The Thomas Merton
Autopsy that Wasn’t
Did the prominent monk, writer, social
critic, and opponent of the American role in the Vietnam War, Thomas Merton,
strangely succumb to a faulty fan while attending a monastic conference in
Bangkok, Thailand? That’s what
Associated Press reporter, John T. Wheeler, reported with a dateline of Bangkok
on the day of the death, December 10, 1968.
One can read that same characterization of the event even today on the web site of Merton’s home
Abbey of Gethsemani, near Bardstown, Kentucky.
Thailand was in the thick of the Vietnam
War theater of operations at the time. Some
80% of the air
attacks on North Vietnam and virtually all of those on the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos originated there. America’s war
wounded were treated there and many who succumbed from their wounds were flown
back to the States from Thailand. On one
such flight, they were accompanied, ironically, by the dead Merton, who had
been one of the war’s most influential opponents. Along with Martin Luther King, Jr., and
Robert Kennedy, he was the third major Vietnam War opponent to die under
suspicious circumstances in 1968.
Although Richard Nixon was the president-elect at the time, we might be
reminded that Lyndon Johnson was still the president.
Had the public information situation then
been what it is today, very likely lots of people would have been weighing in
with the question in that lead sentence.
Who’s ever heard of anyone being killed from being shocked to death by a
household appliance, much less a fan?
The only time this writer has ever heard of it was when a radio fell
into a bathtub, but I suppose something like a hair dryer might also produce
the same fatal result. (In fact, in the
actual 1997 keynote address to the biennial meeting of the International Thomas
Merton Society [ITMS], not in the formal transcription here, James W. Douglass
reported that his friend Andrew Young had told him that Merton had died when a
hair dryer had fallen into his bathtub, and Douglass joked about it because
Merton was bald.)
The very first question that any skeptics
of the day would have wanted to ask would have been, “What did the autopsy
show?” After all, that’s what autopsies
are for, to determine the cause of death.
How do we know that the faulty fan that was found lying across his
supine body that was clad only in boxer shorts or the bottom half of summer
pajamas actually killed Merton? Without an autopsy, all speculation about
cause of death is nothing more than that. It’s just so much blowing of smoke. An early such smoke blower, currently cited
on Merton’s Wikipedia page, was the French Benedictine monk, Jean Leclercq, who was one of the conference’s
organizers, writing on February 26, 1969:
How exactly did [Merton’s] death come
about? We will never know exactly and with certitude. There are already a number of scenarios circulating—the sort of thing you
expect when an extraordinary person dies. Some have begun spreading the rumor
that the last moments of his life were in the presence of a statue of the
Buddha. Others have suggested that he was assassinated like Martin Luther King
had been. On the evening of his death two different versions were already being
put forth by the media of Thailand and the United States. Papers in the United
States only made mention of electrocution; those in Thailand spoke only of a heart
attack. On both sides there was a desire to explain his death in such a way as
to forestall certain hypotheses, none of which are all that significant.
In all probability the death of Thomas Merton was due
in part to heart failure, in part to an electric shock. Neither one nor the
other alone would normally be fatal. (Emphasis added)
We should hardly be surprised that a
person capable of such muddy thinking would neglect to raise the question of whether
there had been an autopsy.
We wouldn’t learn it from the AP or from the
mainstream American press either at the time or later, but the attendees of the
conference knew that the local Thai authorities, who sent the police accompanied
by a medical doctor to do a hasty investigation, didn’t do any autopsy in one
of their hospitals because within a few hours U.S. military personnel showed up
and whisked the body away, or, as Dom Jean Leclercq
put it, “[Merton’s] body was taken away during the night,” without telling us
who did the taking. Since the press never
told us that the U.S. military quickly took possession of the civilian Thomas
Merton’s body, thereby short-circuiting usual Thai investigative procedures,
they didn’t have to address the question of why it was done and who authorized
this departure from the standard protocol.
Apart from their quick decision to take such unorthodox action, one
might even wonder how the U.S. military had learned so quickly of Merton’s
death.
The Other French
Observer
So, if there had been an autopsy in
Thailand it would have to have been at that U.S. military hospital. In fact, one of the earliest reports to come
out of the conference, also written in French by a native French speaker by
another attendee of the conference, Mother
Marie de la Croix, said an autopsy had been conducted. Here is a translation of the key passage of de la Croix’s article that appeared some years later in The Merton
Seasonal, published by the ITMS:
The next day, our Fathers
told us that the army had come to take the body at 1:30 in the morning. At the
same time, the Abbot of Gethsemani, finally
contacted, refused to believe it was a heart problem and asked for an autopsy
by doctors of the American army; this was done. But the conference was over before
we could learn the results, if in fact it turned out that they could reach any
definitive conclusion.
The way she tells it, the part about the
autopsy sounds plausible. She was right
there at the conference (not in Bangkok as reported by the AP and by the Gethsemani Abbey to this day, but at a Red Cross conference
center in Samut Prakan some 15 miles south of Bangkok) and she sat across the
table from Merton and conversed with him at lunch after his morning
presentation to the group on the day of his death. She is also more accurate than the AP
reporter Wheeler, who not only said that they were in Bangkok, but also,
according to his anonymous “Catholic sources,” said that Merton was missed when
he didn’t show up for lunch. Furthermore,
what she says about the autopsy is largely consistent with what Abbot Flavian
Burns wrote on page 109 in 1984 in a compendium entitled Merton by Those
Who Knew Him Best. Here I quote from page 51 of our recently
published Thomas Merton’s
Betrayers: The Case against Abbot James Fox and Author John Howard Griffin:
Flavian wrote that he called the [U.S.]
embassy in Bangkok and was told “there had been an accidental death; no more
than that.” Flavian added, “I asked for
an autopsy because I wanted answers to questions I knew would be coming.”
But, returning to the translation of Sr.
de la Croix’s article, we find this note by the ITMS publishers right at the
top: “While some of its details are not completely
accurate (there was never an autopsy performed on Merton’s body, for example, and
one of the ‘priests’ in his bungalow was in fact a layman, John Moffitt), this
previously unpublished account provides another precious witness to Merton's
final days.”
In fact,
the year in which Abbot Flavian Burns wrote that he ordered an autopsy was the same
year that Michael Mott’s authorized biography, The Seven Mountains of Thomas
Merton, came out, in which Mott states emphatically that there was no
autopsy and offers some clumsy excuses for it, but we’re getting ahead of our
story.
Sr. de la
Croix got more things wrong than the translator tells us—or probably even knew
at the time the ITMS published her article.
She writes, for instance, that after returning to his cottage from lunch
in the main building, Merton took a shower.
When the Gethsemani Abbey’s Br. Patrick Hart in
his postscript to the 1973 book, The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton introduced
to the public the claim—which Hugh Turley and I completely debunk in our 2018
book, The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton: An Investigation—that Merton was wet from a shower when he
encountered the faulty fan, he made no mention of de la Croix’s previous
statement that Merton had taken a shower.
That is doubtless because she also wrote that after the shower Merton
took a nap, which would have done nothing to buttress Brother Patrick’s
suggestion that the shock from the fan was lethal because Merton was wet from
having just emerged from a shower.
She has a
great deal of company, right up to the present, in the case of that crucial error-filled
paragraph in her article:
When we came back at 4 o'clock from the visit
to Bangkok, we were told, "Thomas Merton is dead." The details are
easily told. He had taken a shower before having a nap and then had turned on
his fan, a large standing fan that was in poor condition. He was immediately
electrocuted. On the floor above him, a Benedictine priest whose name I don't
know, Father de Grunne, I think, heard a loud cry,
then the noise of a fall. He didn't investigate. Only two hours later, when the
same priest needed some document or other, did he go to knock on the door of Father
Louis Merton. Getting no response, he
became uneasy, went out, and through the large open window he saw Father lying
on the ground with the fan on top of him. But it was too late to do anything. Later on they tried
to say that he had had a heart attack, even though a Korean sister who was a
doctor had examined him and concluded that it was death by electrocution, pure
and simple; all this was to avoid the serious consequences that this would have
entailed for the Thai Red Cross as well as for others. This also explains why
the I.C.I. would also give this explanation even though no one believed it.
Sr. de la
Croix had been on the same afternoon sightseeing excursion into Bangkok as
Moffitt, the poetry editor of the Jesuit-published America magazine out
of New York City. She got the last name
of that Belgian Benedictine monk right, Fr. François de Grunne,
but virtually everything else she has to say is off the mark, much of which is
because she relied upon the veracity of de Grunne,
who appears to have been a central figure in the murder plot, as we explain in
detail in The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton.
There was a thoroughly reliable witness who was the fourth occupant
of the cottage, and his room was on the first floor with Merton. We are speaking of the Benedictine monk from
the Philippines, Fr. Celestine Say, who was about five minutes behind Merton
and de Grunne as they returned to the cottage from
the main building after lunch.
That was
approaching 2 p.m. The temporary rooms
were separated only by screens at the top, so as far as the transmission of
sound is concerned it was like one big room.
Say reported that for the two hours before de Grunne
eventually saw Merton in his room lying on his back under the fan and alerted
Say, he had heard no sound from Merton.
The first thing that Say did upon arriving was to go to the bathroom off
the hallway between his room and Merton’s and brush his teeth. While Say was
brushing his teeth, de Grunne came down from his
room, which was directly over Say’s, not Merton’s room, knocked on the closed
bathroom door, and when Say opened it, de Grunne
asked him if he had heard a shout.
De la Croix
has the time right for de Grunne’s report of that
purported shout, but he did not mention anything about the noise of a fall, as
Say reported what de Grunne told him. At that, de Grunne
had simply gone back to his room over Say’s.
He seemed to be inviting Say to check on Merton, but he didn’t do it himself,
and Say didn’t do it out of respect for Merton’s
privacy. According to Say, who was
unable to take a planned nap because of de Grunne’s
constant pacing of the floor over him, de Grunne came
down again sometime later and left the cottage briefly before his third trip
downstairs when he made his fateful discovery, near 4 p.m.
Michael
Mott has a different account of the time of the perceived “shout” and the
reason for de Grunne’s final trip down the stairs:
“At some time before three o’clock Father de Grunne
heard what he thought was a cry and the sound of something falling...An hour
later, a few minutes before four, Father de Grunne
descended the stairs again to get the key of the cottage from Merton and to
reassure himself that the monk was only a sound sleeper.”
De Grunne couldn’t have come down to get the key—as the Thai
police also reported—because he had already left the cottage once around 3 p.m.
and come back in shortly afterward according to Say. Say reported that de Grunne
said he had come down later to ask Merton if he would like to go for a swim,
but since the conference was set to resume at 4:30, that seems implausible as
well. After telling Say what he had seen
in Merton’s room, de Grunne immediately left for the
main building. He quickly encountered
two Benedictine abbots, Fr. Odo Haas
and Fr. Egbert Donovan, who were returning from a swim in the pool. He told them of seeing Merton lying inert in
his room with the fan on top of him, but he also told them that the reason that
he had come down from his upstairs room was because of the shout he had heard
from down below, which would have been a delayed reaction on his part of close
to an hour by the timing of the purported shout or the “loud noise” as the Thai
police report had it.
If any
doubt remains as to de Grunne’s unreliability as a
witness—or worse—as we report on page 96 of The Martyrdom of Thomas Merton,
in a July 6, 1969, letter to John Moffitt, de Grunne
said that the noise he first thought had come from down below he realized had actually come from one of the other nearby houses.
Back to Sr.
de la Croix’s account, the Thai police did not “try to say” that Merton died of
a heart attack; they concluded that he died of “heart failure,” which is not
the same thing medically. The Benedictine nun, Sr. Edeltrud
Weist, the medical doctor who pronounced Merton dead,
as one can see from her name, was not Korean.
She was German, based in a convent in Taegu, Korea. There is some irony in this mistake, since de
la Croix was hardly Japanese, though living in a convent in Japan. She
was not nearly so definite about the cause of death as de la Croix says she
was, either. As we discuss in Thomas
Merton’s Betrayers (pp. 188-189), she said in her written witness statement
that the best she could do was to declare that Merton was dead. Though leaning strongly toward electric shock
as the death cause, she admitted to being thoroughly puzzled by the scene that
she encountered, as were the other witnesses.
That brings
us back to the subject of this essay. In
the absence of a formal autopsy, medical doctor or not, Sr. Weist
was in no position to conclude that it was “death by electrocution, pure and
simple,” as de la Croix has it. And the
crucial fact that no autopsy had been performed would remain a secret to the general public for years.
John Moffitt would write an article, “New Charter for Monasticism” for America
(January 18, 1969) that briefly touched on Merton’s death and another for The
Catholic World, “Thomas Merton the Last Three Days” (July 1969) and neither
broached the subject of an autopsy. Neither
did his book with the same title as the America article, published in
January of 1970. Through most of 1969,
as we recount in Thomas Merton’s Betrayers, Moffitt was exchanging
letters with Merton’s first authorized biographer, John Howard Griffin,
expressing his great skepticism over the accidental electrocution while, at
least in the letters that have survived, avoiding the essential subject of an autopsy.
Other False Reports of an Autopsy
Sr. de la
Croix was not alone among those saying, early in the game, that an autopsy had
been conducted. Bardstown, Kentucky, has
a small daily newspaper called The Kentucky Standard. Although the town is only 12 miles from
the Gethsemani Abbey, the newspaper was a day behind
the national media in reporting on Merton’s death, and when it did in a very
brief article with no byline it misspelled the abbey’s name as “Gethsemane,”
using the common Biblical spelling.
Their next article was two days after Merton’s December 17 funeral at
the abbey. In contrast to the first
article, it was long and detailed. One
of the “facts” it furnished in the article was that at a stop-off in Oakland,
California, on the long trip back to Kentucky, an autopsy had been performed on
Merton’s body. It also said that a monk
from Gethsemani flew out to California and
accompanied the body home from there. No
such “facts” were ever reported anywhere else, to our knowledge. Like the first one, this article also had no
byline, but as we explain in Thomas Merton’s Betrayers (pp. 45-46), it was
almost certainly written for the newspaper by someone at the Gethsemani Abbey.
The Thai
investigation authorities also got in on the act. The official doctor’s certificate, signed by
the doctor on the scene, Luksana Nakvachara
states near the bottom in the English translation that we found in the National
Archives:
Remarks: The patient died outside Samutprakarn
Hospital. The remains were brought to
the Hospital for the purpose of a post mortem by
medical doctors and investigation as prescribed by law.
The back
side of the translation of the death certificate that we found at the National
Archives has this inscription:
(Reverse
Page): The remains may be removed
through the area of Amphurmuang, Samutprakan
Province and they may be allowed to pass through other areas as a post-mortem
examination has already been made in accordance with the law.
(Signed)
Pol Lt. Boonchob Cheongvichit,
Investigator
December
11, 1968
What they
are describing sounds for all the world like an autopsy, but the doctor and the
police lieutenant had to have known that what they were writing was not true,
because the body went directly from the Red Cross conference center to the U.S.
military hospital, never seeing the inside of Samutprakarn Hospital or any
other medical facility controlled by the Thais.
No-Autopsy Story Dribbles Out
Brother
Patrick Hart might well have been the first to divulge that no autopsy had been
conducted. He did it in 1973, in that
postscript to The Asian Journal of Thomas Merton in which he introduced
the false shower story. But he hardly
gave the subject the attention it deserved, brushing it aside as simply having
been prevented by “international red tape.”
In 1976
Cornelia and Irving Sussman wrote a short 1976 biography entitled Thomas Merton: The Daring Young Man on the Flying Belltower. They ran with Brother Patrick’s shower story, adding embellishments
of their own that represent both poor scholarship and an energetic attempt to
further promote the notion of the killer fan, while avoiding the autopsy
question completely. Most interestingly,
in their acknowledgments they single out Brother Patrick as someone who had
read their manuscript and even suggested changes, and they also thank John
Howard Griffin for his assistance. Later,
as we learned from his archives, Griffin wrote them with glowing praise for
their book, telling them as well that he did not think the book had any factual
errors. As we point out, it was replete
with them when it came to the subject of Merton’s death. (The Martyrdom of
Thomas Merton, pp. 133-135.)
On August
3, 1980, in a Louisville Courier Journal front-page article by John C.
Long entitled “Revival of Theory about Monk’s Death Distresses Friend,” Brother
Patrick is cited for a curious explanation for what that “international red
tape” was that prevented an autopsy from taking place. He told Long that there was a Thai law that
required anyone autopsied in Thailand to be buried in Thailand.
The story
is absurd on its face, demonstrating more than anything the abbey’s sensitivity
to the question of the lack of an autopsy.
The fact that the Thai fabricators would say that they did an autopsy
and let the body go back to the States is sufficient to give the lie to Brother
Patrick’s claim. In fact, they make it
sound almost like an autopsy was a prerequisite for permitting the body
to leave the country.
Michael
Mott devoted seven pages of his 1984 authorized biography to Merton’s death and
burial. It represented the biggest
exposure of the public at large to the news that, although the American public
had been told with great assurance from the very beginning that Merton had been
killed by a rogue fan, there had never been any autopsy to confirm that
extremely rare occurrence. In his
extensive treatment of the subject, Mott also revealed a couple of other
important things that the news media, the Gethsemani
Abbey, and other people who had written about the death had kept a virtual
secret. He revealed that the Thai police
“investigators” had concluded that Merton was already dead from “heart failure”
before encountering the electrified fan found lying across his supine
body. Only The New York Times in
its December 11, 1968, report, upon the authority of a cable from Thailand that
the Gethsemani Abbey had received, had reported that
heart failure was the official cause of death.
But then in the wire service report it sent out it dropped mention of
the heart-failure conclusion. For its
part, the abbey told other inquiring news agencies for the first few days that
it had not been told the cause of death.
Mott’s
third big revelation was that there was a wound in the back of Merton’s head
that had “bled considerably.” That wound
had been mentioned by Sr. Weist in her written
witness statement and by other witnesses in correspondence to the abbey, to
which Mott had access, but this was the first public mention of it that we have
been able to find.
Having let
those three cats out of the bag, Mott then scrambled to put them back in, and
so powerful is the “first-impression effect,” and so monolithic has the
national opinion molding apparatus (NOMA) been in adhering to that first faulty
AP story, he has been largely successful.
Here is how he pulled off that tricky maneuver, taking the last one
first:
Little
attention seems to have been given to a wound on the back of Merton’s head that
had bled considerably. The obvious
solution appears to be that it was caused when his head struck the floor. (p.
567)
That’s
it. Notice the passive voice. Dr. Weist, the
first medical person to examine the body gave it some attention, but the Thai
authorities, their examining doctor and the police made no mention of it, and
they were joined by the American news media and everyone else who had written
about Merton’s death heretofore. And
what a fall backward it would have to have been upon a level floor to produce a
wound that had “bled considerably!”
Boxers get such wounds over the eye, but that’s because of the skin
being cut by the edge of the eye socket behind it. There’s no such edge on the back of the
skull.
Here is how
Mott explains away the Thai authorities’ heart-failure conclusion:
The
immediate question at the conference was confined to the cause of death, where
there appeared to be two causes, electrocution and heart failure. The police investigation had not inspired
much confidence. Many felt electrocution
was deliberately played down to protect the reputation of the conference
center. It may have been so. One thing argues for electrocution,
especially since Merton had no history of heart condition. (p. 566)
Mott then
proceeds to make the case that the shock caused the heart failure, but that’s
not what the police report said. It said
that Merton was dead from heart failure before he touched the fan. In case you doubt it, Mott has the key quote
from the police report right there on the same page, “...Reverend Thomas 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 had hit the floor.”
Mott didn’t
need to guess about the police motivation to protect the reputation of the
conference center. The Thai doctor told
the witness Fr. Celestine Say precisely that, and he
relayed that information to the abbey in a letter to which Mott had
access.
What’s
important here is what’s missing. What
about the reputation of the International Red Cross in charge of the conference
center, and, most importantly, the maker of the fan, the Japanese giant
Hitachi, as reported by several witnesses.
Why wouldn’t the abbey have wanted there to be an autopsy to nail down
the fact that the fan killed Merton so they could bring suit
against one or both of these deep-pocket organizations? (Never mind that
the creation of the Merton Legacy Trust that Merton signed shortly before his
trip to Thailand ensured that the income from his writings up to that point and
all that they might milk out of his unpublished journals and writings in
the future would go to the abbey, which was a much surer source of income than
a living Merton, a constant threat to leave and take the income with him, would
have been.)
That brings
us to Mott’s excuse for the lack of an autopsy.
He is at his creative best in explaining it with endnote 466 on page
654:
On the
vexed question of why no autopsy was performed, there have been a number of answers.
Abbot [Rembert] Weakland [the Benedictine abbot
primate who presided over the conference] has said he was satisfied the cause
of death seemed clear, the facilities in Bangkok for an autopsy were few, and
he lacked the authority to order one.
Dom Flavian Burns understood that if an autopsy was performed in
Thailand, either the body would be greatly delayed in getting to the United
States or Merton might have to be buried in Thailand.
Mott can
get by with this lame excuse by carefully failing to tell his readers in all
his seven pages that the U.S. military had taken the body directly from the
conference center to its own hospital.
That fact also makes moot Brother Patrick’s claims that “international
red tape” or some ridiculous Thai law requiring someone autopsied in Thailand
to be buried in Thailand. It wasn’t an
international question; it was an intra-national one. There was nothing to stop the U.S. military
hospital from doing an autopsy on Merton.
They only embalmed him instead.
Finally, on
the biographer Michael Mott’s “definitive” account of Merton’s death, look at
his last word virtually ruling out the very idea that there was a plausible
motive for the man’s assassination:
In 1968,
Merton’s death would have furthered the political ends of no group. Those who felt animosity toward the stands he
had taken on various issues were not in Bangkok. Only the letters of 1967 in which he spoke of
his desire to become an intermediary for peace remain to trouble an absolute
certainty. By December 1968, at any
rate, Merton was not an obvious target in Bangkok for either reasoning or
unreasonable assassins. (p. 568)
The
inability to reason would appear to be all Mott’s at that point.
What would
an honest autopsy have shown? We believe
that we have made the case beyond serious contradiction with The Martyrdom
of Thomas Merton and most recently with Thomas Merton’s Betrayers that
it would have revealed a hole in the back of Merton’s skull, caused either by a
bullet or by some sharp murder weapon. If
our conclusions are correct, the exhumed body would still show that, but we’re
not holding our breath waiting for someone with the courage to order such an
exhumation or with the honesty to tell us what they have found.
David
Martin
February 4,
2023
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