What We Know about
Thomas Mertons Death
Paper by David Martin and Hugh Turley
presented to Thomas Merton Symposium, Pontifical Antheneum,
Rome, Italy, June 13, 2018
The
state of knowledge of Thomas Mertons death can best be described as highly
unsatisfactory. Michael Motts 1984
authorized biography, The Seven Mountains
of Thomas Merton, has been taken
as the last word on the subject. Everyone who has written about Mertons death
since then—and there are many—has apparently accepted his
explanation of how Merton was electrocuted by a defective fan, departing from
his description on occasion only with their own embellishments, based solely upon
imagination rather than new research.
This
is unfortunate, because Mott leaves a lot of loose ends. First, he quotes directly from the just-then-revealed
conclusion of the Thai police report, a document that only a few people had
previously seen and of whose full contents few are even now aware:
However, the Investigating Officer
questioned Dr. Luksana Narkvachara, whose views were that Reverend Thoma Merton
died because of:
1.
Heart
failure.
2.
And
that the cause mentioned in 1. caused the dead priest to faint and collide with the stand fan
located in the room. The fan had
fallen onto the body of Reverend Thomas Merton. The head of the dead priest had hit the
floor. There was a burn on the bodys
skin and on the underwear on the right side which was
assumed to have been caused by electrical shock from the fan.
Therefore the cause of the death of
Reverend Thomas Merton was as mentioned.
There were no witnesses who might be suspected of causing the
death. There is no reason to
suspect criminal causes.
Mott softened the blow of
that revelation by preceding it with a quote from the report that said that a
defective electric cord had been installed inside the fans stand that caused
an electrical leakage sufficient to kill a person who touched the metal part,
but thats not what the attending doctor said killed Merton, hence the
however.
The police investigation had
not inspired much confidence, writes Mott, and who could be surprised that it
hadnt? Many felt electrocution
was deliberately played down to protect the reputation of the conference center. It may have been so.
What Mott has just told us,
using nice language for it, is that the official investigation of Mertons
death amounted to a cover-up. This
is a very poor beginning for learning what the actual cause of death was. Then Mott provides us with only one
possible motive for the cover-up, to protect the reputation of the local
conference center. But that center
was run by a large, powerful international organization, the Red Cross. It would sound like a big scandal if one
were to say that there was a cover-up to protect the Red Cross, so Mott says
essentially the same thing, but in different words.
But there is another big,
powerful organization involved here.
If a family has a member killed by a defective fan in a public facility,
a product liability lawyer would advise the family to sue whoever might be
responsible, and the deeper the pockets of the responsible party the better. That would not just be the Red Cross,
but it would be the maker of the fan.
Mott doesnt say who that was, but according to several witnesses, the
fan was made by Hitachi.
Now were looking at a major
scandal involving a big multinational corporation. Might the Thai authorities have
performed their cover-up on behalf either the Red Cross or the Hitachi
Corporation? Mertons home abbey of
Gethsemani in Kentucky was, in effect, his surviving
family. One might well ask why the
abbey did not bring suit for damages against either the Red Cross or Hitachi,
or both. Does that mean that the
abbey privately accepted the verdict that Merton actually died of natural
causes and that they were willing to do so in the absence of an autopsy?
Thats right. There was no autopsy, even though the
official doctors certificate stated, a post-mortem examination has been done
in accordance with the law. Mott
offers a variety of weak excuses for the absence of an autopsy but says nothing
about the statements by the Thai authorities that give the unmistakable
impression that there was one. He
also fails to tell us that the police report made no mention of the curious
bleeding wound in the back of Mertons head. Mott, himself, does mention that injury,
employing the passive voice: Little attention seems to have been given to a
wound on the back of Mertons head that had bled considerably. The obvious solution appears to be that
it was caused when his head struck the floor.
The big story here, though,
is that an investigating police force that Mott has virtually acknowledged
engaged in a cover-up should pay absolutely no attention to the bleeding wound
in the back of Mertons head. Merton
fell upon a level floor. Mott
notwithstanding, its not the least bit obvious that the floor caused such a
wound. How deep did the wound
go? Did it reach the brain? If the wound were probed might one find
a projectile of some sort? An
examination on the spot—even without a full autopsy—might have
provided an answer to some of these questions, but the Thai police failed even
to acknowledge the wounds existence.
At this point one must begin to ask if they conducted their cover-up on
behalf of someone even bigger and more powerful than the International Red
Cross or the Hitachi Corporation.
The police report also said
nothing about Merton having been wet from a shower when he came into contact
with the fan. Mott, on the
other hand has this passage: What
seems the most likely reconstruction 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.
Does that not also suggest
that the police are covering up for those responsible for the faulty fan that
killed Merton? At this point,
readers may be surprised to learn that it is the police and not Mott who are on
the firmer ground. In fact,
speaking of the loose ends in Motts explanation of the event, its really very hard to say what ground Mott is on. Notice that he doesnt even say for
certain that Merton was wet from a shower, though he even leaves open the
possibility that Merton donned his shorts while still wet from the shower,
something that is even less likely than a Hitachi fan shocking someone to
death.
The police, in this instance,
had good reason to make no mention of Merton having taken a shower. That is because he didnt. He left lunch at the main building of
the conference center at around 1:40 p.m. in the company of Father Franois de
Grunne, O.S.B., of Belgium to take a break from the conference, which was to
resume at 4:30. The cottage where
they were staying was a 10 to 15 minute walk away. Father Celestine Say, O.S.B., from the
Philippines, followed about five minutes behind them, and he could see them far
ahead of him in conversation. By
the time Say arrived at the cottage, de Grunne had
gone upstairs to his room and Merton to his room on the first floor. Says room was also on the first
floor. John Moffitt, the poetry
editor of the Jesuit America magazine
was the fourth person in the cottage, with a room upstairs, but he had joined a
group for a short sightseeing trip into Bangkok for the afternoon.
The doors with their frames
for the private rooms seem to have been more or less permanent structures, but
the walls were not. They were nothing
but a wire mesh, with bed sheets hung next to them for privacy. Air could pass through, an important
feature in the tropical climate with no air conditioning, and so, too, could
sound. A shower room was accessible
from the parlor between the two private rooms. The fan that was found lying on Merton
was in his room, which was some distance from the shower.
Say said that he could even
hear Merton when he was walking barefooted in his room, but from the time that
he arrived at the cottage, he never heard a sound from Merton. He could even see that Merton was not
lying in his bed, but thought that he might be reclining on the floor, either
because it was cooler or for penance.
Say was awake the whole time from when he arrived at the cottage shortly
before 2:00 p.m. until de Grunne came downstairs and
told him to come have a look into Mertons room at around 4 :00 p.m. Say even took a shower himself when he
was unable to take an intended nap because of the noise de Grunne
was making pacing up and down upstairs directly above him. At no time after his arrival at the
cottage did Say hear or see Merton take a shower.
The testimony that de Grunne gave to the police was included with the police
report when it was sent to the Gethsemani Abbey in
1969, but it seems to have disappeared.
De Grunne wrote several letters to Moffitt in
that year, and he makes no mention of Merton having showered, either. The shower was absent from contemporary
news reports, as well.
A few weeks after the
conference, Sister Marie de la Croix, O.C.S.O., who was at the conference,
prepared a 5-page report in French whose English title is The Last Days of
Thomas Merton. In that report she
wrote that the first thing Merton did upon returning to the cottage was to take
a shower, but then, she says, he took a nap before his encounter with the fan,
so the shower would have been immaterial to the supposed electrocution. At any rate, she was not a witness,
having been on that same excursion into Bangkok with Moffitt and was probably
just repeating erroneous scuttlebutt.
One other
early document makes mention of a shower. That is a
letter sent on December 11, 1968, the day after the death, purportedly from
the six Trappist delegates at the Conference to
Abbot Flavian Burns at the Gethsemani
Abbey. There were actually seven
remaining Trappists in attendance at the conference
after Mertons death. If there was
ever such an actual signed letter, it has also disappeared. Whoever wrote the letter merely
speculates, saying only that Merton might have taken a shower, but none of the Trappists would have been in any better position than
Sister Marie de la Croix to testify to the fact since none of them were
witnesses, either.
Mott is bad enough with his
hedging and equivocating, but he is most unreliable when he is most
definite. Right at the beginning of
his narrative of what happened at the cottage he says, At some time before
three oclock Father de Grunne heard what he thought
was a cry and the sound of something falling. There were noises at all hours in the
area around the cottage, but this sound seemed to come from below.
With this passage, he has
planted in the mind of the reader that that was the moment of Mertons fatal
encounter with the fan. On this
point Mott seems to be close to agreement with the police report. At 3:00 P.M., on the same day, Reverend
De Grunne who stayed in an upper room over the scene,
while walking into the bathroom, heard a loud noise coming from the lower story
which sounded like a heavy object falling onto the floor, they say.
Notice
that the cry is missing from the police report. Perhaps Mott got that from Father Say,
who he implies failed to hear the noise because he was brushing his teeth at
the time and the water was running.
Say did, indeed, report that
de Grunne came down and asked him if he had heard a
shout, and Say was brushing his teeth at the time, but the time of his
experience is quite different.
According to Say, the first thing he did upon returning to the cottage
was to take off his habit and to go brush his teeth. It was at that moment, which would have
been around 2:00 p.m., that de Grunne came down,
knocked on the bathroom door, and asked Say if he had heard a shout, which Say
said he had not. Say later reported
in a letter that it would have been an easy matter for de Grunne
to look into Mertons room and see his condition, but he did not. He simply went back upstairs and paced
the floor.
What one would never gather
from Mott, or from the police report, for that matter, is that de Grunne behaved a great deal more like a suspect than a
reliable witness. It looks like he was inviting Say to make
the discovery of Mertons body, but Say only noticed upon returning to his room
that Merton was not lying in his bed, looking no further, out of respect for
Mertons privacy.
De Grunne
interrupted his almost two hours of pacing around, according to Say, to leave
the cottage for a short time and then to come back. After coming down that third time at
around 4:00 p.m., either to ask Merton to go for a swim or to ask him for the
key to the cottage, depending upon which of the two mutually exclusive reasons de
Grunne has given, he made his discovery and then
invited Say to come look into Mertons room. Neither of de Grunnes
reasons for going to Mertons room at that time is plausible. He had already gone out and come back
into the cottage, either using the key to regain reentry or without needing a
key for an unlocked outer door, and it was too late to go for a swim. The conference was set to resume at
4:30.
Say then saw Merton lying in
his shorts on the floor of his room with the fan lying across him. The door was latched from inside (though
later gaining entry without breaking the door proved relatively simple). De Grunne left
toward the main building, ostensibly to go for help. Upon encountering two abbots, Fr. Odo Haas, O.S.B. and Fr. Egbert Donovan, O.S.B., his first
words were to ask them if they had had a good swim. Even Mott thought this pleasantry odd,
but he dismissed it on account of de Grunnes nervousness. Say later wrote that de Grunnes manner generally had given him the creeps. Donovan wrote that de Grunne told them that he had come down and discovered
Merton because of the noise that he had heard. Now we have a third possible time for the
crucial noises from down below that de Grunne claims
to have heard.
In
July of 1969, in a letter responding to John Moffitt, de Grunne
took it all back. In that letter he
said that whatever noises he might have heard must have been coming from the
nearby neighborhood.
There is another source for
the 3:00 p.m. time. An unsigned
statement, purportedly to be from Fr. Haas, says, We met Rev. Fr. Grunne [sic] and he told us that about 3 pm he heard a cry
and the fall of a heavy object in or nearby the house. After some time he wanted to go look in
the room where Fr. Merton was, off on the right.
Theres the 3:00 p.m., but
now we have a third reason for de Grunne to have come
down and look into the room, and after a long, implausible delay, at that. Because it has a number of clear errors,
however, we have concluded that this document cannot be authentic. Mott has seized upon the biggest error,
though, apparently because it is essential for the lethal-fan argument. Haas, Donovan, and Say were the first
people into Mertons room. The Haas
statement says that when he tried to remove the fan from Mertons body, he got
a strong electric shock and could not free himself from it until Say rushed to
unplug it. Say reported, however, that
Haas recoiled from the shock and when asked, said that the shock was not too
strong. Even the police report said
that Haas jerked away from the fan.
For Mott, that turned into Haas dramatically being jerked sideways and
held to the fan until Say could unplug it.
Finally, the reader may have
noticed that we say that the witnesses found Merton in his shorts. Say even photographed the scene. Mott, however, purposely neutralized the
photographic evidence by writing that the photograph was taken after the scene
had been disturbed and that the body by that time might have been dressed for
modestys sake. He had to have
known that that was not true, because he had seen the same letters from Say that we have seen and he knew that Says purpose in
taking the photograph was precisely to preserve the death scene as the
witnesses had seen it, because they thought it was so peculiar. Mott also fails to explain how there
could have been a burn on the underwear—as he quotes from the police
report—if the body had been found naked.
In
summation, the widespread trust in Michael Motts account of Thomas Mertons
death has been very badly misplaced.
Hugh
Turley and David Martin, authors of The Martyrdom of Thomas
Merton: An Investigation
June
13, 2018
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