| SPECIAL EVENTS MEMORIAL SERVICE
It was another
early, but voluntary, custom among Elks for the Subordinate Lodges to conduct a
formal service in tribute to a brother who had died. With the growth of
the Order this custom became more and more general; and the appealing sentiment
of which it was born was crystallized in a Statute of the Order. Under its
provisions the first Sunday in December of each year is designated as "Elks
Memorial Day"; and it is mandatory upon each Subordinate Lodge to commemorate
departed brothers on that day.
A definite ritual
has been prescribed for this annual event, which lends itself with equal
effectiveness to the simplest, or the most elaborate, of permitted programs.
The Memorial Service
may be conducted in the Lodge room for members only; but it is often observed as
a public ceremonial, with a program of special music and other appropriate
features.
FLAG DAY SERVICE
It is to be expected
that an organization dedicated to patriotic service should seek to promote a
proper knowledge of, and respect for, the American Flag, and all that it
represents. The Order of Elks has done this in many ways. Perhaps
the most effective of its prescribed activities is the Flag Day Service.
Each Subordinate Lodge is required to conduct this service annually on June 14th
the anniversary of the birth of the American Flag.
The idea of a Flag
Day Service was first suggested by the then Grand Exalted Ruler at the 1907
Grand Lodge Session in Philadelphia. Of the dates submitted for
consideration at that time, June 14 was adopted by the session and was called
"Elks Flag Day". The following year, in Dallas, the Grand Lodge approved a
ritual for the Flag Day ceremony.
The 1911 Grand Lodge
Session at Atlantic City made the observance of Flag Day mandatory for
Subordinate Lodges by the adoption of Section 229 of the Statutes: "It shall be
the duty of each Subordinate Lodge to hold the service known as "Flag Day
Services" at the time and in the manner prescribed by the ritual of the Order.
Later on- at the
Grand Lodge Session in Atlantic City in 1930- there was added to this statute an
amendment, reading: "The Grand Exalted Ruler may, in exceptional cases and for
good cause, grant a dispensation for a different day or to any two or more
Lodges to hold such services jointly."
It was not until
August 3, 1949 that the President of the United States signed Public Law 203,
designating June 14 as Flag Day. Thus our Order was not only the first
fraternal organization to celebrate Flag Day, but had made the ceremony
mandatory long years before the date on which the observance became a nationwide
practice by legal decree.
The ritual for the
occasion is an elaborate one and it is quite generally conducted as a public
ceremonial. It is designed to be informative as well as inspirational; and
the colorful pageantry provided lends itself admirably to the achievement of
these objectives.
MOTHER'S DAY
The sentiments which
are naturally and universally inherent in the relationship of mother and child,
have led to the designation of the second Sunday in May each year as Mother's
Day, upon which all people are encouraged to pay appropriate tribute to
motherhood and to perform acts of filial affection and devotion. The Grand
Lodge, by resolution, has accorded permission to Subordinate Lodges to celebrate
Mother's Day, if they so desire, either for their own members or for the public.
A ritual has been provided which they may use for the occasion; but its use is
not mandatory.
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