May Brotherly Love Prevail, Freemasonry on the Battlefield and in Prison Camps


May Brotherly Love Prevail,  Freemasonry on the Battlefield and in Prison Camps

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May Brotherly Love Prevail, Freemasonry on the Battlefield and in Prison Camps:
$34.95


by Richard E. Shields Jr, 2014, 185 pages, index, illustrated, First 1000 signed and numbered. A collection of Masonic stories from battlefields of the 1700s to the War in Iraq. Includes Masonic activity in the prison camps of World War II both in Europe and the Pacific theaters, and what happened to the grand lodges and their members as the Nazi\'s overran Europe. Here\'s some excerpts from the book:The Boston Tea PartyIn November 1773, indignation ran high in Boston and the rest of the colonies over the tax on tea. The evening of November 30th (St. Andrews Day) was the time for the annual meeting and election of officers in St. Andrew’s Lodge in Boston. There was always a large attendance at this annual meeting but this night there were so few that the meeting was postponed until December 2nd. Only seven members had shown up. The secretary closed his record of the meeting with the cryptic but significant notation: “N.B. (no business) Consignees of TEA took up the Brethren’s time.” Joseph Warren, Paul Revere and their associates were too busy planning a “tea party” and could not make it to the annual meeting of their beloved lodge.Under a Big TreeDuring August-October, 1942 the Masonic Club at Bukit Timah (Hill of Tin) Prison Camp at Bukit Timah, Malaya met about a dozen times at 5:30pm sitting under a big tree out in the open. The business of the meeting consisted of memorizing and speaking the rituals. Safeguards were taken to keep out intruders. The club had some problems with continuing as most of the members would come back to camp late and tired and “browned off.”*One of the members of the club wrote a letter telling of his experiences. He related that they met in a building and two guards inconspicuously patrolled the outside of the building. This particular prison was so large that the Japanese very seldom entered the camp perimeter wire. Brother Colonel Holmes of the Manchester Regiment undertook full responsibility for the Masonic activity in case there were any problems with the Japanese, but there was none. This brother said that he carried his regalia case with him throughout the war and one time a Japanese Sergeant opened it during a search but he was not interested and just handed it back to him.[i] *Greatly annoyed or out of patience. [i] S. J. Fenton, “The Military Services and Freemasonry,” Transactions of Quatuor Coronati Lodge, p. 17.

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May Brotherly Love Prevail, Freemasonry on the Battlefield and in Prison Camps:
$34.95

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