Ridván 1966:
1 The
Fiftieth Anniversary of the revelation by `Abdu'l-Bahá,
in March and April 1916, of the first Tablets of the Divine Plan, has witnessed
the conclusion of a feat of pioneering unparalleled in the annals of the Cause.
A year ago the call was raised for four-hundred-and-sixty-one pioneers to leave
their homes within twelve months and scatter throughout the planet to broaden
and strengthen the foundations of the world community of Bahá'u'lláh.
There is every hope that with the exception of thirty-four posts whose
settlement is dependent upon favourable circumstances
all the pioneer goals will be filled by Ridván
or their settlement will be assured by firm commitments. The gratitude and
admiration of the entire Bahá'í world go out to this
noble band of dedicated believers who have so gloriously responded to the call.
These pioneers, who have arisen for the specified goals, have been reinforced
by a further forty-five believers who have settled in the goal territories,
while sixty-nine more have left their homes to reside in twenty-six other
countries already opened to the Faith. All told, in the course of the year,
five- hundred-and-five Bahá'ís have arisen to pioneer beyond their homelands,
the largest number ever to do so in any one year in the entire history of the
Cause.
2 This
is a resounding victory, and in the light of the Master's statement in the
first of the Tablets of the Divine Plan, "It has often happened that
one blessed soul has become the cause of the guidance of a nation.", of
wonderful portent for the future. Its immediate results are the opening of
twenty-four new territories to the Faith, the resettlement of four others, and
the consolidation of ninety-three more. The newly-opened territories are: Chad
and Niger in Africa; Alaskan Peninsula, Barbuda, Cayman Islands, Chiloé Island, Providencia
Island, Quintana Roo Territory, Saba, St. Andrés
Island, St. Eustatius, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lawrence Island, Tierra del Fuego,
and Turks and Caicos Islands in the Americas; Laccadive Islands and Marmara
Island in Asia; Niue Island in Australasia; and Bornholm, Capri, Elba, Gotland,
Inner Hebrides, and Ischia in Europe.
3 The
re-settled territories are: Corisco Island and
Spanish Guinea in Africa and Maldive Islands and
Nicobar Islands in Asia.
4 As
announced last Ridván, the first Convention of
the Bahá'ís of Brunei will be held this year, during the second week-end of the
Ridván period, when the first National
Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Brunei will be elected. Hand of the Cause
Collis Featherstone will represent the World Centre of the Faith on this
historic occasion.
5 A
further result of the confirmations which have rewarded the tremendous teaching
effort of the past two years is the call now made by the House of Justice for
the formation at Ridván 1967 of the following
nine National Spiritual Assemblies: in Africa---the National Spiritual Assembly
of Algeria and Tunisia with its seat in Algiers; the National Spiritual
Assembly of Cameroon Republic with its seat in Victoria and with Spanish
Guinea, Fernando Po, Corisco and São Tomé and
Príncipe Islands assigned to it; the National Spiritual Assembly of Swaziland,
Mozambique and Basutoland with its seat in Mbabane; the National Spiritual
Assembly of Zambia with its seat in Lusaka. In the Americas---the National
Spiritual Assembly of the Leeward, Windward and Virgin Islands with its seat in
Charlotte Amalie. In Asia---the National Spiritual Assembly of Cambodia with
its seat in Phnom Penh; the National Spiritual Assembly of Eastern and Southern
Arabia with its seat in Bahrayn; the National
Spiritual Assembly of Taiwan with its seat in Taipei. In Australasia---the
National Spiritual Assembly of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands with its seat in
Tarawa. These nine new National Spiritual Assemblies constituting, together
with the new National Spiritual Assembly of Brunei, ten additional pillars of
the Universal House of Justice, will bring to seventy-nine the number which
will take part during Ridván 1968 in the
second International Convention for the election of that Institution.
6 This
momentous year cannot be allowed to pass without mention of the tireless and
dedicated services of the beloved Hands of the Cause, the Standard-Bearers of
the Nine Year Plan, and the able support rendered them by their Auxiliary
Boards. The special missions which they have discharged on behalf of the
Universal House of Justice, the teaching tours they have undertaken, the
conferences they have organized, their constant work at the World Centre, and
above all their never-ending encouragement of the friends and watchfulness over
the welfare of the Cause of God, have given distinction and effective
leadership to the work of the entire community. The grievous loss which they
sustained in the passing of Hand of the Cause Leroy Ioas
is shared by the whole Bahá'í world.
7 The
splendid achievements in the pioneering and teaching fields, together with the
enthusiastic attention given to the preparation of plans for the befitting
celebration of the centenary of Bahá'u'lláh's
proclamation of His Message to the kings and rulers of the world, have sealed
with success the first, and opened the way for the second phase of the Nine
Year Plan, a phase in which the Bahá'í world must
prepare and arm itself for the third phase, beginning in October 1967 when the
six intercontinental conferences will sound the "opening notes" of a
period of proclamation of the Cause of God extending through the remaining
years of the Nine Year Plan to the centenary, in 1973, of the revelation of the
"Kitáb-i-Aqdas".
The three-fold purpose of these conferences is to commemorate the centenary of
the opening of Bahá'u'lláh's Own proclamation of His
Mission, to proclaim the Divine Message, and to deliberate upon the tasks of
the remaining years of the Nine Year Plan.
8 Five
specific tasks face the Bahá'í world as it enters
this second phase of the Plan:
The
first is to complete the settlement of the pioneers, and the dispatch of others
wherever needed.
The
second is intensive preparation for the third phase of the Plan through
development of new teaching measures and expansion of the various Bahá'í funds at international, national and local levels.
The
third is acceleration of the provision of Bahá'í
literature, particularly its translation and publication in those languages in
which, as yet, none has been published or the supply is inadequate.
The
fourth is the acquisition of the remaining national .Ha.zíratu'l-Quds,
Temple sites, national endowments and teaching institutes called for in the
Plan, before the developing inflation now affecting nearly the whole world adds
too greatly to the financial burden of acquiring these properties.
The
fifth is development of the Panama Temple Fund. The Universal House of Justice
is initiating this Fund with a contribution of $25,000, and now calls upon the
believers and Bahá'í communities to contribute
liberally and continuously until the funds for the completion of this historic
structure are assured. Such contributions should be sent directly to the
National Spiritual Assembly of Panama. More than fifty designs have been
received, and the House of Justice is now considering the recommendations of
the National Assembly. The choice will be announced and the friends will be
kept fully informed of the progress of this highly significant and inspiring
project.
9 Every individual follower of Bahá'u'lláh,
as well as the institutions of the Faith, at local, national, continental and
world levels, must now meet the challenge to raise the intensity of teaching to
a pitch never before attained, in order to realize that vast increase called
for in the Plan. For those believers living in countries where they have
freedom to teach their Faith, this challenge is the more sharply pointed by the
oppressive measures imposed on the Faith elsewhere. In Persia the believers are
denied their elementary rights and the Faith is still largely proscribed. In `Iráq the national and one local .Ha.zíratu'l-Quds
have been seized and the activities of the friends severely restricted. In
Egypt Bahá'í properties are still confiscated and
recently several believers were imprisoned for a period, and are now awaiting
trial. New oppression has broken out in Indonesia where the national .Ha.zíratu'l-Quds has been seized and organized activities
of the believers have been forbidden. In yet other countries the believers are
subject to restrictions and surveillance. The friends in all cases are
steadfast and confident, looking forward to their emancipation and the eventual
triumph of the Cause.
10 The
challenge to the local and national administrative institutions of the Faith is
to organize and promote the teaching work through systematic plans, involving
not only the regular fireside meetings in the homes of the believers, the
public meetings, receptions and conferences, the week-end, summer and winter
schools, the youth conferences and activities, all of which are so vigorously
upheld at present, but in addition through a constant stream of visiting
teachers to every locality. The forces released by this latter process have
been extolled by Bahá'u'lláh in these words:
The
movement itself from place to place, when undertaken for the sake of God, hath
always exerted, and can now exert, its influence in the world. In the Books of
old the station of them that have voyaged far and near in order to guide the
servants of God hath been set forth and written down.,
while `Abdu'l-Bahá in the Tablets of
the Divine Plan, says:
Teachers
must continually travel to all parts of the continent, nay, rather, to all
parts of the world...
11 Such plans must be initiated and developed now, during
this period of preparation, so that they may be fully operative by the
beginning of the proclamation period from which time they must be relentlessly
pursued until the end of the Plan.
12 The
Universal House of Justice attaches such importance to this principle of
travelling teaching that it has decided to develop it internationally, and now
calls for volunteers to offer their services in this field. By their visits to
lands other than their own, these friends will lend a tremendous stimulus to
the proclamation and teaching of the Cause in all continents. It is hoped that
such projects will be self-supporting, since the International Deputization Fund will still be needed for pioneering.
However, when a proposal which is considered to be of special benefit to the
Faith cannot be financed by the individual or the receiving National
Assemblies, the House of Justice will consider a request for assistance from
the Deputization Fund. Offers, which may be for any
period, should be made to one's own National Spiritual Assembly or to the
Continental Pioneer Committees, which have been given the additional task of
assisting National Assemblies to implement and co-ordinate this new enterprise.
Let those who arise recall the Master's injunction to "travel like `Abdu'l-Bahá ... sanctified and free from every attachment
and in the utmost severance".
13 Simultaneous
and co-equal with this vast, ordered and ever-growing teaching effort, the work
of consolidation must go hand in hand. In fact these two processes must be
regarded as inseparable parts of the expansion of the Faith. While the work of
teaching inevitably goes first, to pursue it alone without consolidation would
leave the community unprepared to receive the masses who must sooner or later
respond to the life-giving message of the Cause. The guidance of our beloved
Guardian in this vital matter is, as ever, clear and unambiguous:
"Every outward thrust into new fields, every multiplication of Bahá'í institutions, must be paralleled by a deeper thrust
of the roots which sustain the spiritual life of the community and ensure its
sound development. From this vital, this ever-present need attention must, at
no time, be diverted; nor must it be, under any circumstances, neglected, or
subordinated to the no less vital and urgent task of ensuring the outer
expansion of Bahá'í administrative
institutions." A proper balance between these two essential aspects of
its development must, from now on, as we enter the era of large-scale
conversion, be maintained by the Bahá'í Community.
Consolidation must comprise not only the establishment of Bahá'í
administrative institutions, but a true deepening in the fundamental verities
of the Cause and in its spiritual principles, understanding of its prime
purpose in the establishment of the unity of mankind, instruction in its
standards of behaviour in all aspects of private and
public life, in the particular practice of Bahá'í
life in such things as daily prayer, education of children, observance of the
laws of Bahá'í marriage, abstention from politics,
the obligation to contribute to the Fund, the importance of the Nineteen Day
Feast and opportunity to acquire a sound knowledge of the present-day practice
of Bahá'í administration.
14 The
onward march of the Faith requires, and is indeed dependent upon, a very great
increase in contributions to the various funds. All the goals assigned to the
World Centre of the Faith, and particularly those dealing with the development
and beautification of the properties surrounding the Holy Shrines and the
extension of the gardens on Mount Carmel entail heavy expenditures. The
building of the two Temples called for in the Plan will require further large
sums, and the world-wide process of teaching and consolidation now to be
intensified must be sustained by a greatly increased and uninterrupted flow of
funds. The International Deputization Fund must be
maintained and expanded, not only for further pioneering needs, but in order to
assist and develop the travelling teacher programme
now called for. Since only those who have openly proclaimed their recognition
of Bahá'u'lláh are permitted to contribute
financially to the establishment of His World Order, it is apparent that more,
much more is required from the few now so privileged. Our responsibilities in
this field are very great, commensurate indeed with the bounty of being the
bearers of the Name of God in this day.
15 The
challenge to the individual Bahá'í in every field of
service, but above all in teaching the Cause of God is never-ending. With every
fresh affliction visited upon mankind our inescapable duty becomes more
apparent, nor should we ever forget that if we neglect this duty, "others"
in the words of Shoghi Effendi, "will be
called upon to take up our task as ministers to the crying needs of this
afflicted world". Now, it seems, we may well be entering an era of the
longed-for expansion of our beloved Faith. Mankind's growing hunger for
spiritual truth is our opportunity. While reaching forth to grasp it we would
do well to ponder the following words of Bahá'u'lláh:
Your
behaviour towards your neighbour
should be such as to manifest clearly the signs of the one true God, for ye are
the first among men to be re-created by His Spirit, the first to adore and bow
the knee before Him, the first to circle round His throne of glory.
16 As humanity plunges deeper into that condition of which Bahá'u'lláh wrote, "to disclose it now would not be
meet and seemly", so must the believers increasingly stand out as
assured, orientated and fundamentally happy beings, conforming to a standard
which, in direct contrast to the ignoble and amoral attitudes of modern
society, is the source of their honour, strength and
maturity. It is this marked contrast between the vigour,
unity and discipline of the Bahá'í community on the
one hand, and the increasing confusion, despair and feverish tempo of a doomed
society on the other, which, during the turbulent years ahead will draw the
eyes of humanity to the sanctuary of Bahá'u'lláh's
world-redeeming Faith.
17 The
constant progress of the Cause of God is a source of joy to us all and a
stimulus to further action. But not ordinary action. Heroic deeds are now
called for such as are performed only by divinely-sustained and detached souls.
`Abdu'l-Bahá, the Commander of the hosts of the Lord,
in one of the Tablets of the Divine Plan, uttered this cry: "O that I
could travel, even though on foot and in the utmost poverty, to these regions
and, raising the call of `Yá Bahá'u'l-Abhá'
in cities, villages, mountains, deserts and oceans, promote the Divine
teachings! This, alas, I cannot do. How intensely I deplore it." And
He concluded with this heart-shaking appeal, "Please God, ye may
achieve it."
The Universal House of Justice