Masonic Temple Used for Worship by JWs

by blondie 18 Replies latest social current

  • blondie
    blondie

    Representatives of the Jehovah's Witnesses didn't show. But their work on the former Masonic Temple at 385 Broadway was praised by the commission's executive director, Michael Wing.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses are cleaning up, repainting and refurbishing the temple in a way that meets their needs for worship but doesn't despoil the building's original intent, said Wing. A large Masonic symbol in ornate floor tile has been covered with a circular rug, he said.

    Other symbols on the outside of the building have been covered with stucco, he said.

    The congregation could have obliterated both, but they remain, he said.

    http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?level_3_id=57&page=5685559

    City honors woman |for preserving its past

    Monday, November 18, 2002

    By CHRIS GALE
    Herald News

    PATERSON - Flavia Alaya, a historic preservation activist, sounded a war cry on behalf of the city's besieged history, including four stolen plaques that once adorned Hinchliffe Stadium and which she said are in the possession of a Montclair antiques dealer.

    Initially, Alaya's voice was swallowed by the Paterson Museum's voluminous hall, filled with silk looms, lathes, airplane engines and a submarine. But she roused the audience, telling members they should be "harassing the people who have charge of our culture."

    She read out the phone numbers of various officials and told the crowd it should call for the return of the plaques, which she said were discovered missing five years ago and had been sighted in a Montclair antique shop. The dealer won't return them, she said.

    The historic preservation activist, who also busies herself with other causes, was one of three people receiving the City of Paterson Historic Commission's Annual Heritage Citizen Award, an honor she started when she was the head of the commission. In a ceremony noting success stories in the city's preservation movement, she reminded attendees of the combative side of historic advocacy and the tendency for Paterson's history to be purloined.

    Two valuable Colt pistols were stolen from the Paterson Museum, and have yet to be recovered. At a city memorial, two plaques and a stone urn are missing. A small cannon that was part of a Civil War memorial was stolen in the mid-1990s. It was later found at a scrap yard in Newark and returned.

    "So many blows to strike, can't strike them all," she told a friend later as the gathering broke up.

    Joining Alaya in receiving the award, a scroll tied with a multicolor ribbon, was John Peretti and Michael Lemme, and The Jehovah's Witnesses of Paterson.

    Peretti and Lemme had rehabilitated a dilapidated Victorian house at 624 East 27th St.

    "Everybody thought we were crazy," said Lemme about the day they bought the house.

    Peretti said their attention to historic detail will pay off when they find a buyer willing to pay the $399,000 they've listed the house at.

    "When this house sells, it will send shock waves," said Peretti.

    Representatives of the Jehovah's Witnesses didn't show. But their work on the former Masonic Temple at 385 Broadway was praised by the commission's executive director, Michael Wing.

    The Jehovah's Witnesses are cleaning up, repainting and refurbishing the temple in a way that meets their needs for worship but doesn't despoil the building's original intent, said Wing. A large Masonic symbol in ornate floor tile has been covered with a circular rug, he said.

    Other symbols on the outside of the building have been covered with stucco, he said.

    The congregation could have obliterated both, but they remain, he said.

    Congressman Bill Pascrell Jr., D-Paterson, acknowledged the recipients, giving each an award of his own, emblazoned with the congressional seal.

    He recalled his time as mayor of the city and his push for historic preservation saying "people laughed at us 25 years ago." But Pascrell said preservation, and the militancy of activists like Alaya are necessary -"preservation is renewal."

    Reach Chris Gale at (973) 569-7132 or [email protected].

    5685559

  • sf
    sf

    Well, well, will Wonders never cease?

    I suppose it was only a matter of Time.

    'Covering over' what was already laid there as 'symbolic', is redundant and a slap in Russell's face.

    Shame!

    sKally

  • Matty
    Matty

    I thought this was rather odd and goes against the traditional view of witnesses making no compromises in their "pure worship".

  • ballistic
    ballistic

    We actually held our memorial in the Masonic Hall itself one year as the kingdom hall was being re-built.

  • shera
    shera

    odd...

  • ARoarer
    ARoarer

    I know that property. They had "brothers" from local Halls in our area working on it. They will turn around and sell it for a profit. They get the free labor to do all the work and then the Society sells the property. They did that with the assembly hall up in Monroe, and I heard they were thinking about selling the one in Jersey City. That one is also a historical landmark. The old Stanly Theatre.

  • ARoarer
    ARoarer

    I know that property. They had "brothers" from local Halls in our area working on it. They will turn around and sell it for a profit. They get the free labor to do all the work and then the Society sells the property. They did that with the assembly hall up in Monroe, and I heard they were thinking about selling the one in Jersey City. That one is also a historical landmark. The old Stanly Theatre.

  • ARoarer
    ARoarer

    I know that property. They had "brothers" from local Halls in our area working on it. They will turn around and sell it for a profit. They get the free labor to do all the work and then the Society sells the property. They did that with the assembly hall up in Monroe, and I heard they were thinking about selling the one in Jersey City. That one is also a historical landmark. The old Stanly Theatre.

  • lulu
    lulu

    In 2001 we met in the local R.S.L. memorial hall on a Sunday morning. The ex soldiers met at another time as did other religions!! Hyprocrites!!

  • Room 215
    Room 215

    It's amazing how they can grant exceptions and dispensations when it suits them. When the WTBTS took over the Greepoint Avenue theater in about 1996, and turned it into NYC's first Assembly Hall, it was loaded with Egytpoitan figures and religious motifs, including innumerable crux ansata.

    Pressing to meet renovation deadline, Knorr and other Bethel bigwigs order the workers to ignore the pagan symbols and proceed with the paintng, plumbng and electrical work. It was only when local dubs raised a hue and cry did they attempt to obliterate the symbols.

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