Spotting A.A.’s History Hole Problem
By Dick B.
About 1990, I began looking for the evidence
of A.A. history, and I looked in many parts of the United
States and England. I found that nobody had unearthed and
reported the books in Dr. Bob’s Library. Next, I found that
nobody had researched or described Anne Smith’s Journal. Next,
I found that nobody had adequately described the required
“Quiet Time” practices. Next, I found that nobody had described
the “surrender” upstairs ceremony where AAs had made the
required decision for Christ. Next, I found that nobody had
related the immense amount of Oxford Group writings and history
to the ideas from that program that Bill Wilson codified in the
Big Book and Twelve Steps. Next, I found that nobody had
reported on Sam Shoemaker’s personal journal entries about Bill
Wilson, nor reported on the substantial correspondence between
Bill W. and Sam. And there was a lot more that was hidden under
the rocks.
I was not the only one who observed the gap
or “lacuna” as Father Blaes described it. And by the time, I
published my Turning Point: A
History of Early A.A.’s Spiritual Roots and
Successes, I was prepared to report many
of the facts. And about my work, a Roman Catholic priest,
Father Paul B., M.A., Ph.D., Roman Catholic Diocese of Kansas
City, Missouri, observed this:
Though there have been excellent histories
of A.A.’s beginning years, each and corporately, have left one
major lacuna—the precise origins of A.A.’s spiritual principles
(Turning Point, page 1)
For many years thereafter, I wondered why
this glaring gap. Why did it take from 1935 to 1997 to unearth
and report the real spiritual history of A.A.? And finally, one
noted A.A. historian twice gave his own explanation. He
wrote:
Although the breadth of A.A.’s varieties is
a new phenomenon, the reality of diversity within Alcoholics
Anonymous is not merely recent. AA’s differences were one
reason why it developed in so decentralized a fashion. Early
researchers were aware of that, but they fell into the easy
(and enduring) trap of research. Influenced also by the
secularization hypothesis shared by most sociologists of the
era (Tschannen, 1991), they tended to overlook the Akron
birthplace of AA and its more Oxford Group-oriented offspring,
concentrating their attention on New York AA and its
derivatives. The affiliations (and so the locations) of those
early students also suggest that they found East Coast AA more
convenient to research. Then too, the strong personality and
central role of Bill Wilson had much to do with this focus
(Ernest Kurtz, Research on Alcoholics Anonymous Opportunities
and Alternatives, Chapter 2, “Research on Alcoholics Anonymous:
The Historical Context” (NJ: Publications Division, Rutgers
Center of Alcohol Studies, 1993, p. 15); Ernie Kurtz, The
Collected Ernie Kurtz (Wheeling, WV: The Bishop of Books, 1999,
p. 4).
Add to this admission, three other
historical pieces. (1) The 400 page deletion from the Big Book
prior to publication. This cutting was done by Tom Uzzell,
member of the faculty at New York University (Pass It On, p.
204). Bill’s secretary Ruth Hock personally informed historian
Bill Pittman that most of the deleted material was Christian
and Biblical in character. (2) Bill W.’s wife Lois Wilson
observed the following: “Shouldn’t the book be written so that
it would appeal to them [agnostics, atheists, those of the
Jewish faith and, around the world, of other religions] also?
Finally it was agreed that the book should present a universal
spiritual program, not a specific religious one, since all
drunks were not Christian.” See Lois Remembers: Memoirs of the
co-founder of Al-Anon and wife of the co-founder of Alcoholics
Anonymous (NY: Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, Inc., 1987,
p. 113). (3) Throwing out the original drafts of the Steps and
the rest of the Big Book’s fifth chapter. In A.A.’s Pass It On,
at page 235, A.A. reported that on March 16, 1940, Works
Publishing moved its offices from Newark to lower Manhattan. It
reported “In the move, much was thrown out.” And the book
speculates that the trashed material probably included the
original drafts of the Steps and the rest of Big Book chapter
5.
The huge gaps in A.A. historical resource
materials cannot be contributed to some subversive conspiracy.
The poverty of the early AAs, the objections to Christian and
Biblical overtones, the editorial cutting, and the utter
failure of early historians to look for the treasures instead
of just at the conveniently located repositories, have raised
one vital question. Would knowledge of the real early A.A.
history and spiritual roots contribute to A.A.’s primary
purpose of serving the alcoholic who still suffers? There may
be many answers and viewpoints. But when I researched and
published the facts about the younger days of Bill Wilson and
Dr. Bob, and when I learned the facts about A.A.’s Christian
Endeavor sources, and when I learned the description of the
real program by Frank Amos, and when I looked at Akron’s
emphasis on the Book of James, Jesus’s sermon on the mount, and
1 Corinthians 13, a new excitement emerged. I learned I could
stay IN Alcoholics Anonymous. I learned I could correctly pass
on its truly Christian and Biblical roots. And I learned from
the hundreds of suffering alcoholics I contacted and sponsored
that they deeply profited from knowing and applying the
principles and practices of the early A.A. pioneers who
attained a documented 75% to 93% success rate by applying the
historical techniques.
Gloria Deo
Dick B.
© 2008 Anonymous. All rights reserved.
dickb@dickb.com; 808
874 4876; PO Box 837, Kihei, HI 96753-0837
http://www.dickb.com/index.shtml
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