
  
  Masonic Anti-Intellectualism 
  A Crying Shame
  
  By Wor. Bro. Frederic L. 
  Milliken
  That such a young, bright, 
  knowledgeable Freemason as Brother Salman S. Sheika resigned from Freemasonry 
  at the young age of 26 is a crying shame. It is doubly reprehensible because 
  of the discrimination he met inside of Freemasonry. When we think of 
  discrimination we normally think of Black – White prejudice. But 
  discrimination takes many forms and just as ugly as racial discrimination is 
  religious discrimination. To find that in the holier than thou Grand Lodges of 
  the North who constantly look down their pious noses at Southern Grand Lodges 
  as havens of Redneck values makes some Masons at the best, hypocritical. Have 
  we not progressed from the hypocrisy and discrimination of the Pharisees and 
  Sadducees of Jesus’ time?
  Sheika was one of those seekers 
  who thirsted for “the Truth.” Isn’t that one of the tenets of our professions 
  as Masons, Brotherly Love, Relief and Truth? He was told Freemasonry had some 
  answers or at least some tools to work with. But alas, as we hear repeatedly, 
  Freemasonry doesn’t practice what it preaches. Esoteric Masonry is frowned 
  upon in many quarters. As soon as you mention the words “Masonic Education” in 
  the Lodge Building many Masons will find that they have some other pressing 
  problem to attend to. So many Grand Lodges and Lodges have become havens of 
  fellowship and charitable works but not ones of study and learning.
  
  But the latter is precisely why Sheika joined 
  Freemasonry and they promised him that it was there for him. Broken promises 
  are unmasonic conduct. But it is worse than that. What we have here is 
  anti-intellectualism within Freemasonry. And that will be the undoing of the 
  Craft. For many others are better at charity, better at fellowship. But none 
  have the potential of really and truly making good men better. That’s hard to 
  do, however, when you are anti-intellectual. – Brother Frederic L. Milliken
  
  
  
                                                                       
    L-R: Bro. Salman S. Sheikh, GM S. Eugene Herritt and Bro. Mohammed AlJumaili
 
   Why 
  I Left Freemasonry: The First And Last In My Family To Do So:
  By 
  Salman S. Sheikh
  I 
  experienced bigotry, ignorance, and the total opposite of what a Mason really 
  is
  The beauty of life as we go 
  through it is the sequence of beautiful experiences that shape us from the 
  moment we lay in the loving arms of our parents as babies to facing a complex 
  world as adults trying to find a path forward. As a Muslim-American, my keen 
  interests in the US was always trying to learn more, make people smile, and 
  leave a good impression on the people of this country on how we can all strive 
  to be in union as human beings to bring peace and prosperity. I always say the 
  world in a unique and analytical way growing up which led me into heavy 
  research as I approached my high school days. On my weekends off from school, 
  I would spent countless hours researching Freemasonry, different secret 
  societies, listening to occult researchers like Jordan Maxwell, etc. I was 
  always the black sheep of my family and was always the one who was a part in 
  terms of my knowledge, experiences, and interests and that led me to the doors 
  of Freemasonry at age 23 with the first in my family to do so.
  In the summer of 2015, I had met 
  a Jamaican immigrant named Marlon Francis who became good friends with me. He 
  showed up at my summer job in Upper Darby and I saw the square and compass 
  symbol and asked him I wanted to join through my previous keen research on the 
  matter. Marlon had an old school mentality and had waited 5-6 months of us 
  meeting, hanging out, becoming friends before he eventually trusted my 
  character and made a consideration to get me a petition from the lodge. So 
  from start to finish I went through an old school process of asking the Mason 
  and having the Mason evaluate me for a period of time before he proceeded. As 
  I was getting closer to my initiation after the investigation committee of 
  William Roosevelt PM approved me, I begin to have ideas of the wonderful 
  knowledge that I would learn because I was already heavy into Masonic, Occult, 
  Astral Projection research, etc.
  At the age of 23 and in January 
  2016, I was initiated into Freemasonry as an Entered Apprentice by a Jewish 
  Past Master, Alan Ozer with whom over time I formed a close bond and which 
  attests what true Masonry is with a Muslim and Jew embracing each other for 
  the sake of God and brotherhood. On the same night I am thankful to another 
  Past Master, Greg Klauder who told me ‘People will still be people.” in 
  reference to me as a Muslim who appreciated the unity. Over time I begin to 
  understand what PM Klauder had meant.
  As time went on and I became a 
  Master Mason, 32nd degree Scottish Rite, Shriner, Royal Arch Mason, and 
  Royal/Select Council Master Mason I realized that Freemasonry was just a 
  social club with a few ritual traditions. I was also discouraged as I saw the 
  brethren who would smile in my faces but would later post Anti-Islamic and 
  Anti-Immigrant posts on their social medias. I stayed patient and realized the 
  imperfection of all things as we are taught as Masons and made an effort to 
  try to win everybody’s heart through my honest spirit and character of seeing 
  true human unity but even that was not enough. In the summer of 2018 after 2.5 
  years of a solid active effort, I decided to resign from Freemasonry and its 
  bodies with my good standing intact. I shed tears when I wrote my resignation 
  letter but God had told me in my heart that they did not deserve me and I had 
  the right to move on. I reflected on the story of Prophet Musa(Moses) from the 
  Holy Bible and Holy Quran where he was in line for the Egyptian throne but 
  decided to throw that all away when his heart did not accept the Israelites 
  being mercilessly abused. I left for the same reasons where I experienced 
  bigotry, ignorance, and the total opposite of what a Mason really is.
  As my tenure as a Mason I made 
  sure I gave hugs, smiles, and real knowledge to all those who came my way in 
  which I had members from India, UK, Africa, etc. all reach out to me to 
  express their interest in my works and printed my essays in their lodges which 
  at the end only made my lodge, Grand Lodge, and country stand out in a 
  positive way in the current environment of confusion, division, and chaos. I 
  feel pride that in my short time I did more to benefit the global Masonic 
  community than those who were here before me for years but didn’t make a 
  positive difference in the aspects of bringing humanity and Masons of 
  different backgrounds together as we just saw in 2018 Florida and Texas 
  recognizing their Prince Hall counterparts. We are still behind in many ways 
  and one of the reasons I left because the organization lets anybody in and we 
  don’t practice what we preach when the going gets tough or when it comes down 
  to the nitty gritty. I am thankful to Mike from Grand Lodge who called me and 
  we agreed we would rather be only just 20 people instead of 100,000 but all 20 
  of them being top notch quality who were there for the right reasons. I am 
  also thankful to RWGM S Eugene Herritt who promised to keep my memory and 
  vision alive in terms of bringing change to the Grand Lodge. Masonry in the US 
  I believe and its members are currently a reflection of the society they 
  inhibit, by that I mean that we spend majority of our times on social media, 
  at jobs, home, and in the community and that’s where your true character is 
  revealed the most in comparison to just 2 night a month at lodge and 
  pretending to call someone a brother just for the sake of it but when times of 
  trial and tribulation come those same people are nowhere to be found and can 
  turn against you if they see the benefit of doing so. That is not Masonry and 
  I chose to walk away from it to contribute to my own community and people who 
  deserved it more. I still have WM’s from India asking for my demit certificate 
  to make me a member there but declined all of their requests. My next goal in 
  life is to be initiated into Sufism(Mystic Islam) and follow the true path of 
  God with people who are on the same spiritual frequency as me. I did not 
  resonate anymore with the members or the fraternity on a spiritual basis which 
  caused my departure so at the end it was not my loss at all.
  My last advice to the Freemasons 
  is that if you want this to continue to survive in a future where the young 
  ones are keen with artificial intelligence and info at the palm of their 
  hands, then you need to offer them something new that hasn’t been shown to 
  them before. The practice of memorizing sacred texts, being on a 
  chair/committee, contributing to charity is something that can be found in 
  every church, synagogue and mosque throughout America. The real question is, 
  what are you willing to help them realize in an environment where 
  relationships, family, jobs, spirituality is on a totally different playing 
  field then our previous generations? Once this question is addressed along 
  with letting in clean hearted quality people, then we won’t hear the same tune 
  every month of why the same 6-7 guys are showing in a lodge with 4-500 
  members. It’s a simple solution which if followed can be beneficial to the 
  organization along with not showing them the same stuff every meeting and not 
  letting Past Masters run their lodges. Give the new guys a chance otherwise 
  they will just see it as another boy’s club and move on with other adventures 
  in life that could benefit them more. It’s a shame for me to say this but I 
  learned more on my own and with likeminded spiritual people I had met before I 
  even became a Mason than I have ever learned in a lodge or appendant body. 
  That should not be the case.
  In conclusion, I am thankful for 
  these last 2 years for what they were worth to make a difference in the 
  organization of Freemasons in my state, country, and other nations to teach 
  them the forgotten values of a true Mason and the true nature of one who 
  listens to his heart and walks the path of God. I departed at age 26 in good 
  standing and still have a lifetime ahead of me to do great things for other 
  groups that are meant to cross my path. I am thankful to be the first in GL of 
  PA’s history to do a program on Sufism and make the effort to bring Masonic 
  understanding and unity while others are just worried about their legacies. My 
  greatest legacy will be that I will remain in the hearts and minds of the 
  Freemasons forever and that means I also live forever which is more important 
  than statues or my name appearing in Grand Lodge digest decisions. Please 
  continue to love each other in and out of lodge and practice what you preach 
  because God’s all-seeing eye will hold us all accountable one day for all our 
  seen and unseen actions. Before your meetings start, do a hand in hand 
  meditation so even the brother who feels left out can feel a part of his 
  brotherhood instead of looking bored or playing on his phone. I want you all 
  to think about all these things I have addressed in my final message and I 
  leave that burden on your shoulders from this point on with the mission of how 
  you will carry this fraternity forward for future generations and not be in a 
  desperate situation to keep numbers up. When your heart, mission, members, 
  teachings, online image, etc. is all pure and designed to empower somebody 
  then worrying about numbers should be the least of your worries because at the 
  end “My Faith is in God and God is my right.” As Salam Aleikum (Peace be upon 
  you and your families today and every day.)
  Yours in brotherhood,
  Salman S. Sheikh
  Upper Darby, Pennsylvania
  
   
  