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- From: mimir@hardy.u.washington.edu (Al Billings)
- Newsgroups: alt.magick,alt.pagan
- Subject: Moorish Orthodox Church
- Summary: Spiffy stuff from Hakim Bey
- Keywords: neat cool wow
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.232347.5329@u.washington.edu>
- Date: 16 Nov 92 23:23:47 GMT
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Imams Anonymous
- Lines: 281
-
-
-
- HISTORY & CATECHISM
- of the
- MOORISH ORTHODOX CHURCH
- OF AMERICA
-
- virtual edition
-
-
-
- * * *
-
-
- Transcribed from the CRESCENT MOON PRESS
- 1986 Edition and updated by the editors
- 1992. no copyright
- (all material may be freely reproduced)
-
-
-
- Imprimatur & Nihil Obstat
-
- USTAD SELIM
- (Enforcer of the Law
- &
- Bishop-Exilarch of Persia)
- &
- ARIF HUSSEIN AL-CAMAYSAR
- (Imam of Manhattan)
-
-
-
- * * *
-
-
-
- A morning breeze
- trails musk behind it
- perfumes
- from the street
- where my love is
-
- Yes, and the world wastes
- while you sleep
- The caravan is leaving
- The sweet smell is dying
- Get up!
-
- Jalaloddin Rumi
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Moorish Orthodoxy is not a new religion. Historically it began with
- the message of the American prophet Noble Drew Ali, born Timothy Drew
- in North Carolina in 1886, raised by Cherokee Indians and adopted into
- that tribe. At sixteen Drew began his wanderings as a circus magician,
- which took him to Egypt where he received self knowledge and direction
- from a priest, the last of a cult of High Magic practiced for centuries
- in the pyramid of Cheops. This magus recognized the young American as
- a reincarnation of a former leader of the cult, and saw him for the
- prophet he was.
-
- From him Drew Ali learned the messages of The Circle Seven Koran, as
- well as much higher truths; he returned to America where he was told
- in a dream to found a new religion "for the uplifting of fallen
- mankind." He began the first mosque, or temple, in Newark --- but
- because he and his followers refused to fight in World War I he was
- forced to move to Chicago, where his movement, the Moorish Science
- Temple, began to grow.
-
- The Moorish Science Temple attracted mostly Black Americans. Noble
- Drew however was no racist, though he held certain racial theories.
- Blacks, he said, are Moabites or Moors, and under this identity he
- taught pride to a race of oppressed sufferers. Moors are an "Asiatic
- Race" --but so are many others. For example, Noble Drew identified
- Celts as an Asiatic Race; later, when Whites of various sorts became
- interested in Moorish Science, he identified all such as "Persians", a
- sort of spiritual rather than factual identity. For Moorish Americans
- Morocco is a "promised land"; this shows the influence of Garveyite
- "Return" teachings, and provides an interesting link between Moorish
- Science and Rastafarianism. Moorish Orthodoxy (despite its name) gives
- all these teachings an esoteric significance. For us, "The Asiatic
- Nation of North America" includes all who embrace some form of the
- Oriental Wisdom, whatever their other affiliations, and "Morocco"
- signifies their goal, "illuminated" consciousness.
-
- In Chicago Noble Drew issued many Moorish Passports, and it is said
- that some new converts, in the zeal of their newfound nationality,
- began to grow less and less subservient in their dealings with the
- oppressor empire ("Pharoah" or "Babylon"). This culminated in a full
- scale attack on the Science Temple in which (despite the secret escape
- route, an essential feature of all Moorish Science Temples) many of
- the faithful were martyred, including the Enforcer of the Law, a man
- whom Noble Drew had recognized as a reincarnation of Jesus.
-
- Shortly thereafter (in 1929) Noble Drew prophesied the hour of his
- death. He was "taken for questioning" by the Chicago Police and
- brutally beaten, and died soon after his release.
-
- After this, the Moorish Science Temple began to split into sects or
- factions, one headed by Noble Drew's chauffeur, another by Elijah
- Muhammed, who his his Moorish Science origins and taught a
- pseudo-science of race hatred disguised as the "Nation of Islam".
- Until Elijah's death, many Moors expected him to recant.
-
- In the 1950's in the Baltimore/DC area, some white poets and jazz
- musicians came into contact with the Science Temple and acquired
- passports. They formed another offshoot of Moorish Science, the
- Moorish Orthodox Church of America. At that early stage, the M.O.C.
- was seen as partly Moorish and partly Eastern Orthodox, and there
- existed certain ties with "Errant Bishops" of the Old Catholic Church,
- Syrian Orthodoxy, etc. Some of these founding fathers drifted
- eventually into Sunni Islam, others remained faithful to the M.O.C.
- and friendly to the Science Temple.
-
- In the early 1960's on Manhattan's Upper West Side, one of the
- youngest of these, Walid al-Taha (Warren Tartaglia), jazz saxophonist
- and author of -The Hundred Seeds of Beirut-, initiated some friends
- into the Church shortly before his tragic death (in his early 20's).
- A new Temple was established in a basement on 103rd street off
- Broadway, along with a head shop "The Crypt", and a Moorish Science
- Reading Room. The Church maintained a M.O.C. Motorcycle Club at
- various neighborhood garages, and a campsite of 123 acres was acquired
- in northern New York. Close ties were formed with the Ananda Ashram in
- upstate NY. Members in Baltimore renewed ties with elders and
- missionaries of the Moorish Science Temple, including the Moorish
- Governor of Maryland, who ran a junk shop that smelled of rose attar
- and woodstove smoke, and talked like a Persian poet from Alabama --
- an echo, no doubt, of Noble Drew's own perfect Moorish Voice. Ties
- were formed with the M.S.T. in Brooklyn, which provided copies of The
- Circle Seven Koran, Catechisms, etc.
-
- When the Ananda Ashram moved into Milbrook NY with Timothy Leary's
- League for Spiritual Discovery commune, the M.O.C. also established a
- presence there. The M.O.C. is proud of its heritage in the Psychedelic
- Churches Movement of the 60's, when we shared many adventures in
- Milbrook till the Empire banished its Celtic guru into exile and
- prison. We still have a temple in Duchess County, where the church is
- legally incorporated.
-
- At that time the Church more or less abandoned all "Orthodoxy" (though
- not the name) and found its true spirit in Sufism.
- What interested us most was Sufism of various unorthodox varieties,
- including Ismailism (the teachings of the Assassins). But many other
- strains were woven into the M.O.C. in the 60's, including Advaita
- Vedanta, Tantra, Neo-American-style psychedelic mysticism, Native
- American Symbolism, and insurrectionist activism.
-
- The 70's and early 80's in retrospect seem a rather dim period in
- Church history. Members scattered around the world and interest waned.
- The "New Age" bogged down in various Greed Therapies, guru-scams and
- bland-outs. For a while only small groups in Manhattan and Dutchess
- Co. kept a shadowy existence and continuity. Recently however the time
- has become ripe for a Revival. New religions are appearing: Native
- American rites, Neo-paganism, Anarcho-taoism, the followers of Eris
- and others with whom we feel a natural affinity. We have launched a
- new edition of our newspaper, The Moorish Science Monitor (quiescent
- since 1967!) and many new conversions have resulted. The sudden
- upsurge of interest necessitated this revised edition of the M.O.C.
- pamphlet, out of print since the late 60's.
-
- * * * * *
-
- What is Moorish Orthodoxy? What is its "Catechism"? Many people have
- converted to Moorish Orthodoxy simply on hearing its name or seeing
- the photograph of Noble Drew Ali (frontispiece of the Circle Seven
- Koran) -- later, however, they may wish to learn something of Moorish
- doctrine.
-
- In effect, there is none. Moorish Orthodoxy is like a mirror in which
- each seeker beholds a beloved form, each one different. We have no
- required ritual and no source of authority other than those the
- individual imagination provides. We do however perhaps share a certain
- "taste" or spiritual aesthetic.
-
- Moorish Orthodoxy was founded originally to explore the esoteric
- dimensions of Noble Drew's teachings, discovered in such passages from
- the Circle Seven Koran as these:
-
- "Now cease to seek for heaven in the sky;
- Just open up the windows of your hearts and,
- like a flood of light, a heaven will come
- and bring a boundless joy."
-
- "By the sweet breath of Allah all life is
- bound to one; so if you touch a fiber of
- a living thing you send a thrill from
- center to the outer bounds of life."
-
- "You are, each one, a priest, Just for
- yourself."
-
- "Allah and man are one."
-
- "When man has conquered every foe upon the
- plane of soul and the seed will have full
- opened out, will have unfolded in the
- Holy Breath. The garb of the soul will then
- have served its purpose well, and man will
- need it never more...and man will then at-
- tain unto a blessedness of perfectness
- and at one with Allah."
-
- "I (Jesus) brought immortality to light
- and painted on the walls of time a rain-
- bow for the sons of men; and what I did
- all men shall do."
-
- The antinomian and egalitarian aspects of lines like these have
- reinforced our position, in relation to all organized religion, of
- heresy; in relation to all liberatory teachings and beautiful
- imaginings we take up a posture of "rootless cosmopolitanism" that
- seeks out universal spirit hidden anywhere, revealed in all cultures,
- always occult and dissident, an "Invisible College" embracing East and
- West but rejecting all official stultifying Consensus Reality. A Moor
- might belong to any religion or none, "free either to take up a form
- or not take up a form... not bound to any. Forms are for use, not to
- make captives" (Hazrat Inayat Khan).
-
- The idea of an American heretical Islam is one such form. We
- appreciate the aesthetic of Moorish Science, of Noble Drew's unique
- and prophetic mixture of Afro-American, Native American, Magical,
- Oriental and Moorish symbolism and imagery. We admire his courage, his
- martyrdom, his revolutionary stance against "Pharoah", his
- Americanizing of the prophetic spirit (he always wore a Cherokee
- feather in his fez). We reflect this aesthetic in our lives and
- creative work. But we are not bound by it. Like certain esoteric
- Javanese sects we reject the figure of the Master (guru or murshed) in
- favor of the teacher. Anyone can be a teacher in relation to someone;
- everyone has something to teach, something to learn.
-
- To symbolize this attitude, all Moors are encouraged to create new
- names and titles for themselves. The Moorish Hierarchy is self
- appointed; anyone is free to print Passports, although the old
- Manhattan Lodge possesses certain seals and procedures which converts
- may appreciate. Popular titles include: Moorish Governor,
- Metropolitan, Deacon, Vicar, Exilarch, Imam, Castellan, Papessa,
- Contessa, Marshall or just plain Reverend. Moorish Science Temple
- adherents often add "Bey" or "El" to their names, others favor other
- traditions, and some use their own names. All Moors are entitled to
- titles, however, since all Moors have "authority".
-
- The Moorish Orthodox Catechism, then, consists of no rules or dogmas,
- but only of adherance to the "Five Pillars" of Moorish Science as
- listed by Noble Drew:
-
- LOVE
- TRUTH
- PEACE
- FREEDOM
- JUSTICE
-
- to which we add a sixth, "Beauty".
-
-
-
-
- This bud opens into the red rose,
- the nightingale is drunk for joy---
- Hail, seekers! Lovers of wine;
- wine for a thirsty world
- like a slug under
- the rock of repentance...
- a rock smashed by a mere goblet---
- and that is the announcement, the Miracle
-
- Wine for the king! Wine for the slave!
- this banquet was set for everyone,
- drunk or sober, and when
- the Feast is over and night grows up,
- and the inside door of the Tavern springs
- open
- Low and High together will bow down
- under the Arch of the World
- to meet what...outside?
-
- Hafez Shirazi
-