The Universal
House of Justice
Day
of the Covenant
26
November 2003
To the Followers of
Baháfuflláh in the Cradle of the Faith
Dearly loved Friends,
1. It is now a little over 125 years since eAbdufl-Bahá addressed His
open letter to the people of your country. Because of His vital role in a
religious community that had been made the object of intense prejudice, the
Author necessarily refrained from attaching His name to the document. His
message, however, could not have been more clear. Speaking out of
a profound love for a native land that He had not seen during the long years of
exile since His childhood, the Master appealed in passionate language for its
people to call to mind those days when Iran gwas as the heart of the worldh,
gthe source and centre of sciences and arts, the wellspring of great inventions
and discoveries, the rich mine of human virtues and perfectionsh. The time had
come, He insisted, when the heirs of so great a civilization could—and
must—arise and reclaim their heritage.
2. What the letter prophetically laid out was the challenge of
modernity. Today, that challenge has become the inescapable preoccupation of
populations throughout the planet, not least the peoples of the Islamic world.
The meaning of modernity and the features of that rising flood of cultural
revolution were explicitly identified in the Masterfs message: constitutional
and democratic government, the rule of law, universal education, the protection
of human rights, economic development, religious tolerance, the promotion of
useful sciences and technologies and programmes of public welfare. In praising
the achievements of what He termed this gtemporal and material apparatus of
civilizationh, the Master made it clear that He was not proposing simply a
credulous imitation of the West. On the contrary. In uncompromising language,
He portrayed European society as drowning gin the sea of passion and desireh,
trapped in a materialistic perception of reality that could bring in its wake
nothing but disillusionment:
Be just: can this nominal
civilization, unsupported by a genuine civilization of character, bring about
the peace and well-being of the people or win the good pleasure of God? Does it
not, rather, connote the destruction of manfs estate and pull down the pillars of
happiness and peace?
3. Readers were urged to look below surface phenomena. As a lengthy
exposition of historical processes would have burdened what was intended as an
urgent appeal for reflection and action, eAbdufl-Bahá confined Himself to a few
salient examples of the points He was making. Their common theme was the
transformative power that has been responsible for all of humanityfs
development over the ages and that would later lend the published edition of
the letter its familiar title The Secret of Divine Civilization. Whether in
reviewing events of Persian history or touching on passages in the Holy Qurfán,
the letter called on its readers to reflect deeply about the unique endowment
that promotes the advancement of all human well-being:
Consider carefully:
all these highly varied phenomena, these concepts, this knowledge, these
technical procedures and philosophical systems, these sciences, arts,
industries and inventions—all are emanations of the human mind. Whatever people
has ventured deeper into this shoreless sea, has come to excel the rest. The
happiness and pride of a nation consist in this, that it should shine out like
the sun in the high heaven of knowledge.
4. The Secret of Divine Civilization is a celebration of the creative
role played by the rational faculty—Godfs greatest gift to humankind—in the
advancement of civilization. Among the fruits of the mind that He particularly
singled out, the Master laid strong emphasis on scientific and technological
development. His readers were encouraged to reflect on the benefits that would
accrue to Persian society through taking appropriate advantage of whatever had
been accomplished in this respect by peoples of other lands, whether in the
West or elsewhere. It had been the free-ranging powers of the human intellect,
He insisted, that had discovered and tested each of the benefits enjoyed by any
people, and no legitimate argument could be advanced for imposing cultural or
national barriers to the operations of this universal process. Its achievements
represent the common possessions of the entire human race, their adoption by a
nation or people neither diminishing the users nor reflecting on their native
capacities.
5. At a much deeper level, the Master turned his readersf attention to
the spiritual forces shaping and impelling the work of the mind. In one of the
most penetrating passages of the letter, He challenged those fundamental errors
about the nature of man and society that had already had ruinous consequences
in other lands and that could, if not avoided, undermine the capacity of the
Iranian people to assess their present situation objectively and seize the
opportunities before them. gThere areh, eAbdufl-Bahá remarked, gsome who
imagine that an innate sense of human dignity will prevent man from committing
evil actions and ensure his spiritual and material perfection.h On the
contrary, He pointed out, it is readily observable that human development
depends on education. He then drew the implications of this law for the
progress of society. All the evidence inescapably demonstrates that the
principal influence in the gradual civilizing of human character, far from
being a simple endowment of nature, has been the effect produced on the
rational soul by the guidance of the successive Messengers of God. It has been
through Their intervention, and through it alone, that the peoples of the
world, of whatever nation or religion, have learned the values and ideals that
have empowered them to put material resources and technological means at the service
of human betterment. It is They who, in each age, have defined the meaning and
requirements of modernity. It is They who have been the ultimate Educators of
humankind:
Universal benefits derive from
the grace of the Divine religions, for they lead their true followers to
sincerity of intent, to high purpose, to purity and spotless honour, to
surpassing kindness and compassion, to the keeping of their covenants when they
have covenanted, to concern for the rights of others, to liberality, to justice
in every aspect of life, to humanity and philanthropy, to valour and to
unflagging efforts in the service of mankind. It is religion, to sum up, which
produces all human virtues, and it is these virtues which are the bright
candles of civilization.
6. We have reviewed briefly here the argument of eAbdufl-Baháfs great
message because of the remarkable extent to which contemporary events vindicate
its diagnosis and prescriptions. The insights it contains illumine both the
situation in which the Iranian people currently find themselves and the related
implications for you who are the followers of Baháfuflláh in that country. The
message was a summons—to the countryfs leaders and the population alike—to free
themselves from blind submission to dogma and to accept the need for
fundamental changes in behaviour and attitude, most particularly a willingness
to subordinate personal and group interests to the crying needs of society as a
whole.
7. As you well know, the Masterfs appeal was ignored. Locked in the
grip of an antiquated Qájár autocracy restrained only by its incompetence,
Persia drifted ever deeper into stagnation. Venal politicians competed with one
another for a share of the diminishing wealth of a country driven to the verge
of bankruptcy. Worse still, a population that had once produced some of the
greatest minds in the history of civilization—Cyrus, Darius, Rumi, Hafiz,
Avicenna, Rhazes and countless others—had become the prey of a clerical caste,
as ignorant as it was corrupt, whose petty privileges could be maintained only
by arousing in the helpless masses an unreasoning fear of anything progressive.
8. Little wonder then that, taking advantage of the chaos that followed
in the wake of the first world war, an ambitious army officer was able to seize
power and establish a personal dictatorship. To him—as to his son after
him—deliverance from Persiafs ills was assumed to lie in a systematic programme
of gWesternizationh. Schools, public works, a trained bureaucracy and a
well-equipped military served the needs of the new national government. Foreign
investment was encouraged as a means of developing the countryfs impressive
national resources. Women were freed from the worst of the restrictions that
had prevented their development and were given opportunities for education and
useful careers. Although the Majlis remained little more than a facade, hope
rose that, in time, it might emerge as a genuine institution of democratic
government.
9. What emerged, instead, through the single-minded exploitation of
Iranfs petroleum resources, was wealth on an almost unimaginable scale. In the
absence of anything resembling a system of social justice, the chief effect was
to vastly enrich a privileged and self-serving minority, while leaving the mass
of the population little better off than they had been before. Treasured
cultural symbols and the heroic episodes of a glorious past were resurrected
merely to decorate the monumental vulgarity of a society whose moral
foundations were built on the shifting sands of ambition and appetite. Protest,
even the mildest and most reasonable, was smothered by a secret police
unconstrained by any constitutional oversight.
10. In 1979 the Iranian people threw off this despotism and swept its
counterfeit claims to modernity into historyfs dustbin. Their revolution was
the achievement of the combined forces of many groups, but its driving force
was the ideals of Islám. In place of wanton self-indulgence, people were
promised lives of dignity and decency. Gross inequities of class and wealth
would be overcome by the spirit of brotherhood enjoined by God. The natural
resources with which providence has endowed so fortunate a land were declared
to be the patrimony of the entire Iranian people, to be used to provide
universal employment and education. A new gIslamic Constitutionh ostensibly
enshrined solemn guarantees of equality before the law for all citizens of the
republic. Government would endeavour conscientiously to combine spiritual
values with the principles of democratic choice.
11. How do such promises relate to the experience being described 25
years later by the great majority of Iranfs population? From all sides today
one hears cries of protest against endemic corruption, political manipulation,
the mistreatment of women, a shameless violation of human rights and the
suppression of thought. What is the effect on public consciousness, one must
further ask, of appeals to the authority of the Holy Qurfán to justify policies
that lead to such conditions?
*
12. Iranfs crisis of civilization will be resolved neither by blind
imitation of an obviously defective Western culture nor by retreat into
medieval ignorance. The answer to the dilemma was enunciated on the very
threshold of the crisis, in the clearest and most compelling language, by a
distinguished Son of Iran Who is today honoured in every continent of the
world, but sadly not in the land of His birth. Persiafs poetic genius captures
the irony: gI searched the wide world over for my Beloved, while my Beloved was
waiting for me in my own home.h The worldfs appreciation of Baháfuflláh came
perhaps most explicitly into focus on 29 May 1992, the centenary of His death,
when the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies met in solemn session to pay tribute to
Him, to His teachings and to the services rendered to humanity by the community
He founded. On that occasion, the Speaker of the Chamber and spokespersons from
every party rose, successively, to express their profound admiration of One who
was described in their addresses as the Author of gthe most colossal religious
work written by the pen of a single Manh, a message that greaches out to
humanity as a whole, without petty differences of nationality, race, limits or
beliefh.
13. What has been the response in His native land to a Figure whose
influence has brought such honour to the name of Iran? From the middle years of
the 19th century when He arose to champion the Cause of God, and despite the
reputation His philanthropy and intellectual gifts had won, Baháfuflláh was
made the object of a virulent campaign of persecution. In recognizing His
mission, your forefathers had the imperishable glory of sharing in His
sufferings. Throughout the ensuing decades, you who have remained faithful to
His Cause, who have sacrificed for it and promoted its civilizing message to
the most remote regions of the planet have known your own portion of abuse,
bereavement and humiliation—each Baháfí family in Iran.
14. One of the most appalling afflictions, in terms of its tragic
consequences, has been the slander of Baháfuflláhfs Cause perpetrated by that
privileged caste to whom Persiafs masses had been taught to look for guidance
in spiritual matters. For over 150 years, every medium of public
information—pulpit, press, radio, television and even scholarly publication—has
been perverted to create an image of the Baháfí community and its beliefs that
is grossly false and whose sole aim is to arouse popular contempt and
antagonism. No calumny has been too vile; no lie too outrageous. At no point
during those long years were you, the victims of this vilification, given an
opportunity, however slight, to defend yourselves and to provide the facts that
would have exposed such calculated poisoning of the public mind.
15. One example will stand for all the rest. Of the countless
accomplishments of the Cause, particularly striking has been the success of
Baháfuflláhfs teachings in inculcating, in one generation of believers after
another, the highest standards of personal morality. No argument is needed here
to defend this assertion. The reputation for integrity that the Baháfí
community has won worldwide—among publics, governments and international
agencies alike—speaks for itself. Thousands of your fellow citizens have also
had good cause to appreciate its character at first hand. And yet, driven by
ungovernable malice, your self-appointed enemies in Iran have not hesitated to
bring against you charges of every form of human depravity, charges which—when
recounted in free societies where the Faith is well known—have merely exposed
the degeneracy of the minds capable of concocting them.
16. Parallel with this campaign of moral defamation has been a strategy
devised to intimidate all those who, aware of the truth of the matter, were
moved to come to your assistance. Having associated you in popular opinion with
attitudes and behaviour that are a danger to society, your oppressors then
accuse anyone who appeals on your behalf of also being a Baháfí and therefore
lacking in credibility. The extremes to which this systematic corruption of
public life extends can be seen in the willingness of those behind the scheme
to represent even long-standing opponents of the Cause as being its secret
supporters. Have they not gone so far as to claim that a discredited prime
minister—whose father had been expelled from the Baháfí community precisely
because of his partisan political involvement, who was himself insistent to his
last breath on his Islamic identity and who was the cause of great difficulties
for the Baháfí community—was in fact a clandestine member of the Faith?
17. Nor have your oppressors been content with slander. For a century
and a half you have suffered repeated violence. Most recently, since the 1979
revolution, you have seen some of the noblest men and women whom Baháfuflláh
has raised up imprisoned on charges too outlandish to warrant comment,
subjected to monstrous tortures and murdered after farcical trials, their
property plundered by their persecutors and by the hoodlums who serve and
protect them. Your elected Spiritual Assemblies, long the most advanced
examples of democratic decision-making bodies in the country, were arbitrarily
dissolved, many of their members kidnapped and slain. How many the children who
have been orphaned. How many the youth who have seen their educational plans
and hopes of earning a livelihood brutally extinguished. How many the aged left
homeless, the pensions for which they had worked a lifetime confiscated by
fatvás issued by men unworthy of respect. How many the parents who have been
forced to bury the mutilated bodies of their sons and daughters in whatever
barren wastelands were allocated to them for the purpose. What indeed of the
flower-bordered Baháfí cemeteries, tenderly cared for over the years, that have
been maliciously bulldozed, the precious remains of countless loved ones
shovelled onto heaps of rubble?
18. Those perpetrating these atrocities are eager to raise a hue and
cry—as indeed they have every right to do—if the least offence is given in
another land to a location associated with the sacred name of Islám. But what
of the Baháfí Shrines and other Holy Places in Iran? What of the priceless
House of the Blessed Báb in Shíráz, centre of pilgrimage for the entire Baháfí
world, destroyed by a municipal wrecking crew acting under the direction of
eulamá, its sacred precincts paved over as an ultimate desecration? Speaking of
persons so base as to commit acts of this evil, Baháfuflláh has declared, gGod
is wholly quit of them, and likewise are We.h
19. No one would contend that you are alone in the ordeals you are enduring.
The victims of injustice today number in countless millions. Each year, the
agendas of the human rights organizations are overwhelmed by appeals from
spokespersons for oppressed minorities of every type—religious, ethnic, social
and national. In the words of Baháfuflláh, gJustice is in this day bewailing
its plight, and Equity groaneth beneath the yoke of oppression.h What has more
alarmed perceptive observers of such situations than even the physical and
material anguish caused is the spiritual damage done to the victims. Deliberate
oppression aims at dehumanizing those whom it subjugates and at de-legitimizing
them as members of society, entitled to neither rights nor consideration. Where
such conditions persist over any length of time, many of those affected lose
confidence in their own perception of themselves. Inexorably, they become
drained of that spirit of initiative that is integral to human nature and are
reduced to the level of objects to be dealt with as their rulers decide.
Indeed, some who are exposed to sustained oppression can become so conditioned
to a culture of brutalization that they, in their turn, are ready to commit
violence against others, should the opportunity offer itself.
20. What is it then, the world is beginning to ask, that has preserved
you from spiritual corrosion of this nature? Where have you found the resources
to free your hearts from resentment and to act with magnanimity toward those
who have taken part in your mistreatment? How is it that, after a century and
more of unremitting persecution—and the calculated attempt at genocide of these
past 25 years—you still retain both a confident mastery of your moral purpose
and an abiding love for the land in which you have suffered so greatly? The
incomparable words of Baháfuflláh supply the answer:
Every fire is seen to be
extinguishable except for the fire of the Love of God that is manifest and
ablaze in the hearts. Every mighty tree will be uprooted by tempestuous winds
except for the trees of the Divine orchard, and every lamp is quenched except
for the lamp of the Cause of God, which shineth in the heart of the world.
Winds will add to its brightness, and it will never be extinguished.
21. This is the answer that history will give to those who enquire of
your secret. Your lives are the fruit of that Divine orchard, the handiwork of
the Creative Word to which you have surrendered your hearts. gO well-beloved
ones! The tabernacle of unity hath been raised; regard ye not one another as
strangers. Ye are the fruits of one tree and the leaves of one branch.h gclove
is light, no matter in what abode it dwelleth; and hate is darkness, no matter
where it may make its nest.h gWere man to appreciate the greatness of his
station and the loftiness of his destiny he would manifest naught save goodly
character, pure deeds, and a seemly and praiseworthy conduct.h gIn this day,
all must cling to whatever is the cause of the betterment of the world and the
promotion of knowledge amongst its peoples.h gcthe tongue is for mentioning
what is good, defile it not with unseemly talk.h gWomen and men have been and
will always be equal in the sight of God.h gOne speck of chastity is greater
than a hundred thousand years of worship and a sea of knowledge.h gWe have
enjoined upon all to engage in crafts and trades and have accounted it as an
act of worship.h gTrustworthiness is the greatest of doors leading to the
tranquility and security of the people of the world.h gKnowledge is the cause
of exaltation and advancement. It enableth man to pass beyond the world of dust
to the realms above and leadeth him out of darkness into light. It is the
redeemer and the bestower of life. It conferreth the living waters of
immortality and imparteth heavenly food.h
22. All of you have, from childhood, been familiar with the exhortation
of eAbdufl-Bahá that so marvellously sums up these ideals: gTo be a Baháfí is
to be the embodiment of all human perfections.h
23. The spirit of resourcefulness and practicality you are displaying
also brings great comfort to the anguished hearts of your fellow believers in
other lands. When your children were expelled from schools because of their
Faith, you created classrooms in your homes. Graduates of the institution you
founded to meet the needs of university students, who are similarly denied
education, are today distinguishing themselves in prestigious universities in
other countries where their credentials have been gladly accepted. God willing,
the day is not far distant when opportunities for the development of their
capacities will be opened for the thousands of other Baháfí youth still cruelly
deprived. The sacrificial pooling of modest incomes is proving not only
sufficient to ensure that members of the community are not left in want, but to
produce funds for general activities. Under the most arduous conditions, a
vibrant community life continues, with the far greater intensity that testing
alone can produce.
24. For over a century this spirit has borne fruit both in Iran and
throughout the entire world. There is today no region of the planet where the
capacities of Iranian Baháfís have not lent a mighty impetus to the expansion
of the teaching work and the establishment and consolidation of the Faithfs
institutions. Nor has the impact been limited to the spiritual life of the
Faith. It would be difficult to think of any profession, any field of science
or the arts, where Iranian Baháfís—particularly youth—are not powerfully
manifesting the ideal of excellence so often reiterated by eAbdufl-Bahá. Such
qualities do not burst forth in a people overnight, nor are they the product of
mere human will. In the lives and work of Persian pioneers around the world
today can be seen the fruit of the culture of learning and self-discipline in
which they and their parents were lovingly raised in the land of their birth.
25. To every fair-minded observer, you are the living proof that faith
in God and confidence in social progress are in every sense reconcilable; that
science and religion are the two inseparable, reciprocal systems of knowledge
impelling the advancement of civilization. Already, you begin to see this
realization dawning in the eyes of many Muslims of your acquaintance. These
friends and neighbours, who can truly lay claim to being ga people summoning
unto goodnessh, have watched with outrage as those whom they know to be
innocent of any crime have been slandered and attacked without recourse to
legal protection. They are sensitive—perhaps even more than you are
yourselves—to the spirit of courage and decency that you have displayed
throughout these ordeals. And they are also awakening to the real character of
those whose abuse of you defiles the honour of Islám, in whose name such crimes
are perpetrated. If you are not yet physically free, you are at last beginning
to win acceptance as a respected and valued part of the Iranian people. Ahead
lies the day when your fellow citizens will have recognized and come to
treasure the contribution you are destined to make to Iranfs recovery of her
rightful place among the nations of the world.
*
26. Ruling elites can make no more serious error than to imagine that
the power they have managed to arrogate to themselves provides an enduring
bulwark against the relentless tides of historical change. Today, in Iran as
everywhere throughout the world, these tides roll in with insistent urgency and
tumultuous force. They are not merely at the door of the house, but rise up
irresistibly through its floors. They cannot be diverted. They will not be
denied.
27. This is the real reason why Baháfuflláh was so desperately opposed
by clergy and rulers who recognized in Him—correctly if only dimly—the Voice of
a coming society of justice and enlightenment, in which they themselves would
have no place. Nor should you have any doubt that it is this same fear that
animates the successive waves of persecution you have long endured. Those who
investigate the Cause of Baháfuflláh with sincerity readily appreciate that the
Baháfí community is a creative minority that is the embodiment of its Founderfs
vision of the future and of His indomitable Will to achieve it. Through your
love, your sacrifices, your services and your very lives, you have proven to be
the true promoters of the progress of your dear homeland of which eAbdufl-Bahá
has written:
The horizon of Persia hath been
illumined with the light of the heavenly Orb. Erelong will the Daystar of the
supernal realm shine so brightly as to raise that land even unto the ethereal
heights and to cause it to shed its radiance over the whole earth. The
imperishable glory of bygone generations shall once more be manifest in such
wise as to dazzle and bewilder the eyesc.
Iran shall become a focal
centre of divine splendours. Her darksome soil will become luminous and her
land will shine resplendent. Although now wanting in name and fame, she will
become renowned throughout the world; although now deprived, she will attain
her highest hopes and aspirations; although now destitute and despondent, she
will obtain abundant grace, achieve distinction and find abiding honour.
28. Each time we visit the Holy Shrines you are in the forefront of our
hearts and prayers. Your long night will end, and you will have the joy of
witnessing with your own eyes the mighty structure your sacrifices have raised.
[signed:
The Universal House of Justice]