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Winter 1998/99
Issue 07

Tobias Churton - Letter from the Editor
The Eye
Newsbites
Are You One of Us?
The Future That Everybody Wanted
The Importance of Recognition
Roman Catholic Attitudes, Yesterday and Today
The Word 'Brother' Among Masons
Ancient Egypt and Freemasonry
Medieval Monks, Masons and Mystical Architecture
In Search of the Wisdom of Solomon
The Secret of the 47th Proposition
Review: Behind the Wire
Review: Ancient Traces
Review: Freemasonry: A Celebration of the Craft
Review: John Lennon Anthology
Old Fireglass
Two Cautionary Tales
Letters to the Editor
The Country Stewards Lodge
Copyright 1997-2010
Grand Lodge Publications Ltd
Designed and Maintained by: Cyberpoint
FREEMASONRY TODAY
The Word 'Brother' Among Masons is Something More Than a Name

Julian Rees

Dust as we are, the immortal spirit grows
Like harmony in music; there is a dark
Inscrutable workmanship that reconciles
Discordant elements, makes them cling together
In one society.

William Wordsworth

I was reminded recently that twists of fate can work in many and curious ways. Young Erwin (name changed) came from Germany in the 1930s to study medicine at Cambridge and so survived the Holocaust in which most of his family perished.
    Erwin graduated and was commissioned into the Royal Army Medical Corps, later becoming a prominent member of the medical profession in this country. He was also initiated into Freemasonry and in time became a member of a German-speaking lodge in London. This lodge, because of its international status, made and received regular visits to and from lodges in continental Europe, mostly in Germany, but Erwin could not be persuaded to join any of the visits to the country of his birth, not out of any direct hatred, but simply due to a very uncomfortable feeling in the company of anybody he felt might, even remotely, have had a part in the terrible events surrounding the Holocaust. His friends in the lodge tried to persuade him to join them on one such visit, and he finally, reluctantly, agreed.
    The experience proved, in his own words, almost unbearable. He had an aversion to almost all the places they went, almost all the people they met. True, the bonds of the brotherhood of Freemasonry did a lot to diminish these effects, but overall the visit was not a success from his own personal view. He told me that he found himself standing in the street looking at the people around him and thinking “were you perhaps one of them?” and again “perhaps you?” or “you look as though you might have . . .” The twists of our imagination in a situation like that are indeed cruel. Erwin made up his mind not to repeat the experience.
    Over the years which followed, the reciprocal visits continued. The lodge received a visit from a lodge in Frankfurt. The Master of the lodge, Wolfgang (name also changed), of a similar age to Erwin, had grown up in a different part of Germany, had been to university, and like thousands of his countrymen was called up to fight in what everybody had been led to believe was a good cause. He described to me in great detail his sense of dawning horror, in 1945, on learning of the atrocities of the Third Reich.
    Wolfgang struck up a more than casual friendship with Erwin. At some point, Erwin invited Wolfgang to stay with him at his home in London, and the friendship deepened. Eventually, Wolfgang asked Erwin why it was that he never accompanied the lodge on its visits to Germany, and after a while Erwin told him. Wolfgang didn’t try to persuade him against his will. But some time later he said to him: “Look, I cannot begin to imagine what you suffer because of the Holocaust, and I cannot of course argue against the feelings it has implanted in you against my countrymen, but you and I meet on the square, and the bonds of our brotherhood rise above everything else. In our lodges, you and I are one. Outside the lodge, there may be all kinds of influence that could divide us, but if you can surmount those obstacles which alienate you from my country, I can tell you that you will be the richer for it. If you give in, and allow mistrust and hatred to take up residence, the evil-doers will have won the victory.”
    I don’t have to tell you that faced with the shining light of such a truth Erwin started to heal. He subsequently made many visits to Germany - masonic and otherwise - made many good and lasting friendships, was decorated by the United Grand Lodges of Germany for services to Freemasonry and came to be grateful to Wolfgang for his gentle intervention.
    This is only a passing example perhaps of what our answer can be to man’s inhumanity to man. Are we to be forever crushed by evil and allow it to distort our lives, or to show what Immanuel Kant called “man’s limitless capacity for good”? An outrage perpetrated against humanity from any quarter merits a real humanitarian involvement on our part to right the wrong. We should not lose sight of the fact that in a uniquely masonic way, the same spirit that united Erwin and Wolfgang to such good effect on a personal level does inspire men everywhere to acts of understanding, tolerance and reconciliation.


  Issue 07, Winter 1998/99
© Grand Lodge Publications Ltd 1997-2010