• HISTORY & CATECHISM OF THE MOORISH ORTHODOX CHURCH OF AMERICA

    From Andrew Squires to All on Friday, January 23, 2026 11:19:19


    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











    Andy
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
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