Click The Images To Go To Page Indicated In The Flag The Fourth A.A. International Convention The fourth AA International Convention was the first not held in the USA. It was held in Toronto, Canada, in July 1965. Bill and Lois were, of course, prominent on the program, and at that time many of the old-timers were still active and at the convention. Nell Wing, Bill's secretary, particularly remembered Clarence Snyder, who started AA in Cleveland. She said that Bill spent "a couple of hours" in Clarence's hotel suite reminiscing about the early days.
This surprised Nell, who pointed out: "As long as Bill was alive," Nell notes, "Clarence was antagonistic and hostile toward him. He was a leader of a small group of dissidents, who were anti-Conference and anti-G.S.O., and who bad-mouthed Bill for many years. And here was Bill in Toronto, chatting and chuckling with his bête noire [a person disliked] and enjoying it all. I believe that was the last time they met together." Nell adds that a "feisty priest [Fr. John Doe] who had threatened to disrupt the 'Coming of Age' ceremony in St. Louis, was at this convention also, but now he was loving and kind to Bill and Lois and everyone else. He had just returned from an audience with the Pope in Rome, bearing a citation for Bill. It hangs now on the wall at Stepping Stones." The film "Bill's Own Story," which Nell had watched being made at Stepping Stones, was shown for the first time in Toronto. It was well received and has been reproduced in several languages since then. I think I need to give tribute to one person who made Toronto such a significant convention: Al S. Al S., an advertising and film man in New York, had joined the fellowship in March 1944. "'Within a month," Nell Wing reports, "he was 'into action,' as the Big Book says. Among his many contributions to AA, he helped re-form the Manhattan group, and also helped organize another club for A.A.s on Forty-first Street. He helped structure the New York Intergroup, for which he served as secretary and director. While there, he and another member, George B., were instrumental in persuading Knickerbocker Hospital to set aside a ward just for alcoholics under the sponsorship of A.A. -- the first such general hospital in New York to do so." Nell notes that by late 1948, Al had become editor of the Grapevine. During the time he worked on the Grapevine, he also served as a director of A.A. Publishing, Inc. (an earlier name of AA World Services, Inc. From 1958 to 1961, he was a director of the A.A. Grapevine, Inc., and a trustee on the General Service Board. He attended, until his death, every international convention and contributed to the success of them all. He was a valued friend of Bill's, according to Nell, and Bill solicited Al's views and comments on all his books and other writings. Nell adds: "Lois put it succinctly: 'Bill and Al were buddies.'" I, for one, feel a debt of gratitude to Al S., whom I don't remember ever meeting, for all he did to help New York AA, especially the Intergroup office, where I made my first AA contact. But the contribution for which most of us feel most grateful, it was Al S. who composed the "I am Responsible" pledge for the convention in Toronto.
Nell writes: "I am responsible.. When anyone, anywhere, reaches out for help, I want the hand of A.A. always to be there. And for that: I am responsible." "There was a special spirit about the Toronto Convention. Many people say it was the best ever."
Source: Index of A.A. History Pages on Barefoot's Domain As in so many things, especially with we alcoholics, our History is our Greatest Asset!.. We each arrived at the doors of A.A. with an intensive and lengthy "History of Things That Do Not Work" .. Today, In A.A. and In Recovery, Our History has added an intensive and lengthy "History of Things That DO Work!!" and We will not regret the past nor wish to shut the door on it!!
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On the Web Oct 26, 2002 in the Spirit of Cooperation Three mighty important things, Pardn'r, LOVE And PEACE and SOBRIETY |