Stephen Knight
Masonic Ritual Murders AKA Jack the Ripper by Uri Dowbenko
Book
The Brotherhood by Stephen Knight
Jack the Ripper: The Final Solution by Stephen Knight
The Killing of Justice Godfrey
See: BAAL Freemasonry
Quotes
"In the ritual of exaltation, the name of the Great Architect
of the Universe is revealed as JAH-BUL-ON......BUL =
Baal, the ancient Canaanite fertility god associated
with 'licentious rites of imitative magic'. .....Baal,
of course, was the 'false god' with whom Jahweh competed for the allegiance of
the Israelites in the Old Testament. But more recently, within a hundred years
of the creation of the Freemason's God, the sixteenth-century demonologist John
Weir identified Baal as a devil. This grotesque manifestation of evil had the
body of a spider and three heads - those of a man, a toad and a cat. A
description of Baal to be found in de Plancy's Dictionary of Witchcraft is
particularly apposite when considered in the light of the secretive and
deceptive nature of Freemasonry: his voice was raucous, and he taught his
followers guile, cunning and the ability to become invisible.
JAH-BUL-ON by Stephen Knight
Eagle's investigation was centred on Masonry in the medical profession, which
is prevalent, especially among general practitioners and the more senior
hospital doctors. Hospital Lodges prove useful meeting places for medical staff
and administrators. Most main hospitals, including all the London teaching
hospitals, have their own Lodges. According to Sir Edward Tuckwell, former
Serjeant-Surgeon to the Queen, and Lord Porritt, Chairman of the African Medical
and Research Foundation, both Freemasons and both consultants to the Royal
Masonic Hospital, the Lodges of the teaching hospitals draw their members from
hospital staff and GPs connected with the hospital in question.
Tuckwell and Porritt are members of
the Lodges attached to the teaching hospitals where they trained and later
worked - Porritt at St Mary's, Paddington (St Mary's Lodge No 63), which has
about about forty active members out of a total of 300, half of them general
practitioners; and Tuckwell at St Bartholomew's (Rahere Lodge No 2546), with
about thirty active brethren. Other London hospital Lodges include King's
College (No 2973); London Hospital, Whitechapel (No 2845); St Thomas's (No 142)
and Moorfields (No 4949).
Many of the most senior members of
the profession are Freemasons, especially those actively involved with the Royal
College of Physicians and the Royal College of Surgeons, which has benefited
from a massive £600,000 trust fund set up by the Brotherhood for medical
research. Masonry does seem to have had an influence over certain appointments.
Tuckwell emphatically denied that membership of the Brotherhood ever helped any
doctor's career, telling Eagle that there was not the slightest truth in the
rumour '. .. whereas Lord Porritt more circumspectly said that "it would be hard
to deny that some people have been helped"'.
Although the governing bodies of
most major hospitals are formed largely of Freemasons, the one overriding
consideration in medicine, at least in the non-administrative areas, seems to be
placing the best person in the job, whether Mason or otherwise. This is perhaps
best illustrated by the staffing of the Brotherhood's own hospital. The Royal
Masonic Hospital is not staffed exclusively by Freemasons, although most of its
consultants are Brothers.
Chief executive of the hospital
Raymond Mole says that Masonry is not a criterion for appointment. The only
qualification demanded is that a Royal Masonic consultant be a consultant at a
teaching hospital. Robert Eagle again:
. .. registrars at the hospital are not usually Masons . . . one of the few women doctors to work at the Royal Masonic Hospital told me that during the several years she held the job she heard very little mention of the subject.
'Obviously no one asked me to join; but I had no idea whether even my closest colleague there was a Mason.' As she subsequently became a consultant at the hospital she does not seem to have been the victim of Masonic misogyny either. Stephen Knight (The Brotherhood by Stephen Knight p. 136-138)