|
Howard John Zitko (1911-2003) An obituary
Tuesday, May 27, 2003 Howard John Zitko, founder of the World
University, died in a nursing home in Arizona, USA, on
November 12, 2003 aged 92. Zitko was responsible, largely
single-handedly, for the creation of the World University
Roundtable, an international learned society that was, some
twenty years later, to create the World University in Arizona
and, via its Regional Colleges, in Africa, Asia and South
Africa as well. His vision of education was ambitious and
all-encompassing, rooted in an esoteric spiritual
consciousness which pervaded everything that he did. In his
pursuit of the World University ideal of a global educational
establishment transcending national and cultural boundaries,
Zitko was far ahead of his time; many of his ideas concerning
experiential education have since passed into the mainstream
contexts of the non-traditional, open and distance education
movements in the USA and elsewhere.
If his pioneering achievement was at times
acknowledged more by a circle of initiates rather than by the
public at large, this was a reflection of the way his ideas
had come to capture the mind of a generation to such an extent
that they had ceased to be merely the property of a single
individual and passed into common consciousness. Born on 26
October 1911 and educated at the Universities of Wisconsin and
California, Zitko entered the Christian ministry in the 1930s
in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, later becoming pastor of churches in
Hollywood and Huntington Park, California. His interest in
spiritual matters transcended orthodox Christianity, however,
and he began to become increasingly involved with the Arcane
school of belief, whose chief protagonist was Alice A. Bailey.
Other esoteric spiritual influences acknowledged by Zitko at
this time included C.W. Leadbeater (Theosophy), Max Heindel
(Rosicrucianism), Manly P. Hall, Edgar Cayce, Krishnamurti,
Aurobindo and Sivananda. Influenced by these teachings, Zitko
became much involved in Lemurian and Atlantean philosophy,
which was at that time to the forefront of spiritual
investigation, and was a leading member of the Lemurian
Fellowship, heading its Midwestern Division.
Spurred on by this research, he produced in
1936 his philosophical masterwork; the Lemurian Theo-Christic
Conception, a complex and extremely wide-ranging work of some
325,000 words outlining in a lucid and cogent manner his
credo, and addressing much that was then at the forefront of
spiritual science and esoteric philosophy. This was presented
by the Lemurian Fellowship as a study course during the 1940s,
when it attracted many students, and was subsequently revised
in 1956 and 1979 before publication by the World University
Press. In 1940, Zitko had followed the Conception with the
publication of An Earth-Dweller's Return, the edited
unpublished manuscripts of the spiritual master Phylos, part
of which had been published in 1884 by the medium Frederick
Spencer Oliver as A Dweller on Two Planets. These Zitko also
made available to the public, initially through the Lemurian
Press and later through the World University Press. He was
later to author Democracy in Economics - Streamers of Light
from the New World, World University Insights and New Age
Tantra Yoga. Zitko's productive activity was crowned in 1946,
when, inspired by the recent foundation of the United Nations,
he addressed an audience of educators and lay members on the
winter solstice at the Echo Park Women's Club, Los Angeles,
outlining the establishment of a world university on a world
scale with a world programme that would further the cause of
world peace and understanding.
From that meeting a board of thirteen
trustees was formed in Los Angeles, resulting in the
incorporation of the World University Roundtable in California
on February 24, 1947, as a non-profit religious, educational
and charitable corporation that would work towards the
furtherance of the World University vision. Of these thirteen,
comprising spiritual leaders, educators, naturopaths and
others, Zitko was the last to survive, although his colleague
Dr Norman Walker was to live to the age of 108. It was this
board that inaugurated the Los Angeles Section of the World
University in 1948 with forty instructors and a diverse
curriculum; however, the section was to founder for lack of
funding and suitable space a few years afterwards. The World
University movement thus created was to be described as the
"Grandaddy" of all such experiments by Dr Robert Muller,
former secretary-general of the United Nations. In 1950, the
erstwhile First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, endorsed the World
University, praising its world peace initiatives.
With a mind towards expansion, Zitko oversaw
the creation of the World University Association of Schools,
which was to embrace numerous worldwide institutions in the
succeeding years. The concept, partly born of financial
necessity, was that in each country the university would grow
from the grass roots rather than according to a centralised
plan; in this way existing schools would affiliate to the
World University and in time work towards Regional College
status. In 1952, adherents in Buenos Aires published a
four-page informative bulletin about the World University and
distributed 10,000 copies; this complimented the University's
own bimonthly journal, eventually entitled Liftoff, which
continued in publication for 56 years from 1947 until its last
issue in May-June 2003, bringing news of the World University
to its many adherents around the globe. From 1947 onwards, an
Annual Conference was organised in accordance with the
Roundtable constitution, initially at the Roundtable
headquarters, then in Washington, DC from 1967-75, but
subsequently expanding to take in locations in Europe, Asia,
Africa and Latin America.
The 1970 Conference was held simultaneously
in Nigeria, the Netherlands and the USA; after this
Conferences took place in, amongst other places, Brussels
(1992), Rome (1993), England (1996), Bali (1997), Korea (1979,
1990), India (1987), Canada (1984), Puerto Rico (1994),
Germany (1995), USA (Los Angeles, 1976, Oregon, 1977, Texas,
2000) and St Lucia (2002). The 2003 Conference had been
scheduled for Arizona, but was pre-empted by Zitko's death. It
was perhaps these Annual Conferences, which brought together
educators from around the world, that were the supreme
demonstration of the strength of support for the World
University movement. The organisation of the Roundtable
proceeded with the appointment of Chief Delegates in each
country in which there was representation (that total rising
to more than 80 countries by the close of the
twentieth-century) and the formation of national offices in
those countries beginning with India in 1987 and succeeded by
Nigeria and Ghana in 1991, Italy in 1992, Argentina, Greece,
Bulgaria, Luxembourg, Bangladesh and others. Membership was by
invitation, with each Chief Delegate invited to nominate
individuals of considerable distinction in their fields for
the award of the Cultural Doctorate in their discipline, which
honorary award then brought these individuals into the work of
the World University.
In addition ordinary membership of the
Roundtable was open to those from all walks of life who wished
to support the endeavour. In time the roll of the Cultural
Doctorate membership was to grow to several hundred, embracing
educators, spiritual and political leaders, business people,
writers, artists, musicians and others. One of the last
recipients was the Governor-General of St Lucia, Dame
Pearlette Louisy. In India, the members of the Roundtable were
so numerous as to merit the creation of the "Indian Alumni of
the World University" under the chairmanship of Dr J.J.
Bennett in 1988; the roll of this organisation stood at 88 in
2001. Its activities have included the reprinting of Liftoff
in Indian languages, the sponsorship of essay competitions,
and the involvement in political, social and humanitarian
projects throughout the sub-continent.
In 1958, the World University Roundtable
offices moved to Huntington Park from their former location in
Hollywood and Burbank, in consequence of Zitko's appointment
to a new ministry there. He was to hold this appointment until
1964, when he devoted himself full-time to the work of the
World University. 1962 had seen former US President Dwight D.
Eisenhower advocate a World University in an address to the
Confederation of Organizations of the Teaching Profession in
Stockholm, Sweden, and as a result the World University
received banner headlines in the Los Angeles Times. In 1964,
Zitko and the World University organised a move to Arizona,
where two years later they reached an agreement with the
Horizon Land Corporation to relinquish six hundred acres
leased from the State Land Department.
Once it had become clear that a substantial
campus was now a real possibility, the Roundtable trustees
organised the new incorporation of the World University itself
in Arizona as an institution of higher education on December
21, 1967, having registered the Roundtable in Arizona in 1964.
This represented a fulfilment of the original aims of the
Roundtable conceived some twenty years earlier, thus creating
a twofold organisation comprised of a spiritual arm (the
Roundtable) and an academic arm (the University). 1967 also
saw the publication of Michael Zweig's "The Idea of a World
University" (Southern Illinois University Press) in which the
World University was given honourable mention. In 1969, after
surrendering the lease on their previous land, the World
University purchased a complex of buildings in Tucson, to
which was added a library, which was to be the University's
home until 1985. That year saw the purchase of the
University's present home, the 80-acre Desert Sanctuary Campus
at the foot of the Rincon Mountain Range near Benson, Arizona,
and two years later, once the move was complete, the Tucson
campus was sold.
The Desert Sanctuary Campus had originally
been used as a yoga ashram and a school for disadvantaged
young people; now it was adapted for the World University with
the conversion of its nine buildings to provide offices,
visitor accommodation and a substantial library. The library
building came to house what is arguably the finest library on
esoteric and spiritual science and related subjects in the
world, consisting of some 25,000 books, manuscripts and other
resources, together with theses that had been submitted for
the cultural doctorate. 2003 had seen a successful restoration
project completed on the library building. The campus, which
is of outstanding natural beauty, also features an
Olympic-size swimming pool. Zitko was to make the campus his
home; he received visitors from throughout the world there,
and together with a small staff of volunteers administered the
business of the World University without salary, funded by
donations and by the trust that he had established to support
the University in perpetuity.
Chief among this staff must be mentioned
Zitko's devoted Secretary, Dr Jill Overway, an expert in yoga
also resident on the campus, who typed and prepared each
edition of Liftoff and handled much in the way of
communications, latterly including messages from around the
world via email. The activities of the University expanded to
encompass a substantial publications arm during the 1970s; as
well as Zitko's writings, it published works of literary
criticism, child development, poetry by the acclaimed Canadian
poet Stephen Gill and the autobiography of impresario Irwin
Parnes. By the 1990s the World University was ready to
initiate a series of Regional Colleges, beginning with the
North American Regional College (housed at the Desert
Sanctuary Campus) in 1998.
This college published a prospectus of
non-traditional experiential and spiritual studies leading to
certificate and diploma awards, with forty-four faculty
members drawn from around the world. Although all courses were
offered by distance learning, some on-campus instruction also
took place, and in 2002 programmes leading to the award of a
research doctorate in association with Zoroastrian College
were made generally available (from which programme Dr S.S.
Walia was the first to graduate in Energy Science, following a
thesis on the therapeutic qualities of solar energy). In the
following year, the Design, Technology and Management Society
initiated the South African Regional College in Ladismith,
although this was to cease affiliation in 2002 following a
change in management of the DTMS.
This was to be followed by the South East
Asian Regional College (the World Association of Integrated
Medicine in India), the West African Regional College and
World University Computer Center (Nigeria) and the Zoroastrian
Regional College (the Zoroastrian College, India). At the time
of Zitko's death, Queen's University, Bangladesh (the largest
private university in that country) and the Daya Pertiwi
Foundation, Indonesia, were in the process of seeking Regional
College status. Some twenty or so schools and other
organisations, whilst not achieving Regional College status,
were affiliated or associated with the World University; these
included to name but a few, the University for Human Goodness
in North Carolina, USA, the Vidya Yoga Free University,
Brazil, Ansted University, British Virgin Islands and
Malaysia, the International States Parliament for Safety and
Peace, the International Association of Educators for World
Peace, the Academy of Ethical Science, India, and the Mandingo
Academy, New York, USA. Other institutions had formed
affiliations with the World University in earlier years,
including notably the Parthasarathy International Cultural
Academy, India, the Accademia Superiore di Studi di Scienze
Naturali e Psicobiofisiche Prof. Ambrosini - Diandra
International University and Academy, Italy, Brazil, Spain and
USA, and the World University of Intercultural Studies,
Bulgaria.
A website was set up by the World University
and Roundtable in 1998, and in 2001 this registered 45,784
hits. After the September 11 attacks, the number of hits
snowballed from an average of 1,800 per month to an
astonishing 12,959 in the month of those events, suggesting
that a wider audience was turning to the World University in
times of crisis. Each winter solstice from 1956, commemorating
the tenth anniversary of the foundation of the Roundtable, was
designated World University Day and formed the focus for an
outpouring of worldwide messages to the Desert Sanctuary
Campus, sharing in telepathic rapport with the ceremony
conducted there. 2002 saw an unprecedented demonstration of
support, with many messages from around the globe producing
what Zitko described as a "stream of love divine". In his own
words, "there never was a greater conviction among all...that
the World University was linked with a Higher Authority,
cognizant of the dedication expressed by all those who have
made the commitment to support the vision which underlies the
New World Civilisation of "Light, Love and Power." The
ceremony had included the Affirmation of Djwhal Khul the
Tibetan, a Message of the Master Phylos and Zitko's own
keynote address delivered earlier that year at the Annual
Conference in St Lucia.
Zitko was a man of imposing presence and
energy, and his spiritual qualities became quickly apparent in
any discourse. He was generous with his time and encouragement
and was an entertaining and thought-provoking correspondent,
sending his review of the year's events as a Christmas gift
annually. His humanity and warmth were witnessed by the many
friends he counted throughout the entire world, making the
Desert Sanctuary Campus a focus for those who sought an
educational and philosophical ideal that transcended temporal
boundaries. One rarely exchanged ideas with him without
leaving with a renewed faith in human nature. He is survived
by his three children Lenodene Muriel, now retired, Terel,
owner of the Landmark Furniture Store in Cottonwood, Arizona,
and a spiritual teacher, Beth Ellen, a professor at Winthrop
University, South Carolina, and his granddaughter Tiffany, a
medical student at North Carolina State University. In answer
to the question of how he maintained his faith in the World
University in the face of what was at times significant
opposition, including at one point a death threat against his
person, Zitko replied simply, "Serve as selflessly as possible
with your eyes on the stars and your feet on the ground, and
let the result take care of itself." The Hon. Professor John
Kersey Founder Member, World University, and Cultural
Doctorate Member, World University Roundtable Vice-Delegate
and President, English National Office of the World
University.
Taken from
http://www.eidos.org/article_50.htm
|