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In this episode, we explore the history and evolution of the Hongmen, also known as the Heaven and Earth Society or Chinese Freemasons—one of the oldest and most influential secret brotherhoods in Chinese history. Emerging during the 17th century after the fall of the Ming Dynasty, the Hongmen began as a patriotic resistance movement against the foreign Manchu-led Qing rulers. Legend says the group was founded by Shaolin monks who swore a blood oath to restore Han rule, giving rise to an underground network built on loyalty, justice, and brotherhood.

Over the centuries, the Hongmen grew into a vast revolutionary network, inspiring uprisings and even supporting Dr. Sun Yat-sen in the 1911 revolution that ended imperial rule in China. As Chinese immigrants moved abroad, they carried Hongmen traditions with them, forming Chinese Freemason lodges in the U.S., Canada, and Southeast Asia that blended fraternal values with community service and patriotism.

While some branches drifted into organized crime—evolving into parts of the Triads—many others remained charitable and lawful, preserving the group’s ideals of unity and loyalty. Today, the Hongmen still exist as cultural and social organizations, their rituals, oaths, and symbols a lasting reminder of a brotherhood that began in rebellion and survived through secrecy, solidarity, and faith in justice.