9
November 2018
To
the Baha'is of the World
Dearly
loved Friends,
1. As the process of the
disintegration of a lamentably defective world order gathers momentum in all
parts of the planet, engendering hopelessness, confusion, hostility, and
insecurity, the hearts of the friends everywhere must be assured, their eyes
clear-sighted, their feet firm, as they work patiently and sacrificially to
raise a new order in its stead. The
guidance of Baha'u'llah is the foundation upon which you build. His instruction is clear: "This servant appealeth
to every diligent and enterprising soul to exert his utmost endeavor and arise
to rehabilitate the conditions in all regions and to quicken the dead with the
living waters of wisdom and utterance, by virtue of the love he cherisheth for God, the One, the Peerless, the Almighty,
the Beneficent." His divine
remedy has been prescribed:
"God, the True One, beareth Me witness,
and every atom in existence is moved to testify that such means as lead to the
elevation, the advancement, the education, the protection and the regeneration
of the peoples of the earth have been clearly set forth by Us and are revealed
in the Holy Books and Tablets by the Pen of Glory." And His assurance is engraved on every
faithful heart: "The
betterment of the world can be accomplished through pure and goodly deeds,
through commendable and seemly conduct."
2. During the ministries of
'Abdu'l-Baha and Shoghi
Effendi, the first community of sufficient size that could begin to
systematically apply Baha'u'llah's teachings to unite material and spiritual
progress was that of the believers in the Cradle of the Faith. The steady flow of guidance from the
Holy Land enabled the Baha'is of Iran to make tremendous strides in but one or
two generations and to contribute a distinctive share to the progress of their
nation. A network of schools that
provided moral and academic education, including for girls, flourished. Illiteracy was virtually eliminated in
the Baha'i community. Philanthropic
enterprises were created.
Prejudices among ethnic and religious groups, aflame in the wider
society, were extinguished within the community's loving embrace. Villages became distinguished for their
cleanliness, order, and progress.
And believers from that land were instrumental in raising in another
land the first Mashriqu'l-Adhkar with its
dependencies designed to "afford relief to the suffering, sustenance to
the poor, shelter to the wayfarer, solace to the bereaved, and education to the
ignorant." Over time, such
efforts were augmented by scattered initiatives of other Baha'i communities in
various parts of the world.
However, as Shoghi Effendi remarked to one
community, the number of believers was as yet too small to effect a notable
change in the wider society, and for more than the first half century of the
Formative Age the believers were encouraged to concentrate their energies on
the propagation of the Faith, since this was work that only Baha'is could
do--indeed their primary spiritual obligation--and it would prepare them for
the time when they could address the problems of humanity more directly.
3. Thirty-five years ago,
circumstances within and outside the community combined to create new
possibilities for greater involvement in the life of society. The Faith had developed to the stage at
which the processes of social and economic development needed to be
incorporated into its regular pursuits, and in October 1983 we called upon the
Baha'is of the world to enter this new field of endeavor. The Office of Social and Economic
Development was established at the Baha'i World Centre to assist us in
promoting and coordinating the activities of the friends worldwide. Baha'i activities for social and
economic development, at whatever level of complexity, were at that time
counted in the hundreds. Today they
number in the tens of thousands, including hundreds of sustained projects such
as schools and scores of development organizations. The broad range of current activities
spans efforts from villages and neighborhoods to regions and nations, addressing
an array of challenges, including education from preschool to university,
literacy, health, the environment, support for refugees, advancement of women,
empowerment of junior youth, elimination of racial prejudice, agriculture,
local economies, and village development.
The society- building power of Baha'u'llah's Cause has begun to be more
systematically expressed in the collective life of the friends as a result of
the acceleration of the process of expansion and consolidation, especially in
advanced clusters. Beyond this, of course, countless believers, through their
professional and voluntary efforts, contribute their energies and insights to
projects and organizations established for the common good.
4. Once again, then, we
find that forces inside and outside the Faith have made possible a new stage in
the work of social and economic development in the Baha'i world. Therefore, on this sacred occasion of
the Festivals of the Twin Birthdays, we are pleased to announce that the Office
of Social and Economic Development now effloresces into a new world-embracing
institution established at the World Centre, the Baha'i International
Development Organization. In
addition, a Baha'i Development Fund will be inaugurated, from which the new
organization will draw to assist both long-standing and emerging development
efforts worldwide; it will be supported by the House of Justice, and
individuals and institutions may contribute to it.
5. A five-member board of
directors will be appointed which will function as a consultative body to
promote and coordinate the efforts of the worldwide community in social and
economic development. The directors
will serve for a term of five years beginning on the Day of the Covenant. Operating at the spiritual and
administrative centre of the Faith, the board will
consult with the Universal House of Justice and the International Teaching
Centre to ensure that the development work is coherent with the many endeavors
of the Baha'i world. The new
institution will begin by assuming the functions and mandate previously carried
out by the Office of Social and Economic Development and then gradually grow in
capacity to discharge them on an expanding scale and at higher levels of
complexity. It will reinforce the
efforts of Baha'i individuals, communities, and institutions worldwide to
extend and consolidate the range of their activities. It will help to strengthen institutional
capacity for social and economic development in national communities, including
through the creation of new agencies and the emergence of advanced development
organizations. It will promote, on
an international scale, approaches to development and methodologies that have
proven effective. It will keep
abreast of findings in the development field and explore their application in
consonance with spiritual principles with assistance from Baha'is with relevant
training. It will form networks of
resource persons and such institutional arrangements across continents as are
necessary for carrying out its various lines of action. Above all, like the Office of Social and
Economic Development before it, its primary purpose will be to facilitate
learning about development by fostering and supporting action, reflection on
action, study, consultation, the gathering and systematization of experience,
conceptualization, and training--all carried out in the light of the Teachings
of the Faith.
6. Upon the Arc on Mount
Carmel that surrounds the resting places of members of the Holy Family, Shoghi Effendi anticipated both the raising of edifices and
the establishment of international institutions--administrative, scientific,
and social--that would flourish under the auspices of the Faith of Baha'u'llah.
This new institution for social and economic development will grow and evolve
over the decades and centuries ahead according to the needs of humanity and
under the direction of the House of Justice until the material and spiritual
civilization anticipated by Baha'u'llah is realized in this contingent world.
7. Ultimately, of course,
the work of Baha'i social and economic development rests in the hands of the
friends everywhere. To take full
advantage of the opportunities emerging, one need look
no further for encouragement and insight than to the perfect Exemplar of the
Baha'i teachings. Consider His
words: "We should continually
be establishing new bases for human happiness and creating and promoting new
instrumentalities toward this end.
How excellent, how honorable is man if he arises to fulfill his
responsibilities; how wretched and contemptible, if he shuts his eyes to the
welfare of society and wastes his precious life in pursuing his own selfish
interests and personal advantages. Supreme happiness is man's, and he beholds
the signs of God in the world and in the human soul, if he urges on the steed
of high endeavor in the arena of civilization and justice."
[signed] The
Universal House of Justice