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New Book Makes Jack The Ripper A Freemason…Again

Here we go again.

The tired old accusation that the infamous Jack the Ripper was a Freemason is back. The latest author to try to make this idiotic claim is Bruce Robinson in his new book, They All Love Jack: Busting The Ripper.

Read the interview with him in GQ-UK Magazine. From
"How one man revealed Jack the Ripper's identity" by Robert Chalmers:


Robinson's research into the Ripper's atrocities gathered pace once he examined the murder of Catherine Eddowes, the second of two murders (known as the "double event") on the night of 30 September 1888. "He killed and mutilated her, then wrote this message on the wall: 'The Juwes are / The men that / Will not / Be blamed for nothing.' Sir Charles Warren, commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, is informed of this message by telegraph. He leaps out of bed at 4am and gets into a hansom cab, not in order to preserve the writing on the wall but to wipe it out. And erase it he did, even though fellow officers were urging him to have this evidence photographed. Right there you have the fulcrum on which the so-called mystery of Jack the Ripper lies."
The word "Juwes", Robinson argues, is a reference to Jubela, Jubelo and Jubelum, assassins central to Masonic legend. (Their full history and mythical significance is explained at some length in They All Love Jack.)
"Once I started researching Commissioner Warren, what emerged was that he was a very senior Freemason. He knew the message about 'Juwes' had to have been written by a Mason. Warren got his stupid arse out of bed that night to fulfil the spirit of the oath sworn by a senior Freemason, ie, 'I will protect any other Mason [from the consequences of their actions], murder and treason not excluded.'"
Robinson re-examined the forensic detail of other known Ripper murders. "Freemasonry has denied any connection with the Ripper for 130 years," he says. "But these women were all murdered according to Masonic ritual. Throats cut across, abdomens ripped open, guts slung over their shoulders, every piece of metal taken off them and placed nearby. The whole affair is glaringly Masonic. That much I realised within a week."

Of course, the notion that Jack the Ripper was a Freemason is hardly innovative. Dozens of Ripperologists have examined the murders in this context
Robinson's no slouch - he's the author of the award winning screenplay for the 1984 film The Killing Fields. But he uses the same, tired old "evidence" that they all use: namely, the "Juwes" nonsense. This theory was first promulgated in Stephen Knight's 1976 book, Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution. The tale came to him from an informant named Joseph Sickert, son of a painter named Walter Sickert who supposedly knew all the juicy details firsthand and told them to his son before he died (Sickert had an axe to grind, since his father had been a suspect himself). Never mind that no one besides anti-Masonic conspiracy mongers, including any Mason, has ever referred to the three ruffians in Masonic ritual as "the Juwes". And the names of the ruffians were removed from English ritual in the early 1800s. It is very true that Sir Charles Warren, Commissioner of London's Metropolitan Police and a Freemason, approved of having the message scrawled on the wall removed, but this was because there were rumors in the city that a Jew was responsible for the Ripper killings. There had, in fact, already been several near-riots and incidents of violence against Jews over the case, and Warren didn't want the graffiti seen out of fear that more would happen.


As to the so-called Masonic ritual references to the killings themselves and the manner in which the bodies were arranged, many of the details are just plain wrong, or a total fabrication. If you want to read about it in great detail, see WBro. Dennis Stocks' very detailed essay, Freemasonry and the Ripper.

I have no idea if the UGLE's ritual in 1888 said that a Mason would protect a Brother, "murder and treason not excluded." Perhaps someone else knows. But I do know that my own jurisdiction goes out of its way in the ritual to specifically say "murder and treason excluded," and has for some time. Certainly, Robinson has no way of knowing. Masons are required to obey the laws of their nation, and there is absolutely no evidence of Masons concealing their crimes from the authorities for each other, despite many attempts to accuse them of it down through history. There is literally one instance in modern history of Masons accused of murder and covering it up (see the entry for William Morgan on Wikipedia), and the evidence of that so-called crime is shaky at best-it has never been proved, and no body was ever found. That's literally it.

This Ripper stuff is typical British anti-Masonic claptrap, and dragging it up again makes me suspect the rest of Mr. Robinson's theories. The entire Masonic theory originated with Joseph Sickert who introduced Stephen Knight to the story, and fabricated a whole Ripper hoax that spawned several books, magazine articles and documentaries. In the June 18th, 1978 edition of London's Sunday Times he confessed that he made the whole story up, or in his own words, "it was a hoaxa whopping fib." Masons included.

Continue reading...
 
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Lazza21

Registered User
Unfortunately yet another conspiracy theory founded on an assumption made in ignorance by the author.
 

Glen Cook

G A Cook
Site Benefactor
The segment we read presents an interesting case for identifying the killer. It fails, in the sections outlined, to prove a Masonic conspiracy. The belief that a G Musician is a senior Mason is an error. Further, rather than accepting the intuitive conclusion that a failure to mention the culprit in diaries is evidence the culprit wasn't well known, the claim is made that failing to mention him is evidence if conspiracy. The senior officer order to remove graffiti is again thought to be evidence of conspiracy. Nothing new there.

I shall wait for it to hit the mark down shelf.
 

Warrior1256

Site Benefactor
I absolutely LOVE these Masonic conspiracy theories!!!! I actively look for them on the internet for the entertainment value. All are amusing and some are right down thigh slapping hilarious.
 

coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
conspiracy.jpg
 

Warrior1256

Site Benefactor
Well, they do have their entertainment value, as long as you treat them this way. It's when they are taken as factual when the troubles start.
And it always amazes me how many people DO believe them no matter how goofy or outlandish.
 

coachn

Coach John S. Nagy
Premium Member
I don't quite understand brother. Could you explain?
re: ...many people DO believe them no matter how goofy or outlandish...

Sure Brother: out of its 92 pages, 11 are dedicated to drinking songs. The rest was also put forth as goofy and outlandish history and rules. It is not history. Even the historians of the day looked at it as foolish.

It was entertainment for dinner parties and a way of justifying and standardizing the newly created role-playing theatrical franchise.

And there are far too many who believe otherwise.
 

Warrior1256

Site Benefactor
re: ...many people DO believe them no matter how goofy or outlandish...

Sure Brother: out of its 92 pages, 11 are dedicated to drinking songs. The rest was also put forth as goofy and outlandish history and rules. It is not history. Even the historians of the day looked at it as foolish.

It was entertainment for dinner parties and a way of justifying and standardizing the newly created role-playing theatrical franchise.

And there are far too many who believe otherwise.
Thank you coachn, I always value your opinion.
 
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