stayed in Paris
residing at
Rue de Ponceau.
France
In Paris, he became a leader of one of the
revolutionary battalions in 1795, taking
command of one of the sections of the infamous
10 of the
Vendémiaire, which attacked
the
French Convention, taking an
active part in its fall. As a result, he established links with
individuals like
Chateaubriand, the
Marquise of Coustine. He was
also a friend of
Armand-Marie-Jacques
de Chastenet, Marques of Puységur (a disciple of
Franz Anton Mesmer), to whom he dedicated
his book
Causas do Sono Lúcido ("On the Causes of Lucid
Sleep").
In 1797
he was arrested in Marseille
for unknown reasons, and sent by a law court to the infamous Chateau d'If
in a barred police carriage. He was shut up
in solitary confinement in the Chateau. While imprisoned he
steadily trained himself using techniques of self-suggestion.
After a long stint in the Chateau, Faria was released and returned
to Paris.
In 1811,
he was appointed Professor of Philosophy at the University of France at
Nîmes
, and was
elected member of the Société Medicale de Marseille at
Marseille.
In 1813 Abbé Faria, realising that
animal magnetism was gaining importance in
Paris, returned to Paris and started promoting a new doctrine. He
provoked unending controversies with his work
Da Causa do Sono
Lúcido no Estudo da Natureza do Homem (On the cause of Lucid
Sleep in the Study of Nature of Man), published in Paris in 1819
and was soon accused of being a
charlatan.
He retired as
chaplain to an obscure
religious establishment, and died of a stroke in Paris on September
30, 1819.
He left behind no addresses and his grave
remains unmarked and unknown, somewhere in Montmartre
.
Tributes
- There
is a bronze statue in Madkai in central
Panjim
, Goa, India
(next to the Government Secretariat), of the Abbé Faria trying to
hypnotize a woman. It was sculpted in 1945 by Ramchandra Pandurang Kamat.
- Portugal
commemorated the 250th anniversary of the Abbé's
birth in May, 2006, by releasing a postcard of his statue in
Panjim, Goa.
- A
prominent thoroughfare in the southern Goan city of Madgaon
is named Rua do Abade Faria (Street of
Abbé Faria) in his honour.
- Alexandre Dumas, père
used a fictionalised version of the Abbé in his famous novel
"The Count of Monte
Cristo". In the novel, Faria is a prisoner of the Château
d'If who instructs Edmond Dantès,
the protagonist and a fellow prisoner, in a number of fields
including mathematics, the sciences, and foreign
languages, and eventually helps him to escape from the island
prison. He also discloses to Dantès the whereabouts
of a hoard of jewels at Monte Cristo
, a small island near the Italian
coast, before dying from a cataleptic seizure.
- Asif Currimbhoy in his famous
play “Abbe Faria" narrates the dramatic situations of the life and
views of a revolutionary priest and Premier hypnotist.The title was
published by Writers Workshop. ISBN 8171894410 / 9788171894413 /
81-7189-441-0. http://openlibrary.org/b/OL1056393M/Abbe_Faria
- The
Institute of Clinical Hypnosis & Counselling established in
Kerala state of India
is a
memorial to Abbot Faria.
- The Mustard Seed Art Company, a theater group from Goa,
celebrated the 250th anniversary of Faria's birth by staging a play
entitled "Kator Re Bhaji", which was written and directed by Isabel
de Santa Rita Vaz.
- Laurent Carrer included the first English translation of
Faria's single tome, originally written in French as “De la cause
du sommeil lucide ou Etude de la nature de l’homme” (On the Cause
of Lucid Sleep or Study On The Nature of Man) in his 2004 "José
Custódio de Faria: Hypnotist, Priest and Revolutionary".
Quotes
- "[Faria was] great, because he had no fear and fought for truth
rather than for his place at the vanity fair. The Abbot de Faria's
mystery does not lie in the circumstances of his life that are
unknown to historians and lost forever; his mystery lies in his
talent, courage, and quest for truth. His mystery was the mystery
of someone who was ahead of his time and who blazed a trail for his
descendants due to his sacrifice." - Dr. Mikhail Buyanov, President of the
Moscow
Psychotherapeutic Academy, and author of A Man Ahead of His
Times, a study in Russian of
Abbe Faria.
- "There was a man in Paris who made the experience of hypnotism
public. Every day, some 60 people used to gather at his residence
and it was rare among these, that there were not at least five or
six people who were susceptible to fall into a hypnotic trance. He
would openly declare that he did not possess any secrets nor any
extraordinary powers, and that everything he achieved was dependent
on the will of the persons he was performing upon." - French
General Francois Joseph Noizet.
External links
- Commemorative postcard honoring the Abbe's 250th
Anniversary.
- Tribute
website
- Short documentary
-
http://www.archive.org/stream/marvelsbeyondsci00grasrich/marvelsbeyondsci00grasrich_djvu.txt
-
http://asifcurrimbhoy.com/source/wp-content/uploads/Asif-Currimbhoy-Abbe-Faria.pdf
Notes
- Moniz, A. Egas, O Padre Faria na história do
hipnotismo (Abbé Faria in the history of hypnotism), Lisbon
: Faculdade
de Medicina de Lisboa, 1925.
- Dalgado, D.G., Memoire sur la vie de l'Abbé Faria,
Paris, 1906.
- Charles. J. Borges, Goa and the revolt of 1787.
- digitized copy of Abbé Faria's original manuscript "De la
cause du sommeil lucide" (original version - in French) -
Preface by D.G. Dalgado - Paris 1906 - courtesy of Dr. Paret. An
English translation of this work, including Dalgado's preface, can
be found in Carrer's "José Custódio de Faria: Hypnotist, Priest and
Revolutionary."