"To preserve the reputation of the Fraternity unsullied must be your constant care."

BE A FREEMASON

Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2024

Hoosier Brother Speaking on Rubicon Podcast Tonight



by Christopher Hodapp

A young Indiana filmmaker joined the Masons at Broad Ripple Lodge 643 in Indianapolis, where he quickly became very active and was appointed to the Senior Steward's chair. Within a year of his degrees, he also signed on with Lodge Vitruvian 767, one of just a few 'Observant-Style' or 'Best Practices' Masonic lodges in Indiana. And he became Junior Steward at Indiana's Dwight L. Smith Lodge of Research U.D. where he similarly jumped in and began giving Masonic talks. 

He visits far and wide – often, too – frequently attending lodges out of state, and always in search of as much Masonic education as he can manage to scare up. His activities and enthusiasm for the fraternity haven't gone unnoticed by the Grand Lodge and its officers. Last year he received the Grand Lodge of Indiana's Rookie Award, a program designed to help Indiana Lodges recognize new Master Masons who become actively involved in their symbolic Lodge, and Freemasonry in general, during their first year in our fraternity.

No, this is not some self-serving, back-patting, fulsome autobiography chock full o' myself, even though his Masonic trajectory has been remarkably parallel to my own back in the pre-smartphone days of 1998-99. 

I'm speaking of Brother Jeremiah Beaver. And I'm proud to say he'll be presenting a program tonight on the Rubicon Masonic Society webcast, 21st Century Conversations on Freemasonry. Jeremiah's topic will be 'Notes From the Beehive: Doing the Work in an Indiana Best Practice Lodge.' 


I can't praise the Kentucky brethren at Rubicon lavishly enough for their quality programming, their increasingly famous Festive Boards, and the seriousness with which they take their Freemasonry. Rubicon hosts virtual Masonic education programs on the 4th Monday of each month, starting at 7 pm Eastern. These programs are open to Masons of all degrees, as well as non-Masons.

For the complete archived lineup of the 63 previous Rubicon programs, CLICK HERE.

To RSVP for tonight's talk by Brother Beaver, CLICK HERE.

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Arizona Anti-Mason Posts Videos of Degree Rituals Taken Surreptitiously


by Christopher Hodapp

Following the statement last week from the Vatican reaffirming the Church's longstanding prohibition of Masonic membership for Catholics, the usual platoon of online anti-Masonic wing-nuts came tumbling out onto the Intertubz to post and re-post all the usual anti-Masonic tropes and conspiracy allegations. Most are easy to ignore, or simply dispense with by citing factual information, if anyone wants to bother wasting that much time and breath. (I've got a whole book dedicated to telling the true facts about this fraternity - not that the antis care to believe it.) But one person in particular on X-formerly-Twitter has generated a lot of discussion among Masons themselves — not out of offense or anger or indignation, but out of sadness, more than anything else. 

A self-touted "traditional Catholic influencer", "undercover journalist" and "whistleblower" called Kyle Clifton has been gleefully circulating videos of private Masonic ceremonies he claimed to have shot with a hidden camera after having joined a local lodge. Images on his posts and other clues quickly pointed to his location as Arizona. 

Lodge tylers everywhere should be familiar with his face and background, in case he turns up in your neck of the woods. That's his profile picture, depicting him with the Arizona state flag, but looking for all the world like he's sporting a radiant, holy halo of sanctity (or more correctly, smug sanctimony). 

On his various social media pages he sports an 'America first' ball cap - perhaps he missed the details that America's first president and scores of other founding luminaries who created the Declaration of Independence and hashed out the Constitution were Freemasons. But more of his absurd phobias and errors anon.

On Tuesday this week the Grand Master of the Grand Lodge F&AM of Arizona, MW George Rusk, issued a statement concerning this incident and verifying the source as an Arizona Mason:
"One of our members has posted on social media videos of our ritual. This is a breach of trust and a violation of his obligation to the craft. He took an oath and could not keep it. The information he posted is not unknown to the internet; a simple search will find something similar. But his posting did expose him as someone who cannot be trusted more than it exposed our Fraternity.

"The Grand Lodge is investigating this incident and will act upon the results according to the Arizona Masonic Code and legal advice from Grand Counsel. I request that you refrain from spreading any rumors, but if you have direct information about the posting send it to the Grand Secretary.”




This may come as a shock to those breathless readers of InfoWars and other sites that have been celebrating Kyle's puerile little incident all week, but our Masonic rituals are scarcely a Big Secret. And that's been true for a very long time. But Masons value our privacy every bit as much as Kyle, his fellow RadCaths, the staff of InfoWars and its audience all do. 

Exposés of Masonic ritual have existed since about ten minutes after the organization of the premiere grand lodge in London in 1717. When Samuel Pritchard's Masonry Dissected was published in 1730, the printer couldn't keep it in stock, it sold so fast (likely more to Masons themselves than the general public, to be used for learning their degree work). When the Nazis goose-stepped their way into Paris and began identifying French Masons, they shot an anti-Masonic propaganda film that exposed the ritual of the Grand Orient de France. In the Internet age, videos of Masonic ritual – either photographed surreptitiously, or recreated by former Masons themselves – have been circulated before. And fully typed-out Masonic rituals themselves have been posted on the web since at least the 1980s. Masonic "secrecy" has never really been about hiding our initiatic rituals from the outside world, and the various attempts to embarrass us or somehow make us apoplectic over being "exposed" don't really give us fitful nights fretting about it.

There's a certain aspect of these incidents that's always been comical. On the one hand, many comments responding to Kyle's videos have been soaked with the usual allegations of soul-destroying spookiness, Devil-worship, Satanic symbols, along with a raft of offensively anti-Jewish rhetoric, claiming the rituals are anti-Christian blasphemies and that Masons are really just evil Jews or their willing henchmen in the whole "global domination" fantasy. 

Young-shaver-me-lad and "undercover journalist" Kyle alleged in his posts, "The masonic oath & penalties are sworn over, essentially a Jewish Talmud. The 3 lamps are illuminated to mock our Holy Trinity." Such accusers believe Masons to be all-powerful, world-controlling, bald-headed, cat-stroking super villains. On the other hand, the same commenters go on to say the whole thing is a bunch of silliness, giggling over a group of middle-class guys engaging in bad acting and spouting mumbo jumbo. Puffy flyover-country Protestants who secretly pretend to be Moloch-worshiping Old Testament Hebrew priests.

So what are we – malevolent, all-powerful evildoers, moronic dupes, or suburban backyard vaudevillians? I'm confused.

Of course, Kyle himself seemed more preoccupied with the colossal prank he was pulling than in actually paying any attention to the ritual and lectures he went through when he joined. If he actually looked at the book that he took his own obligation upon, I'll bet fifty quatloos and a groat that it was a King James Version of the complete Holy Bible, and not the "Jewish Talmud" (which would be a neat trick anyway, since the last complete Talmud I saw a couple of years back filled ten large hardback volumes and about two feet of bookshelf real estate – and Masonic altars aren't usually that big). Or perhaps he mis-typed and meant the Tenach, the Hebrew origin of the Old Testament. 

In any case, it appears that he never bothered to discover that his very own version of the Bible (presuming he actually owns one) also includes the Old Testament. A subsequent video he shot depicts a large family heirloom-type King James Bible on the lodge altar, customized as a gift for Freemasons with introductory pages explaining many biblical passages and unfamiliar archaic terms that appear in Masonic ritual. It's not any sort of bizarrely edited or abridged "Masonic Bible," which he would know if he had actually checked the full text and table of contents. But perhaps he's just unfamiliar with reading Biblical text. If he had, he'd know there's an awful lot it has to say about deceivers.

The one sure thing about two-faced people is you can't trust either one. By posting these videos, Kyle exposed far more about what sort of man he really is. He clearly lied from the moment he expressed a false interest in joining, knowing his church of choice prohibits Masonic membership. In most cases, a potential candidate asks a friend or co-worker known to be a Mason if he can join — so Kyle knowingly and wittingly lied to that friend. Every step he took was deliberately deceitful, and at multiple times in his degrees he was asked ifhe was willing to proceed or withdraw. He clearly believed his deceit was just fine because he was really in the service of righteousness. . . or something. 

In light of that, who in their right mind would ever trust him now? Who'd hire him as an employee, knowing that he lies on applications, can't be trusted to keep anything private just because he was asked to do so, and makes up his own version of situational ethics? What boss would have him? What friend can ever trust him? What spouse would ever believe him? 

The truth about Masonic secrecy ever since the very beginning of the fraternity is that it's about honor. In the end, everything civilized human beings do requires honor, because your word has got to be your bond. Civilization depends on it. If you say one thing but do the opposite, society will eventually get the message and turn its back on you. If you can't keep something as dumb and trivial as a handshake or a password a secret simply because someone asked you to, how can you be trusted in anything else you say or do?

Zealous people determined to tear down Freemasonry for their own religious purposes will never be convinced that quite literally millions of Masons from 1717 up to today would never voluntarily join – and stick with – anything that was evil, sacrilegious, nefarious, or remotely ‘satanic’. Among the millions of men who have become Freemasons over three centuries have been thousands of devout Christian clergymen, and possibly hundreds of Jewish rabbis, Muslim imams, and countless other priests and leaders from among the world’s major religions. To believe that those men in particular would have any desire to belong to an organization that openly or surreptitiously engages in activities that propagate the worship, glorification or veneration of Satan – or any other spiritually evil entity of any stripe – is a completely unhinged delusion. Masonic ritual encourages every man to study his own faith, to participate in his own religion's congregation, to consult the ancient texts deemed to be holy by his own religion to find his path to eternal salvation. That includes Kyle. Freemasonry is not a religion, nor are we a path to a glorious resurrection and afterlife. And we've never claimed to be.

This is a fictional, spooky movie, boys and girls - not a Masonic meeting.

The fraternity occasionally has attracted men who really are hunting the spooky-ooky dressing up in black robes, chanting backwards in badly conjugated schoolboy Latin, burning incense and sacrificing the big-breasted blonde virgin on the altar stuff they've seen in moldy old 60's Hammer horror films (usually led by Christopher Lee). If they actually get as far as going through the very real Masonic degree rituals, they're bitterly disappointed to find out that we really aren't raising the dead and worshipping some hoary old demiurge after all.

Once the dust settles, Kyle will doubtless be expeditiously expelled from the fraternity (if he hasn't already quit or been booted out by his lodge and the grand lodge). And, contrary to what his cheering "I've exposed the Masons!" audience might childishly believe, that will be the sum total of the "penalties" he will suffer. Because, as he was doubtless told during his degrees, those "bloody penalties" he was "threatened with" during the "Masonic blood oaths" are purely symbolic, and have been from the start of the fraternity. Actually, they were rooted in what began as disfiguring penalties in medieval Europe, which prevented a man's body from being buried in the consecrated ground of a churchyard. 

Catholic churchyards, I might add.

Friday, May 19, 2023

Rubicon Masonic Society's Ongoing Virtual Education Programs




by Christopher Hodapp

I've been woefully remiss in failing to promote the ongoing Masonic education video presentations posted by the fine brethren at Kentucky's Rubicon Masonic Society, in conjunction with Lexington Lodge 1 and the William O. Ware Lodge of Research. 
The May 22nd, 2023 program is "Operative Freemasonry: A Manual for Restoring Light and Vitality to the Fraternity" presented by Kirk White, the current Grand Junior Warden of the Grand Lodge of Vermont. To RSVP and gain access to this episode, CLICK HERE.

Rubicon hosts their virtual Masonic education programs on the 4th Monday of each month, starting promptly at 7 pm Eastern. Education is open to Masons of all degrees as well as non-Masons. Their monthly online presentations started during the COVID shutdowns and have continued ever since. They're up to 47 episodes so far, and are still going strong. 

If you've never heard of it before, the Rubicon Masonic Society is an invitation-only private group of Master Mason Freemasons located in Lexington, Kentucky. Their purpose is to establish a deeper understanding and connection with Freemasonry, its traditions and practices, and to further cement the brotherhood of its members and guests through conviviality and unity outside of the lodge. Their annual Festive Boards, held at Lexington's magnificent Spindletop Hall, have become legendary (this year's will be August 18th, as part of a special conference about the 'Classic Masonic Authors of the 20th Century' – CLICK HERE for details), and I heartily recommend attending one, or at least catching the video they shot demonstrating their special ways of running these events (see The Masonic Table on Amazon Prime).

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Dan Brown's 'The Lost Symbol' Streaming TV Series Premieres Sept. 16



by Christopher Hodapp

The second official trailer for the upcoming TV series, Dan Brown's The Lost Symbol has been released. Episode 1 premieres on Thursday, September 16th on NBC/Universal's Peacock streaming platform, and requires a subscription. New episodes will appear every Thursday.

The series is based on Brown's Masonic-themed 2009 thriller The Lost Symbol and stars Ashley Zukerman as Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon.


By the way, you may be balking at the notion of paying for a $4.99/month subscription to the Peacock streaming channel just to see this one lone series. I know cable TV cord cutting has been the rage for many years now. But, IF you still are among the shrinking audience who still pays for a cable TV package, AND if your cable provider is Comcast/Xfinity, they are currently offering a free year's subscription to the Peacock service.

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Midwest Conference on Masonic Education 2021 Presentations Online


by Christopher Hodapp


The Midwest Conference on Masonic Education didn't take place last year because of the COVID pandemic shutdowns. The 2021 event last weekend was originally to be held in Illinois, but out of an abundance of caution, organizers chose to make it a virtual conference.

Consequently, several presentations this year were made via video, and those programs are now posted online. 

They include:
  • Personalizing Freemasonry - Chad Kopenski
  • Truth - Spencer Hamaan
  • Facilitating Dialogue: Introduction to Guided Discussion - Chuck Dunning
  • Panel discussions
Also, a pair of papers from Richard Lacoursiere are online:
  • Whither Are You Traveling? 
  • Leaders Eat Last

The 2022 Conference will held April 29 - May 1, 2022 in Kansas City, Missouri.

Video presentations from previous years can be found on the MCME YouTube channel HERE.

Monday, November 30, 2020

Online Tour of the Detroit Masonic Temple




by Christopher Hodapp

If you've never had the chance to visit the world's largest Masonic building, Detroit's Masonic Temple, Brother Rob Moore, the docent, caretaker and all around good guy was interviewed for an online Youtube show called Powers Pow Wow. The result is a 90-minute, top to bottom video tour of this incredible architectural gem. 

Click the video above or follow the link HERE.

The Temple is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

Friday, May 08, 2020

Masonic Library & Museum of Indiana

by Christopher Hodapp


The enforced closure of all public facilities in the state during the COVID-19 pandemic gave me a little time to create a video teaser for the Masonic Library and Museum of Indiana

The April 2020 issue of Indianapolis Monthly magazine featured all of our capitol city’s great restaurants we can’t go visit until the restrictions are lifted. Such are the odd vicissitudes of magazine deadlines closing sometimes months in advance of actual publication.



The back page of the magazine always features an unusual artifact from around the City every month. April’s artifact was none other than the Masonic Library and Museum of Indiana’s unique folk art sculpture by nineteenth century Indiana Mason George S. Frank. It is shown in a beautiful, full-page photo by Tony Valainis with a description of the piece, complete with a few words from our director Mike Brumback.


For more about Brother Frank’s remarkable and complex sculpture,see this much longer article HERE.

Like nearly every other facility in Indiana, we have been forced to close during the duration of the pandemic. Normally, we are open to the public. When this all passes, please do stop in and see us on the 5th floor of the Indianapolis Masonic Temple at 525 N. Illinois Street in Indianapolis. With any luck, we are anticipating reopening sometime in June.

Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Scottish Rite NMJ Presents "Unpanic the Pandemic" with Surgeon General Thursday

by Christopher Hodapp


This Thursday, March 26th, the Scottish Rite Northern Masonic Jurisdiction will present a live-stream information session with the Surgeon General of the United States, Jerome Adams, MD, entitled, "Un-Panic the Pandemic: Our Community Partnership on the 2019 Coronavirus ."

New York's Junior Grand Warden, Worshipful Brother E. Oscar Alleyne, 33°, DrPH, MPH, has arranged this program and he will be presenting along with with the Surgeon General. Illustrious Brother Alleyne, 33° is a member of the Scottish Rite Valley of the Hudson.

While Oscar is known far and wide within the fraternity as one of the most active and well-traveled Masons you'll ever encounter anywhere, many may not know that he is a Doctor of Public Health and the Chief Programs and Services Officer at the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) in Washington, DC. That's a long way of saying he's on the front lines of this pandemic right now, and has been working with the CDC and the Surgeon General to help stem the spread. 

The goal of the broadcast is to provide clear, truthful information to Brethren and their families as we all confront the challenges posed by the virus in our homes and communities. Sovereign Grand Commander Glattly will also field a few questions on how Brothers can continue to connect with Brothers in their lodges and Valleys. 

The program will be presented live on  on Facebook this Thursday, March 26 at 7:00 pm (ET)

The schedule is as follows:

  • 7pm (ET) Introductions
  • Dr. Jerome Adams, Surgeon General provides the latest updates
  • Brother Oscar Alleyne on the impact on our communities and what we can do to stay healthy and well
  • Michael C. Russell, Scottish Rite Executive Director, moderates questions
  • David A. Glattly, Sovereign Grand Commander addresses the Brethren
  • 7:30-7:45 Program Ends
To Join the Broadcast on Facebook, simply go to the Scottish Rite NMJ page at that 7PM. You can find the page here
https://www.facebook.com/scottishritenmj/

If you are not on Facebook the program will be recorded.
The link will also be posted in the "What's Happening" section on the home page of the NMJ website.




Dr. Jerome Adams is an American anesthesiologist and a vice admiral in the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps who currently serves as the 20th Surgeon General of the United States. Prior to becoming Surgeon General, he served as the Indiana State Health Commissioner, from 2014–2017.

Dr. Adams attended medical school at Indiana University School of Medicine as an Eli Lilly and Company Scholar. He also received a Master of Public Health degree from the University of California, Berkeley in 2000, with a focus on chronic disease prevention. He is board certified in anesthesiology.







Illus. Dr. Oscar Alleyne, 33°, is the Chief Programs and Services Officer at the National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO) in Washington, DC. He has wide ranging experience in local and national public health sectors. He is skilled in in Epidemiology, Health Communication, Population Health Planning and Assessment, Government, Emergency Preparedness, Informatics, Biosurveillance, and Environmental Health.

He holds a Doctor of Public Health (DrPH) focused in Health Policy and Management from New York Medical College and a Master of Public Health (MPH) in Environmental Health and Epidemiology.

Sunday, March 15, 2020

Traveling Without Moving: Masonic Improvement During the COVID Panic

by Christopher Hodapp



The almost overnight shuttering of nearly all Masonic activity across the U.S. and around the world in response to the COVID 19 virus panic will immediately turn a vast number of Masons into Third-Stage Guild Navigators now. We're now stuck with cruising the Internet or something else for at least the next six weeks as this plays out, because we sure as hell aren't going to clean out the garage in March. 

In the science fiction universe created by Frank Herbert for his Dune Trilogy, the Third-Stage Guild Navigators of the Spice Guild have mutated and mastered the technique of folding space in order to move instantly from one end of the galaxy to the other, permitting "traveling without moving." In various sections of the novels, they are described as "fat" and like a "fish in a strange sea." 

Masons already were kind of like fish in a strange sea before this started. If we remain sedentary long enough, we'll soon fatten up like beached belugas on a hot day from being able to find nothing left at the grocery besides Cheetos, Miracle Whip and and pickles. Frank Herbert described the Guild Navigators as having tiny arms (Masons have deep pockets and short arms), and massive web-like hands (the better to practice our dodgy handshakes with). And since we're Traveling Men by the tenets of our profession, the Internet Mason has little choice left but to "travel without moving." 

So for all of you who obsess over the line "the internal and not the external qualifications of a man are what Masonry regards," now's the perfect time to start polishing that interior surface of our ashlars.

Think of it as having six weeks off. It's kind of like being suspended by an angry grand master until you both calm down, but without the mark of Cain besmirching your Masonic record for the rest of your life. While you wait to get reinstated, try reading, writing, or catch up on your listening and viewing.

That's what I did...




If the motto of Masons of old was Audi, Vide, Tace (Hear, See, Be Silent), perhaps our updated one during this isolated period should be Legere, Scribere, Audi, Vigilate (Read, Write, Listen, Watch). 



Sit back, pour yourself another Quarantini, check the latest black market commodity prices on toilet paper, and consider the following suggestions. 

READ

You might start first by pushing away from the screen and actually reading a Masonic book or three. I realize that average Masons would rather gnaw off their foot than crack open a book. Albert Mackey opined in 1875 that, "The ultimate success of Masonry depends on the intelligence of her disciples." Sadly, he lamented:
"[N]othing is more common than to encounter Freemasons who are in utter darkness as to every thing that relates to Freemasonry. They are ignorant of its history - they know not whether it is a mushroom production of today, or whether it goes back to remote ages for its origin. They have no comprehension of the esoteric meaning of its symbols or its ceremonies, and are hardly at home in its modes of recognition. And yet nothing is more common than to find such socialists in the possession of high degrees and sometimes honored with elevated affairs in the Order, present at the meetings of lodges and chapters, intermeddling with the proceedings, taking an active part in all discussions and pertinaciously maintaining heterodox opinions in opposition to the judgment of brethren of far greater knowledge... [T]here are some Masons who think that the mere act of initiation is at once followed by an influx of all Masonic knowledge. They need no further study or research. All that they require to know has already been received by a sort of intuitive process."
I'm asked a LOT by Masons what my "favorite" Masonic books are, or to give them a suggested reading list. I hesitate to do that because my answer always has to be, "That depends." Freemasonry has existed as a social, cultural , philosophical, and practical movement for more than three hundred years, and its historical origins are at least twice as old – arguably older. Its literary origins from which our founders and ritualists shamelessly purloined countless phrases and ideas alone could fill a room with books (Art DeHoyos reigns over a whole Temple full of them). Its mythical and legendary origins reach to the pre-Christian era and Hebrew Biblical sources.

Yet, if I tell a Mason seriously wanting to explore any of this at minimum to start with Coil's Masonic Encyclopedia, the Bible (at least 1st Kings, Chronicles, Ecclesiastes, and Psalms), Isaac Newton's Chronology of Ancient Kingdoms and his other works about Solomon and his Temple, and Thomas More's Utopia, he'd run screaming from the room. And has. Tell a modern Mason to actually read any part of the King James Version of the Bible from which our ritual is largely derived, and he's just as likely to yawp something about it being un-Masonic.

So my practical reading list for any Mason today, regardless of their avenue of interest, always starts with Albert Pike's Esoterika. Whether you are a new Mason or an old one, this brilliant book about the three Craft lodge degrees will make you actually think hard about the rituals we all know, the words we all say, and why we do and say it. Pike doesn't tell you what to think, he asks you to think differently.

From there, I don't have a single, all-purpose favorite list. I have about ten, because "that depends."

So have a look at what a few others have recommended. Your own grand lodge might have a recommended list, too.



And if you prefer to listen to audio books, there are countless Masonic titles, new and old, now available as audio books. Amazon is probably the best place to hunt audible Masonic titles. In case you are wondering, three audio versions of my own books are:

WRITE

If you ever had that idea, notion, field of study, object of obsession, or spark of great inspiration whack you in the head, now you've got time to actually get it down on paper or converted into onscreen pixels. Write a presentation for your lodge on any Masonic-related topic you have in mind. Or expand it, make it a little less conversational, lob in a footnoted reference or two, and submit it as an article to the literally scores of Masonic publications out there. I can tell you as a former editor, magazines and journals can only print what gets submitted to them. That means you need to start typing.

Your grand lodge probably has a monthly or quarterly magazine that is starving for articles beyond just "Muckenfuss Lodge Pins Medal On Aged Past Master" and photos of ten guys from across the room that look like badly dressed, out of focus thumbs in aprons. Now's your chance to submit something.

Your grand lodge might have its own lodge of research. Trust me, they are desperate for new articles, papers or live presentations from not just the same old faces. 

In case you aren't familiar with them, there are scores of national and international Masonic magazines and journals to which you can contribute:
If you think you have a book lurking on you that is Masonic related, bear in mind that Freemasonry is as but a sparrow-fart niche of a niche topic to the dwindling list of major book publishers left in the world. Please see Doug Preston's presentation, Why Is It So Goddamned Hard to Make a Living as a Writer Today? on the Author's Guild website, but only if you want your dreams to be the next James Michener or Albert Pike fully crushed. Hint: don't give up your Uber gig. Google and Amazon have teamed up with the "information must be free!" hacker mentality to all but destroy the publishing business, and the courts have let them. Put it another way - you should never buy another ebook again, Kindles included. 

Nevertheless, print-on-demand technology has been a great boon to the Masonic book publishers and to independent Masonic authors who want to go it alone. While you will find one-off "publishers" who are usually just a single author using a business entity for their books, the actual major Masonic publishers still interested in new works (in English) include:

LISTEN

Masonic podcasts have come and gone over the years, but there are some that have been around long enough to be established perennials. And while several excellent ones have faded away, new ones have stepped in to continue the conversations. Like blogs, podcasts often are creatures of the moment, discussing current events and timely topics, or interviewing Masonic authors, speakers, and our own brand of celebrities. But others look back at historical topics or enduring ones like symbolism, ritual or traditions. The best thing about them is you can while away a long commute or otherwise multitask and still get a healthy dose of Masonic education and conversation.

Here are a few of the top ones (and forgive me if I've left off your favorite):

WATCH

In case you want visuals to go with your Masonic education. 

M.A.T.S.O.L. (Masonry At The Speed Of Light) hosts more than sixty different video lectures.  Masonic authors and researchers from all over the world back in 2011-12 recorded their talks on a huge range of topics, and you're bound to find at least several to interest you. What makes these very different is that the presenters are not just the same dozen or so Masonic "celebrities" you've seen or heard before, and there are some serious gems to be found here.

As for other videos that are not just talking heads and Power Point slides, here is a handful of programs available on DVD you might screen and then play at lodge when everything gets back to normal.
And if you just want to kick back and enjoy yourself with a movie, here's some topwater bait.





And finally, just as a closing thought, there's no reason to remain in total isolation. I actually have a friend who once said, "I hate waiting for my phone to finally stop ringing when somebody calls so I can send them a text and ask what the hell they wanted." 

We've all got phones in our pockets these days, so pick it up and actually telephone the members of your Lodge - whether you've ever spoken to them before or not. You've got plenty of time now, and your Secretary can probably email a list of their phone numbers. Connect or reconnect with your Brethren, with your own voice, not an email or text message for a change. Even if we can't meet face to face, maybe we can finally get back to what this fraternity was always supposed to be about - caring for and about each other, Brother to Brother. 

After a few days of isolation, a friendly voice on the other end of the line is a good way to start.

Saturday, March 07, 2020

Interview: One Man Can Change Freemasonry


A year ago, I sat down with Brother Juan Sepulveda of the Winding Stairs podcast during Masonic Con 2019 in Attleboro, Massachusetts to discuss current social forces affecting Freemasonry, and how just one Mason can make a huge difference in his lodge, the fraternity, and the world beyond it.

The interview will eventually be part of a new Masonic Documentary, "Roadmap to Freemasonry".
Forgive the audio. It says something about how popular and packed MasonicCon was that the quietest space we could manage to find for the interview was a stairwell. 

Click below to watch on YouTube.


By the way, Masonic Con 2020 will take place on April 18, 2020 at Ezekiel Bates Lodge in Attleboro, MA. Click HERE for more details.

Tuesday, March 03, 2020

New Robert Langdon For NBC's 'Lost Symbol'-based TV Series



Media websites are reporting that Australian-American actor Ashley Zukerman has been cast as author Dan Brown's globe-hopping symbologist Robert Langdon in NBC's upcoming series, Langdon. The series will be based on Brown's The Da Vinci Code sequel, 2009's The Lost Symbol, which revolves around the Freemasons and Masonic sites across Washington, D.C.


Ashley Zukerman
It's never been very often that the Masons have been uniformly portrayed as the virtuous good guys and central characters to high-visibility film or TV projects, so this is good news.

Zukerman's Robert Langdon will be a younger version of
Tom Hank's character in the motion picture chronology
The NBC series is being treated as a sort of prequel to The Da Vinci CodeAngels & Demons, and Inferno, the previous big-budget movies made with Tom Hanks in the part. Zukerman's Robert Langdon will be younger than Hanks', and the plot line of the book will be slightly shifted so that the character of Peter Solomon will more clearly be Langdon's more recent mentor from his early Harvard days. 

Ashley Zukerman most recently appeared in the HBO series Succession, but he's not exactly a household name like Hanks. That's probably a good thing for such a high-visibility role like Robert Langdon.

Scottish Rite SJ's House of the Temple in Washington

It's unknown at this point whether the series will actually be shot in Washington (a frustratingly complex city to film in logistically), or even if the actual Masonic sites mentioned in the book will be used for the production. The Scottish Rite SJ's distinctive headquarters, the House of the Temple, plays an important part in the original novel, but no one knows whether it will be retained in the series, changed to a different (and possibly fictional) location, or re-created in whole or in part via cgi effects (which would have been required anyway due to plot action). 

It'll be hard to improve on the HOT's real-life Temple room, but I'm sure Hollywood will want to up the ante on spookiness. Still way too early to tell.


Nevertheless, be aware that The Lost Symbol source material for Langdon features Freemasons, Masonic symbolism and philosophy all the way through, including a quite philosophical ending. Let's hope at least some of that survives in this upcoming TV treatment. And it would be nice for everyone involved—including us— if this turns out to be a hit.

The approved script for the Langdon show has been written by The Crossing creators Dan Dworkin and Jay Beattie, and rumor has it that Dan Brown recommended them for the project. They've been named as the show's executive producers - they also co-created/executive produced Matador, and served as consulting producers on Star Trek: Discovery and American Horror Story

No word yet on who plays kindly old Masonic sage Peter Solomon - hopefully a cross between Art de Hoyos and Brent Morris. Maybe with a curmudgeonly touch of Rex Hutchens thrown in. 

I'll be happy to forward my headshot to producers. 

Just sayin'.



     
(While you wait, I'd like to recommend my books Solomon's Builders and Deciphering The Lost Symbol so you can bone up on the REAL Masonic background and history of Washington D.C.)

Sunday, October 20, 2019

Video: Nazis vs. Freemasons


Finding a decent Masonic program at random on Amazon Prime's leviathan on-demand streaming service is frequently an exercise in futility, given the abundance of lurid video nonsense about our fraternity choking the marketplace. But I stumbled into an outstanding documentary last week - Nazis vs. Freemasons: the Robbing of the Lodges (La Mémoire Volée des Francs-Maçons).
(NOTE: The Amazon version is dubbed into English and also has English subtitles for the French interviews. The title listed on Amazon is ‘Nazis and the Freemasons’ but the onscreen title on the program itself is ‘Nazis vs. the Freemasons.’ And yes I know, that Nazi swastika in the poster above is backwards - not my artwork.)
Over the last few decades, much attention has been given to the far sexier topic of art treasures stolen by the invading forces of the Nazi regime as they tore across Europe. But it's difficult to find much when it comes to the subject of their sacking of Masonic temples in Germany and in the occupied countries. Few historians outside of the fraternity are even aware this was done, and almost no one even talked about it before the mid-1980s or so. 

Of course, there was Hitler's well-known philosophy that the Freemasons and the Jews were in cahoots to "take over the world," and that "all Jews are Freemasons; all Freemasons are Jews." So there was a direct anti-semitic aspect to the destruction of the lodges. Then there was the longstanding European claim that French Masons had started the French Revolution, and that Masons had essentially designed and controlled the entire government of France's Third Republic in the late 19th century. 

Alfred Rosenberg
Heinrich Himmler
A certain clot of influential Nazis like Alfred Rosenberg (one of the chief architects of Nazi ideology and its top "racial theorist") and SS Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler had their own reasons for wanting their hands on Masonic archives. Rosenberg created an entire institute for pursuing cultural, historical and anthropological "proofs" of Nazism's racial theories and especially the "Judeo-Masonic Conspiracy." His Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg (or ERR) had an entire division devoted just to Masonic archives. Meanwhile, Himmler really was a full-throated devotee of occultism, and had a longstanding inkling that the secretive Masons really might be secretly hiding the the secrets to Life, the Universe and Everything in our secretive secret secrets. 

Once Hitler came to power and shuttered Germany's lodges, the ERR set up their Masonic division in the basement of Berlin's largest former Masonic Temple, while upstairs was turned into the national headquarters of the SS. They made odd housemates: Rosenberg's ERR and Himmler's SS were in direct competition with each other to see who could confiscate more cultural and artistic treasures. 

Rosenberg stored the ERR's loot at Neuschwanstein Castle, while Himmler's best finds got hauled off to Wewelsburg Castle, which became his own virtual crypto-religious shrine for the SS' most elite officers. But the invading Germans weren't just interested in stripping expensive Masonic decor or spooky props. They also gutted Masonic libraries wherever they found them. By the end of the war, Himmler had amassed the world's largest library of esoteric books made up of more than 13,000 stolen volumes from across Europe. A huge portion of them came from Masonic libraries.

Most of all, the Nazis desperately wanted the detailed membership records from the various grand lodges and lodge secretaries (along with trade unions and other voluntary associations) from every country they advanced into. The Nazis removed Masonic records and libraries across France, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, Poland, the Baltic States, Greece, and Italy.

Those records - frequently consisting of lodge petitions and other personal information - were a treasure trove for the Gestapo and other security forces and their quislings for tracking down men through their Masonic memberships, sponsors, occupations, known residences, spouses and families, and much more. France's various competing grand lodges, whether male, female or co-Masonic, made no idealogical difference to the Nazi security apparatus. Notions of regularity that Masons might obsess over were meaningless distinctions, and every grand lodge and individual lodge room was looted, regardless of whose it was. The files and confiscated libraries were ultimately sent back to Berlin where the Gestapo, the SS, and their cooperative collaborators pored over them. This was the way that an estimated 250,000 Freemasons wound up being systematically arrested and sent to the camps throughout Europe. 

Because of U.S. and British bombing campaigns on Berlin as early as 1942, the archives began getting shipped eastward into Poland and Czechoslovakia by the Nazis to avoid destruction - only to be captured when the Russians marched in from the opposite direction. Russia's Red Army were the first of the allied forces to roll into Berlin and seize control of the Nazi's centralized record keeping infrastructure. But the story didn't conclude in 1945. When the war ended, the Masonic records never returned. 

The Soviets under Stalin were every bit as obsessive about spying on private citizens as their defeated Nazi enemies had been, and just as ruthless when it came to stuffing their ideological foes into the dark hole of the gulags. The leaders of the Russian Revolution and their successors had been every bit as anti-Masonic as Hitler's Germany, for many of the very same reasons, just without the grim efficiency. So Stalin was happy to capitalize on the Nazi's diligence - those very same Masonic records were packed up from Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia and shipped farther eastward as fast as the Russians could find boxcars and trucks. And they remained behind the Iron Curtain for the duration of the Cold War. Because the Soviets had taken all of the former Nazi territories east of Berlin, all of those former Masons still alive throughout the Warsaw Pact countries could still be traced by Moscow through their old lodge records.

All of this is partially why this very topic today brings out heated fights in, for instance, Italy, when government prosecutors periodically demand that grand lodges turn over their membership records in their regular-as-clockwork anti-Mafia investigations. European Masons have the past as a grim example of how their own private information can be used against them, and it's a large part of the reason they aren't as publicly showy over their Masonic memberships as we are in the U.S. The wartime experience is also why European Masons on the continent are far less consumed by discussions of regularity and recognition at the local lodge level — they know from experience that the enemies and persecutors and would-be destroyers of our fraternity make no such distinctions.

Another reason for Moscow's desire to pore over the Masonic archives was strategic, once the Cold War was in full swing. A large proportion of the military and political leaders of the Allied forces, the post-war Marshall Plan administrators and officers, and leading NATO figures were Freemasons. Many of them were quite public about it (especially the Americans), so the Russians clung to the Masonic information in case it could be used for their own purposes. After Stalin's death, that particular obsession fell by the wayside, but the lost Masonic archives simply disappeared into the massive maw of Soviet bureaucratic detritus. 

Think of the last scene of Raiders of the Lost Ark.


Patricia Grimsted
It wasn't until 1999 after the fall of the USSR that those decades-old Masonic archives began turning up in forgotten warehouses dotted all across the fallen Soviet empire. That was thanks to the detective work of the redoubtable Patricia Grimsted, an American historian who has specialized in investigating confiscated Nazi treasures, files and other lost cultural material. She is quite literally the hero of this detective story.

This video was originally a French program, but dubbed into English. At 51 minutes, it would make an excellent presentation for a lodge's Masonic education. It features Pierre Mollier, the Director of the Grand Orient de France's incredible Museum of Freemasonry in Paris; historians Andre Combs and Sophie Coeure; Philippe Charuel, Grand Master of the Grande Loge de France; Marc Menschaert, Grand Master of the Grand Orient de Belgique; Philippe Gugliemi, Past GM of the Grand Orient de France; and Patricia Grimsted, whose dogged investigation of Nazi plunder over the years led to the ultimate return of these archives.