We clashed with the manuscript of Kont (Count) Walewski for the first time, when V.P.Kovtun asked us for help in 1994. He had a school exercise-book in his hands, given to him by Rouslan Dobrovolsky in Caucas in 70-ies. Such notes were widely spread in Tbilisi, been rewritten by worshippers of esoteric knowledge.

Later, being in New York, we found a manuscript "The System of Caucasian Yoga" by Pole Kont (Count) Stefan Colonna Walewski, published in USA in 1955. The exercise-book, offered to us by V. P. Kovtun was nothing, but paragraphs, rewritten from this manuscript.

The editor's preface states: "Count Stefan Colonna Walewski's outer life was that of a well-known collector and dealer in oriental art and antiquities and in anthropological curios. His shop, Esoterica, was not only a famous New York connoisseurs' landmark but the gateway of another world, in which magick, demons and talismans were as real as subways and neon signs. The Count firmly believed that he attracted these strange objects to him by a sort of higher magnetism of which he knew the workings; and his unrivalled collection seemed to prove his point.

Few knew, however, that behind Count Walewski's constant kindnesses to his fellow man and his expert knowledge -- the two main facets of his external life -- there lay an intense inner life and searc for life's most hidden secrets. Few knew that before the 1920s, in the Caucasus mountains (between the Black and Caspian seas, on the border between Turkey and Russia) he had been vouchsafed some of those secrets by two initiates of a rarely encountered secret society, which combined indigenous doctrines and those of yoga with teachings stemming from a mystica1 tradition of ancient Zoroastrianism. Walewski never saw his teacners again, and he himself assumed no personal credit for their teachings which were merely handed on to him under oath not to reveal the source.

We offer you the paragraphs from his facsimile manuscript "The System of Caucasian Yoga".

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