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Indralaya began as
an experiment in 1927. Northwest members of the Theosophical Society had
the opportunity to come together at the MacClaren Farm, a 26 acre property
on Orcas Island for a "spiritual vacation", and a general get-together.
Fritz Kunz and Dora Van Gelder Kunz (who married earlier that year) came
from the East Coast as special guests.
In 1927, there was
no dining room or sleeping accommodations. Meals were cooked in the old
farmhouse kitchen and eaten outside. People slept in tents (the lucky
ones) with hay filled ticks (used for mattresses). Everybody prepared
for the camp and everybody helped out. The two camps held in 1927 were
very successful, with 43 attendees, and a great deal of enthusiasm was
generated for meeting the following summer. This enthusiasm led to a decision
to continue the camp meetings on a yearly basis.
A separate organization
was set up by Ray Wardall, a Seattle attorney and member of the Theosophical
Society, to operate the camp. It was a nonprofit, tax-exempt, educational
and charitable Washington State corporation, using the three declared
objects of the Theosophical Society for its objects and purposes. It was
approved by the Secretary of State on November 27, 1928. Application was
also made to the Internal Revenue Service for tax exempt status, and IRS
approval was granted. The new corporation was called the Orcas Island
Foundation. Shortly after its birth, the property was named Camp Indralaya,
a name selected by Fritz Kunz.
Indralaya has changed
in many ways since 1927, and yet it is also the same. The property has
grown and been developed to encompass 78 acres, 28 cabins, a kitchen,
dining room, lounge, library, and two necessitoriums, one with outdoor
showers. Our program year begins in April and extends until mid-October.
But there is still a special feeling of peace, harmony and reverence for
all life that has been present since the beginning. And we still share
this place with the bunnies, the deer, the eagles and the owls, the beautiful
madrona, fir, and cedar trees.
When Indralaya celebrated
its 70th birthday five years ago we had a grand week-long celebration
and gala banquet dinner (cooked of course, by volunteers). Close to 200
people visited for all or part of that celebratory week. The program for
the session was composed of a series of panels consisting of various generations
of campers, including a panel of several people who attended the first
camp in 1927. A second panel was composed of a number of people who started
coming in the 1930s and 40s. A third panel was made up of younger community
members, both those who had spent much of their childhood here and others
who began coming as adults. Program participants were asked to recount
what had brought them to Indralaya and what meaning the place held in
their lives. For many Indralaya is synonymous with living theosophy and
the experience of working together in community.
In 2002, Indralaya
celebrated its 75th anniversary. Several of those who were with us at
the 70th have passed on, and we miss them. We offer some of the thoughts
that people shared at the 70th anniversary celebration with the hope that
they will impart some of the essence of the Indralaya experience.

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| "One of
the first programs I attended at Indralaya was a Silent Meditation
Retreat. It occurred as the Gulf War was winding down. The Kurds
were homeless and their lives disrupted and I came with a sense
of pain and anxiety. I found that during the Silent Meditation Retreat,
together silently with others, I worked some of this out and came
to terms with it." |
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| "I have
always thought that this is a wonderful place to bring children,
to share a reverence for life which is part of theosophy. We experience
a friendship with nature. Indralaya is a center of peace." |
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| "I loved
it. My children loved it. Playing in the meadow, wonderful people.
...to be involved in the inner side of life. This is the place that
I was exposed to it --communing with nature and each other." |
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| "Indralaya
has been an inspiration. It has given me time to think, feel, meditate,
and work. It has given me peace and harmony. It has been a source
of strength and helped me find the solutions to problems of life.
I learned to bake bread there." |
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| "I came
to Indralaya as part of a process that started at my birth or earlier.
As a teenager, I dreamt of helping people. Early on I knew that
I had to find a philosophy and spiritual support group if I was
going to do anything. I wanted to understand the purpose of life
and the scheme of things. I was searching...and when I was in New
York City I went to the Theosophical Society and from there I was
encouraged to go to Indralaya. I made it to Indralaya and after
three days I had a powerful experience. I was sitting around the
campfire and all of a sudden a strange powerful energy inside of
me made it clear that I no longer had to keep searching. This was
it. I was home." |
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| "Indralaya
is the joy of my life." |
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| "That
Indralaya is an important influence on my life is an understatement.
For example, I closely identify with the water system. The pipes
are like my arteries." |
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"Camp has been many
things to me at different stages -- family, parent, guardian. I met my
husband there and we began life together at Indralaya. It was the background
in raising my children."
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