The 76th Consistory of the Society of Blue Friars was convened Friday at the Hyatt Regency in Crystal City, Virginia as part of Masonic Week. The Society of Blue Friars was founded in 1932 for the express purpose of recognizing outstanding Masonic authors throughout the world.
At the conclusion of last year's Consistory, Dr. S. Brent Morris, the longest-serving Grand Abbott in the Society's history, announced his retirement after 15 years, and named Arturo de Hoyos as his successor. Friday's gathering was the first under Grand Abbott De Hoyos.
His books include: Saint Edoüard: A 1748 Masonic Scottish Lodge During the French Enlightenment: The Spirit of Freemasonry; and The Book of Wisdom - all of which have been published in beautiful editions by the Scottish Rite Northern Masonic Jurisdiction.
All are painstakingly translated and heavily notated from long-hidden French manuscripts from the 1700-1800s that illuminate the lodges and lives of their members in this critical (and cataclysmic) period of growth, social turmoil, revolution, Empire, and transformation in France. His works go far beyond mere translations of archaic French-language lodge minutes and notes. He brings alive the Masons themselves who were members of these lodges by unearthing their lives, occupations, lodgings, and habits. These are not dry histories, they are personal ones. It is from this important period that the hautes grades were developed, which eventually crossed the Atlantic and became what we know as the Scottish Rite today.
All are painstakingly translated and heavily notated from long-hidden French manuscripts from the 1700-1800s that illuminate the lodges and lives of their members in this critical (and cataclysmic) period of growth, social turmoil, revolution, Empire, and transformation in France. His works go far beyond mere translations of archaic French-language lodge minutes and notes. He brings alive the Masons themselves who were members of these lodges by unearthing their lives, occupations, lodgings, and habits. These are not dry histories, they are personal ones. It is from this important period that the hautes grades were developed, which eventually crossed the Atlantic and became what we know as the Scottish Rite today.
Friar Oussayef was born in Sétif, Algeria and attended school in France, where he lived for many years. He holds an MA from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and an MS from the School of Public Communications at Boston University.
Kamel is a Past Master of William Parkman Lodge and Converse Lodge. He has been awarded the prestigious Henry Price and Joseph Warren medals for distinguished service to Freemasonry in Massachusetts. In the AASR, he is an Assistant Master of Ceremonies with the Massachusetts Consistory of the Valley of Boston.
This year's brochure listing all 110 Blue Friars, both living and deceased, can be seen below. Click images to enlarge.
Congratulations to Brother Kamel Oussayef for gaining such a unique honor. I thank him for providing rare,cultural,high quality Masonic reading material not easily found elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteMasonic authors selected to membership in the Society of Blue Friars, are those authors who have really distinguished themselves by their ability to help inform, inspire, teach, and even transform, the lives of their Brethren through their Masonic writings. Thanks, Brothers!
"The habit of reading is the only enjoyment in which there is no alloy; it lasts when all other pleasures fade."
By Brother Anthony Trollope.