Just how much do the Masons really matter?
Let the membership lists be published, so the public can judge for itself, argues Martin Short
Saturday 22 July 1995
Latest in Opinion
Opinion blogs
GCSEs are a pointless waste of time
A few facts. Last year almost 70% of 16 year olds achieved at least 5 GCSE passes with grades A*-C. ...
Asylum seekers: When the questions tell us so much more than the answers
For the last four years I've been paying my karmic dues (I would say "contributing to the big societ...
Thanks to The Sun, for enriching each of our lives
Those at the super-soaraway Sun are, yet again, making outlandish claims that they’ve changed the wo...
Related articles
All the rituals and oaths of Freemasonry are couched in terms of secrecy, and the penalties for revealing them are bloodcurdling in the extreme. If these rituals are not secret, then how can they be revealed? And why punish those who reveal them? Do the rules of a golf club or the Garrick need theircandidates for membership to swear to protect them "under no less a penalty of having my throat cut across, my tongue torn out and buried of the sand of the sea ... or the more effective punishment of being a branded as a wilfully perjured individual"?
And do the candidates of any other mere "private" society swear this oath blindfolded, bare-breasted, with nooses around their necks, and, yes, with the left trouser-leg rolled up? And all this done by the likes of Lord Parkinson, Lord Whitelaw, your local police chief and half the male members of the local magistrates' bench?
It is easy to ridicule the rituals and to exaggerate their significance. Retreating under a hail of public outcry in the Eighties, Britain's grand lodges have steadily watered them down, eliminating the more ludicrous elements. Most Masons never took these seriously anyway. Even so, the PR campaigns, videos and open-door policy so conspicuously pursued by Freemasonry since Stephen Knight and I wrote our books on them, have never included any performance of "private" rituals or any display of nooses, blindfolds and swords.
If we accept a frequent Masonic argument that the rituals are only little plays, not to be taken literally, it's difficult to believe that Masons take literally those other parts of the ritual telling them not to scratch each other's backs or break the laws of the land.
The breach of that injunction has worked to great mutual benefit in many walks of life, and to the great damage of non-Masons who have dared to call Freemasonry a mass conspiracy. In the police the number of Masons who used to rise to high office rightly upset non-Masons such as the former chief inspector Brian Woollard, who felt his inquiries into local government corruption in the early Eighties were being blocked by Masons encircling the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, as well as Scotland Yard.
If policemen join Freemasonry "to get away from other police, to meet ordinary chaps", as Commander Higham was reported as saying in yesterday's Independent, it is curious that the all-police Manor of St James Lodge was formed in 1986, not long after the Metropolitan Commissioner had strongly advised his officers to avoid joining the fraternity.
Grand Lodge now regularly expels Masons sent to jail for serious criminal offences but, again, this has only been forced on the movement by the media exposures of the Eighties. Grand Lodge has done nothing to deal with the large number of local government lodges in which elected councillors, full-time officials and suppliers of goods and services to the council all drink at the same bar and eat at the same table, bound together in a column of mutual defence and support.
The Commons Home Affairs Select Committee will have a tough job. Evidence of Masonic membership is very hard to acquire, the fraternity's regional yearbooks are highly restricted in circulation, and no such yearbook covers London's 1,600 lodges. If the select committee is to get to grips with the role of Freemasonry in the judiciary it will have to secure lists of all these lodges, and of the many others to which judges, solicitors and magistrates belong all over the country.
So much public apprehension about Freemasonry is caused by the fact that no one knows for sure who is, and who is not, "on the square". One solution is for all lodge membership lists to be available for scrutiny in public libraries. If that happened, I suspect outsiders might find it difficult to confirm their worst suspicions.
The writer is author of 'Inside the Brotherhood', HarperCollins.
- 1 Robert Fisk: Clinton's $33m raid on Pakistan shows that, in the end, hypocrisy will win
- 2 Martin Hickman: A silken performance from Blair the master escapologist
- 3 Ian Birrell: Bob Geldof's obsession with aid hurt Africa. But now trade is healing the scars
- 4 Robert Fisk: The West is horrified by children's slaughter now. Soon we'll forget
- 5 Simon Kelner: The giant confidence trick that twisted politics for ever
- 6 Dominic Lawson: For a nation of non-conformists it feels like we're in North Korea
- 7 Leading article: Egypt's elections leave its divisions unresolved
- 8 The Daily Cartoon
- 9 Lance Price: Pull the other one, Tony. You let Murdoch shape policy
- 10 The dark side of Dubai
- 1 Robert Fisk: Clinton's $33m raid on Pakistan shows that, in the end, hypocrisy will win
- 2 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 3 Brilliant pupil's 'logical' suicide
- 4 Robert Fisk: The West is horrified by children's slaughter now. Soon we'll forget
- 5 Sex in dressing rooms and Play School presenters 'stoned out of their minds' - inside BBC Television Centre
- 6 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 7 Alien: The monster returns?
- 8 UN condemns Syria after massacre of civilians
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
'I may be deaf, but you can still talk to me'



Comments