Professor Secretly Trashes Merton Book
Thomas Merton, the great Roman Catholic writer, spent his entire
religious career, from his acceptance into the Cistercian Order in December of
1941 until his tragic death in Thailand at the age of 53 in December of 1968,
as a monk at the Our Lady of Gethsemani Abbey near Bardstown, Kentucky. If for Merton’s legions
of admirers, the Gethsemani Abbey is
“Mecca,” then the independent Catholic university, Bellarmine, some 40 miles to the north in Louisville is
“Medina.” In 1967, Merton bequeathed his voluminous papers to
Bellarmine, which had been founded by the local diocese as Bellarmine College
in 1950. Since his death it has become the home of the Thomas Merton Center
at Bellarmine University and
the headquarters of the International Thomas Merton Society. There are a number of other Thomas
Merton Centers, but this is The Thomas Merton Center.
As one might expect, a number of the professors at Bellarmine are
Merton specialists to one degree or another. One of them is the
Canadian, Gregory K. Hillis, Associate Professor of Historical Theology. For
those who might have failed to notice the “Ph.D.” at the end of his academic
pedigree, there’s a “Dr.” in front of his name on his Bellarmine web site.
Last week, an acquaintance of mine told me that Professor Hillis
was saying some very disparaging things about Hugh Turley and me and our
book, The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation, on
Twitter. Understandably, I bristled at the news and rushed to see
what he was saying. I have been on Twitter since early 2015,
@dcdave2u, but I must admit that I don’t know my way around it all that
well. I put in some key words in their search engine to see what the
good professor was up to. Nothing came up resembling what had been
described to me.
I then found his Twitter page, https://twitter.com/gregorykhillis. Wow! He’s been on
Twitter since 2011 and he has 6,015 followers. He also proclaims
himself to be a lover of baseball. Searching his tweets at his site
for the beanballs he was said to be throwing at me, at this very moment I
see https://twitter.com/gregorykhillis/status/1100042933070372864 in which he says that he is talking about
his favorite Merton book, Conjectures of a Guilty Bystander, to his
honors seminar. His purpose in tweeting that, I suppose, is to let a
lot more people than just his students know that he knows quite a great deal
about Thomas Merton. But as I scroll down his tweets, I don’t see
the first thing that he has tweeted about The Martyrdom of Thomas
Merton. But by now, I think I know why.
Twitter has a feature that allows you to block out your tweets
from anyone that you select. The purpose, as it is explained, is so that you can insulate yourself from
annoying trolls. Apparently, you can be very selective about the
blocking, because neither Turley nor I can see how Hillis is bad-mouthing us,
although I can read his other tweets. Turley tells me that he, in
fact, can’t read a thing from Hillis.
I’m certainly no annoying troll to Hillis or anyone
else. I only recently heard of the guy, and I didn’t know that he
was on Twitter.
I got back to my friend and he told me that Hillis had spread his
calumny in the form of a series of tweets, limited by the number of characters
allowed, which read sequentially amounted to a brief book review. He
then did me the favor of piecing them together, supplying his own paragraph
breaks where they seemed appropriate. Here is his handiwork, leaving
off Hillis’s tangent at the end about works by Merton that, naturally, have nothing
to do with his death:
In the last few months, I’ve had numerous people email & tweet
me about a book called “The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton.” It’s a
self-published book that endeavors to prove that Merton did not die of an
accidental electrocution, but that he was assassinated by the CIA.
I recently received a copy of the book, and I just finished
reading it. I’ve been asked so often about my opinion about the book
that I thought I would say a few words. First, the book is
self-published for obvious reasons. It is not a work of serious
scholarship. It is filled with conjecture and innuendo, which is, I
suppose, to be expected from a book challenging the traditional narrative of
Merton’s death.
Second, the authors certainly demonstrate that Merton’s death was
a very odd one, and they raise interesting questions about the traditional
narrative. However, in order to believe their alternative theory,
the reader needs to accept that a respected civil rights activist & friend
of Merton’s, John Howard Griffin, was a conspirator, as were two deeply
respected monks, Abbot Flavian Burns and Br Patrick Hart, the latter of whom is
a friend of mine.
Third, as interesting as it would have been to have Thomas Merton
so loathed by the CIA that it would devise an elaborate plan involving an
apparently shifty Belgian Benedictine monk, as well as a cover-up involving the
U.S. embassy in Thailand, the entire American press corps, as well as Merton’s
friends and monastic brothers, such a narrative is just not believable, at
least to me.
Is there something weird about Merton’s
death? Absolutely. I’ve never known what to do with
it. But in terms of believability, the narrative presented in this
book is just not credible, no matter how often the authors assure us that “the
best evidence indicates beyond any serious doubt that Merton was
murdered.” Indeed, in order to establish their theory, they malign
people of good faith and character about whom they know very
little. The authors are specialists in raising questions about
suspicious deaths (this is not their first such work) and they clearly enjoy
raising such questions. That is their prerogative. But no
one should think that this book represents anything more than the conjectures
of two authors who have made a hobby of writing conspiracy
theories.
Merton’s death was strange & unfortunate, but what is most
important about him is what he did & wrote during his remarkable
life. Many people continue to view him as an exemplar and more than
a few ask for his intercession, regardless of how he died. If you’re
new to Merton, read Merton. Don’t read this book. I
recommend starting with an edited collection of Merton’s journals.
Hey, did you notice that the book is self-published and therefore
virtually worthless compared to the sage opinion of Dr. Gregory K. Hillis,
Ph.D. Don’t read it. In George Orwell’s newspeak,
“Ignorance is bliss.” “DON’T READ THIS BOOK.”
Jussie Smollett comes to mind. Did Professor Hillis
really think he could get by with this, trashing Turley and me this way and we
wouldn’t find out about it? Having been on a college faculty, I am
familiar with the nasty, backbiter type, and now Twitter has facilitated the
predilections of such people on a much wider scale. But the wider
the scale the greater the likelihood the slander will get back to the
target. Do you really want to take the word of a man of such
character?
Yes, our book is self-published. We had a contract
offer from TrineDay Publishing, but at about
the same time I noticed for the first time that a very impressive book that
I had reviewed was self-published, Alison Weir’s Against Our Better Judgment: The Hidden
History of How the U.S. Was Used to Create Israel. Her book has been very successful, as one can see from the
customer reviews on Amazon. As she explained to me in an email, the
tools available now make self-publishing much easier and with the rise of
Amazon at the expense of bookstores, old-fashioned publishers are far less
necessary. Furthermore, given the power of the people she was taking
on, she didn’t expect to have much success with an American publisher,
anyway.
Alison’s situation seemed very similar to ours, We also
wanted to keep total control over our work, and TrineDay’s publishing
schedule might have caused us to miss the 50th anniversary of
Merton’s death, so we went the self-publishing route. And hecklers like Hillis notwithstanding, we have
been happy with our decision.
Of course, there’s a lot more that’s wrong with Hillis’s review
than the “self-published” jibe. Taking a page from his book, one can
easily see why he would want to keep it confined to his own Twitter playpen and
out of the sight of anyone with critical faculties or people who might know
something already about our book or about the circumstances of Thomas Merton’s
death. Even without any knowledge of the subject, one should be able
to spot the critical flaws in Hillis’s approach.
Greg, the Mischievous Mischaracterizer
The great social commentator, economist Thomas Sowell, once wrote in one of his newspaper columns that as a college
professor he often marked in red on his students’ papers, “Specify, don’t
characterize.” Sowell’s pen would have bled all over Hillis’s six
paragraphs. All he has done is to characterize. The
problem with that method is that there’s nothing to stop the writer from mischaracterizing. Even
worse, unless he is completely unable to comprehend what he reads or he is
lying about having read our book, Hillis has maliciously mischaracterized it as
a work lacking in serious scholarship. I would invite him to hustle
over to the second floor of Bellarmine’s W.L. Lyons Brown Library and confer
with Dr. Paul Pearson, the head of The Merton Center. His question
for Dr. Pearson should be, “What is the best book for learning the facts about
Thomas Merton’s death?”
That was the starting point of our research some years ago, as we
write in the book. We asked Pearson that precise question, and he
recommended two books, The Seven Mountains of Thomas Merton by
Michael Mott, published in 1984, which is the authorized Merton biography and
John Moffitt’s 1970 work, A New Charter for Monasticism: Proceedings of
the Meeting of Monastic Superiors in the Far East: Bangkok, December 9 to 15,
1968.
Dr. Pearson was right at the time, we were to
discover. Michael Mott is, indeed,
the author of what Hillis calls the “traditional narrative,” such as it is,
insofar as one can decipher what Mott has written. Mott, you see, is
actually all over the place and very dishonest in his own narrative, as we
explain in the paper that I delivered at a Merton symposium in Rome last June at which Dr. Pearson was
a panel member.
“What seems the most likely reconstruction,” writes Mott, “is that
Merton came out of the shower either wearing a pair of drawers or
naked. His feet may have been wet still from the shower.”
Who puts on his shorts while still wet from a
shower? Mott also had to have known for certain that Merton did not
take a shower, because he had the same death-scene photographs and the same
letters from the witness, Fr. Celestine Say, that we uncovered. Say
was there, virtually in the same room the whole time. He said that
when they found Merton’s body with the fan lying across him, he looked like he
might have been getting ready to take a shower, but during the roughly two
hours before, when they were separated only by mesh partitions, he had heard
not a single sound from Merton. He took the photographs, he said,
showing Merton wearing pajama shorts just as they found the
body. These two photographs show Merton lying on his back with a
Hitachi floor fan lying diagonally across his body at the pelvic
area. Mott states that the photographs were taken after the scene
was disturbed, which he had to have known was not true. Mott also
speculates that the body might have been dressed in shorts for modesty’s sake,
but he had to have known for certain that that was not true,
either.
You don’t even have to rely upon Fr. Say’s account to see the
flaws in Mott’s foundation for the “traditional narrative.” Mott
quotes the police report’s description of the scene, which describes burns on
the shorts, presumably produced by the fan that produced burns on Merton’s
skin. He also quotes the portion of the police report that says that
the “dead priest” fell into the defective fan, having died of natural heart
failure. According to the police report, then, it couldn’t have been
accidental electrocution that killed Merton.
Pearson, for his part, in his keynote address recounting Merton’s life and having read
our book and knowing that I was in the audience, concluded his own narrative
with a summary of Merton’s last oral presentation and then wrote, “Later that
same day, after lunch and the afternoon break, Merton would be found lying dead
underneath a freestanding electric fan in his room.” Please notice
there’s no trace of Hillis’s precious “traditional narrative” like a shower or
an accidental death from electrocution. Later in the program,
neither Pearson nor anyone else at the symposium would have anything critical
to say about my presentation.
The Hillis Approach
In lieu of specifying, that is to say, instead of addressing any
facts or evidence, Professor Hillis, in his wisdom, makes liberal use of
several of what I have called the Seventeen Techniques for Truth Suppression, in particular, nos. 2, 5, 6, 7, and
11.
Number two is “Wax indignant.” We have cast aspersions
upon people who are not just respected, but “deeply respected.” How
dare we? What he doesn’t tell us is that Merton’s secretary, Brother
Patrick Hart, who died at age 93 just a few days ago, made up his story that
Merton “proceeded to take a shower” when he returned to his cottage after
giving his talk and having lunch. Brother Patrick confessed to us on
the telephone that he had no evidence for it.
When he made that announcement almost five years after the death
in the postscript to The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton, one
of the volumes that Hillis recommends in lieu of our book, he also saw to it
that the words, “in his pajamas” were snipped out from the description of
Merton’s discovered body in a letter purported to be from the remaining
Trappists at the conference. You can read about it in our article, “New Directions’ Misdirection on Thomas Merton’s Death.”
John Howard Griffin and Fr. Flavian Burns engaged in similar acts
of legerdemain in furtherance of the story that Merton died from accidental
electrocution, as we lay out in great detail in the book without any trace of
“innuendo,” and any conjecture we do is very limited and identified as
such. The perceptive reader, which Professor Hillis is clearly not,
will notice that Mott in his own conjecture about the likelihood that Merton
took a shower, has no reference to what Brother Patrick wrote. After
all, Brother Patrick stated it as a fact, and he did so almost five years after
the death. In the interim, John Moffitt, who was at the conference,
in his 1970 book made no mention of any shower, nor did anyone else before
Brother Patrick, including the compilers of the police
report. Moffitt, after reviewing a draft of Brother Patrick’s
postscript, told him that he could not say that Merton took a shower, but the
“deeply respected” monk did it anyway. (One must wonder how such wretched
scholars as we located the draft and the exchange of letters.)
Number five in the “Seventeen Techniques” is “Call the skeptics
names like ‘conspiracy theorist’…. You must then carefully avoid fair and open
debate with any of the people you have thus maligned.” Hillis really
nailed that one, and, as we see, he went to a bit of trouble, using the tools
of Twitter to do so. Don’t expect Hillis to be sponsoring any visit
by Turley or me to Bellarmine to make a presentation where the whole question
could be aired out. People will see that we have simply dug up facts
that Hillis and other professed Merton scholars never bothered to look
for. Hillis, following the example of Brother Patrick, and perhaps
engaging in an act of psychological projection as well, has flat-out lied about our
work. “Baldly and brazenly lie,” by the way, is number 15 of the
“Seventeen Techniques,” so let’s credit Hillis with that one as well while
we’re at it.
Number six is “Impugn motives.” So, check this
out: “The authors are specialists in raising questions about suspicious deaths
(this is not their first such work) and they clearly enjoy raising such
questions. That is their prerogative. But no one should
think that this book represents anything more than the conjectures of two
authors who have made a hobby of writing conspiracy theories.”
Shades of “conspiracy buff.” We are mere hobbyists who
write what we do for fun, because we must get some sort of perverse kick out of
raising ridiculous doubts about the revealed establishment
truth. Don’t we know that people in power, the press, and the CIA
would never lie to us?
Maybe Dr. Gregory K. Hillis, Ph.D. actually believes what he has
written for his select followers on Twitter. What would a craven
careerist academic invertebrate understand about our motivation,
anyway? His failure to specify, though, is on full display in all
its malignant glory. We explain in the foreword of the book, after
all, how we came together over the Vince Foster death case and how Turley later
collaborated with the dissident witness in the case and his lawyer to
write Failure of the Public Trust, and we guide readers to their
web site, FBI cover-up.com. Having presumably read the
foreword, Dr. Hillis, Ph.D., also knows that the judicial panel that appointed
independent counsel Kenneth Starr ordered Starr to include in his report on
Foster’s death the letter that the three of them wrote that demolishes Starr’s
and the press’s Foster suicide thesis. Pretty good work for a
hobbyist, I should say. But the press that Hillis apparently reveres
completely blacked out the existence of that 20-page letter (no. 1 in the 17
Techniques).
Readers of the foreword would also know that I have written 75
articles on the Foster case, and being directed to my dcdave.com web site they would see that the most
important case that I have tackled is that of the supposed suicide of Secretary
of Defense James Forrestal. They would also learn on my web site that I
was responsible for shaking loose from the Navy their official investigation of
Forrestal’s death that had been kept secret for 55 years. They would
also learn that, as with the witness letter to Kenneth Starr, the press blacked
out that news as well. What they would not learn is that in the near
future I shall be coming out with the book, The Assassination of James
Forrestal.
Number seven of the truth suppression techniques is “invoke
authority.” In Hillis’s case, the primary authority that he invokes
is his own exalted self: “In the last few months, I’ve had numerous
people email & tweet me about a book called ‘The Martyrdom of Thomas
Merton,’” he begins his short essay, but he doesn’t tell you what any of those
other people might have had to say about the book. Rather, he
proceeds to share with us his own very low opinion of the work, as though the
sole purpose of all these other people in writing to him was to partake of his
superior wisdom, which he then proceeds to share with his acolytes.
He also strongly implies that the men whom we identify with hard
evidence as primary perpetrators of the cover-up should be bowed down to as
custodians of the truth about Merton’s death. The abbey authorities
and the “respected civil rights advocate and friend of Merton” have spoken, so
that all that remains for the rest of us to do is to shut up and nod our heads
in agreement.
It did not take us long to find, drawing upon our wealth of
experience with other major cover-ups, that such capitulation before what
Hillis calls the “traditional narrative” and that other professed Merton scholar
and Canadian working in the U.S. groves of academe, Paul R. Dekar,
calls alternatively the “standard account” and the “widely accepted account” is
completely unwarranted. As we write in our introduction on page 2,
“Up to now, no one has examined the circumstances of [Thomas Merton’s] death
systematically, critically, and what is most important,
honestly. That is our purpose here.”
I dare say that Bellarmine’s ranking expert on the subject, Dr.
Paul Pearson, would agree with how we have characterized our effort, but Hillis
counsels his followers that they stay away from these impertinent interlopers
as he slings his mud and then crawls back under his rock.
That brings us to no. 11 of the 17 Techniques, and all we need do
is quote its first five sentences and you will see how it dominates what passes
for analysis by Hillis:
Reason backward, using the deductive method with a vengeance. With
thoroughly rigorous deduction, troublesome evidence is irrelevant. E.g. We have
a completely free press. If evidence exists that the Vince Foster
"suicide" note was forged, they would have reported it. They haven't
reported it so there is no such evidence.
You can see his reasoning here:
Third, as interesting as it would have been to have Thomas Merton
so loathed by the CIA that it would devise an elaborate plan involving an
apparently shifty Belgian Benedictine monk, as well as a cover-up involving the
U.S. embassy in Thailand, the entire American press corps, as well as Merton’s
friends and monastic brothers, such a narrative is just not believable, at
least to me.
To the contrary, from our experience, the active role of the press
in selling the unsupported accidental-electrocution story right from the
beginning was virtually the biggest tell that something was
amiss. As for the CIA, one has to be very naïve, indeed, to believe
that that organization is incapable of such an outrage, and as we say in the
book, the notion that Merton was not worth their trouble sells the man greatly
short.
We don’t know why the others engaged in the cover-up, but the
evidence is there for everyone to see. At that point we do have some
conjecture as to what their motivation might have been—which, as we have said,
we clearly label as such—but leave it to the readers to decide the “why” of the
matter. What we think we have made clear is the “who,” the “what,”
and the “how.”
More Coherent and Trustworthy Voices
There are people of a good deal greater stature than Hillis—a
pretty large universe—who agree with us, and the wild pitches he is throwing at
us might as well be meant for them, as well. Professor
Edward Curtin, in his widely circulated review, wrote the following:
This is an extraordinary book in so many ways. First,
because the authors prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Trappist monk and
anti-war writer Thomas Merton was assassinated and did not die in a fabricated
accident, as has been claimed for all these years.
Second, because it is so meticulously researched, sourced,
documented, and logically argued that it puts to shame and the lie to so many
works, including academic ones, that purport to be profound but fall apart once
carefully inspected, especially all those that have been written about Merton
and his alleged accidental death.
Then there is Hillis’s
fellow Canadian, Patrick Jamieson, the editor of Island Catholic
News in Victoria, British
Columbia:
…let me just say that it is in effect like a forensic audit
of the evidence of the facts of Merton’s mysterious death, supposedly by
electrocution after taking a shower. The book shows that he was not electrocuted and he had not just taken a shower. It
closely reasons its way from point to point in true investigative fashion of
some of the best of true crime writing.
It spells out all the contradiction, inconsistencies,
misinformation, deliberate disinformation and outright lies that have
compounded the story over the five decades. There is a great deal of puzzlement
expressed in the book at why Catholics have left this crime unresearched and solved
over all this time.
One can find more such reviews on the book’s web site at http://www.themartyrdomofthomasmerton.com/reviews.html.
Final Note
It’s hard to miss the irony in the manner of Professor Hillis’s
furtive sniping at our work. In a lecture that he gave about Merton
at Notre Dame, which one can view on YouTube, he begins by praising Merton as a man of dialogue. When
it comes to the question of Thomas Merton’s death, though, Hillis is all
hit-and-run. He shrinks from dialogue like Count Dracula shrinking
from a cross. (If they first consume a bottle of Five Hour Energy or
a can of Red Bull, conservative Catholic detractors of Merton might actually
learn something worthwhile from that lecture. I believe that one of
the main reasons that many such people have little use for Merton is that such
grotesquely non-traditional, heterodox Catholics as Fr. Daniel Horan, OFM, and Fr. James J. Martin, SJ, profess to admire him. We learn
from Hillis’s scintillating lecture that, contrary to popular opinion, Merton
was in very many ways a traditional Catholic.)
David Martin
February 27, 2019
Addendum: Edited on February 14, 2022, to remove favorable mention
of our book by John Smelcer.
To comment go to Heresy Central.
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