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Freemasons:
The silent destroyers?
" ...these people can poison every part of a person's life."
Christian ex-masonic judge, 'Christopher', speaks out
Important note: Not all masons are bad news - many initiates have no
idea or disapprove of the self-seeking criminality and persecution that
goes on, mostly at the higher levels
by Tony Gosling @nticopyright
When I first heard about the Freemasons they seemed harmless enough, a
likable curiosity. Aprons? Secret handshakes? A bit of childlike escapism for
grown-ups? But Stephen Knight and Martin Short's masonic exposés reveal an
occult order where standards are falling rapidly. Their investigations reveal a
more sinister picture of the world's most extensive secret society.
On an individual level privacy is an essential right, but the characteristics
of freemasonry make it inappropriate in many cases. Britain's 700,000 masons,
that's about one in thirty adult men, form a secret link between the country's
most powerful institutions. Secret masonic links can be used by unscrupulous
businessmen and other individuals to compromise the independence and integrity
of the media, judiciary, local government, lawyers, MP's, local councillors,
royalty, politicians, armed forces, police, civil servants, and intelligence
agencies. And, in the 1990's, as economic pressures increase, so does the
temptation to abuse the masonic network for private gain. A complete national
list of initiates is the very least the public require if masonic assisted
corruption in positions of public trust is to be checked out, and ruled out.
Bloodcurdling initiation rites, occultism, secret expressions, closed
meetings... and all for what?
New recruits are drummed up by existing masons '...it might be a good idea to
join...' but the choice of whether to actually apply or not is up to the
individual. So what does that decision say about a person? Anyone who
approaches the masons in order to join will probably be encouraged by the
prospect of gaining social positions by the back door. In other words the
initiate has the fundamental ingredient of a cheat who is prepared to go behind
the public's back because he lacks confidence, self-belief or integrity. Masons
are men who fight shy of free and open discussion. The usual reason for men
joining is to take up the masons' unofficial promise to further one's career.
So why aren't these powerful people coming clean?
In the lowest three degrees of masonry there is a plethora of silly rituals
that may, or may not, mean something. The point of these is surely to brainwash
men into accepting bizarre subservience without questioning why they are doing
it. If initiates prove to be truly and ingratiatingly obedient they are then
selected by their Masonic betters to enter the higher degrees up to level 33
[see extract below]. The move to these higher degrees is like stepping from the
second class to the first class carriage on a train. The 4th to 33rd degree
seems to be called the 'Royal Arch' though I can find no masonic literature
'spelling that out'.
The Royal Arch is more like a gentleman's club than the lower levels. In
Britain the H.Q. of the Royal Arch 'The Supreme Council' is at 10 Duke Street,
St. James's London SW1. Check out the brass plaque by the door, 'The Supreme
Council, Ring Once'
Another notable and easily missed Masonic venue is no. 86 St. James' Street
in London SW1. The Mark Masons HQ or the 'Worshipful Society of Free Masons' is
just a stone's throw from the royal hangout of St. James' Palace. At the front
of the masonic building is an office of Kall-Kwik printing.
So secrecy is at the very heart of what the masons are about. Masonry is for
those who'd never be able to get what they want by open discussion. Masons
celebrate the ignorance in others and as such keep progress of human
understanding. Masons are going behind people's backs with their
patronising, condescending and subversive brotherhood.
Britain's Grand Master (33rd degree) Mason is Prince Michael of Kent. His
father the then Duke of Kent, was a Nazi supporter in World War 2. Hardly
encouraging
Masonry is bad for the families of those who join it, because it can, and
frequently does, take precedence over everything else in their lives. It is bad
for culture, democracy and the nation. The fact that so many of our so called
public 'servants' are secretly masons subverts the crucial principle of open
government. As one of Stephen Knight's anonymous ex-masons attests [see below],
'There is no defence against an evil which only the victims and the perpetrators
know exists.'
An attempt to expose precise details of all the cranky rituals performed in
the lodge is time consuming and surely misses the point. The message is already
clear... powerful people are putting time in behind closed doors for their
clique's advantage, and therefore our decline.
Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live. Exodus 22;18
VOMIT,
Victims Of Masonic Ill Treatment
The VOMIT newssheet comes out weekly. It is vitriolic and has short ascerbic
articles purporting to expose corruption caused by the 'JMF', which it
describes as:
"..the Judeao Masonic Faction; the heirarchies of Jews and
Masons, the Establishment, the Old Boy Network or whatever you want to call it.
It is the thing which controls our lives and contaminates the Judiciary
and the Executive. It is the thing which makes a mockery of human rights and
democracy."
VOMIT can be obtained from JM Todd, Misbourne Farmhouse, Amersham Road,
Chalfont St. Giles, Buckinghamshire, HP8 4RU.
Enquiries and editorial phone/fax number 01494 871204
VOMIT resources on the internet:
See newsgroups alt.freemasonry
and uk.legal for the latest edition
- go to Metacrawler or Altavista
and search usenet drop down box for "victims of masonic
ill treatment" or just "VOMIT"
Extract from VOMIT 12/98 'Calling All Victims'
LETTERS
Letter dated 16 April 1998 from Mr J S Chalmers, Field End, 51 Conway
Crescent, Burnham-on-Sea,Somerset TA8 2UW (Telephone 01278 794374) to J M Todd
Dear Mr Todd,
As a fellow Mason I should address you as Brother but I am so appalled by a
letter which you wrote recently to the press I feel disinclined to do so. I find
it unbelievable to say 'I do not know a single Mason who has not been prepared
to accept preferential treatment derived from Masonic Membership'. The
principles of the Craft that I certainly uphold, clearly forbid any
'preferential treatment' and I for one never gained any such advantage from my
membership of 25 years. The impression you give to the public at large is a
disgrace to Freemasonry and quite shameful to make such a statement. You are
fully aware that there is a National Register of members and like any other
Association this is mainly kept private. How can you remain a member if you
truly believe what you have said?
There will always be 'black sheep' in any organisation but you malign many
thousands of decent men in the craft by your sweeping statement. I have always
lived up to the code of conduct contained in our ritual and true friendship in
the Brotherhood of Masonry can only exist if it is untainted by such hypocrisy.
I trust many others will point out the error of your ways.
Signed J S Chalmers W Bro. J. S. CHALMERS. P. PRO. G. SUPT. OF WORKS (West
Kent).
Reply dated 18 April 1998 from J M Todd.
Dear Mr Chalmers,
I thank you for your letter of 16 April 1998 referring to my letter of 21
February published by the Times. One thousand salutations to you and ten Brownie
points and may the Great Architect of the Universe watch over you.
It was not my intention to offend decent Masons but rather to waken them up to
the reality of Freemasonry. For my first twenty years of Masonic subservience my
attitude was exactly like yours. I may still be a member because in Scotland one
is automatically a life member in order to maintain a maximum number of
brainwashed slaves to the cause.
My view is that Masons in high places are black sheep and that the rest are
white sheep. Since it is obvious that you are one of the lower order Masons who
do not know the first thing about Masonic corruption I should not abuse you.
Bear in mind that many of us Masons have suffered grievously and still suffer as
the result a Masonic chicanery. We don't take too kindly to people like you who
are worried about the impression we give to 'people at large'. People at large
are sick of the manner in which your hierarchy has undermined every institution
in the land.
You would not know if you had gained advantages through the Craft. You could
have been given promotion because, as a Mason, you would trust the word of a
bent Mason. However, if you care to think a bit more you will realise that not
only have you derived unfair advantage by being a Mason you will also have
bestowed the same unfair advantage on other Masons.
If you want to reply to this letter please do so by return. I will publish your
reply.
Yours fraternally and eternally,
James M Todd -o-o-o-
DOCTOR IAN OLIVER - GRAMPIANS CHIEF CONSTABLE [this para deleted for legal
reasons see - Tony]
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Extract from VOMIT 8/98 'The Masonic Crooks'
The Royal Masonic Hospital See Private Eye of 20 February
1998 at page 9. The RMH had an excellent reputation for not killing its Masonic
patients. It was financed and effectively owned by the lodges who had funded it
for years. The ordinary decent Mason had paid the piper. The Grand Lodge had no
say in the ownership and administration. This did not stop the Grand Lodge in
the form the president of the governors, the Duke of Kent who was and is also
the Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England, deciding to sell the
hospital. The governors took successful action in the courts. For reasons
unknown the hospital went into receivership. The lodges offered to put up £12
million to keep it afloat. The Official Receiver and the Charity Commissioners
turned down the offer authorised its sale to a property developers for £6
million. The property developer has already sold part of the property for £16.8
million and still has a few acres left for development. The developer will have
no problem obtaining planning permission and making a further gain that could
exceed the profit already made.
Will you ordinary Masons please read our introduction again?
Note that the Charity Commissioners and the Official Receiver approved of the
sale. We found the Charity Commissioners guilty of the same offences when they
allowed Barclays Bank Trust Company to defraud the Combined Charities Trust in
the sale of the official cocaine distribution centre next door. The Official
Receiver has been guilty of serious offences in the Winding Up of Bydand Limited
(the highest bidder for what became the cocaine distribution centre). We have
tried to provide the Metropolitan Commissioner with information that could lead
to the discovery of other locations connected with the cocaine trade but so far
there has been no response. In due course we hope to show that the drugs
business helped to finance Lloyds Insurance Syndicates.
Book Extracts:
Stephen Knight's book: 'The Brotherhood'
"If only five per cent of Freemasons use - abuse - the Craft for
selfish or corrupt ends it means there are 25,000 of them. The figure is much
closer to twelve or thirteen per cent now."
I am free to name only a small number of the many hundreds of people who have
helped me with advice and information. Most of those who helped did so only on
the understanding that I would say nothing that could lead to their
identification. Among these were many Freemasons who feared recrimination from
other members of the Brotherhood. Others included government officials,
politicians, judges, policemen of all ranks, lawyers, churchmen, past and
present officers of MI5 and MI6, and people from every sector of society touched
on in the book.
The Knights Templar, p.168
In England, the rank of barrister-at-law is conferred exclusively by four
unincorporated bodies in London, known collectively as the Honourable Societies
of the Inns of Court. The four Inns, established between 1310 and 1357, are
Lincoln's Inn, Gray's Inn, the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple. Prior to the
establishment of the latter two Inns, the Temple, which lies between Fleet
Street and the River Thames, was the headquarters of the Knights Templar,
declared heretics by King Philip IV of France and wiped out during the early
fourteenth century. There is a modern day Order of Knights Templar within
British Freemasonry which claims direct descent from the medieval order. From
the beginning the men of law were linked with Freemasonry.
Passing money "Through the organisation",
p.204/5
Sporle, now dead, was a corrupt man who used the Lodge at Wandsworth
unashamedly for setting up crooked deals. Among seven charges of corruption for
which he was later jailed for six years, Sporle was found guilty of taking a job
from T. Dan Smith, PR man and fellow conspirator of architect John Poulson. It
is generally thought that Smith, who did so much to further the interests of
Poulson (himself known to have exploited his masonic membership at every
opportunity), was also a member of the Brotherhood. According to what he told
me, and I have no reason to disbelieve him, he is not and never has been a
Freemason, however. This is what he said when we met for a cup of tea at the
Charing Cross Hotel: 'People have always assumed that I am a Mason, so gradually
I found the way they shook hands and the way they made the next move - and
because I virtually detested them (for no reason other than I hate that sort of
organization) I always used to give them the handshake back. Still do. I met a
journalist last week from the Daily Mirror. He gave me a Freemasonic
handshake and I gave him one, and he said, "Oh, you're on the Square."
He said, "As you're on the Square, why didn't you pass the money to Ted
Short that way.
'I said, "Well, how do you do it that way?" He said, "Very
simply. You just pass it through the organization."'
Edward Short, MP for Newcastle Central, was an old friend of Smith's and a
Freemason. He accepted £500.00 from Smith 'for the work you have done on behalf
of the firm'. The DPP later considered prosecuting Short for accepting a bribe
but decided there was no case to answer. Eleven years after the event, when it
all came out, Short, by then deputy Prime Minister and Leader of the House,
astonished Parliament by not resigning despite dissatisfaction with his
explanation.
There are clues that there is a well-established system within Freemasonry for
passing money untraceably from one Mason to another. No fewer than seven
informants within the brotherhood as well as T. Dan Smith on the outside have
told me of the system.
In the ritual of exaltation, the name of the Great Architect of the Universe
[The Freemason's god] is revealed as JAH-BUL-ON - not a general umbrella term
but a precise designation that describes a specific supernatural being - a
compound deity composed of three separate personalities fused in one. Each
syllable of the 'ineffable name' represents one personality of this Trinity:
- JAH
- Jahweh, The God of the Hebrews.
- BUL
- Baal, the ancient Canaanite fertility god associated with 'licentious
rites of imitative magic'.
- ON
- Osiris, the Ancient Egyptian god of the underworld.
Baal, of course, was the 'false god' with whom Jahweh competed for the
allegiance of the Isrealites in the Old Testament. But more recently, within a
hundred years of the creation of the Freemason's god, the sixteenth century
demonologist John Weir identified Baal as a devil. This grotesque manifestation
of evil had the body of a spider and three heads - those of a man, a toad, and a
cat. A description of Baal to be found in de Plancy's Dictionary of Witchcraft
is particularly apposite when considered in the light of the secretive and
deceptive nature of Freemasonry: his voice was raucous, and he taught his
followers guile, cunning and the ability to become invisible.
'The Thirty-Third Degree'
from Chapter 5
There is an Elite group of Freemasons in England over whom the United Grand
Lodge has no jurisdiction. These are the brethren of the so-called Higher
Degrees, and even the majority of Freemasons have no idea of their existence.
Most Freemasons who have been raised to the 3rd Degree to become Master Masons
believe they are at the top of the masonic ladder. As novices they were Entered
Apprentices. They were then 'passed' as Fellow Craft Masons and finally 'raised'
as Masters. The very name Master has connotations of supremity. If Master Masons
have ambition it will usually be to achieve office within their Lodge -
eventually, with good fortune and the passing of years, to become Worshipful
Master of their mother Lodge (the Lodge to which they were first initiated into
Masonry). Those who have their eyes fixed on higher office will aim for rank in
their Provincial Grand Lodge or in the United Grand Lodge itself. But even the
Grand Master of all England is only a Freemason of the 3rd Degree. The three
Craft degrees form the entire picture of Masonry for most of the 600,000
'uninitiated initiates' of the Brotherhood in England and Wales.
3º Master Mason
2º Fellow Craft
1º Entered Apprentice
The 'Masters', who form the largest proportion of Freemasons, are in most
cases quite unaware of the thirty superior degrees to which they will never he
admitted, nor even hear mentioned. This is the real picture, with the three
lowly degrees governed by Grand Lodge and the thirty higher degrees governed by
a Supreme Council.
These thirty degrees, beginning with the 4th (that of Secret Master) and
culminating in the 33rd (Grand Inspector General), are controlled by a Supreme
Council whose headquarters are at 10 Duke Street, St James's London SWI. Nobody
walking down Duke Street from Piccadilly is likely to suspect the true nature of
what goes on inside the building, even if he or she happens to notice the small
plate to the right of the entrance which says, 'The Supreme Council. Ring once'.
Built in 1910-11, this imposing Edwardian mansion with fine neo-classical
features might easily be taken for a consulate or the headquarters of some
private institute. Nor do people thumbing through the S-Z section of the London
Telephone Directory get any clue from the entry sandwiched between Supreme
Cleaners and Supreme Die Cutter 'Supreme Council 33rd Degree ... 01-930 1606'.
Nobody looking at that fine but anonymous house from outside could suspect that
behind its pleasing facade, beyond the two sets of sturdy double doors and up
the stairs there is a Black Room, a Red Room and a Chamber of Death.. To high
Masons, the house in Duke Street known as the Grand East.
Members of Craft Freemasonry - that is, all but a few thousand of England's
Masons - often argue that Freemasonry is not a secret society but a society with
secrets. Although the argument is in the end unconvincing, it has its merits.
But no such case can be made out for the wealthy society-within-a-society based
at 10 Duke Street.
The Thirty-three Degrees of Freemasonry
33º Grand Inspector General
32º Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret
31º Grand Inspector Inquisitor Commander
30º Grand Elected Knight Kadosh, Knight of the Black and White Eagle
29º Knight of St Andrew
28º Knight of the Sun
27º Commander of the Temple
26º Prince of Mercy
25º Knight of the Brazen Serpent
24º Prince of the Tabernacle
23º Chief of the Tabernacle
22º Prince of Libanus
21º Patriarch Noachite
20º Venerable Grand Master
19º Grand Pontiff
18º Knight of the Pelican and Eagle and Sovereign Prince Rose Croix of Heredom
17º Knight of the East and West
16º Prince of Jerusalem
15º Knight of the Sword, or of the East
14º Scottish Knight of Perfection
13º Royal Arch (of Enoch)
12º Grand Master Architect
11º Sublime Elect
10º Elect of Fifteen
9º Elect of Nine
8º Intendant of the Building
7º Provost and Judge
6º Intimate Secretary
5º Perfect Master
4º Secret Master
--------------------------
3º Master Mason
2º Fellow Craft
1º Entered Apprentice
[Quote: There is no Degree higher then that of Master Mason..
Once a MM a man can go on to join the Appendant Bodies like York Rite &
Scottish Rite that have higher number Degrees but none has a higher position
then the Third Degree of the Blue Lodge. from Manny at MasonTruth@aol.com]
One of the regulations of ordinary Craft Freemasonry is that no Mason may
invite an outsider to join. Anyone wishing to become a Freemason must take the
initiative and seek two sponsors from within the Brotherhood [This, at least, is
the theory - and United Grand Lodge staunchly maintains that it is the practice.
In reality most Entered Apprentices are recruited by existing Masons they know
personally]. The position is reversed for Freemasons of the 3rd Degree who wish
to be elevated to the Higher Degrees. Initiation open only to those Master
Masons who are selected by the Supreme Council. If a representative of the
Supreme Council establishes a contact with a Master Mason and concludes that he
is suitable, the Candidate will be offered the chance of being 'perfected' and
setting the first foot the ladder to the 33rd Degree. But only a small
proportion even of the limited number of Freemasons who take first step,
progress beyond the 18th Degree, that of Knight of the Pelican and Eagle and
Sovereign Prince Rose Croix of Heredom. With each Degree, the number of
initiates diminishes. The 31st Degree (Grand Inspector Inquisitor Commander) is
restricted to 400 members; the 32nd (Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret) to 180;
and the 33rd - the pre-eminent Grand Inspectors General - to only 75 members.
One of my major sources of information was a former Grand Inspector
Inquisitor Commander of the Thirty-First Degree of the Ancient and Accepted Rite
who had withdrawn from Masonry in 1968 for religious reasons. As with so many
other people in the labyrinthine world of Freemasonry, I was led to him by way
of a series of contacts, He agreed through a third party to he interviewed by me
concerning his conviction that no active Christian could in all conscience
remain a Freemason.
When I met him I learned that he was a judge, and a particularly quick-tempered
one. Although I had heard of him, I had hitherto known little about him.
We spent a long time talking about Masonry and religion, but after a while I
began to ask him about the Ancient and Accepted Rite of the Thirty-Third Degree.
He was, after all, only the fourth initiate to the Rite who had agreed to see
me. He answered quickly. 'No, I dare not go into that,' he said. 'We'd better
stick with religion.' It seemed a perfectly normal answer - I had received many
such replies over the months of my investigation. It sounded like the usual
rebuff. But I thought immediately afterwards how strange it was that he had used
the words 'dare not'. Most people said, 'I'd better not', or 'I'd rather not'. I
remarked on his use of the word. He said, Anyone in public life has to be
cautious.'
'Cautious,' I repeated. 'That's a masonic word of recognition.'
'You've obviously delved into the ritual, so you know,' he said. 'But I mean
cautious in the sense everybody understands it.'
'What must you be cautious about?'
'Mr Knight, I don't like this line of questioning. I agreed to speak to you in
general terms about why my commitment to Jesus is incompatible with the masonic
religion. I do not wish to be drawn into discussion of matters covered by
whatever undertakings I have ... taken.'
'By undertakings, do you mean masonic oaths?'
He paused. 'Yes, I do. I prefer the word obligation to oath. It's not the same.'
I remember thinking as I turned the conversation back on to the track I wanted
it to follow that it would be interesting later on to return to this question of
the distinction between an obligation and an oath. I never did.
'Why do you have to be cautious, careful', I said. 'You're not a Mason any more.
I've got copies of all the rituals of the 4th to 33rd degree. There is no
obligation which could possibly be interpreted to forbid you from telling me
what you meant when you used the word "dare" in an ordinary
conversation.'
This isn't about my religious convictions, is it?'
'Many of your former masonic colleagues are very powerful people in this
country. Do you think there would be some kind of reprisal if you gave away any
secrets?'
'Not of the kind you write about in your book about Jack the Ripper.' He
laughed. A bit hollowly, I thought.
'Well, not murder, no, I wouldn't have thought so.' I, too, laughed. I felt
oddly embarrassed. 'But there is some kind of reprisal to be feared then?
Something more ... subtle?'
He began to look angry. He had made a slip. 'That was a figure of sp-- I was
making a joke. A very bad joke.'
'But you said-'
'I know, I know! And I do not believe for one moment that what you suggest in
your book has happened in real life - then or ever.'
I could see the rattled ex-Mason automatically slipping back into the practice
of a lifetime. Sometimes you shall divert a discourse, and manage it prudently
for the honour of the worshipful fraternity. I would not be diverted into
defending the evidence and arguments in my first book. I felt I was close to
something. I pressed on.
'Leaving murder aside, can I ask you . . .' And then it hit me. 'Can I ask you,
as a Christian, have you ever seen at first hand any sort of reprisals carried
out by Freemasons using masonic influence against any non-Freemason or
anti-Freemason?'
All at once, he seemed to relax, or to somehow collapse into a smaller man as he
let all the anger go out of him. 'As a Christian . . .' He paused thoughtfully,
and I noticed how very many times he blinked his eyes during this hiatus. I
wondered at one point if he was praying for guidance. He drew a long, slow, deep
breath. 'As a Christian, I have to tell you that I have never in my whole life
witnessed or heard about a single act of hostility by a Freemason or group of
Freemasons that was sanctioned by Grand Lodge or Supreme Council' He looked at
me significantly as he laid stress on that qualifying clause. 'There,' he said.
'I have said nothing which betrays my obligations.'
'I have heard from quite a lot of contacts about organized action by groups of
Freemasons that have resulted in the financial or social ruin of certain
people,' I said.
So have I,' he said, still looking me straight in the eye as if telling me this
was important. 'So have I, Mr Knight.' 'Have you any direct knowledge of such
happenings?'
'Not of such happenings which had the backing of official Freemasonry.'
'But of action which was unofficial? In other words, Masons abusing the Craft
for their own ends?'
'You know the answer to that, from the way I have said what I have said.'
'I have also heard about people who have "crossed" certain Masons and
finished up in prison . ...'
He stopped me in mid-sentence by placing a finger on his lips.
'If I told you everything I know about Freemasonry being betrayed by its
members, it would surprise even you,' he said. 'It would make your hair stand on
end. I can't tell you any more.' Then, as if it was an afterthought, but I don't
believe it was, he said, 'Give me your phone number. You might hear from someone
in a few days.' I gave him the number. 'Who?' I said.
The finger went back to his lips and he went to fetch my coat.
'God bless,' he said as I left, and I ran pell-mell to a sandwich bar in nearby
Chancery Lane to scribble down the notes on which this account of our meeting
has been based.
Four days later I received a phone call from a man who told me he had seen my
advertisement for people with information about Freemasonry in an old copy of
the New Statesman (This advertisement had appeared for four weeks in the summer
of 1981, some nine months earlier). He said he had read my Jack the Ripper: The
Final Solution and would very much like to meet me. I tried, as I tried with all
my callers, to get him to say something concrete on the phone, but he would not
even tell me whether or not he was a Mason. I had already received a dozen or so
similar calls, some of which had proved useful, some wild goose chases. But the
researcher's world is the natural habitat of wild geese and red herrings, and
one accepts the necessity of chasing them. Despite his unwillingness to talk -
perhaps, in a way, because of it - I arranged to meet him the following Saturday
in the vestibule of the Cafe Royal. From there we would go to his club. He said
his name was Christopher. Whether this was his Christian name or his surname I
didn't know.
When I arrived, he was sitting in the armchair to the right of the fireplace,
just inside the entrance, smoking a small cigar in a holder and reading that
day's Times. He was tall, more than six feet, slim and aged about fifty.
Everything about him spoke of affluence, except his plain National Health
Service glasses. We went to his club, which he pledged me not to name as it
could be used to identify him. It turned out that Christopher was one of his
three Christian names and that he was a very senior Civil Servant in Whitehall.
He had contacted me, he said, not as a result of seeing the New Statesman
advertisement - although he had seen it when it appeared - but at the request of
my cautious Christian Judge. He asked me what I wanted to know. I said I took it
that he was a Freemason. He nodded and took some papers out of his slimline
briefcase. He wanted me to be in no doubt as to his bona fides.
After examining the papers I told him I was interested to know what a person
might have to fear from a group of influential Freemasons if circumstances made
him, for instance, a threat to them in the business world; or if he discovered
they were using Masonry for corrupt purposes; or had fallen a victim of their
misuse of Freemasonry and would not heed warnings not to oppose them.
'It is not difficult to ruin a man,' he said. 'And I will tell you how it is
done time and again. There are more than half a million brethren under the
jurisdiction of Grand Lodge.
Standards have been falling for twenty or thirty years. It is too easy to enter
the Craft, so many men of dubious morals have joined. The secrecy and power
attract such people, and when they come the decent leave. The numbers of people
who would never have been considered for membership in the fifties are getting
larger all the time. If only five per cent of Freemasons use - abuse - the Craft
for selfish or corrupt ends it means there are 25,000 of them. The figure is
much closer to twelve or thirteen per cent now.'
It transpired that Christopher was one of a small and unpopular group within
Masonry who some time in the early seventies had decided that either they had to
get out of the Brotherhood or they had to do something 'to stop the rot' which
the blinkered officers of Great Queen Street refused to admit was there. His
reason for talking to me was to assure me that the Brotherhood was an
essentially good body of men devoted to all that was best in the British social
system and which promoted brotherly love and contributed to the wellbeing of the
country and to the relief of suffering. He wanted this put firmly across to the
public, and his group wanted pressure brought to bear on those in positions of
responsibility within the Brotherhood to put Freemasonry's house in order - to
institute proper policing, to close down Lodges used for shady dealings and to
root out corrupt brethren and expel them. The group - it had no name - also
wanted the whole business of masonic secrecy looked into by Grand Lodge, most of
them believing that secrecy was more harmful than helpful to Masonry.
Christopher explained that Masonry's nationwide organization of men from most
walks of life provided one of the most efficient private intelligence networks
imaginable. Private information on anybody in the country could normally be
accessed very rapidly through endless permutations of masonic contacts - police,
magistrates, solicitors, bank managers, Post Office staff ('very useful in
supplying copies of a man's mail'), doctors, government employee bosses of firms
and nationalized industries etc., etc. dossier of personal data could be built
up on anybody very quickly. When the major facts of an individual's life were
known, areas of vulnerability would become apparent. Perhaps he is in financial
difficulties; perhaps he has some social vice - if married he might 'retain a
mistress' or have proclivity for visiting prostitutes; perhaps there is
something in his past he wishes keep buried, some guilty secret, a criminal
offence (easily obtainable through Freemason police of doubtful virtue), or
other blemish on his character: all these and more could be discovered via the
wide-ranging masons network of 600,000 contacts, a great many of whom were
disposed to do favours for one another because that had been their prime motive
for joining. Even decent Masons could often be 'conned' into providing
information on the basis that 'Brother Smith needs this to help the person
involved'. The adversary would even sometimes be described as a fellow Mason to
the Brother from whom information was sought perhaps someone with access to his
bank manager or employer. The 'good' Mason would not go to the lengths of
checking with Freemasons Hall whether or not this was so. The 'target' was
presented as a Brother in distress by a fellow Mason, especially a fellow Lodge
member, that would be enough for any upright member of the Craft.
[I discovered from other sources that this system has been long established
within Masonry for the 'legitimate' purpose of bringing succour to a distressed
Brother Mason or to the family of a departed Mason. It is common for details of
a Freemason's debts, for instance, to be passed to his Lodge by his masonic bank
manager. This 'invasion of privacy' is for no more sinister reason than for his
brethren to club together and pay off his debts. This occurs most often after
the death of a Mason, but by no means always. And this, apparently, is just one
example of the many methods by which Freemasons obtain information about each
other for genuine purposes.]
Sometimes this information gathering process - often involving a long chain of
masonic contacts all over the country and possibly abroad - would be
unnecessary. Enough would be known in advance about the adversary to initiate
any desired action against him.
I asked how this 'action' might be taken.
'Solicitors are very good at it,' said Christopher. 'Get your man involved in
something legal - it need not be serious - and you have him.' Solicitors, I was
told, are 'past masters' at causing endless delays, generating useless
paperwork, ignoring instructions, running up immense bills, misleading clients
into taking decisions damaging to themselves.
Masonic police can harass, arrest on false charges, and plant evidence. 'A
businessman in a small community or person in public office arrested for dealing
in child pornography, for indecent exposure, or for trafficking in drugs is at
the end of the line,' said Christopher. 'He will never work again. Some people
have committed suicide after experiences of that kind.'
Masons can bring about the situation where credit companies and banks withdraw
credit facilities from individual clients and tradesmen, said my informant. Bank
can foreclose. People who rely on the telephone for their work can be cut off
for long periods. Masonic employees of local authorities can arrange for a
person's drains to be inspected and extensive damage to be reported, thus
burdening the person with huge repair bills; workmen carrying out the job can
'find' - In reality cause - further damage. Again with regard to legal matters,
a fair hearing is hard to get when a man in ordinary circumstances is in
financial difficulties. If he is trying to fight a group of unprincipled
Freemasons skilled in using the 'network' it will be impossible because masonic
Department of Health and Social Security and Law Society officials (see pp
189-90) can delay applications for Legal Aid endlessly.
'Employers, if they are Freemasons or not, can be given private information
about a man who has made himself an enemy of Masonry. At worst he will be
dismissed (if the information is true) or consistently passed over for
promotion.'
Christopher added, 'Masonic doctors can also be used. But for some reason
doctors seem to be the least corruptible men. There are only two occurrences of
false medical certificates issued by company doctors to ruin the chances of in
individual getting a particular job which I know about. It's not a problem that
need greatly worry us like the rest.'
He continued for about half an hour to list examples of the ways in which
corrupt members of the Brotherhood could defeat opposition, repeating every few
minutes that these kinds of circumstances involved a minority of the brethren
and that most would be utterly appalled at even the suggestion that such things
were happening, let alone countenance them. ' That they were happening at all
reflected the deterioration of the Craft inasmuch as its entry requirements were
no longer stringent enough. Those in power in Freemasons Hall knew something of
what went on, but they felt defeated by it and preferred to look the other way
rather than take steps to eradicate it. If Christopher and his group failed to
force the issue into the open, he said, the organization would become so morally
polluted that it would simply cease to exist. But he was not solely concerned
with the Brotherhood. It was the victims of those who used Masonry as a source
of personal power who had to be helped as well.
'Only the fighters have any hope of beating the system once it's at work against
them,' he told me. 'Most people, fighters or not, are beaten in the end, though.
It's . . . you see, I ... you finish up not knowing who you can trust. You can
get no help because your story sounds so paranoid that you are thought a crank,
one of those nuts who think the whole world is a conspiracy against them. It is
a strange phenomenon. By setting up a situation that most people will think of
as fantasy, these people can poison every part of a person's life. If they give
in they go under. If they don't give in It's only putting off the day because if
they fight, so much unhappiness will be brought to the people around them that
there will likely come a time when even their families turn against them out of
desperation. When that happens and they are without friends wherever they look,
they become easy meat. The newspapers will not touch them'.
'There is no defence against an evil which only the victims and the perpetrators
know exists.'
Information For Candidates
(from The Universal Book of Craft Masonry)
Appendix One
Freemasonry consists of a body of men banded together to preserve the
secrets, customs and ceremonials handed down to them, from time immemorial, and
for the purpose of mutual intellectual, social and moral improvement. They also
endeavour to cultivate and exhibit brotherly love, relief and truth, not only to
one another, but to the world at large.
Freemasonry offers no pecuniary advantages whatever, neither does there exist
any obligation nor implied understanding binding one Mason to deal with another,
nor to support him in any way in the ordinary business relations of life.
Freemasonry teaches us to remember our common origin; it also distinctly enjoins
us to respect all social distinctions, so that while some must rule, others must
obey and cheerfully accept their inferior positions.
Freemasonry has certain charities, but it is not in any sense whatever a benefit
society, nor is it based on any calculations which would render this possible.
The charities are solely for those who having been in good circumstances have
been overtaken by misfortune or adversity, and they are quite insufficient to
meet even these demands now made upon them.
Freemasonry distinctly teaches that a man's first duty is to himself, his wife,
his family and his connections, and no one should join the Order who cannot well
afford to pay the initiation fees and subscriptions to his Lodge as well as to
the Masonic charities, and this without detriment in any way to his comfort, or
to that of those who have any claim upon his support.
Freemasonry recognises no distinctions of religion, but none should attempt to
enter who have no religious belief, as faith in a Deity must be expressed before
any can be initiated, and prayers to Him form a frequent part of the ritual.
Freemasonry, therefore, demands that everyone, before offering himself as a
candidate, should be well assured in his own mind:
1. That he sincerely desires the intellectual and moral improvement of himself
and his fellow creatures, and that he is willing to devote part of his time,
means and efforts to the promotion of brotherly love, relief and trust.
2. That he seeks no commercial, social nor pecuniary advantages.
3. That he is able to afford the necessary expenditure without injury to himself
or connections.
4. That he is willing to enter into solemn obligations in the sight of his God.
The Officers of the Lodge
Appendix Two
Each Lodge elects the following officers every year:
Worshipful Master Chairman of the Lodge.
Immediate Past Master Last year's Worshipful Master.
Senior Warden Personal officer of WM; next year's WM in most lodges.
Junior Warden Personal officer of WM and next in seniority.
Chaplain The officer who conducts prayers. Can be a man of any profession
in the outside world, not necessarily a clergyman.
Treasurer The senior officer in charge of the Lodge funds.
Secretary
Director of Ceremonies In charge of the ritual element of Lodge business.
Senior Deacon The Deacons - with their wands - play an important part in
Lodge ritual, including acting the role of messengers.
Junior Deacon
Charity Steward. Officer in charge of the Lodge's donations to charity.
Almoner Officer in charge of collecting and spending the Lodge's
benevolent funds.
Assistant Director of Ceremonies Self-explanatory.
Inner Guard Officer who guards the door of the Lodge on the inside and
ensures that only Freemasons enter.
Tyler The outer guard who stands outside the Lodge door with a dagger as
the first line of defence against non-Masons trying to enter.
APPENDIX THREE
Initiation to the First Degree up to the end of the
Obligation
The Tyler prepares the Candidate in a room outside the Lodge room where he is
to be initiated by divesting him of all metal articles. The Candidate removes
his outer clothing until he stands ' in socks, his left shoe, trousers and shirt
only. His shirt is unbuttoned to reveal his left breast, his right sleeve is
rolled up to reveal the elbow, his left trouser leg is rolled up above the knee
and a slipper is placed on his unshod foot. A hangman's noose is then placed
around his neck, the end of the rope hanging down behind him. He is blindfolded.
He is then led by the Tyler to the door of the Lodge and the Tyler knocks.
The Inner Guard, moving with the prescribed step and making the First Degree
sign, says, 'Brother junior Warden, there is a report.' After several ritual
responses, the Inner Guard opens the door and asks the Tyler, 'Whom have you
there?'
'Mr John Smith, a poor Candidate in a state of darkness,' says the Tyler, 'who
has been well and worthily recommended, regularly proposed and approved in open
Lodge, and now comes of his own free will and accord, properly prepared, humbly
soliciting to be admitted to the mysteries and privileges of Freemasonry.'
There follow several repetitions exchanges, the Inner Guard places the point of
a dagger to the Candidate's left breast. He is asked, 'Do you feel anything?
'Yes.'
The Inner Guard raises the dagger in the air, and the still blindfolded
Candidate is led by the right hand by the junior Deacon to the kneeling-stool
before the Worshipful Master, who then addresses the Candidate for the first
time.
'Mr John Smith, as no person can be made a Mason unless he is free and of mature
age, I demand of you, are you a free man and of the full age of twenty-one
years?' 'I am.'
'Thus assured, I will thank you to kneel, while the blessing of Heaven is
invoked on our proceedings.'
The Candidate kneels. The Brethren move in the prescribed manner, the Lodge
Deacons crossing their wands above the Candidate's head, while the Worshipful
Master or the Chaplain prays aloud, 'Vouchsafe Thine aid, Almighty Father and
Supreme Governor of the Universe, to our present convention and grant that this
Candidate for Freemasonry may so dedicate and devote his life to Thy service, as
to become a true and faithful Brother among us. Endue him with a competency of
Thy Divine Wisdom, so that, assisted by the secrets of our masonic art, he may
be the better enabled to unfold the beauties of true Godliness, to the honour
and glory of Thy Holy Name.'
The Immediate Past Master says or sings, 'So mote it be.'
'Mr Smith,' continues the Worshipful Master, 'in all cases of difficulty and
danger, in whom do you put your trust?', and the Candidate replies, 'In God.'
'Right glad I am to find your faith so well founded. Relying on such sure
support you may safely rise and follow your leader with a firm but humble
confidence, for where the name of God is invoked we trust no danger can ensue.
The Candidate rises to his feet with the help of the Deacons. The Worshipful
Master and the Brethren sit. The Worshipful Master then gives a single knock
with his gavel. 'The Brethren from the north, east, south and west will take
notice that Mr John Smith is about to pass in view before them, to show that he
is the Candidate properly prepared, and a fit and proper person to be made a
Mason,' says the Master.
There then follows various ritual motions and the Candidate is led in a
procession around the Lodge. Arriving at the place where the junior Warden
stands, the junior Deacon takes the Candidate's right hand and taps the junior
Warden's right shoulder with it three times. The junior Warden asks, 'Whom have
you there?' 'Mr John Smith,' replies the junior Deacon, 'A poor Candidate in a
state of darkness, who has been well and worthily recommended, regularly
proposed and approved in open Lodge, and now comes of his own free will and
accord, properly prepared, humbly soliciting to be admitted to the mysteries and
privileges of Freemasonry.' 'How does he hope to obtain those privileges?'
'By the help of God, being free and of good report.'
The Junior Warden then takes the Candidate's right hand, and says to him,'Enter,
free and of good report,' and he is led to the Senior Warden, before whom a
similar exchange takes place. The Senior Warden moves to the Worshipful Master.
'Worshipful Master,' he says, making the appropriate sign, 'I present to you Mr
John Smith, a Candidate properly prepared to be made a Mason.'
'Brother Senior Warden,' replies the Worshipful Master, 'your presentation shall
be attended to, for which purpose I shall address a few questions to the
Candidate, which I trust he will answer with candour.' He turns to the
Candidate. 'Do you seriously declare on your honour that, unbiased by the
improper soficitation of friends against your own inclination, and uninfluenced
by mercenary or other unworthy motive, you freely and voluntarily offer yourself
a Candidate for the mysteries and privileges of Freemasonry?'
'I do.'
'Do you likewise pledge yourself that you are prompted to solicit those
privileges by a favourable opinion preconceived of the Institution, a genuine
desire of knowledge, and a sincere wish to render yourself more extensively
serviceable to your fellow creatures?'
'I do.'
'Do you further seriously declare on your honour that, avoiding fear on the one
hand and rashness on the other, you wl ill steadily persevere through the
ceremony of your initiation, and if once admitted you will afterwards act and
abide by the ancient usages and established customs of the order?'
'I do.'
'Brother Senior Warden, you will direct the junior Deacon to instruct the
Candidate to advance to the pedestal in due form.'
'Brother Junior Deacon, it is the Worshipful Master's command that you instruct
the Candidate to advance to the pedestal in due form.'
The Junior Deacon complies, leading the Candidate to the pedestal and
instructing him to stand with his heels together and his feet at right angles,
the left foot facing east and the right foot south. He continues: 'Take a short
pace with your left foot, bringing the heels together in the form of a square.
Take another, a little longer, heel to heel as before. Another still longer,
heels together as before.'
The Candidate is now standing before the pedestal, with the junior Deacon to his
right and the Senior Deacon to his left.
'It is my duty to inform you,' says the 'Worshipful Master, 'that Masonry is
free, and requires a perfect freedom of inclination in every Candidate for its
mysteries. It is founded on the purest principles of piety and virtue. It
possesses great and invaluable privileges. And in order to secure those
privileges to worthy men, and we trust to worthy men alone, vows of fidelity are
required. But let me assure you that in those vows there is nothing incompatible
with your civil, moral or religious duties. Are you therefore willing to take a
Solemn Obligation, founded on the principles I have stated, to keep inviolate
the secrets and mysteries of the order?'
'I am.'
'Then you will kneel on your left knee, your right foot formed in a square, give
me your right hand which I place on the Volume of the Sacred Law, while your
left will be employed in supporting these compasses, one point presented to your
naked left breast.'
This done, the Candidate is then made to repeat the Obligation after the
Worshipful Master, 'I, John Smith, in the presence of the Great Architect of the
Universe, and of this worthy, worshipful, and warranted Lodge of Free and
Accepted Masons, regularly assembled and properly dedicated, of my own free will
and accord, do hereby (WM touches Candidate's right band with his left band) and
hereon (WM touches the Bible with his left band) sincerely and solemnly promise
and swear, that I will always hele, conceal and never reveal any part or parts,
point or points of the secrets or mysteries of or belonging to Free and Accepted
Masons in Masonry, which may heretofore have been known by me, or shall now or
at any future period he communicated to me, unless it be to a true and lawful
Brother or Brothers, and not even to him or them, until after due trial, strict
examination, or sure information from a well-known Brother, that he or they are
worthy of that confidence, or in the body of a just, perfect, and regular Lodge
of Ancient Freemasons. I further solemnly promise that I will not write those
secrets, indite, carve, mark, engrave or otherwise them delineate, or cause or
suffer it to be so done by others, if in my power to prevent it, on anything
movable or immovable, under the canopy of Heaven, whereby or whereon any letter,
character or figure, or the least trace of a letter, character or figure, may
become legible, or intelligible to myself or anyone in the world, so that our
secret arts and hidden mysteries may improperly become known through my
unworthiness. These several points I solemnly swear to observe, without evasion,
equivocation, or mental reservation of any kind, under no less a penalty, on the
violation of any of them, than that of having my throat cut across, my tongue
tom out by the root, and buried in the sand of the sea at low water mark, or a
cable9s length from the shore, where the tide regularly ebbs and flows twice in
twenty-four hours, or the more effective punishment of being branded as a
wilfully perjured individual, void of all moral worth, and totally unfit to be
received into this worshipful Lodge, or any other warranted Lodge or society of
men, who prize honour and virtue above the external advantages of rank and
fortune. So help me, God, and keep me steadfast in this my Great and Solemn
Obligation of an Entered Apprentice Freemason.
One of the most important reference points for finding out whether or not an
individual is a freemason is the 'Masonic Yearbook' - see notes
and queries below
BEHA, Ernest, A Comprehensive Dictionary of Freemasonry (Arco Publications,
1962).
BOX, Hubert S., The Nature of Freemasonry (Augustine Press, 1952)
CAHILL, E., Freemasonry and the Anti-Christian Movement (Gill and Son, Dublin,
1952).
CARLILE, Richard, Manual of Freemasonry (Wm Reeves,
London, 1845).
CARR, Harry, The Freemason at Work (Lewis Masonic, 1976).
COVEY-CRUMP, Rev, The Hiramic Tradition, (London,1937).
COX, Barry, SHIRLEY , John and SHORT, Martin, The Fall of Scotland Yard
(Penguin, 1977).
DEWAR, james, The Unlocked Secret (William Kimber, 1966).
FITZWALTER, Raymond and TAYLOR, David, Web of Corruption (Granada, 1981)
GOULD, R. F., History of Freemasonry (Caxton, 1951).
HANNAH, Walton, Darkness Visible (Augustine Press,1952); Christian by Degrees
(Britons Publishing Co 1954).
JONES, Bernard E., Freemasons' Book of the Royal Arch (Harrap, 1957);
Freemasons's Guide and Compendium (Harrap, 1950).
'JUBELUM', Freemasonry and the Church of England Reconciled (Britons Publishing
Co 1951).
KNIGHT, Stephen, Jack the Ripper.. The Final Solution (Harrap, 1976).
LAWRENCE, Rev John, Freemasonry - A Way of Salvation? (Grove Books, 1982).
LAWRENCE, Rev John T., Masonicjurispradence (A. Lewis,1923).
LENNHOFF, Eugen, The Freemasons (A. Lewis, 1934).
LEPPER, J. Herron, The Traditioners (Ars Quatuor Coronatorum, vol 56, Quatuor
Coronati Lodge, no 2076).
LEO XIII, POPE, Humanum Genus, 1884 (Britons Publishing Co, 1952).
MACKENZIE, Norman (Editor), Secret Societies (Aldus, 1967).
MACKEY, Albert G., Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry (3 vols) (Macoy Publishing and
Supply Co, Richmond, Virginia, 1946).
MORGAN, William, Freemasonry Exposed (Glasgow,1836).
NEWTON, Joseph Fort, The Builders.. A Story and Study of Freemasonry (Hogg,
1917; Allen and Unwin, 1918).
PICK, Fred L. and KNIGHT, G. Norman, The Pocket History of Freemasonry
(Frederick Muller, 1953).
PINCHER, Chapman, Tbei'r Trade is Treachery (Sidgwick and jackson, 1981).
RAINSBURY, Rev A. W., Freemasonry - of God or the Devil? (substance of a sermon
preached in Emmanuel Church, South Croydon, 1959).
RUMBLE, Dr L., Catholics and Freemasonry (Catholic Truth Society pamphlet).
THURSTON, H., Freemasonry (CTS pamphlet).
'VINDEX', Light Invisible, A Freemason's Answer to Darkness Visible (Britons
Publishing Co, 1952).
VOORHISS. H. V. B., Factsfor Freemasons (Macoy Publishing Co, 1951, revised
1979).
WHALEN, William j., Christianity and American Freemasonry (Bruce Publishing Co,
Milwaukee, 1958).
MASONIC PERIODICALS
Freemasons' Magazine and Masonic Mirror
Freemasons' Montbly Remembrancer
Freemasons' Quarterly Review
Masonic Square
CONSTITUTIONS of the Antient Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons under
the United Grand Lodge of England (UGL, London, 1917).
All the preceding texts quoted from: Knight, Stephen, The Brotherhood, The
Secret World Of The Freemasons, 1983-, ISBN 0 586 05983 0 - currently out of
print.
Martin Short's book: 'Inside The Brotherhood'
'There is no reason why Masonry should clash with council business. But I
can't tell you anything about it.'
Inside the Brotherhood has its origins in the pioneering work of
Stephen Knight who died [of cancer of the brain] in July 1985 aged thirty-three,
just eighteen months after the publication of his bestselling, controversial and
much-disputed exposé of Freemasonry, The Brotherhood.
Had he lived, Stephen would have written his own sequel. Instead I stepped,
almost literally, into a dead man's shoes. I tracked down many of his sources
and read hundreds of letters sent in response to his book but which he never
pursued because of illness. More than three years after his death, fanmail still
pours in for him from all over the world.
Tell us you're a mason! p.408
Typically futile was the 1985 resolution by the London Borough of Enfield
that all councillors should declare membership of societies such as the Masons.
Two years later the Enfield Gazette discovered only twenty out of
twenty-eight Labour councillors had filled in the confidential form, just one
admitting he was 'on the square'. Of thirty-eight Tories only fourteen complied,
none of whom was a Mason. Yet the newspaper claimed at least ten Tory
councillors were in the Craft. Labour councillors said they suspected Enfield
was run by Masons but one Tory who publicly admitted he was a member retorted:
'There is no reason why Masonry should clash with council business. But I can't
tell you anything about it.'
The family come second, p.599
Masons are reluctant to unleash the full force of law against an offending
brother. Their dilemma is clear from a letter which I received from the son of
the late Sir George Evetts, Master of Ewell Lodge (no.1851) some fifty years
ago.
In 1932 I persuaded my father to buy me a motor-cycle. He quibbled for days
as to paying £35 instead of £30 which he considered ample, and kept on
lecturing me on 'the value of money'. Eventually he gave in and I thanked him.
The sequel came in 1941 when I was serving as an officer in the RNVR [Royal Navy
Volunteer Reserve].
One Saturday afternoon Father was driving with Mother to Croydon for a very
important Lodge meeting. On the outskirts of the town the bombs began to fall
and she begged him to abandon the trip. He refused and stated the meeting was
very important and he must attend. When I came home on leave in
1942 Mother told me of this incident and said,
'The blessed Masons are more important than any of us. I will now tell you that
ten years ago, three weeks after father argued about an extra £5 for your
motor-bike, the telephone rang. It was the master of the Lodge telling Father
that the Treasurer had left his wife and taken the Lodge's funds of £1,300 -
plus a lady friend! Father offered between £600 and £800 as his share towards
making up the loss. I told him he should not give his hard-earned money to
protect a rogue. His reply was to sulk in his study and say, "You do not
understand. As a well-to-do brother, I am honour-bound to replace so much, so
that we do not prosecute."'
Preceding extracts from: Short, Martin, Inside The Brotherhood, Further
Secrets Of The Freemasons, Harper Collins, Grafton, 1989-, ISBN 0 586 07065 6 -
currently out of print
Some pro and anti masonic chit-chat
From: Lloyd MacKenzie Parker - beauseant@arms-armor.com
As my Masonic Brother Voltaire once said: " I don't agree with a single
word you say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it!" I am an
American Freemason, but one whom has visited a number of my English Brethren
(some of whom are relatives).
From reading your various pages, it appears to me that you write as an
intelligent person, and one who has a passionate desire to help others. How
ironic it is then that you have the stance against Freemasonry that you do. For
if you really understood the tenets of Freemasonry, then you would probably
avoid the such tirades against the fraternity. I think this stems from ignorance
on your part. I mean this not as a slight, but as a truth. I consider myself a
fairly intelligent person, but the more I learn proves to me just how ignorant I
myself am. I would only ask that you do some more reading and - Question,
question, question, everything that you read. Don't allow personal biases to
influence your judgement. Gather all the facts- (in this case some-PRO with the
con,) assess these and then come to a decided stance. I have both of Mr.
Knight's books, and other anti-Masonic literature in my library. I feel obliged
to hear what others say, and seek to refute it with fact (whenever possible).
This is quite easy to do with Mr.Knight's works. I recommend to you 'BORN IN
BLOOD' by John Robinson, (an elderly scholar who was not a Mason, but later
became one, only two years before his death). He wrote on the origins of
Freemasonry and their ties to the Knights Templar (another much maligned group).
Mr. Robinson has an entire section in his book where he discusses "The
Brotherhood," et al, and refutes it easily ...fact by fact.
Admittedly American Freemasonry differs from the English, but this is more in
the social aspects than common beliefs and tradition. We American Masons find it
anathema to recruit candidates. One must ask to join our ranks, we don't pick
and choose. This policy is firmly adhered to, and is actually detrimental in
today's society (where few know anything of our fraternity. Recruitment is
relatively commonplace in England, where I have found such instances as a
cousin, who is a constable for Devon-Cornwall Police, being told that he needed
to join if he expected to advance. This would be unheard of in America. Without
lambasting my English Brothers, I will say that, again, our beliefs and
traditions, at least, are still one and the same.
As Masons our basic tenets are set in 'Friendship, Truth and Brotherly
Love." We believe that all people are created by the Deity as equals.
Material wealth, social status, etc. is taught to be unimportant. What counts is
a man's heart; that he live uprightly (in whatever way he chooses) and believes
in the Deity. This applies to women and children as well for in America we have
a Masonic branch for them also (Eastern Star, Job's Daughters, and DeMolay).
When I speak of the Deity, I refer to one omnipotent, benevolent, Supreme
Creator. We Masons are composed of Sikhs, Hindus, Christians, Muslims,
Buddhists, etc. All one must do is profess faith in a benevolent, Supreme Being.
Thusly; a tenet of Masonry is tolerance. As long as one strives to live
uprightly, and believes in a benevolent Supreme Being one is to choose his own
path. Discussion of religion or politics is absolutely forbidden in Lodge, as
these can be divisive (as one might push his beliefs or views on others-
resulting in disharmony).
I apologize if I appear to be proselytizing, but I wanted to make this all
clear to you before proceeding into my next rant. Now that I've covered the
ideals of Freemasonry, I will agree that not all is a bed or roses. As
human-beings we are all fallible creatures, no less in Freemasonry. There are
those who use it to gain status, and advantage, but those who do so violate the
very oath taken upon their admission- that they seek enlightenment, and support
the tenets of the fraternity, and swear that they are not joining for any
mercenary reasons.
Up until only a decade or so ago, much of American Masonry, had a sad
tradition of working to exclude people based on skin color and ethnicity. In the
Black community, this resulted in Blacks forming their own branch of Freemasonry
called "Prince Hall Masonry." Many of us, especially we younger
Brethren, have worked to put an end to this anti-Masonic evil within our own
fraternity. I can only speak for California, but as such an ethnically diverse
state, we had (and really still have) only had a sprinkling of Blacks, Jews,
Sikhs, etc. in our overall ranks. We in California, were some of the first to
openly recognize Prince Hall Masons, and now visit one another's Lodges. In
doing this, I and all California Masons, were technically seen as having
'violated the rules,' by accepting 'clandestine/false Masons' and could have be
ostracized by Lodges in other States and countries. This included England- who
actually issued an edict stating this! Our goal is to now work to make our
fraternity what it is truly meant to be- a place for ALL men.
Enough, thank you for taking the time to hear me out.
Peace- Lloyd MacKenzie Parker
Tony replies..... - tony@gaia.org
Dear Lloyd
Thanks for taking the time to write... Sounds like your objections to racial
discrimination will have an effect. I think it's trully couragoeus to break with
tradition backing principles of basic human respect.
Let me make my objection to masonry clear. It is the very lack of free speech
(which you celebrate above) and culture of secrecy and deception of the lower
degrees by the highter degrees that warns me off. Its a bit like the problem we
have with government... you can be governed by its rules without the
transparency that you need to say you really believe in somthing. In the case of
govt. none of us choose to put ourselves under government yet we're all subject
to its laws. I am an idealist I admit... but I believe the human race can only
live in harmony (without JFK assassinations and Gulf Wars waged by corporations
and banks for oil) if we do it openly and honestly. Masonry is the very
antithesis of openness! Who knows 33rd degree masons well enough to know how
deeply good they are? Do they give you the creeps when you meet them? All these
questions I want answers to AND my Christian faith precludes me worshipping any
other than Jesus Christ and Yahweh the God of the Old Testament.
I also abhor all forms of priviledge. These top masons might be a fine
old dudes if billions of people weren't starving hungry!
'Nuff said... thanks for your compliments about my intelligence... I am sorry
to tell you my IQ is abnormally low. Probably because I couldn't be bothered
with the stupid test!
Tony Gosling
Notes and Queries
Exposure of masonic councillors
From The Guardian Newspaper 17-12-97 N&Q
website
How could I find out which members of my local council are freemasons?
The first route is to obtain a copy of the Masonic Yearbook (available for £12,
inc p&p, from Freemasons Hall, Great Queen Street, London WC2B 5AZ). This is
an encyclopaedia of the masonic fraternity's nationwide structure and contains a
who's who of hundreds of leading freemasons. Check this list as a starting
point.
Each area also has a listing of all its masonic lodges and chapters, indeed, the
yearbook reveals that, for the questioner's address, a borough of Greenwich
Lodge - number 2332 - was founded in 1888. It undoubtably serves as a lodge for
both masonic councillors and council officers in Greenwich. The masonic yearbook
reveals that this lodge holds its annual inaugural meeting at Freemason's Hall
in Covent Garden on the third Saturday each December - this year Saturday 20th.
Simply turn up on the day and watch your local masonic councillors arrive for
the event!
Alternatively, a foolproof method of identifying masonic councillors is to ask a
friendly non-mason councillor to table a motion at the next full council meeting
proposing that the council should set up its own voluntary register of
freemasons. Whether or not the motion is carried, under local government
regulations, all councillors who are freemasons will have to declare an interest
before the matter is debated, and thus reveal their status. David Northmore
London WC2
When I was a Labour councillor in Greenwich in the eighties, we adopted a
policy of councillors declaring membership of masonic lodges and other
associations in the register of members' interests. As a Greenwich resident, the
questioner should contact the Town Hall and ask about relevant entries. This
move was part of a wider debate about masonic influence, including their use of
community buildings.
During a discussion on this issue, a senior officer sought to explain that he
believed the "modern" masonic movement was open to all. A formidable
Tory lady then asked: "I assume you mean all men?" The hapless officer
said he understood there were now ladies' lodges. In a comment that managed to
offend both sides of the argument, a junior officer then asked if they were
called the masonettes. Ron Robinson Greenwich, London SE10
Notes and Queries appears in The Guardian newspaper and has its
own website.
The Deadly
Deception: Freemasonry Exposed - Jim Shaw & Tom McKenney - Jim
Shaw was one of the top leaders of Freemasonry: 33rd Degree Mason, Knight
Commander of the Court of Honor, Past Worshipful Master-Blue Lodge, Past Master
of all Scottish Rite bodies, when he became a Christian and left. He exposes
Freemasonry as he experienced it. $9.95+ $4.00 S&H 207 pp. from: http://www.thecomingbattle.com/more%20books3.html
Scottish rite http://www.srmason-sj.org/index.html
Corruption in the west
country http://www.rose-associates.demon.co.uk
'The Wigged Mafia' - masonic
malpractice in the judiciary http://www.citizenbeware.com/MW1.html
For the following articles (complete versions you might have to pay for) links
are immediately below.
UNITED KINGDOM: The Freemasons and Police
Have the British police fallen under the sway of Freemasons? The boss of
Scotland Yard and officials at the Home Office say they are worried about the
Freemasons' influence over senior police officers. Several cases of corruption
are said to have been covered up at the bidding of the brotherhood.
At least one in seven male magistrates in the U.K. are members of the
Freemason brotherhood, according to a first official survey of the judiciary's
links with the secret organization. The survey was (...)
UNITED KINGDOM: FREEMASONS BEND TO PRESSURE
Police officers and local government officials figure largely among the 50
British Freemasons who have resigned from their lodges on claims their careers
would be damaged if they were publicly identified as members of "the
Craft," according to John Hamill, curator, librarian and spokesman for the
Un (...) [Total = 2199 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: FINGER-POINTING AT FREEMASONS
Gavin Purser, president of the United Grand Lodge of England's Board of
General Purposes, has reluctantly given the names of 16 Freemasons linked to a
number of controversial police investigations in the 1970s and 1980s to Chris
Mullin, chairman of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, after being thr (...)
[Total = 2169 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: THE PARLIAMENT WANTS NAMES OF FREEMASONS
Senior officials of the ruling council of British Freemasonry, the United
Grand Lodge of England (UGL) , face charges of contempt of parliament if they
fail to provide the Commons Select Committee on Home Affairs with the names of
163 members connected with police corruption and miscarriages of j (...)
[Total = 2373 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: FREEMASONS AND THE JUDICIARY
Britain's Association of Women Barristers (AWB) has recommended to the
Commons Home Affairs committee that members of the Freemason Brotherhood who are
appointed as judges should either resign their Masonic membership on the
occasion or at least declare it publicly. (...) [Total
= 1746 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: FREDERICK CRAWFORD
Prime minister John Major has personally appointed a Freemason, Frederick
Crawford, to the £80,000-per-year, part-time post as chairman of the new
Criminal Cases Review Authority (CCRA). The move came (...)
[Total = 1620 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: NEW WARNING ON MASON LINKS
The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) has drawn up national
guidelines warning police officers that membership of the Freemasons (or other
secretive and influential societies) could "compromise their integrity as
impartial upholders of the law. [Total = 1673 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: MASONIC SECRETS INTACT
Expectations that a House of Commons select committee on home affairs might
provide details of alleged Masonic penetration of the judiciary and the police
(IN 259) are "receding into the distance" because of a backlog of
business that the committee has to deal with, according to a Conservative membe (...)
[Total = 1888 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: ANOTHER POKE IN EYE FOR MASONS
London's Metropolitan Police commissioner, Paul Condon, has ordered that all
officers with links to the Freemason Brotherhood be ousted from Scotland Yard's
anti-corruption unit. The move came after a (...) [Total =
1640 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: FREEMASONS MAY BE PROBED
The House of Commons committee of all-party MP's headed by Lord Nolan will
shortly consider examining the role and influence of the Brotherhood of
Freemasons within the British establishment. The comm (...)
[Total = 1712 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: POLICE SUPPORT FREEMASON SECRECY
Following the first-ever debate of its kind, the Police Federation rejected a
motion by 429 votes to 391 to compel all officers belonging to the Freemason
Brotherhood or other secret societies to declare their membership publicly. [Total
= 1808 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: A PUBLIC LIST OF GOVERNMENT FREEMASONS?
Labour MP Chris Mullin's Secret Societies (Declaration) Bill is due for its
second reading on 29 January 1993. The bill would place most public servants,
including police, under a legal obligation to (...) [Total =
273 characters]
UNITED KINGDOM: JOHN SMITH
John Smith, Deputy Police Commissioner, Scotland Yard, is the strong favorite
to become the next Commissioner of the "Met", succeeding Sir Peter
Imbert, who is likely to resign in the autumn after a five year term. [Total
= 1477 characters]
Links to complete articles
Masonic symbols - an
insight http://www.reachouttrust.org/fremsym.htm
United Grand Lodge of Scotland
http://www.grandlodgescotland.com/
Do Freemasons
Worship Satan? http://www.cth.com.au/corp/despatch/worship.htm
Freemasonry's
Occult, Evil Empire Exposed http://www.execpc.com/~amerisub/chapt-04/chapt-04.html
Critical
of Freemasonry FAQ http://users.uniserve.com/~ttrevor/anti-masonry_faq.html
Freemasons, Secret
societies and the New world order http://www.unm.edu/~hrommel/cooperNWO.html
A masonic
Gallery http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Forum/9991/gallery.html
Acacia masonic exposee press
http://www.crocker.com/~acacia
More masonic links http://www.crocker.com/~acacia/jfklinks.html
The Dangers of
Freemasonry - of course it's harmless! http://www.sounddoctrine.com/ptimes/masonry.htm
Black sun
lodge, a bit weird http://ourworld.compuserve.com/blacksun/homepage.htm
The 'mystery' that is
freemasonry http://trojan.neta.com/~kottinge/m-main.html
Bamboozled by the
Masons in Dorset? http://www.mical-data.demon.co.uk/story1.htm
Good
masonic links site http://home.fireplug.net/~rshand/streams/masons/masons.html
Famous
masons http://www.balaams-ass.com/journal/warnings/masnfame.htm
Comparing masonry to the old
Russian communist party http://www.ostara.org/autor/mason.txt
More famous
masons http://www.bc-freemasonry.com/TextFiles/famous.html
For wider bibliography see extract from Stephen
Knight's book (above)
CD-ROM
(The Search For) Ancient Wisdom, Rea and Bob Connoly. Good grounding on the
origins of masonry and the Knights Templar, especially pp. 11, 63 etc..
U.S.A. published by Cambrix, Chatsworth CA. (818) 992 8484
U.K. available from Ramesis, Bradford, Yorks. (01274) 737376
Bad things, if
that's what you like then so be it
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