Two women have been apointed to head the newly launched Freemasonry leadership council

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The Council for Freemasonry’s first president will be Grand Master Zuzanka Penn, right, supported by Grand Master Carol Cole, left.

England’s Freemasons say the appointment is “an unprecedented and historic move” which it is hoped will dismiss the mistaken belief that the organisation is exclusively male.It comes after Freemasons of both sexes rejected suggestions they follow the recent moves by London’s GarrickClub by forcing the men’s masonic lodges to accept women members and vice versa. The Garrick’s all-male membership recently voted to admit women for the first time in its 190-yearhistory.

England’s largest masonic lodges have made it clear that they have no intention of trying to force the men’s and women’s lodges together.

Unfounded criticisms and misconceptions

A new Council for Freemasonry has been established as a governing body to cover female as well as male members of the order in England and Wales.

It will bring together the men’s United Grand Lodge of England (UGLE) and the two female bodies, the Order of Women Freemasons and the Honourable Fraternity of Ancient Freemasons.

“Contrary to the erroneous claim that Freemasonry is exclusively male, women’s Freemasonry has been an integral part of Freemasonry in the UK for over a century.”While Freemasonry is practiced in single-sex lodges, this is no different from many other activities, including most sports, as well as many other community groups.”

The Council for Freemasonry’s first president will be Grand Master Zuzanka Penn, supported by Grand Master Carol Cole and a senior man, Pro Grand Master Jonathan Spence. Sources say the newly established Council for Freemasonry will work to ”ensure that the founding principles of meritocracy, tolerance, diversity and inclusion are advanced and respected” without detracting from the membership of the women’s lodges ”wishing to carry out their freemasonry in a single-sex safe space”.

Move to head off pressure for mixed lodges

The presence of two women at the head of the Council for Freemasonry is designed to head off pressure on the UGLE to admit women to male lodges.

A source at the UGLE told The Telegraph: “The women’s lodges are happy to operate separately from the men. It’s completely their choice.

“They are happy to have their own separate lodges and they don’t want the men to join them and they don’t want to join the men’s lodges.”

In a joint statement, the three governing bodies of the country’s Freemasons said: “Neither The Order of Women Freemasons, nor the Honourable Fraternity of Ancient Freemasons has any desire or intention to change their exclusively female membership, and their members value the practising of Freemasonry in a safe and single-sex environment. This is supported by TIGT.E