150th Birth Anniversary of Andres Bonifacio

Bro. Andrés Bonifacio y de Castro (November 30, 1863 – May 10, 1897) was a Filipino nationalist, revolutionary leader and a Freemason. 

Bro. Andres was born to Santiago Bonifacio and Catalina de Castro in Tondo, Manila and was the eldest of six children. His father was a tailor who served as a teniente mayor (municipal official) of Tondo while his mother (a mestiza of Spanish descent) worked in a cigarette factory. He was orphaned in his late teens - his mother died of tuberculosis in 1881 and his father followed a year after. Bro. Andres was forced to drop out of school and work to support his family. He worked as a mandatorio (clerk/messenger) for the English trading firm Fleming and Company, where he rose to become a corredor (agent) of tar and other goods. He later transferred to Fressell and Company, a German trading firm, where he worked as a bodeguero (warehouseman/agent). He also set up a family business of selling canes and paper fans. Bro. Andres was married twice. His first wife was a certain Monica who died of leprosy. His second wife was Gregoria de Jesús of Caloocan, whom he married in 1893. who would later be deeply involved in the activities of the Katipunan and would even-tually carve a name for herself in the annals of the Revolution.They had one son who died in infancy. Despite not finishing formal education, Bro. Andres was self-educated. He read books about the French Revolution, biographies of the Presidents of the United States, the colonial penal and civil codes, and novels such as Victor Hugo's Les Misérables, Eugène Sue's Le Juif errant and José Rizal's Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo.
Bro. Andres was a member of the Liga Filipina along with Bro. Jose Rizal, Bro. Marcelo Del Pilar, Bro. Graciano Lopez-Jaena. Like most of his peers in the Liga Filipina, Bro. Andres was a freemason. He is a member of Taliba Lodge No. 165 under the Gran Oriente Español (Spanish Grand Lodge). His association with freemasonry substantially influenced the conceptual underpinnings of the Katipunan, particularly on its features of organizational structure, cabalistic rituals and secrecy. When Bonifacio lost hope regarding the attainment of the political reforms sought for by the Liga Filipina, he decided , along with Teodoro Plata, Ladislao Diwa and others to establish the Katipunan, a revolutionary secret society for the purpose of overthrowing Spanish colonial rule. Thus, on July 7, 1892, by the light of a flickering lamp in a house on Azcarraga Street (now known as C.M. Recto) in Tondo, the Kataas-taasan, Kagalanggalangan na Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan was formally launched with solemn rituals involving the ancient blood compact, with the Katipuneros signing their membership with their own blood. The secret society rapidly grew in numbers. The publication of the Kalayaan which was edited by Bro Andres’ close friend and confidant Bro. Emilio Jacinto hastened the proliferation of the Katipunan membership not only in the neighboring provinces but also as far as Panay and Mindanao. By August, the member-ship was estimated at 400,000 strong. 

On May 10, 1897, at the hills of Maragondon, the Supremo and his brother Procopio were executed by the squad led by Lazaro Makapagal. There are conflicting reports as to the manner of execution. The official report states that they were shot and then buried in a shallow grave. Other subsequent accounts allege that Bonifacio was hacked to death and left unburied in the wilderness. He was only thirty three years old. 

Masonic District NCR-A Friendly Basketball Games
















I SAT IN LODGE WITH YOU

There is a saying filled with cheer,
Which calls a man to fellowship.
It means as much for him to hear
As lies within the brother grip.
Nay, more! It opens wide the way
To friendliness sincere and true;
There are no strangers when you say
To me: "I sat in lodge with you."

When that is said, then I am known;
There is no questioning nor doubt;
I need not walk my path alone
Nor from my fellows be shut out.
Those words hold all of brotherhood
And help me face the world anew
There's something deep and rich and good
In this: "I sat in lodge with you."

Though in far lands one needs must roam
By sea and shore and hill and plain,
Those words bring him a touch of home
And lighten tasks that seem in vain.
Men's faces are no longer strange
But seem as those he always knew
When some one brings the joyous change
With this: "I sat in lodge with you."

So you, my brother, now and then
Have often put me in your debt
By showing forth to other men
That you your friends do not forget.
When all the world seems gray and cold
And I am weary, worn and blue
Then comes this golden thought I hold
You said: "I sat in lodge with you."

When to the last great Lodge you fare
My prayer is that I may be
One of your friends who wait you there
Intent your smiling face to see.
We, with the warden at the gate,
Will have a pleasant task to do;
We'll call, though you come soon or late:
"Come in! We sat in lodge with you!"

3rd Degree Conferral - October 22, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brothers! 


Bro. Benjamin Privado
Bro. Gary Reyes

Burial Site of King Hiram of Tyre

Known also as "Huram" and "Horam," Hiram was the king of Tyre in the time of King David and King Solomon. While he was politically allied with David, Hiram's workmen helped David's people to build David's palace in Jerusalem, and then after Solomon succeeded his father David as King of Israel, Hiram's workers also participated in the building of the first Temple. Much of the fine cedar for both the palace and Temple came from Tyre.

The Level and the Square

 by Brother Rob Morris Poet Laureate of Freemasonry
(This poem, written in August, 1854, is the most popular Masonic Poem of all time.)

We meet upon the Level and we part upon the Square.
What words of precious meaning, those words Masonic are!
Come, let us contemplate them! They are worthy of a thought;
In the very walls of Masonry the sentiment is wrought.

We meet upon the Level, though from every station come,
The rich man from his palace and the poor man from his home;
For the rich must leave his wealth and state outside the Mason's door,
And the poor man finds his best respect upon the Checkered Floor.

We act upon the Plumb - 'tis the orders of our Guide.
We walk upright in virtue's way and lean to neither side;
The All-Seeing Eye that reads our hearts doth bear us witness true
That we still try to honor God and give each man his due.

We part upon the Square, for the world must have its due;
We mingle with the multitude, a faithful band and true.
But the influence of our gatherings in memory is green,
And we long upon the Level to renew the happy scene.

There's a world where all are equal - we are hurrying toward it fast,
We shall meet upon the Level there when the gates of Death are past;
We shall stand before the Orient, and our Master will be there
To try the blocks we offer with His own unerring Square.

We shall meet upon the Level there, but never thence depart.
There's a Mansion - 'tis all ready for each trusting, faithful heart.
There's a Mansion, and a welcome, and a multitude is there
Who have met upon the Level and been tried upon the Square.

Let us meet upon the Level, then while laboring patient here;
Let us meet and let us labor, though the labor be severe;
Already in the Western sky the signs bid us prepare
To gather up our Working Tools and part upon the Square.

Hands round, ye faithful Brotherhood, the bright fraternal Chain.
We part upon the Square below to meet in Heaven again!
What words of precious meaning, those words Masonic are --
We meet upon the Level and we part upon the square

3rd Degree Conferral - August 27, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brothers! 


Bro. Eric Cister
Bro. Wilmar Binag

3rd Degree Conferral - July 23, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brothers! 


Bro. Ariel Catangay
Bro. Joel Peralta

3rd Degree Conferral - June 25, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brothers! 


Bro. Wilson Bumanlag
Bro. Ian Salongsongan

Our Grand Master

MW Juanito G. Espino
Grand Master
MY 2013-2014

The Man: His simple beginning
     Our Grand Master was born on 11 June 1952 and the 4th in the brood of seven (7) children from the marriage of Juanito Sr. and Encarnacion, both from Iloilo province. His father worked as the Chief of Staff of the late Senator Jose C. Zulueta while his mother was busy rearing the children as a simple and lovely housewife. His father’s fame and achievement did not have any reflection on our soon to be Grand Master. His simple beginning was characterized as a probinsiyano whose colorful memories and happy thoughts were spent selling newspaper, needles, and buttons in the busy streets of the City. He spent his childhood with his playmates in the riverbanks of Iloilo City’s waterways.

3rd Degree Conferral - April 16, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brother! 

Bro. Rodolfo Diawa

State Funeral for Dr. Jose P. Rizal

The Secret of Enlightened Societies


Message 
Scottish Rite Masons Annual Banquet
1828 Taft Avenue, Pasay City












Secretary Jesse M. Robredo
Department of Interior and Local Government
9 March 2012 

Appropriate greetings...

You and I are standing at a crucial juncture—a turning point, if you 
will—in our country’s history. There is no doubt as to the greatness 
of our nation. Leaders like Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio, and 
Apolinario Mabini have captured the great Filipino aspirations and
built this country’s foundations with their blood. Yet for the most 
part in the last decades, we have moved forward in some kind of 
erratic pace. Brilliance is interrupted by vapid progress. Leaps 
fizzle out, leaving us plodding along... Does the Philippines really 
have what it takes to claim its rightful place among the region’s 
tigers?

Freemasonry building good character of men By Wilma Yamzon (The Philippine Star)

MANILA, Philippines - From a handful of Filipino men who banded together in 18th century Spain to fight for freedom, masonry in the Philippines now has an estimated 25,000 members, almost all of them wielding considerable influence in society.

In the last hundred years, the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of the Philippines (GLP) was able to produce four presidents of the Republic, two prime ministers, three chief justices, four top educators, and five military leaders.
The honor roll includes Presidents Emilio Aguinaldo, Manuel Quezon, Jose Laurel, and Manuel Roxas; prime ministers Apolinario Mabini and Cesar Virata; chief justices Jose Abad Santos, Manuel Moran, and Reynato Puno; educators Rafael Palma, Conrado Benitez, Carlito Puno and Manuel Agulto; and military generals Douglas MacArthur, Vicente Lukban, Hermogenes Ebdane, Avelino Razon, and Voltaire Gazmin.
Before the GLP was officially constituted in 1912, its most influential members were Jose Rizal, Marcelo del Pilar, Andres Bonifacio, and Graciano Lopez Jaena – four national heroes that changed the course of Philippine history.
Indeed, freemasonry teaches moral and ethical lessons of the principles of brotherhood, relief and truth.
“We build good character of men. That’s the foremost aim of masonry,” said GLP Grand Master Santiago Gabionza Jr.  during his group’s visit to The STAR the other day.
“We want to hone men of strongest character, so they can lead. Our guiding weapon: Love for God and country,” explained Gabionza.
For his part, former GLP grand master and chief justice Puno said that freemasonry promotes “goodness in the hearts of men.”
“Goodness in men is the greatest legacy freemasons can give to society,” Puno said.
“It’s on that goodness that masonic leader, former United States President George Washington, based his country’s Constitution,” Puno said.
“Even the Philippine flag has the marking of masonry because a mason designed it. Notice it in the sun and stars of our flag,” said Puno.
Armando Cazzola, historian and Worshipful Master of San Pedro Lodge No. 292, said the revolution against the Spanish governor in 1896 was waged by Filipino masons who were arrested persecuted, exiled, tortured, imprisoned or even put to death.
Religious leaders such as priests Mariano Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora were executed for being masons, Cazzola said.
He noted that many revolutions around the world, including the 1896 and 1986 EDSA People Power revolts in the Philippines, were led by masons.
One of the best contributions of freemasonry to the world is the advocacy of freedom of nations and religions.
Despite the organization’s great diversity, freemasonry’s central preoccupations remain charitable work with local and wider community, the propagation of belief in a Supreme Being, and maintenance of fraternal friendship.
This month, the centennial celebration of the organization will culminate with a wreath laying at the Rizal monument to honor its greatest member and hero.
Other activities, which began in December last year, were the holding of multi-district conventions, fun run and opening of first GLP Masonic Museum in Paco, Manila.



3rd Degree Conferral - March 26, 2013

Raised to the third degree of Masonic craft, our congratulations to our newly raised brother! 

Bro. Almario E. Alonzo Jr.
Bro. Llyod P. Lagman

Dr. Jose Rizal certificate of membership to Temple de Honneur et de L'Union, a Masonic lodge in Paris under Grand Oriente de France.

In Oct. 14, 1891 Jose Rizal applied for admission to Temple de Honneur et de L'Union, a lodge in Paris under Grand Oriente de France. This lodge further inculcated in his heart the French Masonic motto and principle of “Liberty, Fraternity and Equality”. Dr. Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera, Dr. Ariston Bautista, Juan Luna, Dr.Felix Pardo de Tavera, Valentin Ventura and Antonio Vergel de Dios and his brother were prominent and active members of this lodge. Rizal was 30 when he was scheduled for conferral on October 14, 1891. Some of his comrades including Graciano Lopez Jaena, Mariano Ponce, and Marcelo H. del Pilar, were also active Masons. Rizal, on the other hand, was more placid.

notice the nurse's belt buckle who escorted the Queen from the hospital

As Queen Elizabeth II left the King Edward VII hospital this week after being treated for a stomach infection, she was escorted by a hospital nurse, and these images were taken. The nurse's belt buckle bears the symbol of a Square and Compass. To disappoint any strange theories, wearing this emblem means the nurse most likely trained at the Royal Masonic Hospital. Named the Freemasons' War Hospital, the Royal Masonic Hospital was opened by London freemasons during World War I, treating over 4,000 servicemen and an additional 8,600 servicemen during World War II. As it grew and moved into new premises, 'King George V gave permission for the hospital to be renamed as the Royal Masonic Hospital.'

GLP 100 Pesos Commemorative Bill


Duke of Kent reelected Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England

London, United Kingdom. During the Quarterly Annual Communication of the United Grand Lodge of England, the Duke of Kent was confirmed again as Grand Master.

MRRML # 355 Civic Outreach Program 2013

The Filipino League of Golfers of Chicago Illinois together with Macario Ramos Memorial Lodge #355, Glenview United Methodist Church, Central United Methodist Church, Soroptomist Int'l. of Mandaluyong, Church Outreach Foundation, and Local Barangays and & Volunteers conducted an outreach project to the poor residents, street children of TM Kalaw, Manila. The project included feeding, haircut and distribution of grocery items and slippers

TAKE MY HAND; FOLLOW ME


When I was a young man, a long time ago,
The secrets of Masonry I wanted to know.
Of a Mason I asked what those secrets might be.
He replied,"First, we talk, then we will see."

A petition he granted and ordered it filled
To be read at a meeting and a judgment be willed.
Then questions I answered about God and home;
Of habits and friends; a wife or alone.

MRRML 355 10th Public Installation of Elected and Appointed Officers

MRRML 355 Elected and Appointed Officers for MY 2013-2014



VW Reynaldo Tomampo
Worshipful Master                    

Bro. Alex Halili
Senior Warden  

Bro. Bertsan Balanay            
Junior Warden    

VW Charles Agar
Secretary

WB Donald Ronquillo
Treasurer

WB  Jose Alvin P. Sevilla 
Auditor                                   

Bro. Joseph Quibral
Chaplain 

Bro. Jet Tajonera                             
Marshall

Bro. Philip Grecia                                  
Senior Deacon

Bro. Andy De Vera               
Junior Deacon  

Bro. Brem Escanilla
Senior Steward

Bro. Eugenio Pasco       
Junior Steward

VW Julio M. Cabali
VW Januario Sia-Cunco
WB Jovencio Felipe
Bro. Romeo Pacamana
Lecturer

Bro. Al Baet
Almoner

Bro. Edgar Reyws
Orator

Bro. Roderick Sunico
Historian

Bro.  Arnie Santiago
Organist

WB Rommel Dawal       
Tyler                

PHOTOS