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Kloran
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The Kloran (from Klan and Koran[1]) is the handbook of the Ku Klux Klan. Versions of the Kloran typically contain detailed descriptions of the role of different Klan members as well as detailing Klan ceremonies and procedures.
The letters Kl were often used at the beginning of words to delineate a Klan association. Examples include: Kloran, Klonversation (conversation), Klavern (cavern or tavern; local branch or meeting place), Klavaliers, etc. This differed from the practice of the First Klan during Reconstruction; very little of the Reconstruction Klan's terminology was carried over, mostly titles for high officials in the organization. The leader of an individual Klavern, for example, was an "Exalted Cyclops".
The original Kloran was written by William J. Simmons, for his revived "Knights of the Ku Klux Klan", c. 1915. He drew heavily on his previous experiences with fraternalism: he had been a member of many different lodges and had sold memberships in the Woodmen of the World before deciding to revive the Klan (see Second Klan).
References
[edit]- ^ Stanovsky, Derek (2017). "Remix Racism: The Visual Politics of the "Alt-Right"". Journal of Contemporary Rhetoric. 7 (2/3): 130–138.
Kloran
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Origins in the Second Klan
The Kloran, the ritual handbook of the Ku Klux Klan, originated during the revival of the organization known as the Second Klan, founded by William Joseph Simmons on November 25, 1915, atop Stone Mountain in Georgia. Simmons, a former Methodist circuit rider and organizer of fraternal orders such as the Woodmen of the World, sought to reestablish the Klan as a structured secret society promoting white Protestant supremacy, inspired in part by the 1915 film The Birth of a Nation, which romanticized the original post-Civil War Klan. Unlike the decentralized First Klan of the Reconstruction era (1865–1871), the Second Klan adopted elaborate fraternal rituals to foster loyalty and hierarchy among members, peaking at an estimated 4–5 million adherents by the mid-1920s. Simmons personally authored the original Kloran in 1916, drawing on Masonic and other secret society templates to codify Klan procedures, oaths, and symbolism. The term "Kloran" combines "Klan" and "Koran," positioning it as the authoritative guide akin to a sacred text for internal governance. Early editions detailed roles like the Exalted Cyclops (local leader) and prescribed initiation rites involving hooded regalia, cross burnings, and pledges to defend "native, white, Protestant supremacy" against perceived threats from Catholics, Jews, immigrants, and African Americans. The handbook's structure reflected Simmons's vision of the Klan as a patriotic order upholding constitutional Americanism, with rituals emphasizing moral purity and anti-radicalism.[3][8] The first Kloran was printed in Atlanta, Georgia, at the Klan's Imperial Palace headquarters, with copyrights dating to 1916 and subsequent editions like the fourth appearing by around 1920. These documents were restricted to initiated Klansmen, marked with warnings against unauthorized possession, underscoring the Second Klan's emphasis on secrecy and exclusivity to build cohesion amid rapid national expansion into the Midwest and urban North. By standardizing practices across klaverns (local chapters), the Kloran facilitated the organization's bureaucratic growth, including recruitment drives and political influence in the 1920s.[9][10]Development and Editions
The Kloran, the ritual handbook of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, was authored by William Joseph Simmons, the founder of the second-era Klan established on November 25, 1915.[11] Simmons, drawing from his prior experience organizing fraternal orders such as the Woodmen of the World, developed the text to formalize the group's hierarchical structure, initiation rites, and meeting protocols, adapting elements from Masonic and other secret society traditions to promote Klan cohesion amid rapid expansion.[11] The handbook's creation aligned with the Klan's early organizational efforts, emphasizing oaths of loyalty, symbolic terminology, and procedural uniformity to distinguish it from the defunct first Klan of the Reconstruction era.[7] Initial publication occurred in Atlanta in 1916 as the White Book: Kloran, reflecting the group's imperial headquarters there and serving as the foundational ritual guide for klaverns nationwide.[7] Due to surging membership—reaching hundreds of thousands by 1920—multiple editions followed swiftly, with a fourth edition copyrighted in 1916 and a fifth edition issued shortly thereafter under variants like the Klarogo White Book and Night-Hawk White Book.[9] [4] These early printings, produced by the Imperial Palace press, incorporated minor revisions for clarity in ceremonies but retained core content, including detailed scripts for naturalization lectures and kludd (chaplain) invocations.[4] Later editions, such as a second edition dated 1928, appeared amid the Klan's peak influence, though primary textual changes were limited as the Kloran functioned more as a standardized operational manual than an evolving doctrine.[12] Adaptations emerged for affiliated groups, including a 1923 Kloran for the Women of the Ku Klux Klan outlining parallel female auxiliaries' rituals.[6] By the late 1920s, as internal schisms and external scrutiny intensified, production shifted to realm-specific versions, such as a circa-1963 typescript for the Mississippi realm's White Knights, diverging in emphasis but preserving Simmons's original framework.[13]Adaptations in Later Klan Iterations
In the post-World War II revival of the Ku Klux Klan, commonly referred to as the third Klan era beginning around 1946, the Kloran underwent adaptations primarily through the efforts of fragmented splinter groups responding to the Civil Rights Movement and federal enforcement of desegregation. Unlike the more centralized second Klan of the 1920s, which standardized the Kloran under Imperial Wizard Hiram Wesley Evans, later iterations produced localized versions that retained core ritual structures—such as opening and closing procedures, naturalization oaths, and hierarchical titles like Exalted Cyclops—but infused lectures and creeds with explicit anti-integrationist language targeting the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision and subsequent legislation like the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[14][15] Prominent examples include the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, founded in Mississippi in May 1964 by Samuel Holloway Bowers Jr., who issued a Kloran emphasizing militant opposition to "racial mongrelization" and federal "tyranny," framing rituals as defenses of white Christian heritage against communism and Jewish influence—rhetoric that echoed but intensified the second Klan's nativism amid escalating violence, including over 200 Klan-linked attacks in Mississippi alone between 1964 and 1967.[16][14] This version maintained pseudo-Masonic elements like the seven-pointed Klokann cross and secrecy oaths but adapted procedural lectures to justify extralegal actions, such as the 1964 murders of civil rights workers Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner, which Bowers later cited as fulfilling Klan imperatives.[15] Similarly, the Confederate Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, active in North Carolina during the late 1960s, circulated a Kloran around 1966–1968 that preserved standard ceremonies like the Klavern's fiery cross lighting and Kludd's invocations but modified content to decry "negro agitation" and court-ordered busing, reflecting adaptations to local resistance against school integration post-Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education (1971).[17] FBI informant Delmar Dennis, who infiltrated the group in 1966, obtained copies revealing these tweaks, which prioritized paramilitary discipline over the second Klan's fraternal socializing, amid COINTELPRO operations that disrupted over 100 Klan units by 1969.[18][14] Other factions, such as the United Klans of America under Robert Shelton from 1961, reportedly adhered closely to 1920s formats for continuity but introduced variations in terminology, like heightened emphasis on "white power" in recruitment rituals, to appeal to disaffected Southerners facing economic shifts and urban migration; however, legal convictions for racketeering in the 1980s, including the 1963 Birmingham church bombing, curtailed widespread dissemination of updated texts.[15] These adaptations underscored a shift from broad "100% Americanism" to narrow segregationism, with rituals serving less as social bonding and more as ideological mobilization, though empirical evidence from declassified files indicates no wholesale reinvention, only incremental modifications amid declining membership from 10,000–20,000 active Klansmen by the 1970s.[14][15]Content and Rituals
Organizational Structure and Roles
The Kloran, the ritual handbook of the second-era Ku Klux Klan established in 1915, prescribes a rigid, military-inspired hierarchy for the organization, known as the Invisible Empire, divided into national, realm (state), province (regional), and local (klavern or klanton) levels.[19] At the apex, the Imperial Wizard serves as supreme executive and commander-in-chief, chairing the Imperial Kloncilium and wielding ultimate authority over all subunits, elected for three-year terms at national Klonvokations.[19] Supporting this are specialized officers such as the Imperial Klaliff (vice-president), Imperial Klokard (lecturer for rituals and speeches), Imperial Kludd (chaplain for spiritual duties), Imperial Kligrapp (secretary for records), and Imperial Klabee (treasurer for finances), all elected similarly and tasked with enforcing Kloran procedures.[19] At the realm level, typically corresponding to a state, the Grand Dragon functions as the chief administrator and military equivalent of a division commander, overseeing subunits with a staff of nine Hydras including the Grand Klaliff (vice) and Grand Klokard (lecturer).[19] Provinces, often districts or counties, are led by the Great Titan as brigade commander, aided by seven Furies such as the Great Klaliff and Great Kligrapp, focusing on regional coordination.[19] Local klaverns, the basic operational units, are presided over by the Exalted Cyclops as regimental commander, elected annually to conduct Klonklaves (meetings), enforce Kloran oaths, and manage daily affairs, supported by twelve Terrors including the Klaliff (vice for order), Klokard (oath administrator), Kludd (welfare chaplain), Kligrapp (dues and records), Klabee (funds), Kladd (candidate handler), Klarogo (inner guard), Klexter (outer guard), and Nighthawk (ceremonial courier).[19] Cross-level roles include the Kleagle, an appointed organizer without command authority, responsible for recruitment, establishing new klaverns, and demonstrating proficiency in Kloran laws and history.[19] Advisory bodies such as Klokanns (investigators and auditors) operate at multiple levels to probe violations and maintain compliance, while committees in local klaverns handle functions like propaganda, intelligence, welfare, and paramilitary training, all guided by Kloran rituals to ensure secrecy and uniformity.[19] Officers at all echelons are bound to memorize and apply Kloran contents, with non-adherence risking charter revocation, though practical adherence varied.[19]| Level | Key Leader | Primary Duties | Election Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| National | Imperial Wizard | Executive command, policy enforcement | 3 years |
| Realm | Grand Dragon | State oversight, subunit coordination | 3 years |
| Province | Great Titan | Regional administration | Annual |
| Local | Exalted Cyclops | Meeting presidency, ritual execution | Annual |
Ceremonies and Procedures
The Kloran outlines a standardized order of business for Klan meetings, termed klonklaves, commencing with an opening ceremony and concluding with a closing ritual, interspersed with procedural elements such as the reading of minutes, applications for citizenship, and reports of member distress.[20] The opening ceremony requires preparation by designated officers: the Klaliff secures the mounted American flag, positioned at the Exalted Cyclops's right; the Klokard arranges the altar centrally with an open Bible, the Klan's fiery cross emblem (illuminated electrically if possible), and a sword; while the Kludd positions a collection receptacle nearby.[21] All Klansmen rise as the Exalted Cyclops raps the gavel twice, followed by a salute to the flag, the Pledge of Allegiance, and a collective affirmation of Klan tenets including worship of God, patriotism, loyalty to the Klan, and fidelity to the Constitution.[22] The ceremony emphasizes secrecy and discipline, with the Exalted Cyclops invoking the "Imperial Wizard's fiat" to enforce order, and concludes with a prayer by the Kludd invoking divine protection over the "Invisible Empire."[21] Central to Klan procedures is the Ceremony of Naturalization, the initiation ritual for new members, which forms the bulk of the Kloran's instructional content and occurs after vetting applications and recommendations during a klonklave.[23] Non-citizens (uninitiated attendees) retire to an outer den under escort by the Klokard, while candidates—pre-screened for Protestant faith, native-born citizenship, and moral character—are prepared in regalia, often blindfolded, and led into the inner chamber by the investigating committee.[22] The Klokard delivers lectures on Klan history, principles (fraternity, fidelity, and chivalry), and obligations, culminating in the candidate's oath of allegiance: swearing by Almighty God to uphold the Invisible Empire's secrecy, devote energies to its upbuilding, and defend fellow Klansmen against threats, under penalty of death for betrayal.[19] Upon affirmation, the candidate receives the Klan robe, hood, and password, is dubbed a "Klansman," and participates in a symbolic posting at the altar, with the Exalted Cyclops bestowing the title of citizenship in the Invisible Empire.[7] Additional procedures address practical matters, such as inquiries into Klansmen or families needing financial or fraternal aid, handled post-naturalization by the Exalted Cyclops soliciting reports from officers.[21] New business, announcements, and discussions on "Klankraft" (Klan methods and ideology) follow, emphasizing operational discipline like the Fiery Cross Bearer's duty to carry and light the cross during processions.[20] The closing ceremony mirrors the opening in reverse: all rise for flag salute, the Kludd offers a benediction, the Exalted Cyclops adjourns with three gavel raps, and members depart under escort, reinforcing oaths of silence and loyalty.[22] These rituals, adapted from fraternal orders like Freemasonry, were designed to instill hierarchical obedience and ideological commitment within local klaverns.[24]Terminology and Symbolism
The Kloran, the ritual handbook of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, introduces a specialized vocabulary characterized by the prefix "Kl-" applied to modified English terms, creating an esoteric nomenclature intended to foster exclusivity and secrecy among members. This terminology, first systematically outlined in the 1916 edition authored by Imperial Wizard William J. Simmons, delineates organizational roles and procedural elements within Klan rituals.[24] Key terms include Klavern, referring to the local chapter or meeting place; Klonklave, denoting a Klan assembly; and Klonversation, encompassing coded greetings such as "AYAK" (Are You a Klansman?) and the response "AKIA" (A Klansman I Am).[24][25] Leadership positions within the Kloran feature titles like Exalted Cyclops, the presiding officer of a Klavern; Klaliff, the vice president; Kludd, the chaplain; Kligrapp, the secretary; and Klabee, the treasurer.[24] Higher echelons include Kleagle, a field organizer responsible for recruitment and retaining a portion of initiation fees; Grand Dragon, the state-level leader; and Imperial Wizard, the supreme national authority.[25][24] These designations, blending alliteration with pseudo-mythological flair, underscore the hierarchical structure emphasized in the handbook's rituals.[24] Symbolism in the Kloran draws heavily on Christian iconography, repurposed to align with the organization's ideology of white Protestant supremacy. The fiery cross, a central emblem lit during initiations and assemblies, represents the transmission of Christ's light and serves as a signal of Klan presence, with historical roots traced to Scottish clan traditions but adapted for nocturnal rituals on sites like Stone Mountain in 1915.[25][24] White robes and masks, mandatory regalia, symbolize ritual purity and anonymity, concealing identities during ceremonies that parody baptismal rites, including oaths sealed with water from specified sources like the Chattahoochee River.[24] The blood drop cross, incorporating a droplet evoking Christ's atonement, further integrates biblical motifs to affirm racial exclusivity.[26]| Key Term | Definition | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Exalted Cyclops | Local Klavern leader overseeing meetings and initiations | [24] |
| Kleagle | Recruiter collecting initiation fees | [25] |
| Fiery Cross | Lit symbol of allegiance and intimidation in rituals | [24] |
| White Robes | Attire denoting purity and concealing identity | [24] |