The Hot Potato of Thomas
MertonÕs Death
We had almost finished our book on Trappist
monk Thomas MertonÕs mysterious 1968 death at the age of 53 at a monastic
conference outside Bangkok, Thailand, when my co-writer, Hugh Turley, made the
discovery that logician D.Q. McInerny was something of a
Merton expert. McInerny
wrote his doctoral dissertation on Thomas Merton, completing it in the year
after MertonÕs death, and in 1974 had his first book published, Thomas Merton: The Man and His Work.
That really hit close to home. For the last few years Turley and I had
both looked forward each month to McInernyÕs column
on religious and philosophical topics in the newsletter for the seminary at
which McInerny taught philosophy until his retirement
at the end of the last academic year.
We often discussed his latest article on the phone. My son took philosophy courses under McInerny at that seminary some years ago, before dropping
out midway through the seven-year program, and McInerny
previously taught at the College of St. Thomas (now the University of St.
Thomas), from which Turley had previously graduated with a degree in
philosophy.
We discovered that McInerny
had briefly touched on MertonÕs death in his book, but he was writing at a time
when it was really very difficult to get information on the subject and we felt
that it was our obligation to find out what McInerny
had learned and how he had learned it.
That quest began by my writing the following message into the ÒContactÓ
box on the seminaryÕs home page:
I am
the father of one of your previous seminarians, xxxx,
and a regular contributor to [your seminary]. I'm working on another book on
Thomas Merton and would like to talk to D.Q. McInerny
about him. Do you have contact information? Too bad he retired. I really looked
forward each month to his great articles in the newsletter.
Here
is the response I received from a person whom I shall identify only as a
seminary functionary (SF):
Dr. McInerny retired at the end of last school year. He moved
to xxxx, xxxx. His
telephone numbers are xxxx and xxxx. He does not have email, to my knowledge,
otherwise I would be writing to him often. I am using
postal mail at this time! I am sure
he will be pleased to hear from you. Incidentally, xxxx's
name pops up from time to time around here, so he is not forgotten!
SF
seems to be fond of exclamation points.
I decided to lay my cards on the table in hopes of having the most
productive exchange possible with Dr. McInerny, and I
did so with this follow-up email to SF:
Thank you very much for the telephone numbers for Dr. McInerny. I think it would be better to wait to call
him until after he has read my most
recent article, in which I quote him
extensively and take some issue with some of the things he says in his 1974
book on Thomas Merton. That would give him some preparation for the
conversation that I would like to have with him. I am particularly
interested in his conversations with the people at Merton's home abbey of Gethsemani and what they revealed to him concerning
Merton's death. I am certain that he would be interested in all the
things that my co-author, Hugh Turley, and I have learned about the death that
I am sure he does not know and have never been made public. Our upcoming
book is The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation, and we
have a tentative publication date of March 1. *
I would very much appreciate it if you would mail a copy of my article to Dr. McInerny and at least the gist of this email to prepare him
for our telephone conversation. I would also be quite willing to answer
any questions you might have about our project. My home telephone number
is xxxx and my cell phone is xxxx.
Potato Burns
I had
heard nothing in a week, which prompted me to write a brief follow-up email
asking SF when and if he had mailed my article to McInerny. He quickly responded that I must not
have seen his previous email, suggesting that he had no intention of sending
the article to McInerny.
Indeed, I
had overlooked the earlier email among the flood of those that come in each
day, and I promptly found it. Maybe
itÕs because IÕm a born-and-bred Southerner of the old school, but I must say
that SFÕs email struck me as flat-out rude. What on earth could make a person
respond to me in such a combative and uncooperative way as this?
I have
read your article, and I am disappointed in what I thought was to be a fair
assessment of Dr. McInernyÕs work. Instead, you
have demeaned him in order to apparently promote your own work on the subject,
and to infer that he wrote out of ignorance and with a lack of factual
evidence.
Dr. McInerny has never claimed to be a champion of conspiracy
theories, but has been an astute and insightful witness to rational thinking on
numerous subjects. I am confident he did not consider himself an expert
on Thomas Merton, but a reasoned observer.
I do not
want him to be mistreated, and hence I request you destroy the telephone numbers
I gave to you. It appears I acted in na•ve haste without considering what
was intended by your request to contact him.
My,
my! I had no idea that I was such a
reprehensible human being. The
missive virtually drips with raw contempt and hostility towards me, and SF is
saying it directly to me, a longtime benefactor of his institution!
Had I
really been so abusive and unfair toward McInerny
without realizing it? Here is how I
began my section, ÒD.Q. McInerny on Merton and the
Press,Ó in the article in question: ÒIn
his short 1974 book, Thomas Merton: The
Man and His Work, a very thoughtful and honest man whom I greatly respect,
D. Q. McInerny, took issue
with Merton concerning his observations about the press.Ó I then proceeded to give a long quote
from his book in which McInerny objects to MertonÕs
position that the national press and the worst elements of the government are
in league with one another. McInerny offers in rebuttal the role that the press played
in opposing the Vietnam War.
My counter argument in
defense of MertonÕs thesis is that the press knew a lot more than it ever told
about the full horror of our prosecution of the Vietnam War, and then I excuse McInerny for not knowing that because the national molders
of public opinion made it very difficult to know. I probably would have thought as he did,
I say, if I had not gained my special knowledge working in a veteransÕ anti-war
organization. Yes, I said in so
many words that he was ignorant, but itÕs hardly an accusation; rather, I used
it in his defense, because it was an understandable and defensible ignorance.
McInernyÕs
remarks about MertonÕs death, I suspected, were also founded in ignorance, as
difficult as it was to learn anything about the subject at the time, but in
this case it was clear that they were also based upon some very poor thinking,
and I had said as much. So here is
how I responded to SF, and we have had no further communication:
I am sorry that I happened to overlook your
email when it came in. I must say that I find it astonishing. As I
noted in the introduction to the section, I have nothing but the highest
respect for Dr. McInerny. I could very much
imagine writing at the time something little different from what he wrote about
the press, based upon what each of us knew at the time.
On the other hand, it is a simple fact that McInerny
was wrong to state categorically that no one was with Merton when he died and
that it is impossible to know the cause of his death. I am generally
impressed with Dr. McInerny's very rational thinking,
but it was not on display in this instance.
You have no idea how much we have learned about Merton's death that nobody else
knows at this point, and that would certainly include Dr. McInerny.
If he's the man that I think he is, he will be delighted to learn what we have
uncovered, just out of the pure joy for learning and truth. I must say, though,
that I have discovered that such people are a lot rarer
than I once thought they were.
Sincerely,
David Martin
Reflecting on SFÕs emotional outburst, IÕm sorry
to say that I can see all too clearly what set the poor deluded fellow
off. It is to be found in this
passage: ÒDr. McInerny
has never claimed to be a champion of conspiracy theories, but has been an astute and insightful witness to rational
thinking on numerous subjects.Ó
There it is, the dreaded
Òconspiracy theoriesÓ expression.
SF has worked himself up into such a state of high dudgeon that he is
unable to think clearly, over the mere intimation that the official explanation
for the death of the great spiritual and anti-war writer, Thomas Merton, might
not be true.
Talk about ignorant! One can be virtually certain that he
does not know that the official U.S. Embassy Report on the Death of an American
Citizen repeated the official conclusion of the Thai investigative authorities
that Merton died of Òsudden heart failureÓ and that that conclusion was reached
in the absence of an autopsy, which was never conducted. What SF no doubt believes about MertonÕs
death is that a faulty fan electrocuted Merton when he touched it, as he
emerged wet from a shower. The Thai
authorities concluded, to the contrary, that Merton was already dead before he
came into contact with the fan.
Because there never was any investigation of
MertonÕs death worthy of the name, any conclusion about how Merton died is
really just a theory. As we show in
our book, the theory that a fan electrocuted him is extraordinarily weak. It is so weak, in fact, that it has had
to be buttressed by a number of falsehoods.
But why do so many people believe it? ThatÕs where the ÒconspiracyÓ part of
Òconspiracy theoryÓ comes in.
AmericaÕs opinion-molding community—including MertonÕs authorized
biographer, who had been a professional journalist—has told them that it
is so.
One can take it to the bank that SF is unaware
of any of these things. We have
seen, as well, that he prefers to remain in his benighted state, because I gave
him my telephone number and offered to share with him some of the important
things that we have learned, and it is hardly an exaggeration to say that his
response was an email version of a spit in the face.
His sort, unfortunately, is legion in the
country. Since he is ostensibly of
a religious nature, one can imagine him reciting daily with his fellows this
paraphrase of the ApostlesÕ Creed that I penned almost 20
years ago:
I
believe in the almighty American press; and in our political leaders, chosen
through the system conceived by our Founding Fathers, suffered under Watergate,
and rose again from the experience more trustworthy than ever.
I
believe the Watergate lesson is that our freedom is protected by the anointed
who stand in watch on our behalf, the only exception being those fired with an
excess of zeal to see another president brought low at their hands. **
I
believe our leaders incapable of sin that would not be exposed by the media.
I
believe that those who would deny these revelations are not human. They are
creatures. They are conspiracy theorists.
Amen
Et Tu, D.Q.
So much for SF, but what about D.Q.? Looking back at what I wrote I think
that I really might have been too generous to him on account of my prior
disposition to regard him favorably.
If Merton could penetrate the fog of propaganda from his cloistered vantage
point in a Kentucky monastery, I really shouldnÕt be making excuses for McInernyÕs failure to do so. By the time he wrote his book, the
assassinations of the Kennedy brothers, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, Jr.
had all occurred, and enough had been written about them, particularly JFKÕs
assassination, for any thoughtful, right thinking person to have recognized the
sort of cozy relationship between the press and the worst elements of the
government that Merton posited. As
a Merton scholar, McInerny should have been aware of
the Merton essay, ÒThe Vietnam War: An Overwhelming Atrocity,Ó that was
published in the Catholic Worker in
March 1968. McInerny
could well have learned from that article a lot of the things that I had
learned only through my participation in the North Carolina Veterans for Peace. Anyone reading that essay could readily
see the degree to which the press was pulling its punches in its criticism of
our Vietnam War policy. Perhaps McInerny did not realize how much he depended for his
information upon the same people whose credibility was at issue. It amounts to assuming what you are
trying to prove, the sort of logical failure that I would imagine McInerny has often pointed out to his students.
Moreover, what
McInerny wrote about MertonÕs death is really so much
worse as to be indefensible. He
declared authoritatively, ÒÉall indications seem to point to the conclusion that he was
killed accidentally, electrocuted by a defective electric fan.Ó
In an
attempt to excuse McInernyÕs errors, SF writes, ÒI am
confident he did not consider himself an expert on Thomas Merton, but a
reasoned observer.Ó But if the
writer of a doctoral dissertation and a book on Merton is not to be considered
an expert, who would be? It was
certainly with the air of an expert that McInerny
penned the words Òall indications,Ó giving readers the clear impression that he
was a master of the subject.
Compared to almost anyone reading his book, McInerny
certainly was an expert, and he certainly did nothing to disabuse the reader of
the notion.
Did he not
know that there was no autopsy? If
not, why didnÕt he? In his
acknowledgments he credits key people at MertonÕs home monastery for their
assistance. He could have easily
learned from them that there was no autopsy. Knowing that, he definitely should have
hedged in his statement about the cause of MertonÕs death. But learning that there was no
autopsy raises the vexing question of why no autopsy was performed, especially
when one considers the fact that the investigating authorities concluded that
Merton died of sudden heart failure, unrelated to the supposedly lethal
fan. Was McInerny
ignorant of that fact, one wonders? Did the abbey leadership keep McInerny in the dark?
Was this a subject that the young McInerny,
mindful of his career aspirations, knew was unsafe to pursue?
Pusillanimous
Professors
To be sure, primary blame for misinformation about MertonÕs
death lies with the propagandists in the press and their playing of the old
Òfirst impressionsÓ trick, but just as with the James
Forrestal case and the Vincent
Foster case, our professorial class bears its
share of the blame for cementing the false impression in the public mind.
Readers should not be surprised to learn that I did not
accede to SFÕs admonition to destroy the telephone numbers that he supplied
me. Rather, I attempted to give McInerny a call.
Unfortunately, one of the numbers was not functional and the other, on
several occasions over a number of days, rang endlessly with no one picking
up. I didnÕt even get a recording
asking me to leave a message.
Fortunately, my co-author Turley had previously corresponded
with McInerny by mail, and he sent a letter with some
of the questions that we had for him.
McInerny responded promptly and politely. We shall have more to say about that
exchange in a future article. The
book now has a section on McInerny. Suffice it to say, from what he said in
his letter, McInerny could hardly be less qualified
to tell people what Òall indicationsÓ were with respect to the cause of
MertonÕs death. In fact, he
revealed a truly shocking lack of knowledge about the most basic facts of the case.
The truth be told, rather
than to begin his statement with, Òall indications seem to point toÉ,Ó he should have said, Òthe safe thing for me to say is....Ó
At this point, I am reminded of a very important article by
the late Catholic writer Joseph Sobran that appeared
in the December 2, 1997, Washington Times
entitled ÒUp to Speed on ConformityÓ that I quote extensively in Part 4 of ÒAmericaÕs Dreyfus Affair: The Case of the Death of
Vincent Foster.Ó Here are some key
passages:
When I was a schoolboy,
back in the sunny 1950s, we used to get solemn lectures on the dangers of
Òconformity.Ó Many intellectuals thought Americans were becoming intellectually
timid. They were right, but for the wrong reasons.
Most intellectuals are
themselves conformists.
...the natural result is a
population that sets great store by conformity to the mass. In public
controversies, most people are chiefly concerned to play it safe. Before they
take any position, they ask themselves not ÒIs it true?Ó but ÒWhat will happen
to me if I say this?Ó
H.L. Mencken was talking
about academicians who Òposture as American historiansÓ when he hung the Òtimorous
eunuchsÓ label on them. Unfortunately, the historians seem to
have a lot of company these days in the halls of ivy.
* The Martyrdom of
Thomas Merton: An Investigation, was actually published on March 7.
** When this was written, recall, Bill Clinton was
president. Any suggestion at that
time that anyone in the press was really serious about bringing him down was
absurd. That is clearly not the
case with the mediaÕs behavior toward the current president.
David Martin
March 5, 2018
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