|
America and the Most Great Peace |
1 |
To the beloved of the Lord and the handmaids of the Merciful
throughout the United States and Canada. |
2 |
Friends and fellow-promoters of the Faith of God: |
3 |
Forty years will have elapsed ere the close of this coming summer
since the name of Bahá'u'lláh was first mentioned on the American
continent. Strange indeed must appear to every observer, pondering in his
heart the significance of so great a landmark in the spiritual history of
the great American Republic, the circumstances which have attended this
first public reference to the Author of our beloved Faith. Stranger still
must seem the associations which the brief words uttered on that historic
occasion must have evoked in the minds of those who heard them. |
4 |
Of pomp and circumstance, of any manifestations of public rejoicing
or of popular applause, there were none to greet this first intimation [In an address by Dr. Henry H. Jessup at the Parliament
of Religions, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893.--Editor.] to America's citizens of the existence and purpose of
the Revelation proclaimed by Bahá'u'lláh. Nor did he who was its chosen
instrument profess himself a believer in the indwelling potency of the
tidings he conveyed, or suspect the magnitude of the forces which so
cursory a mention was destined to release. |
5 |
Announced through the mouth of an avowed supporter of that narrow
ecclesiasticism which the Faith itself has challenged and seeks to
extirpate, characterized at the moment of its birth as an obscure offshoot
of a contemptible creed, the Message of the Most Great Name, fed by
streams of unceasing trial and warmed by the sunshine of `Abdu'l-Bahá's
tender care, has succeeded in driving its roots deep into America's genial
soil, has in less than half a century sent out its
shoots and tendrils as far as the remotest corners of the globe, and now
stands, clothed in the majesty of the consecrated Edifice it has reared in
the heart of that continent, determined to proclaim its right and
vindicate its capacity to redeem a stricken people. Unsupported by any of
the advantages which talent, rank and riches can confer, the community of
the American believers, despite its tender age, its numerical strength,
its limited experience, has by virtue of the inspired wisdom, the united
will, the incorruptible loyalty of its administrators and teachers
achieved the distinction of an undisputed leadership among its sister
communities of East and West in hastening the advent of the Golden Age
anticipated by Bahá'u'lláh. |
6 |
And yet how grave the crises which this infant, this blessed,
community has weathered in the course of its checkered history! How slow
and painful the process that gradually brought it forth from the obscurity
of unmitigated neglect to the broad daylight of public recognition! How
severe the shocks which the ranks of its devoted adherents have sustained
through the defection of the faint in heart, the malice of the
mischief-maker, the treachery of the proud and the ambitious! What storms
of ridicule, of abuse and of calumny its representatives have had to face
in their staunch support of the integrity, and their valiant defense of
the fair name, of the Faith they had espoused! How persistent the
vicissitudes and disconcerting the reverses with which its privileged
members, young and old alike, individually and collectively, have had to
contend in their heroic endeavors to scale the heights which a loving
Master had summoned them to attain! |
7 |
Many and powerful have been its enemies who, as soon as they
discovered the evidences of the growing ascendancy of its declared
supporters, have vied with one another in hurling at its face the vilest
imputations and in pouring out upon the Object of its devotion the vials
of their fiercest wrath. How often have these sneered at the scantiness of
its resources and the seeming stagnation of its life! How bitterly they
ridiculed its origins and, misconceiving its purpose, dismissed it as a
useless appendage of an expiring creed! Have they not in their written
attacks stigmatized the heroic person of the Forerunner of so holy a
Revelation as a coward recanter, a perverted apostate, and denounced the
entire range of His voluminous writings as the idle
chatter of a thoughtless man? Have they not chosen to ascribe to its
divine Founder the basest motives which an unscrupulous plotter and
usurper can conceive, and regarded the Center of His Covenant as the
embodiment of ruthless tyranny, a stirrer of mischief, and a notorious
exponent of expediency and fraud? Its world-unifying principles these
impotent enemies of a steadily-rising Faith have time and again denounced
as fundamentally defective, have pronounced its all-embracing program as
utterly fantastic, and regarded its vision of the future as chimerical and
positively deceitful. The fundamental verities that constitute its
doctrine its foolish ill-wishers have represented as a cloak of idle
dogma, its administrative machinery they have refused to differentiate
from the soul of the Faith itself, and the mysteries it reveres and
upholds they have identified with sheer superstition. The principle of
unification which it advocates and with which it stands identified they
have misconceived as a shallow attempt at uniformity, its repeated
assertions of the reality of supernatural agencies they have condemned as
a vain belief in magic, and the glory of its idealism they have rejected
as mere utopia. Every process of purification whereby an inscrutable
Wisdom chose from time to time to purge the body of His chosen followers
of the defilement of the undesirable and the unworthy, these victims of an
unrelenting jealousy have hailed as a symptom of the invading forces of
schism which were soon to sap its strength, vitiate its vitality, and
complete its ruin. |
8 |
Dearly-beloved friends! It is not for me, nor does it seem within
the competence of any one of the present generation, to trace the exact
and full history of the rise and gradual consolidation of this invincible
arm, this mighty organ, of a continually advancing Cause. It would be
premature at this early stage of its evolution, to attempt an exhaustive
analysis, or to arrive at a just estimate, of the impelling forces that
have urged it forward to occupy so exalted a place among the various
instruments which the Hand of Omnipotence has fashioned, and is now
perfecting, for the execution of His divine Purpose. Future historians of
this mighty Revelation, endowed with pens abler than any which its
present-day supporters can claim to possess, will no doubt transmit to
posterity a masterly exposition of the origins of those forces which,
through a remarkable swing of the pendulum, have
caused the administrative center of the Faith to gravitate, away from its
cradle, to the shores of the American continent and towards its very
heart--the present mainspring and chief bulwark of its fast evolving
institutions. On them will devolve the task of recording the history, and
of estimating the significance, of so radical a revolution in the fortunes
of a slowly maturing Faith. Theirs will be the opportunity to extol the
virtues and to immortalize the memory of those men and women who have
participated in its accomplishment. Theirs will be the privilege of
evaluating the share which each of these champion-builders of the World
Order of Bahá'u'lláh has had in ushering in that golden Millennium, the
promise of which lies enshrined in His teachings. |
9 |
Does not the history of primitive Christianity and of the rise of
Islám, each in its own way, offer a striking parallel to this strange
phenomenon the beginnings of which we are now witnessing in this, the
first century of the Bahá'í Era? Has not the Divine Impulse which gave
birth to each of these great religious systems been driven, through the
operation of those forces which the irresistible growth of the Faith
itself had released, to seek away from the land of its birth and in more
propitious climes a ready field and a more adequate medium for the
incarnation of its spirit and the propagation of its cause? Have not the
Asiatic churches of Jerusalem, of Antioch and of Alexandria, consisting
chiefly of those Jewish converts, whose character and temperament inclined
them to sympathize with the traditional ceremonies of the Mosaic
Dispensation, been forced as they steadily declined to recognize the
growing ascendancy of their Greek and Roman brethren? Have they not been
compelled to acknowledge the superior valor and the trained efficiency
which have enabled these standard-bearers of the Cause of Jesus Christ to
erect the symbols of His world-wide dominion on the ruins of a collapsing
Empire? Has not the animating spirit of Islám been constrained, under the
pressure of similar circumstances, to abandon the inhospitable wastes of
its Arabian Home, the theatre of its greatest sufferings and exploits, to
yield in a distant land the fairest fruit of its slowly maturing
civilization? |
10 |
"From the beginning of time until the present day," `Abdu'l-Bahá Himself affirms, "the light of Divine Revelation hath
risen in the East and shed its radiance upon the West. The illumination
thus shed hath, however, acquired in the West an extraordinary brilliancy.
Consider the Faith proclaimed by Jesus. Though it first appeared in the
East, yet not until its light had been shed upon the West did the full
measure of its potentialities become manifest." "The day is approaching,"
He, in another passage, assures us, "when ye shall witness how, through
the splendor of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh, the West will have replaced the
East, radiating the light of Divine Guidance." "In the books of the
Prophets," He again asserts, "certain glad-tidings are recorded which are
absolutely true and free from doubt. The East hath ever been the
dawning-place of the Sun of Truth. In the East all the Prophets of God
have appeared ...The West hath acquired illumination from the East but in
some respects the reflection of the light hath been greater in the
Occident. This is specially true of Christianity. Jesus Christ appeared in
Palestine and His teachings were founded in that country. Although the
doors of the Kingdom were first opened in that land and the bestowals of
God were spread broadcast from its center, the people of the West have
embraced and promulgated Christianity more fully than the people of the
East." |
11 |
Little wonder that from the same unerring pen there should have
flowed, after `Abdu'l-Bahá's memorable visit to the West, these
often-quoted words, the significance of which it would be impossible for
me to overrate: "The continent of America," He announced in a Tablet
unveiling His Divine Plan to the believers residing in the North-Eastern
States of the American Republic, "is in the eyes of the one true God the
land wherein the splendors of His light shall be revealed, where the
mysteries of His Faith shall be unveiled, where the righteous will abide
and the free assemble." "May this American democracy," He Himself, while
in America, was heard to remark, "be the first nation to establish the
foundation of international agreement. May it be the first nation to
proclaim the unity of mankind. May it be the first to unfurl the standard
of the `Most Great Peace'... The American people are indeed worthy of
being the first to build the tabernacle of the great peace and proclaim
the oneness of mankind... May America become the distributing center of
spiritual enlightenment and all the world receive
this heavenly blessing. For America has developed powers and capacities
greater and more wonderful than other nations... May the inhabitants of
this country become like angels of heaven with faces turned continually
toward God. May all of them become servants of the omnipotent One. May
they rise from their present material attainments to such a height that
heavenly illumination may stream from this center to all the peoples of
the world... This American nation is equipped and empowered to accomplish
that which will adorn the pages of history, to become the envy of the
world and be blest in both the East and the West for the triumph of its
people... The American continent gives signs and evidences of very great
advancement. Its future is even more promising, for its influence and
illumination are far-reaching. It will lead all nations
spiritually." |
12 |
Would it seem extravagant, in the light of so sublime an utterance,
to expect that in the midst of so enviable a region of the earth and out
of the agony and wreckage of an unprecedented crisis there should burst
forth a spiritual renaissance which, as it propagates itself through the
instrumentality of the American believers, will rehabilitate the fortunes
of a decadent age? It was `Abdu'l-Bahá Himself, His most intimate
associates testify, Who, on more than one occasion, intimated that the
establishment of His Father's Faith in the North American continent ranked
as the most outstanding among the threefold aims which, as He conceived
it, constituted the principal objective of His ministry. It was He Who, in
the heyday of His life and almost immediately after His Father's
ascension, conceived the idea of inaugurating His mission by enlisting the
inhabitants of so promising a country under the banner of Bahá'u'lláh. He
it was Who in His unerring wisdom and out of the abundance of His heart
chose to bestow on His favored disciples, to the very last day of His
life, the tokens of His unfailing solicitude and to overwhelm them with
the marks of His special favor. It was He Who, in His declining years, as
soon as delivered from the shackles of a long and cruel incarceration,
decided to visit the land which had remained for so many years the object
of His infinite care and love. It was He Who, through the power of His
presence and the charm of His utterance, infused into the entire body of
His followers those sentiments and principles which could alone sustain them amidst the trials which the very
prosecution of their task would inevitably engender. Was He not, through
the several functions which He exercised whilst He dwelt amongst them,
whether in the laying of the corner-stone of their House of Worship, or in
the Feast which He offered them and at which He chose to serve them in
person, or in the emphasis which He on a more solemn occasion placed on
the implications of His spiritual station--was He not, thereby,
deliberately bequeathing to them all the essentials of that spiritual
heritage which He knew they would ably safeguard and by their deeds
continually enrich? And finally who can doubt that in the Divine Plan
which, in the evening of His life, He unveiled to their eyes He was
investing them with that spiritual primacy on which they could rely in the
fulfillment of their high destiny? |
13 |
"O ye apostles of Bahá'u'lláh!" He thus addresses them in one of
His Tablets, "May my life be sacrificed for you!... Behold the portals
which Bahá'u'lláh hath opened before you! Consider how exalted and lofty
is the station you are destined to attain; how unique the favors with
which you have been endowed." "My thoughts," He tells them in another
passage, "are turned towards you, and my heart leaps within me at your
mention. Could ye know how my soul glows with your love, so great a
happiness would flood your hearts as to cause you to become enamored with
each other." "The full measure of your success," He declares in another
Tablet, "is as yet unrevealed, its significance still unapprehended. Ere
long ye will, with your own eyes, witness how brilliantly every one of
you, even as a shining star, will radiate in the firmament of your country
the light of Divine Guidance and will bestow upon its people the glory of
an everlasting life." "The range of your future achievements," He once
more affirms, "still remains undisclosed. I fervently hope that in the
near future the whole earth may be stirred and shaken by the results of
your achievements." "The Almighty," He assures them, "will no doubt grant
you the help of His grace, will invest you with the tokens of His might,
and will endue your souls with the sustaining power of His holy Spirit."
"Be not concerned," He admonishes them, "with the smallness of your
numbers, neither be oppressed by the multitude of an unbelieving world...
Exert yourselves; your mission is unspeakably glorious. Should success crown your enterprise, America will assuredly evolve
into a center from which waves of spiritual power will emanate, and the
throne of the Kingdom of God will, in the plentitude of its majesty and
glory, be firmly established." |
14 |
"The hope which `Abdu'l-Bahá cherishes for you," He thus urges
them, "is that the same success which has attended your efforts in America
may crown your endeavors in other parts of the world, that through you the
fame of the Cause of God may be diffused throughout the East and the West
and the advent of the Kingdom of the Lord of Hosts be proclaimed in all
the five continents of the globe... Thus far ye have been untiring in your
labors. Let your exertions, henceforth, increase a thousandfold. Summon
the people in these countries, capitals, islands, assemblies and churches
to enter the Abhá Kingdom. The scope of your exertions must needs be
extended. The wider its range, the more striking will be the evidences of
Divine assistance... Oh! 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!
Please God, ye may achieve it." And finally, as if to crown all His
previous utterances, is this solemn affirmation embodying His Vision of
America's spiritual destiny: "The moment this Divine Message is carried
forward by the American believers from the shores of America and is
propagated through the continents of Europe, of Asia, of Africa and of
Australasia, and as far as the islands of the Pacific, this community will
find itself securely established upon the throne of an everlasting
dominion. Then will all the peoples of the world witness that this
community is spiritually illumined and divinely guided. Then will the
whole earth resound with the praises of its majesty and
greatness." |
15 |
It is in the light of these above-quoted words of `Abdu'l-Bahá that
every thoughtful and conscientious believer should ponder the significance
of this momentous utterance of Bahá'u'lláh: "In the East the light of His
Revelation hath broken; in the West have appeared the signs of His
dominion. Ponder this in your hearts, O people, and be not of those who
have turned a deaf ear to the admonitions of Him Who is the Almighty, the
All-Praised... Should they attempt to conceal its
light on the continent, it will assuredly rear its head in the midmost
heart of the ocean, and, raising its voice, proclaim: `I am the life-giver
of the world!'" |
16 |
Dearly-beloved friends! Can our eyes be so dim as to fail to
recognize in the anguish and turmoil which, greater than in any other
country and in a manner unprecedented in its history, are now afflicting
the American nation, evidences of the beginnings of that spiritual
renaissance which these pregnant words of `Abdu'l-Bahá so clearly
foreshadow? The throes and twinges of agony which the soul of a nation in
travail is now beginning to experience abundantly proclaim it. Contrast
the sad plight of the nations of the earth, and in particular this great
Republic of the West, with the rising fortunes of that handful of its
citizens, whose mission, if they be faithful to their trust, is to heal
its wounds, restore its confidence and revive its shattered hopes.
Contrast the dreadful convulsions, the internecine conflicts, the petty
disputes, the outworn controversies, the interminable revolutions that
agitate the masses, with the calm new light of Peace and of Truth which
envelops, guides and sustains those valiant inheritors of the law and love
of Bahá'u'lláh. Compare the disintegrating institutions, the discredited
statesmanship, the exploded theories, the appalling degradation, the
follies and furies, the shifts, shams and compromises that characterize
the present age, with the steady consolidation, the holy discipline, the
unity and cohesiveness, the assured conviction, the uncompromising
loyalty, the heroic self-sacrifice that constitute the hallmark of these
faithful stewards and harbingers of the golden age of the Faith of
Bahá'u'lláh. |
17 |
Small wonder that these prophetic words should have been revealed
by `Abdu'l-Bahá: "The East," He assures us, "hath verily been illumined
with the light of the Kingdom. Ere long will this same light shed a still
greater illumination upon the West. Then will the hearts of its people be
vivified through the potency of the teachings of God and their souls be
set aglow by the undying fire of His love." "The prestige of the Faith of
God," He asserts, "has immensely increased. Its greatness is now manifest.
The day is approaching when it will have cast a tremendous tumult in men's
hearts. Rejoice, therefore, O denizens of America, rejoice with exceeding
gladness!" |
18 |
Most prized and best-beloved brethren! As we look back upon the
forty years which have passed since the auspicious rays of the Bahá'í
Revelation first warmed and illuminated the American continent we find
that they may well fall into four distinct periods, each culminating in an
event of such significance as to constitute a milestone along the road
leading the American believers towards their promised victory. The first
of these four decades (1893-1903), characterized by a process of slow and
steady fermentation, may be said to have culminated in the historic
pilgrimages undertaken by `Abdu'l-Bahá's American disciples to the shrine
of Bahá'u'lláh. The ten years which followed (1903-1913), so full of the
tests and trials which agitated, cleansed and energized the body of the
earliest pioneers of the Faith in that land, had as their happy climax
`Abdu'l-Bahá's memorable visit to America. The third period (1913-1923), a
period of quiet and uninterrupted consolidation, had as its inevitable
result the birth of that divinely-appointed Administration, the
foundations of which the Will of a departed Master had unmistakably
established. The remaining ten years (1923-1933), distinguished throughout
by further internal development, as well as by a notable expansion of the
international activities of a growing community, witnessed the completion
of the superstructure of the Mashriqu'l-Adhkár--the
Administration's mighty bulwark, the symbol of its strength and the sign
of its future glory. |
19 |
Each of these successive periods would seem to have contributed its
distinct share in enriching the spiritual life of that community, and in
preparing its members for the discharge of the tremendous responsibilities
of their unique mission. The pilgrimages which its foremost
representatives were moved to undertake in that earliest period of its
history fired the souls of its members with a love and zeal which no
amount of adversity could quench. The tests and tribulations it
subsequently suffered enabled those who survived them to obtain a grasp of
the implications of their faith that no opposition, however determined and
well-organized, could ever hope to weaken. The institutions which its
tried and tested adherents later on established furnished their promoters
with that poise and stability which the increase of their numbers and the
ceaseless extension of their activities urgently demanded. And finally the
Temple which the exponents of an already firmly established Administration
were inspired to erect gave them the vision which
neither the storms of internal disorder nor the whirlwinds of
international commotion could possibly obscure. |
20 |
It would take me too long to attempt even a brief description of
the first stirrings which the introduction of the Bahá'í Revelation into
the New World, as conceived, initiated and directed by our beloved Master,
immediately created. Nor does space permit me to narrate the circumstances
attending the epoch-making visit of the first American pilgrims to
Bahá'u'lláh's hallowed shrine, to relate the deeds which signalized the
return of these bearers of a new-born Gospel to their native country, or
to assess the immediate consequences of their achievements. No word of
mine would suffice to express how instantly the revelation of
`Abdu'l-Bahá's hopes, expectations and purpose for an awakened continent,
electrified the minds and hearts of those who were privileged to hear Him,
who were made the recipients of His inestimable blessings and the chosen
repositories of His confidence and trust. I can never hope to interpret
adequately the feelings that surged within those heroic hearts as they sat
at their Master's feet, beneath the shelter of His prison-house, eager to
absorb and intent to preserve the effusions of His divine Wisdom. I can
never pay sufficient tribute to that spirit of unyielding determination
which the impact of a magnetic personality and the spell of a mighty
utterance kindled in the entire company of these returning pilgrims, these
consecrated heralds of the Covenant of God, at so decisive an epoch of
their history. The memory of such names as Lua, Chase, MacNutt, Dealy,
Goodall, Dodge, Farmer and Brittingham--to mention only a few of that
immortal galaxy now gathered to the glory of Bahá'u'lláh--will for ever
remain associated with the rise and establishment of His Faith in the
American continent, and will continue to shed on its annals a lustre that
time can never dim. |
21 |
It was through these pilgrimages, as they succeeded one another in
the years immediately following the ascension of Bahá'u'lláh, that the
splendor of the Covenant, beclouded for a time by the apparent ascendancy
of its Arch-Breaker, emerged triumphant amidst the vicissitudes which had
afflicted it. It was through the arrival of these pilgrims, and these
alone, that the gloom which had enveloped the disconsolate members of
`Abdu'l-Bahá's family was finally dispelled. Through
the agency of these successive visitors the Greatest Holy Leaf, who alone
with her Brother among the members of her Father's household had to
confront the rebellion of almost the entire company of her relatives and
associates, found that consolation which so powerfully sustained her till
the very close of her life. By the forces which this little band of
returning pilgrims was able to release in the heart of that continent the
death-knell of every scheme initiated by the would-be wrecker of the Cause
of God was sounded. |
22 |
The Tablets which were subsequently revealed by the untiring pen of
`Abdu'l-Bahá, embodying in passionate and unequivocal language His
instructions and counsels, His appeals and comments, His hopes and wishes,
His fears and warnings, soon began to be translated, published and
circulated throughout the length and breadth of the North American
continent, providing the ever-widening circle of the first believers with
that spiritual sustenance which could alone enable them to survive the
severe trials they were soon to experience. |
23 |
The hour of an unprecedented crisis was, however, inexorably
approaching. Evidences of dissension, actuated by pride and ambition, were
beginning to obscure the radiance and retard the growth of the newly-born
community which the apostolic teachers of that continent had labored to
establish. He who had been instrumental in inaugurating so splendid an era
in the history of the Faith, on whom the Center of Bahá'u'lláh's Covenant
had conferred the titles of "Bahá's Peter," of the "Shepherd of God's
Flocks," of the "Conqueror of America," upon whom had been bestowed the
unique privilege of helping `Abdu'l-Bahá lay the foundation-stone of the
Báb's Mausoleum on Mt. Carmel--such a man, blinded by his extraordinary
success and aspiring after an uncontrolled domination over the beliefs and
activities of his fellow-disciples, insolently raised the standard of
revolt. Seceding from `Abdu'l-Bahá and allying himself with the Arch-Enemy
of the Faith of God, this deluded apostate sought, by perverting the
teachings and directing a campaign of unrelenting vilification against the
person of `Abdu'l-Bahá, to undermine the faith of those believers whom he
had during no less than eight years, so strenuously toiled to convert. By
the tracts he published, through the active collaboration of the
emissaries of his chief Ally, and reinforced by the
efforts which the Christian ecclesiastical enemies of the Bahá'í
Revelation were beginning to exert, he succeeded in dealing the nascent
Faith of God a blow from which it could only slowly and painfully
recover. |
24 |
I need not dwell on the immediate effects of this serious yet
transitory cleavage in the ranks of the American adherents of the Cause of
Bahá'u'lláh. Nor do I need to expatiate on the character of the defamatory
writings that poured upon them. Nor does it seem necessary to recount the
measures to which an ever-vigilant Master resorted in order to assuage and
eventually to dissipate their apprehensions. It is for the future
historian to appraise the value of the mission of each of the four chosen
messengers of `Abdu'l-Bahá who, in rapid succession, were dispatched by
Him to pacify and reinvigorate that troubled community. His will be the
task of tracing, in the work which these deputies of `Abdu'l-Bahá were
commissioned to undertake, the beginnings of that vast Administration, the
corner-stone of which these messengers were instructed to lay--an
Administration whose symbolic Edifice He, at a later time, was to found in
person and whose basis and scope the provisions of His Will were destined
to widen. |
25 |
Suffice it to say that at this stage of its evolution the
activities of an invincible Faith had assumed such dimensions as to force
on the one hand its enemies to devise fresh weapons for their projected
assaults, and on the other to encourage its supreme Promoter to instruct
its followers, through qualified representatives and teachers, in the
rudiments of an Administration which, as it evolved, would at once
incarnate, safeguard and foster its spirit. The works of such stubborn
assailants as those of Vatralsky, Wilson, Jessup and Richardson vie with
one another in their futile attempts to stain its purity, to arrest its
march and compel its surrender. To the charges of Nihilism, of heresy, of
Muhammadan Gnosticism, of immorality, of Occultism and
Communism so freely leveled against them, the undismayed victims of such
outrageous denunciations, acting under the instructions of `Abdu'l-Bahá,
retorted by initiating a series of activities which by their very nature
were to be the precursors of permanent, officially recognized
administrative institutions. The inauguration of Chicago's first House of
Spirituality designated by `Abdu'l-Bahá as that city's "House of Justice"; the establishment of the Bahá'í Publishing
Society; the founding of the Green Acre Fellowship; the publication of the
Star of the West; the holding of the first Bahá'í National Convention,
synchronizing with the transference of the sacred remains of the Báb to
its final resting-place on Mt. Carmel; the incorporation of the Bahá'í
Temple Unity and the formation of the Executive Committee of the
Mashriqu'l-Adhkár--these stand out as the most conspicuous
accomplishments of the American believers which have immortalized the
memory of the most turbulent period of their history. Launched through
these very acts into the troublesome seas of ceaseless tribulation,
piloted by the mighty arm of `Abdu'l-Bahá and manned by the bold
initiative and abundant vitality of a band of sorely-tried disciples, the
Ark of Bahá'u'lláh's Covenant has, ever since those days, been steadily
pursuing its course contemptuous of the storms of bitter misfortune that
have raged, and which must continue to assail it, as it forges ahead
towards the promised haven of undisturbed security and peace. |
26 |
Unsatisfied with the achievements which crowned the concerted
efforts of their elected representatives within the American continent,
and emboldened by the initial success of their pioneer teachers, beyond
its confines, in Great Britain, France and Germany, the community of the
American believers resolved to win in distant climes fresh recruits to the
advancing army of Bahá'u'lláh. Setting out from the western shores of
their native land and impelled by the indomitable energy of a new-born
faith, these itinerant teachers of the Gospel of Bahá'u'lláh pushed on
towards the islands of the Pacific, and as far as China and Japan,
determined to establish beyond the farthest seas the outposts of their
beloved Faith. Both at home and abroad this community had by that time
demonstrated its capacity to widen the range and consolidate the
foundations of its vast endeavors. The angry voices that had been raised
in protest against its rise were being drowned amid the acclamations with
which the East greeted its recent victories. Those ugly features that had
loomed so threateningly were gradually receding into the distance,
furnishing a still wider field to these noble warriors for the exercise of
their latent energies. |
27 |
The Faith of Bahá'u'lláh in the continent of America had indeed
been resuscitated. Phoenix-like it had risen in all its freshness, vigor and beauty and was now, through the voice of its
triumphant exponents, insistingly calling to `Abdu'l-Bahá, imploring Him
to undertake a journey to its shores. The first fruits of the mission
entrusted to its worthy upholders had lent such poignancy to their call
that `Abdu'l-Bahá, Who had just been delivered from the fetters of a
galling tyranny, found Himself unable to resist. His great, His
incomparable, love for His own favored children impelled Him to respond.
Their passionate entreaty had, moreover, been reinforced by the numerous
invitations which representatives of various interested organizations,
whether religious, educational or humanitarian, had extended to Him,
expressing their eagerness to receive from His own mouth an exposition of
His Father's teachings. |
28 |
Though bent with age, though suffering from ailments resulting from
the accumulated cares of fifty years of exile and captivity, `Abdu'l-Bahá
set out on His memorable journey across the seas to the land where He
might bless by His presence, and sanctify through His deeds, the mighty
acts His spirit had led His disciples to perform. The circumstances that
have attended His triumphal progress through the chief cities of the
United States and Canada my pen is utterly incapable of describing. The
joys which the announcement of His arrival evoked, the publicity which His
activities created, the forces which His utterances released, the
opposition which the implications of His teachings excited, the
significant episodes to which His words and deeds continually gave rise--
these future generations will, no doubt, minutely and befittingly
register. They will carefully delineate their features, will cherish and
preserve their memory, and will transmit unimpaired the record of their
minutest details to their descendants. It would indeed be presumptuous on
our part to attempt, at the present time, to sketch even the bare outline
of so vast, so enthralling a theme. Contemplating after the lapse of above
twenty years this notable landmark in America's spiritual history we still
find ourselves compelled to confess our inability to grasp its import or
to fathom its mystery. I have alluded in the preceding pages to a few of
the more salient features of that never-to-be-forgotten visit. These
incidents, as we look back upon them, eloquently proclaim `Abdu'l-Bahá's
specific purpose to confer through these symbolic functions upon the
first-born of the communities of the West that
spiritual primacy which was to be the birthright of the American
believers. |
29 |
The seeds which `Abdu'l-Bahá's ceaseless activities so lavishly
scattered had endowed the United States and Canada, nay the entire
continent, with potentialities such as it had never known in its history.
On the small band of His trained and beloved disciples, and through them
on their descendants, He, through that visit, had bequeathed a priceless
heritage--a heritage which carried with it the sacred and primary
obligation to arise and carry on in that fertile field the work He had so
gloriously initiated. We can dimly picture to ourselves the wishes that
must have welled from His eager heart as He bade His last farewell to that
promising country. An inscrutable Wisdom, we can well imagine Him remark
to His disciples on the eve of His departure, has, in His infinite bounty
singled out your native land for the execution of a mighty purpose.
Through the agency of Bahá'u'lláh's Covenant I, as the ploughman, have
been called upon since the beginning of my ministry to turn up and break
its ground. The mighty confirmations that have, in the opening days of
your career, rained upon you have prepared and invigorated its soil. The
tribulations you subsequently were made to suffer have driven deep furrows
into the field which my hands had prepared. The seeds with which I have
been entrusted I have now scattered far and wide before you. Under your
loving care, by your ceaseless exertions, every one of these seeds must
germinate, every one must yield its destined fruit. A winter of
unprecedented severity will soon be upon you. Its storm-clouds are fast
gathering on the horizon. Tempestuous winds will assail you from every
side. The Light of the Covenant will be obscured through my departure.
These mighty blasts, this wintry desolation, shall however pass away. The
dormant seed will burst into fresh activity. It shall put forth its buds,
shall reveal, in mighty institutions, its leaves and blossoms. The vernal
showers which the tender mercies of my heavenly Father will cause to
descend upon you will enable this tender plant to spread out its branches
to regions far beyond the confines of your native land. And finally the
steadily mounting sun of His Revelation, shining in its meridian splendor,
will enable this mighty Tree of His Faith to yield, in the fullness of
time and on your soil, its golden fruit. |
30 |
The implications of such a parting message could not long remain
unrevealed to `Abdu'l-Bahá's initiated disciples. No sooner had He
concluded His long and arduous journey across the American and European
continents than the tremendous happenings to which He had alluded began to
be made manifest. A conflict, such as He had predicted, severed for a time
all means of communication with those on whom He had come to place such
implicit trust and from whom He was expecting so much in return. The
wintry desolation, with all its havoc and carnage, pursued during four
years its relentless course, while He, repairing to the quiet solitude of
His residence in the close neighborhood of Bahá'u'lláh's hallowed shrine,
continued to communicate His thoughts and wishes to those whom He had left
behind and on whom He had conferred the unique tokens of His favor. In the
immortal Tablets which, in the long hours of His communion with His
dearly-beloved friends He was moved to reveal, He unfolded to their eyes
His conception of their spiritual destiny, His Plan for the mission He
wished them to undertake. The seeds His hands had sown He was now watering
with that same care, that same love and patience, which had characterized
His previous endeavors whilst He was laboring in their midst. |
31 |
The clarion call which `Abdu'l-Bahá had raised was the signal for
an outburst of renewed activity which, alike in the motives it inspired
and the forces it set in motion, America had scarcely experienced. Lending
an unprecedented impetus to the work which the enterprising ambassadors of
the Message of Bahá'u'lláh had initiated in distant lands, this mighty
movement has continued to spread until the present day, has gathered
momentum as it extended its ramifications over the surface of the globe,
and will continue to accelerate its march until the last wishes of its
original Promoter are completely fulfilled. |
32 |
Forsaking home, kindred, friends and position a handful of men and
women, fired with a zeal and confidence which no human agency can kindle,
arose to carry out the mandate which `Abdu'l-Bahá had issued. Sailing
northward as far as Alaska, pushing on to the West Indies, penetrating the
South American continent to the banks of the Amazon and across the Andes
to the southernmost ends of the Argentine Republic, pressing on westward
into the island of Tahiti and beyond it to the
Australian continent and still beyond it as far as New Zealand and
Tasmania, these intrepid heralds of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh have
succeeded by their very acts in setting to the present generation of their
fellow-believers throughout the East an example which they may well
emulate. Headed by their illustrious representative, who ever since the
call of `Abdu'l-Bahá was raised has been twice round the world and is
still, with marvellous courage and fortitude, enriching the matchless
record of her services, these men and women have been instrumental in
extending, to a degree as yet unsurpassed in Bahá'í history, the sway of
Bahá'u'lláh's universal dominion. In the face of almost insurmountable
obstacles they have succeeded in most of the countries through which they
have passed or in which they have resided, in proclaiming the teachings of
their Faith, in circulating its literature, in defending its cause, in
laying the basis of its institutions and in reinforcing the number of its
declared supporters. It would be impossible for me to unfold in this short
compass the tale of such heroic actions. Nor can any tribute of mine do
justice to the spirit which has enabled these standard-bearers of the
Religion of God to win such laurels and to confer such distinction on the
generation to which they belong. |
33 |
The Cause of Bahá'u'lláh had by that time encircled the globe. Its
light, born in darkest Persia, had been carried successively to the
European, the African and the American continents, and was now penetrating
the heart of Australia, encompassing thereby the whole earth with a girdle
of shining glory. The share which such worthy, such stout-hearted,
disciples have had in brightening the last days of `Abdu'l-Bahá's earthly
life He alone has truly recognized and can sufficiently estimate. The
unique and eternal significance of such accomplishments the labors of the
rising generation will assuredly reveal, their memory its works will
befittingly preserve and extol. How deep a satisfaction `Abdu'l-Bahá must
have felt, while conscious of the approaching hour of His departure, as He
witnessed the first fruits of the international services of these heroes
of His Father's Faith! To their keeping He had committed a great and
goodly heritage. In the twilight of His earthly life He could rest content
in the serene assurance that such able hands could be relied upon to
preserve its integrity and exalt its virtue. |
34 |
The passing of `Abdu'l-Bahá, so sudden in the circumstances which
caused it, so dramatic in its consequences, could neither impede the
operation of such a dynamic force nor obscure its purpose. Those fervid
appeals, embodied in the Will and Testament of a departed Master, could
not but confirm its aim, define its character and reinforce the promise of
its ultimate success. |
35 |
Out of the pangs of anguish which His bereaved followers have
suffered, amid the heat and dust which the attacks launched by a sleepless
enemy had precipitated, the Administration of Bahá'u'lláh's invincible
Faith was born. The potent energies released through the ascension of the
Center of His Covenant crystallized into this supreme, this infallible
Organ for the accomplishment of a Divine Purpose. The Will and Testament
of `Abdu'l-Bahá unveiled its character, reaffirmed its basis, supplemented
its principles, asserted its indispensability, and enumerated its chief
institutions. With that self-same spontaneity which had characterized her
response to the Message proclaimed by Bahá'u'lláh America had now arisen
to espouse the cause of the Administration which the Will and Testament of
His Son had unmistakably established. It was given to her, and to her
alone, in the turbulent years following the revelation of so momentous a
Document, to become the fearless champion of that Administration, the
pivot of its new-born institutions and the leading promoter of its
influence. To their Persian brethren, who in the heroic age of the Faith
had won the crown of martyrdom, the American believers, forerunners of its
golden age, were now worthily succeeding, bearing in their turn the palm
of a hard-won victory. The unbroken record of their illustrious deeds had
established beyond the shadow of a doubt their preponderating share in
shaping the destinies of their Faith. In a world writhing with pain and
declining into chaos this community-- the vanguard of the liberating
forces of Bahá'u'lláh--succeeded in the years following `Abdu'l-Bahá's
passing in raising high above the institutions established by its sister
communities in East and West what may well constitute the chief pillar of
that future House --a House which posterity will regard as the last refuge
of a tottering civilization. |
36 |
In the prosecution of their task neither the whisperings of the
treacherous nor the virulent attacks of their avowed enemies were allowed to deflect them from their high purpose or to
undermine their faith in the sublimity of their calling. The agitation
provoked by him who in his incessant and sordid pursuit of earthly riches
would have, but for `Abdu'l-Bahá's warning, sullied the fair name of their
Faith, had left them in the main undisturbed. Schooled by tribulation and
secure within the stronghold of their fast evolving institutions they
scorned his insinuations and by their unswerving loyalty were able to
shatter his hopes. They refused to allow any consideration of the admitted
prestige and past services of his father and of his associates to weaken
their determination to ignore entirely the person whom `Abdu'l-Bahá had so
emphatically condemned. The veiled attacks with which a handful of deluded
enthusiasts subsequently sought in the pages of their periodical to check
the growth and blight the prospects of an infant Administration had
likewise failed to achieve their purpose. The attitude which a besotted
woman later on assumed, her ludicrous assertions, her boldness in flouting
the Will of `Abdu'l-Bahá and in challenging its authenticity and her
attempts to subvert its principles were again powerless to produce the
slightest breach in the ranks of its valiant upholders. The treacherous
schemes which the ambition of a perfidious and still more recent enemy has
devised and through which he is still striving to deface `Abdu'l-Bahá's
noble handiwork and corrupt its administrative principles are being once
more completely frustrated. These intermittent and abortive attempts on
the part of its assailants to force the surrender of the newly built
stronghold of the Faith its defenders have from the very beginning utterly
disdained. No matter how fierce the assaults of the enemy or skillful his
stratagem they have refused to yield one jot or one tittle of their
cherished convictions. His insinuations and clamor they have consistently
ignored. The motives which animated his actions, the methods he steadily
pursued, the precarious privileges he seemed momentarily to enjoy they
could not but despise. Thriving for a time through the devices which their
scheming minds had conceived and supported by the ephemeral advantages
which fame, ability or fortune can confer these notorious exponents of
corruption and heresy have succeeded in protruding for a time their ugly
features only to sink, as rapidly as they had risen, into the mire of an
ignominious end. |
37 |
From the midst of these afflictive trials, reminiscent in some of
their aspects of the violent storm that had accompanied the birth of the
Faith in their native land, the American believers had again triumphantly
emerged, their course undeflected, their fame unsullied, their heritage
unimpaired. A series of magnificent accomplishments, each more significant
than the previous, were to shed increasing lustre on an already
illustrious record. In the dark years immediately following `Abdu'l-Bahá's
ascension their deeds shone with a radiance that made them the object of
the envy and the admiration of the less privileged among their brethren.
The entire community, untrammeled and supremely confident, was rising to a
great and glorious opportunity. The forces that had motivated its birth,
that had assisted in its rise, were now accelerating its growth, in a
manner and with such rapidity that neither the pangs of a world-wide
sorrow nor the unceasing convulsions of a distracted age could paralyze
its efforts or retard its march. |
38 |
Internally the community had embarked in a number of enterprises
that were to enable it on the one hand to extend still further the scope
of its spiritual jurisdiction and on the other to fashion the essential
instruments for the creation and consolidation of the institutions which
such an extension imperatively demanded. Externally its undertakings were
inspired by the twofold objective of prosecuting, even more intensely than
before, the admirable work which in each of the five continents its
international teachers had initiated, and of assuming an increasing share
in the handling and solution of the delicate and complex problems with
which a newly-emancipated Faith was being confronted. The birth of the
Administration in that continent had signalized these praiseworthy
exertions. Its gradual consolidation was destined to insure their
continuance and to accentuate their effectiveness. |
39 |
To enumerate only the most outstanding accomplishments which, in
their own country and beyond its confines, have so greatly enhanced the
prestige of the American believers and have redounded to the glory and
honor of the Most Great Name is all I can presently undertake, leaving to
future generations the task of explaining their import and of affixing a
fitting estimate to their value. To the body of their elected
representatives must be attributed the honor of having been the first
among their sister Assemblies of East and West to
devise, promulgate and legalize the essential instruments for the
effective discharge of their collective duties--instruments which every
properly constituted Bahá'í community must regard as a pattern worthy to
be adopted and copied. To their efforts must likewise be ascribed the
historic achievement of establishing their national endowments upon a
permanent and unassailable basis and of creating the necessary agency for
the formation of those subsidiary organs whose function is to administer
on behalf of their trustees such possessions as these may acquire beyond
the limits of their immediate jurisdiction. By the weight of their moral
support so freely extended to their Egyptian brethren they were able to
remove some of the most formidable obstacles which the Faith had to
surmount in its struggle to enfranchise itself from the fetters of Muslim
orthodoxy. Through the effective and timely intervention of these same
elected representatives they were able to avert the woes and dangers which
had menaced their persecuted fellow-workers in the Soviet Republics, and
to ward off the rage which had threatened with immediate ruin one of the
most precious and noblest of Bahá'í institutions. Nothing short of the
whole-hearted assistance, whether moral or financial which the American
believers, individually and collectively, were moved to extend on several
occasions to the needy and harassed among their brethren in Persia could
have saved these hapless victims of the consequences of the calamities
that had visited them in the years following `Abdu'l-Bahá's ascension. It
was the publicity which the efforts of their American brethren had
created, the protests they were led to make, the appeals and petitions
they had submitted, which mitigated these sufferings and curbed the
violence of the worst and most tyrannical opponents of the Faith in that
land. Who else, if not one of their most distinguished representatives,
has risen to force upon the attention of the highest Tribunal the world
has yet seen the grievances which a Faith, robbed of one of its holiest
sanctuaries, had suffered at the hand of the usurper? Who else has
succeeded in securing, through patient and persistent effort, those
written affirmations which proclaim the justice of a persecuted cause and
tacitly recognize its right to an independent religious status? "The
Commission," is the resolution passed by the Permanent Mandates Commission
of the League of Nations, "recommends that the Council should ask the British Government to make
representations to the Iráqí Government with a view to the immediate
redress of the denial of justice from which the petitioners (the Bahá'í
Spiritual Assembly of Baghdád) have suffered." Has any one else
except an American believer been led to obtain from royalty such
remarkable and repeated testimonies to the regenerating power of the Faith
of God, such striking references to the universality of its teachings and
the sublimity of its mission. "The Bahá'í teaching," such is the Queen's
written testimony, "brings peace and understanding. It is like a wide
embrace gathering together all those who have long searched for words of
hope. It accepts all great Prophets gone before, it destroys no other
creeds and leaves all doors open. Saddened by the continual strife amongst
believers of many confessions and wearied of their intolerance towards
each other, I discovered in the Bahá'í teaching the real spirit of Christ
so often denied and misunderstood: Unity instead of strife, Hope instead
of condemnation, Love instead of hate, and a great reassurance for all
men." Have not the American adherents of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh, through
the courage displayed by one of the most brilliant members of their
community, been instrumental in paving the way for the removal of those
barriers which have, for well-nigh a century, hampered the growth and
crippled the energy of their fellow-believers in Persia? Is it not America
who, ever mindful of `Abdu'l-Bahá's passionate entreaty, has sent out to
the ends of the earth a steadily increasing number of its most consecrated
citizens--men and women the one wish of whose lives is to consolidate the
foundations of Bahá'u'lláh's world-embracing dominion? In the northernmost
capitals of Europe, in most of its central states, throughout the Balkan
Peninsula, along the shores of the African, the Asiatic and South American
continents are to be found this day a small band of women pioneers who,
single-handed and with scanty resources, are toiling for the advent of the
Day `Abdu'l-Bahá has foretold. Did not the attitude of the Greatest Holy
Leaf, as she approached the close of her life, bear eloquent testimony to
the incomparable share which her steadfast and self-sacrificing lovers in
that continent have had in lightening the burden which had weighed so long
and so heavily on her heart? And finally who can be so bold as to deny
that the completion of the superstructure of the
Mashriqu'l-Adhkár--the crowning glory of America's past and
present achievements--has forged that mystic chain which is to link, more
firmly than ever, the hearts of its champion-builders with Him Who is the
Source and Center of their Faith and the Object of their truest
adoration? |
40 |
Fellow-believers in the American continent! Great indeed have been
your past and present achievements! Immeasurably greater are the wonders
which the future has in store for you! The Edifice your sacrifices have
raised still remains to be clothed. The House which must needs be
supported by the highest administrative institution your hands have
reared, is as yet unbuilt. The provisions of the chief Repository of those
laws that must govern its operation are thus far mostly undisclosed. The
Standard which, if `Abdu'l-Bahá's wishes are to be fulfilled, must be
raised in your own country has yet to be unfurled. The Unity of which that
standard is to be the symbol is far from being yet established. The
machinery which must needs incarnate and preserve that unity is not even
created. Will it be America, will it be one of the countries of Europe,
who will arise to assume the leadership essential to the shaping of the
destinies of this troubled age? Will America allow any of her sister
communities in East or West to achieve such ascendancy as shall deprive
her of that spiritual primacy with which she has been invested and which
she has thus far so nobly retained? Will she not rather contribute, by a
still further revelation of those inherent powers that motivate her life,
to enhance the priceless heritage which the love and wisdom of a departed
Master have conferred upon her? |
41 |
Her past has been a testimony to the inexhaustible vitality of her
faith. May not her future confirm it? |
42 |
Your true brother, SHOGHI.
Haifa, Palestine, April 21, 1933.
|