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- From: grimoire@byron.u.washington.edu (John Greer)
- Subject: Re: Odd Fellows
- Message-ID: <1992Jul22.202130.29303@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: grimoire@u.washington.edu (John Michael Greer)
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- References: <1992Jul21.215452.5254@vicorp.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 22 Jul 1992 20:21:30 GMT
- Lines: 46
-
- In article <1992Jul21.215452.5254@vicorp.com> ron@vicorp.com (Ron Peterson) writes:
- >
- >Anyone ever heard of a club/society called "Odd Fellows"? I've seen
- >their signs (in odd places) in various cities and wondered what they
- >were up to.
- >ron@vicorp.com or uunet!vicorp!ron
-
- The Odd Fellows (well, technically, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows,
- IOOF) used to be the second largest fraternal order in the US, right
- after the Freemasons. They came out of the same basic matrix (i.e.,
- medieval craft guilds) at about the same time; I think the first mention
- of the Odd Fellows is in an essay of Defoe's from about 1745. Like the
- Masons, they do elaborate initiation ceremonies, and there are a series
- of degrees -- nine of them in the current Order, if I'm remembering
- correctly.
- The Order was pretty well moribund until a couple of years ago; the local
- lodge here in Seattle was down to seven members, the youngest of them
- 70, and the rest of the Order was in pretty similar shape. Over the
- last two years or so, a few of the lodges in the Northwest have started
- getting new members on a fairly large scale. (The Seattle lodge has
- gone from 7 to 58 members.) I don't know if it's going on anywhere else,
- but I've heard that the Orcas Island, WA, and Corvallis, OR lodges are
- doing well also.
- As for being esoteric...there's not much I can say about the rituals
- (I don't especially approve of oaths of secrecy, but I keep my word when
- it's given), but the purposes of the Order are more charitable than
- anything else. I suspect that most of the current members would be
- quite shocked if someone suggested that there was something "occult" in
- the IOOF. At the same time, though, the symbolism can definitely be
- used as a basis for meditative and visionary work, and the rituals are
- quite impressive in their own way. If anyone's interested in the IOOF
- as a basis for that kind of working, I'd highly encourage it.
- (Note, however, that the IOOF is a males-only organization -- it has a
- "women's auxiliary" like Eastern Star, the Rebekahs -- and belief in a
- Supreme Being is one of the requirements of membership. Depending on
- the lodge, also, the old guys can be extremely hostile to anything
- post-Norman Rockwell.:) So it's not all roses.)
- If there's anyone else out there who's in the IOOF, or interested in same,
- drop me a line via email!
-
- -- John Michael Greer
- grimoire@u.washington.edu
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