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Back to the Index SHORT TALK BULLETIN - Vol.V August, 1927 No.8
UNITED MASONIC RELIEF
by: Unknown
To relieve the distressed is a duty taught the Freemason as one of the
first lessons of the Ancient Craft. Nothing in Freemasonry is more
touching, more solemn or more beautiful than the Rite of Destitution; just
how closely it nestles in the hearts of all who experience it, is
demonstrated by the reputation which the Masonic Fraternity has for
assisting the needy and being charitable toward all mankind, more
especially a brother Mason.
Masonic relief is practiced by the brother toward the needy, by the
Lodge toward those of its members who have fallen upon evil days, and
often toward the profane as well. Masonic relief by a group of Lodges to a
sister Lodge is commonplace in American Masonic history. But Masonic
relief recently has come to have a new and broader meaning, and to be
administered with a national vision.
The Great War taught American Freemasonry that, no matter how ideal was
its group of forty-nine Grand Lodges, each sovereign in its own
jurisdiction, was the right to make its own rules and laws, decide for
itself what the ancient Landmarks are, and rule its Masonic principality
as it thought wise, it was not a system designed for united Masonic effort
on a National scale. The United States Government could not treat with
forty-nine Grand Lodges, which might have forty-nine different ideas as to
how Masonry might function overseas for the relief and benefit of the men
in khaki. The result was that, except for a few sporadic and divided
efforts, organized Freemasonry in America played but a very small part in
the great struggle beyond the ocean. The spirit was willing, anxious;
brotherhood was frustrated, not by its lack of heart, but by its lack of
the machinery - or, perhaps it is better said, by its having too much
machinery for such an undertaking.
Out of this trouble - and it was a very real trouble to many earnest
American Freemasons - grew The Masonic Service Association, formed of a
majority of the Grand Lodges of the United States. In this organization
the several Grand Lodges created a servant which could work for them all,
which could do what no one of them could do for itself. One of the two
main objects of the Association is the collection, distribution and
administration of United Masonic Relief; when fire or flood, or other
national disaster makes such relief imperative, so that Masons can show
nationally, as well as individually, that they have fully learned the
lesson of the Rite of Destitution.
This is a great country. It has not only wonderful natural resources,
but wonderful potentialities for trouble. We are subject to disastrous
fires. We have tornadoes in the Middle West which do more damage in less
time than wind storms in any other part of the earth. We have the courage
to set up Lares and Penates where nature - and, until we learn, we set
them up not always strong enough - result, a Galveston or a Johnstown
Flood. And we have the Father of the Waters, and the disastrous floods
which afflict the lower Mississippi region.
During the immediate past, Freemasonry has had a chance to test the
instrumentality which the Grand Lodges set up. First came the terrible
storm in Florida, which did such enormous damage, then the terrific flood
in the lower Mississippi Valley, which, even if less destructive of life
than the Florida Hurricane, was definitely greater in the destruction of
property. Ten counties have been flooded in the State of Mississippi, with
a total of seven hundred and thirty-five thousand acres. Thirty-five
counties have suffered a similar fate in Arkansas, and nearly one-half of
Louisiana has been under water. The total flood damage throughout the
entire flood area is estimated by those familiar with conditions, to be at
least one- half billion dollars.
More than twenty thousand members of the Masonic Fraternity affiliated
with more than two hundred Lodges in the Jurisdictions of Arkansas,
Louisiana and Mississippi are materially affected by the floods. Many of
these members of the Craft have lost everything they had in the world,
while others are able to hold on until a gracious Providence, a beneficent
government, or the Masonic Fraternity shall render aid.
In both disasters The Masonic Service Association was immediately upon
the scene, to offer its help and cooperation to the Masonic Authorities in
the afflicted area, and to make its appeal, not only to its constituent
members, but to all Masonic Jurisdictions, for contributions to the relief
of worthy poor and distressed Master Masons, their widows, orphans and
dependents.
Let it be roundly stated here and now, lest some critic think the
Association desires credit where no credit is due. Some Masonic relief
would have come to Florida and to the Mississippi Flood sufferers had
their been no Masonic Service Association. The great heart of Freemasonry
does not need an Association to be touched by want and suffering. But the
relief could not have been either so great, so prompt, or so effectively
administered had their been no central agency to correlate the many
appeals, and assist in the allocation of funds. A movement with no leader,
or with too many leaders, will not progress near as fast as that which has
a competent general at the head. It was in activities of this kind that
the association was of such great value in these two distressing
calamities.
We are a cautious race; we naturally discount a man's own story of his
trouble, until we have investigated. This is sound Masonic practice. Let
an appeal for assistance come to the Lodge, and a committee is commonly
appointed to investigate and report the actual facts to the Lodge. This,
not that the Lodge distrusts the good faith of the appealing brother, but
to get a dispassionate and impersonal survey of the conditions. In these
national disasters, The Masonic Service Association was able to act as a
"Committee" and to ascertain and report to all the Grand Lodges
the actual conditions and the need.
Non-Masons not infrequently ask? "But isn't the Red Cross for just
such purposes, and do you not duplicate the work of that organization when
you, too, attempt national relief?" The answers are many. Consider
the War. Was the red Cross sufficient overseas? Had the Y.M.C.A. no
function? The Salvation Army? The Red Cross does, indeed, get promptly on
the job in national disasters, but it cannot do it all. And among the
"All" which it cannot do is the individual rehabilitation work
which Masonry is so peculiarly fitted to accomplish, because of that
Mystic tie which binds brother unto brother, and brother unto the lodge;
and, which neither the Red Cross, nor any other sectarian organization can
duplicate or understand.
The outpouring of relief from the various Masonic bodies over the
United States for both disasters was astonishing only to Non-Masons; to
the brethren, it was the expected thing. But never before have funds, from
Masonry united to relieve the distress been so quickly administered by one
group of Masons; and it was this centralization of relief authority and
means which placed the money contributed where it did the most good with
the absolute minimum of expense. In Florida, it was less than one cent per
dollar - more than 99 cents of every dollar contributed went to relieve
distress; the partial penny remaining paying for office, postage,
printing, advertising, travel, etc. The figures are not yet in for
Mississippi Flood Relief, since that task is still in the process of doing
as these words are being written. It will be as low in proportion,
although the greater area affected, the destruction of so many of the
existing means of transportation and the consequent difficulties might
well raise it to a higher level, and it will still be low indeed.
The amount of relief in Florida was $114,236.97 from all sources, of
which almost one hundred thousand dollars ($96,649.16) came from Grand
Lodges and other Masonic bodies outside of the State of Florida. In the
Mississippi relief campaign, more than $500,000 has been contributed at
the present writing, and the money is still coming in. It is of special
interest to note that in addition to Lodges and Grand Lodges, nearly every
Supreme Body of Masonry in North America contributed to the Mississippi
relief funds; they did not stop to ask whether those to whom the relief
would go were Companions or Sir Knights or Nobles or Brothers, or Sisters
of the Eastern Star. Masons and their families were in distress, and
practically all joined with Grand Lodges and individual Lodges everywhere
to contribute to the one relief fund asked for by the three Grand Lodges,
through the Masonic Service Association, for the relief of Masons,
regardless of Rite or Degree. And it is to be noted that the greatest
contribution, except for those from Lodges and Grand Lodges, came from
women of the Eastern Star, who opened their purses as wide as their
hearts.
Both in Florida and the flooded area, the procedure has been of the
same general character; immediately upon receipt of the news of the
disaster the Executive Secretary of The Masonic Service Association went
immediately to the scene, there to meet the Grand Masters whose
jurisdictions were suffering, advise with him or them, assist in sending
forth the appeal, and in creating the machinery necessary for the proper
use of the funds received. It is necessary, in such sudden disasters,
first to create an organization for the use of the funds; next, to make a
survey of the situation and find out just what is needed most, and where;
and finally to see that Masons in distress know where to come and how to
reach the aid which is to be had for the asking.
In Florida the situation was complicated by the fact that there were so
many sojourning Masons, not members of Florida Lodges. Relatives and
friends all over the United States appealed to the Grand Lodge of Florida
for information concerning their loved ones. It is to be noted that no
questions were raised in giving out of Masonic relief as to where a
brother belonged; as a matter of fact, of the 527 families relieved by
Masons in Florida, 228 had men in Florida Lodges; the remaining 297
possessed affiliates of other Grand Jurisdictions. In the Mississippi
flood area the problem is made difficulty not only by the fact that three
States are effected, but that the vastness of the devastation, and the
utter need of many for enough help to get started again.
The machinery put in operation was run by the Grand Lodge of Florida,
in Florida; and in the flooded regions by a Board of Control of Grand
Officers from Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas who elected Grand Master
Johnson of Mississippi as Chairman. All the funds received have gone into
a common relief fund; there has been no segregation of money for this
body, or that Rite. The great bulk of the relief has been a spontaneous
outpouring from Masons everywhere, to Masons, - to be disbursed by kindly,
loving brethren of the Mystic Tie.
For the benefit of those who may be interested in figures, a table is
appended to this Bulletin, showing the amount contributed to the
Mississippi Flood Fund by various bodies and States, up to and including
July 15, 1927. Figures for Florida are not given, as that relief campaign
is closed, the Grand Master furnishing a C.P.A. audit of the work of his
committee at the Annual Communication of the Grand Lodge in April, a copy
of which has been sent to all entitled to receive it.
Mississippi Flood Relief is not yet finished, and cannot be for some
time. But any Mason can well be proud of the relief offered by Masonry to
Masons; and the vast majority of brethren of the United States can look
with pride upon the table published herewith, and exult that the Rite of
Destitution meant something real, something vital to their Lodges and
Grand Lodges, and the allied Supreme Bodies of other Rites.
It is pleasant to publish the following Resolution, adopted in the
Grand Lodge of Florida at the Annual Communication assembled in
Jacksonville, last April:
RESOLUTION OF THANKS
"Resolved by the Most Worshipful Grand Lodge of Florida, that we
acknowledge with grateful hearts the liberal and substantial aid and
assistance rendered by the Masons of the United States to the Sojourning
and Resident Masons of Florida who were injured and damaged by the storm
that visited a portion of our State during the month of September, 1926.
"That our especial thanks are due, and hereby ex-pressed, to The
Masonic Service Association of the United States, to its very efficient
Executive Secretary, Brother Andrew L. Randell, P.G.M., and its other
executive officers, and to the Masonic Bodies named below, for valuable
aid and financial assistance rendered in the emergency which confronted
us.
(Here was inserted a list of all contributors)
"Resolved Further: That we express the hope and belief that this
manifestation of humanity and brotherly love may further cement the bond
of Fraternal regard which should exist between real Masons through the
length and breadth of our common country. "That the Grand Secretary,
F. & A.M. of Florida, is hereby directed to transmit a certified copy
of this resolution, under his hand and the Seal of the Grand Lodge, to
each of the bodies and the individuals mentioned above."
"SO MOTE IT BE" |