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I'm reading a book called Going Greek about the formations of the Jewish fraternities and sororities. BG |
The State Presidents of Illinois State Chapter of P.E.O. have something they call the Mizpah Circle. I'm not sure if the other state chapters do that, too. I think they refer to this definition "Mizpah (emotional bond), an emotional bond between people who are separated".
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Mizpah. And: "Laban said, 'This heap [of stones] is a witness between you and me this day.' Therefore it was named Galeed, and Mizpah, for he said, 'May the Lord watch between you and me when we are absent one from the other.'"Genesis 31:48-49. This is referred to as the Covenant of Mizpah. |
Our main founder, Eugenia Tucker Fitzgerald, is buried at Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon, Georgia decorated with pearls and the beginning of our Creed:
http://www.cestchristine.com/wp-cont...9/IMG_2771.jpg Octavia Andrew Rush: http://image1.findagrave.com/photos2...8813463034.jpg |
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BG |
As I posted in the other thread on founders' grave sites, there are two graves that are marked with markers related to Phi Mu Alpha. The first is the grave of our Founder, first President of Alpha Chapter and first Supreme President, Ossian Everett Mills. Father Mills died on December 26, 1920. This marker at his grave in Thompson, Connecticut, was dedicated on December 28, 1928:
http://da-knight.tripod.com/sitebuil...g.w300h225.jpg The second is the grave of the second President of Alpha Chapter, first Supreme Historian and Sixth Supreme President, Percy Jewett Burrell. With Mills, Burrell was instrumental in establishing and articulating the values and principles on which the Fraternity is based. Burrell died without any descendants at the age of 87 in 1964. In 1998, history-minded Sinfonians learned that he had been buried in an unmarked grave in Watertown, Massachusetts. They worked for several years with city officials and with family members toward placing a monument at his grave, and raised money for that monument through donations from Sinfonians across the country. On October 2, 2004, this marker was dedicated at his grave (these pictures are from the dedication ceremony): http://da-knight.tripod.com/sitebuil...g.w300h225.jpg http://da-knight.tripod.com/sitebuil...g.w300h400.jpg The inscription at the bottom can't be completely seen. It reads: "He has not truly lived who has not lived for others, in sympathy and harmony with his fellows." It comes from Burrell's 1908 President's Message to the Fraternity. |
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Hahaha, I am actually shocked to see it on the gravestone, because it is a direct reference to our ritual.
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The interesting thing is that this usage reflects an understanding of love and affection -- quite different from the biblical usage. In Genesis, Laban is basically telling Jacob "I don't trust you as far as I can see you, so just know that when I can't watch you, God is still watching, and you'll pay if you double-cross me." |
I was speaking in generalities - so often I see our badge listed on e-bay as from "a Jewish sorority".
Yes - Hebrew No - specifically Jewish |
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