MASONIC TRAVEL

Bucharest:

Capital of the Rite

Moment of Recognition

From New York to Bucharest: A Journey in Brotherhood

Travel has always been an integral part of my Masonic life. I seem to spend as much time in airports as I do in Lodge rooms, because a real comprehension of our Craft still happens face to face, across borders and beyond accents. As Chairman of the Public Relations Committee of the Grand Lodge of New York, I have learned that one cannot speak credibly about the universality of Freemasonry while remaining permanently at home. The XXI World Conference of Supreme Councils in Bucharest was yet another affirmation of that simple truth.

This gathering had a particular resonance for me. I attended as a special guest of the President of the World Conference of the Supreme Councils of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite, Illustrious Brother Stelian Nistor, Sovereign Grand Commander of the Supreme Council of Romania, and as a guest of his Illustrious team, Brothers Bogdan Murarescu and Dan Ciobanu, both 33°. I also had the pleasure of traveling with my colleague and friend, Right Worshipful Wilber Salazar, who serves with me as Co-Chair on the Grand Lodge Public Relations Committee. Together we represented New York among the more than sixty Supreme Councils from every continent that gathered under one roof in Bucharest.

It was also a source of fraternal pride to see the leadership of my own Grand Lodge so clearly appreciated on the international stage. Our Grand Master, Most Worshipful Steven Adam Rubin, has in recent years taken a visible interest in cross-border Masonic relations. In this Conference, he was listed among those receiving the 33° in the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction, recognition of his long labor for the Craft. In one widely quoted reflection on leadership, he reminded us that, “We are all Brothers just trying to do our parts,” a simple phrase that captures the best of our tradition and that felt very present in Bucharest, where so many different traditions met at the same table.

Photo: MWB Steven Adam Rubin (2nd from left, 2nd row) poses with event attendees

None of what unfolded in Bucharest happened by accident. For years, Illustrious Brother Stelian has been the architect of a quiet, disciplined diplomacy within the Scottish Rite. At the previous World Conference in Asunción, Paraguay, his efforts helped secure what the Romanian press called a “triple world record” for Romanian Masonry: the vice presidency of the World Conference through 2025, the presidency from 2025 to 2030, and, for the first time in the long history of the Rite, the host of the World Conference itself in Bucharest. In his message to the Brethren after that unanimous vote in Paraguay, he summed up the spirit that has carried into our present Conference with a short statement that has since become somewhat of a mantra: “Mergem fix înainte? Răspunsul faptelor noastre este DA!” (“Are we moving forward? The answer to our actions is YES!”). That determination to move forward with dignity could be felt in the way the sessions in Bucharest were conducted.

Romania welcomed the delegations at the highest civic level. We were received by the interim President of Romania Ilie Bolojan, now the sitting Prime Minister of Romania, and by Mr. Mircea Abrudean, President of the Senate of Romania. The monumental welcome given at the World Conference was fitting for its Masonic significance. Delegations were formally received at the National Bank of Romania by His Excellency Mugur Isărescu, its long-serving Governor, and at the Romanian Academy by its President, Professor Ioan-Aurel Pop. It was clear that our work formed part of the country’s wider conversation about its values, institutions, and stability, and not something to be hidden from public view.

 

Romania welcomed the delegations at the highest civic level. We were received by the interim President of Romania Ilie Bolojan, now the sitting Prime Minister of Romania, and by Mr. Mircea Abrudean, President of the Senate of Romania. The monumental welcome given at the World Conference was fitting for its Masonic significance. Delegations were formally received at the National Bank of Romania by His Excellency Mugur Isărescu, its long-serving Governor, and at the Romanian Academy by its President, Professor Ioan-Aurel Pop. It was clear that our work formed part of the country’s wider conversation about its values, institutions, and stability, and not something to be hidden from public view.

Under Illustrious Brother Stelian’s leadership, the visit to the National Bank became more than a protocol call. There, in the presence of these dignitaries, he presided over the unveiling of a portrait of General George Pomuț, the Romanian-American officer whose diplomacy helped make possible the purchase of Alaska by the United States in the nineteenth century, a work that will be donated to the United States Congress. It was a refined gesture but a clear one: the conference was not only about internal recognition among Supreme Councils, it was also about honoring the historic ties between Romania and the wider world.

Throughout the week, the international character of the gathering was never in doubt. Illustrious Brother Walt Wheeler, an important presence in the wider Scottish Rite family, brought his steady good humor and long view of our shared history. From the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States, Illustrious Brothers James D. Cole and Arturo de Hoyos added both gravitas and warmth, reminding everyone how deeply the Mother Council of the World remains invested in the success of each jurisdiction represented in Bucharest. Around them sat Grand Commanders and senior officers from Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia, all speaking different languages, all working within a common ritual vocabulary.

Behind the scenes, Illustrious Brothers Bogdan Murarescu and Dan Ciobanu carried a great deal of the duties with characteristic discretion: schedules, protocol, the delicate choreography of public events and closed sessions alike. Their work, and that of the broader Romanian team, allowed the rest of us to focus on the content of the Conference rather than its logistics. It is one thing to host a dignified session of a Supreme Council. It is quite another to host the world.

History, of course, was not only made in the plenary hall. This XXI World Conference was the first at which the Prince Hall Supreme Councils received full international recognition. In an overwhelming vote, the World Conference admitted both the United Supreme Council, 33°, Prince Hall Affiliation, Southern Jurisdiction, and its counterpart in the Northern Jurisdiction to full membership. For those of us who have worked for years to normalize cooperation between the “mainstream” and Prince Hall families of our Craft, this was more than a procedural matter. It was a visible affirmation that our symbolic language about universality can, in time, become institutional reality.

There were also quiet moments that will stay with me long after the photographs have faded. In breaks between sessions and receptions, I had several thoughtful conversations with members of the Israeli delegation. We spoke, not in abstractions, but in the concrete language of shared concerns: the risks and hopes of our region, the responsibilities that come with public visibility, the ways in which the Scottish Rite can create channels of communication that are deeper than the news cycle. Those exchanges reminded me how much of our real work takes place in the corridors, on the walk from one event to another, in the trust that allows a Brother to speak plainly.

Photo: Bro. Anis (right) with fellow event attendees

For me, attending the XXI World Conference of Supreme Councils was therefore not simply another item on a travel calendar. It was an opportunity to see how years of patient work by Illustrious Brother Stelian and his team have helped place Romania at the center of the Scottish Rite map, how our Grand Master’s emphasis on genuine brotherhood resonates far beyond New York, and how the recognition of Prince Hall Supreme Councils marks a concrete step toward a true universality in our Order. As a Mason who spends much of his time thinking about how we present ourselves to the world, I left Bucharest grateful: grateful for the hospitality shown to us, grateful for the quiet labor of so many Brothers, and convinced, once again, that the effort to cross borders in person is still worth every mile.

Written by: Bro:. Anis D. Okbani
Chairman, Public Relations Committee, Grand Lodge of New York
Grand Lodge of New York Ambassador Abroad to Israel and Morocco
Samuel Lloyd Kinsey