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Ridván 1992
Bahá'í Era 149
by
Universal House of Justice
1992
To the Bahá'ís
of the World
Dearly loved
Friends,
1 At this Ridván
season, with its inherent splendours and its
initiation of unusual, eventful days, our hearts throb in wonderment, we
kneel in homage to the King of Glory by Whose grace we have arrived at an
auspicious juncture in the history of His Cause.
2 From the peak of triumph of
the Six Year Plan now ended, we come to the threshold of the Holy Year, now
begun, awestruck at the very thought of the unique significances associated
with the commemoration of that sanctified occasion one hundred years ago when
Bahá'u'lláh, the Promised One of all ages, took His
leave of this earthly life. The Sun of Truth, however, was to set only to
shine everlastingly from the "Kingdom of fadeless glory"(1),
thenceforward to shed the radiance of its regenerative power on the entire world.
Gone from this plane was He Who is the Author of a Revelation of "inconceivable
greatness" in which "all the Dispensations of the past have
attained their highest, their final consummation"(2); the
Originator of a new Universal Cycle "that must extend over a period
of at least five hundred thousand years"(3); the
Founder of a World Order, a "System---the like of which mortal eyes
have never witnessed".(4)
3 Moreover, He was the
Dawning Point of the Day of God, the "Day in which God's most
excellent favours have been poured out upon men"(5).
Such are the superlative realities upon which our contemplations are focused
during this special anniversary occurring at this crucial moment in the
affairs of humankind.
4 So imbued are we by the
sacred remembrances evoked by this Holy Year, that we can do no less than
invite you all to take pause to enter into this period of reflection, this
time of reconsecration, this stage of preparation for tasks yet to be done,
heights yet to be attained, splendours yet to be
unveiled. For if we look back at one hundred years of an unexampled history
of unremitting progress, we also look forward to many centuries of unfolding
fulfilment of divine purpose---fulfilment, which as experience has shown, is
incrementally realized through the systematic advances of Plans and the
wondrous leaps and thrusts of epochs.
5 Indeed, the immediate
portal to this propitious Holy Year is the vista of new horizons opened by
the triumph of the Six Year Plan, which coincided with the initial phase of
the fourth epoch of the Formative Age of our Faith. Overall
it is not so much a triumph in numerical achievements, though in many places
and at particular moments the scope of expansion was extraordinary. It is a
triumph that has been manifested in a new variety of victories, in new
beginnings, fresh initiatives and mature institutional developments, such as
to stamp the seal of success on the Plan's seven major objectives. Impossible
as it is to enumerate in these few pages the results of the Plan, the main
aspects of the developments in this remarkably dynamic period deserve,
nonetheless, to be highlighted. The Bahá'í community changed markedly over
the last six years. The major indicators are, no doubt, discernible to the
friends everywhere and may be summed up thus:
6 One: The Faith of Bahá'u'lláh is represented in every country on earth. The
sudden change in the political climate, no doubt by intervention of God's
Major Plan, opened vast regions to the penetration of the divine teachings,
primarily in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries. The
opportunities created by this change made possible the settlement of Knights
of Bahá'u'lláh in the last virgin territories that
remained from Shoghi Effendi's Ten
Year World Crusade. They also impelled the launching at Ridván 1990 of the subsidiary Two Year Plan for those
regions. This supplementary Plan was a spectacular success, not only in terms
of expansion in the many countries involved, but also in the diversity of the
strata represented by the new believers in these countries, in the volume and
variety of Bahá'í literature published and in the array of Bahá'í
institutions established during that short time. The Bahá'í world was highly
stimulated by these developments, and a number of countries elsewhere
recorded significant successes in the teaching work. Figures already
available to the World Centre indicate that more than one and a half million
souls entered the Cause during the Six Year Plan. Of particular interest was
the three-year special teaching project in Guyana which resulted in an
increase of the size of the Bahá'í community to some six percent of the
country's population.
7 Two: The proclamation of
the Faith throughout the world attained an entirely new stage. The campaign
of proclamation launched in 1967 through the inspiration of the centennial
anniversary of Bahá'u'lláh's Proclamation to the
kings and rulers of mankind, and which gathered added momentum in 1979 with
the surge of the persecution of the Iranian Bahá'í community, now covered a
greatly expanded range with the distribution of "The Promise of World
Peace". Kings, queens, presidents, prime ministers, legislators,
jurists, academics, diverse institutions and
organizations became aware of Bahá'u'lláh's
Message. The creative energies by which communities everywhere were exercised
in broadcasting the Cause became one of the driving forces of the Plan and in
no small way stimulated the interest of organizations, leaders of thought and
the media in the solutions which the Faith has to offer to a strangely
disordered world. Inspired by the impact of the measures they adopted for
proclamation of the Faith, and also by that of their continuing efforts to
defend the sorely persecuted Iranian Bahá'í community, National and Local
Spiritual Assemblies displayed and continue to display a striking audacity
and originality in dealing with the public. This is evident in their
innumerable contacts with officials at all levels of government, in their
association with a widening spectrum of organizations, and in the increasing
facility of their contacts with the media.
8 Three: The dedication in
December 1986 of the Mother Temple of the Indian Subcontinent to public
worship introduced a new force to the teaching and proclamation activities of
the Faith. As an edifice of rare beauty and excellence, the "Lotus
Temple" has won wide acclaim, while at the same time exerting an
extraordinary appeal to great numbers of visitors. Its fame as an architectural
wonder spread with speed as did its spiritual influence. It is no
exaggeration to say that of all the Bahá'í Houses of Worship, this Temple is
today the single most effective silent teacher of the Faith, annually
attracting more visitors, at the average rate of 20,000 daily, than all the
other Bahá'í Temples combined. Among its visitors from many lands are some of
the most prominent persons in the world. A source of great interest to the
media, the Temple has been featured in television programmes,
even in Russia and China. The influence of its success in these respects has
contributed immeasurably to the widespread public awareness of the Faith.
9 Four: The further emergence
of the Faith from obscurity is reflected in distinctive ways. In learned
circles, in reference works and in the media, the Faith is increasingly being
referred to as a "principal" or "major" world religion.
Media coverage of the Faith's activities has increased voluminously by the
intensified efforts of the friends in proclamation activities, but more
important is the fact that the media are showing an independent interest in
the Bahá'í community and are initiating contacts with it in various parts of
the world. The exposure of influential segments of the public to Bahá'í ideas
in such areas as peace, the environment, status of women, education
and literacy, has induced a response which increasingly calls upon the
Bahá'ís to participate with others in a range of projects associated with
governments or with non-governmental organizations.
10 Moreover, such exposure is
creating in the public mind the realization that the Faith has answers to
current problems and thus the expectation that the Bahá'í community should
take a more active part in public affairs. The notable success of the
activities of the Bahá'í International Community's Office of the Environment,
established during the Plan, amply illustrates the nature of these
developments. Furthermore, the formal relationship which the Bahá'í
International Community established with the Conservation and Religion
Network of the World Wide Fund for Nature and with
the World Conference on Religion and Peace, in conjunction with the numerous
such relationships established by National and Local Spiritual Assemblies in
their respective jurisdictions, reflects a trend in the Faith's emergence as
an entity to be reckoned with. Altogether, the drive of the ramified
proclamation campaign has produced a public resonance about the Faith, which
can be said to be known to the most significant public institutions and
prominent persons on earth.
11 Five: Bahá'í projects of
social and economic development have greatly multiplied and brought much
credit to the community in the examples of the power of group initiative and
voluntary consultative action that have been set in numerous places.
Activities in this respect involved more than one thousand projects in the
areas of education, agriculture, health, literacy, the environment
and improvement of the status of women. In a number of instances
the projects benefited from collaboration with or assistance from governments
and international non-governmental organizations, as, for example, the
projects for the improvement of the status of women undertaken by five
National Spiritual Assemblies with the financial assistance of the United
Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), and those projects in other
fields receiving assistance from the Canadian, Indian, German and Norwegian
governments. Some projects have been so distinguished in their achievements as
to be given public notice through the citations and awards of governments and
international non-governmental agencies.
12 Six: Youth activities took
on a special character shaped by the idea of a youth year of service. The
involvement of the youth in the Six Year Plan as short-term pioneers,
travelling teachers and projecteers had a profound
effect on the teaching work overall and in bolstering the efforts at social
and economic development attempted by growing numbers of national and local
communities. They had much to do with the many victories in the former
communist countries. Their work in social and economic development projects
attracted, in some cases, the attention of governments and development
organizations. Creation of the European Bahá'í Youth Council galvanized the
activities of the youth which powerfully reinforced the teaching thrust on
that continent during the final years of the Plan. A significant feature of
the youth's activities has been their involvement, as short-term volunteers
from all parts of the planet, in the work of the World Centre where their
services have been of inestimable value.
13 Seven: The advances in the
consolidation of the Bahá'í administrative system are evident from the marked
improvement in the internal development and collaborative efforts of its two
arms. The cherished and intrepid Hands of the Cause of God, true to the
allegiance they bear to their beloved Guardian, persevere in their unique
services, astonishing the community with their resilient powers. The growth
in confidence and strength of the Boards of Counsellors and their
auxiliaries, backed by a reinforced and vigorous International Teaching
Centre, assured to the Spiritual Assemblies, whom they are charged to
stimulate and advise, a buttressing indispensable to the welfare of the
entire system; while the extension of the span of activities of the National
and Local Spiritual Assemblies, themselves charged with guiding the destinies
of their communities, significantly broadened the base of that system. Collaterally,
the work of these institutions has facilitated and boosted the evolution of
the Administrative Order. Even more: they have demonstrated a creative energy
that bodes well for their continued maturation.
14 Eight: The great building
projects on the Mountain of God, anticipated by Bahá'u'lláh
in the Tablet of Carmel, inaugurated by `Abdu'l-Bahá
with the construction of the Tomb of the Báb and
carried forward in the plans of Shoghi Effendi,
entered a new stage. Work commenced in May 1990 on reinforcing and extending
the main terrace of the Shrine of the Báb as the
initial step towards realizing the architectural concept for fulfilling `Abdu'l-Bahá's vision of the Terraces that will extend
from the foot to the ridge of the mountain. By September of the next year,
ground was broken for the construction of the Centre for the Study of the
Texts and for the Extension to the International Archives Building, to be
followed by the construction of other edifices on the Arc, namely: the
buildings for the International Teaching Centre and, in due course, the
International Bahá'í Library.
15 All these developments have
made it evident that the accumulated potential for further progress of the
Bahá'í community is incalculable. The changed situation within and among
nations and the many problems afflicting society amplify this potential. The
impression produced by such change is of the near approach of the Lesser
Peace. But there has been a simultaneous recrudescence of countervailing
forces. With the fresh tide of political freedom resulting from the collapse
of the strongholds of communism has come an explosion of nationalism. The
concomitant rise of racism in many regions has become a matter of serious
global concern. These are compounded by an upsurge in religious
fundamentalism which is poisoning the wells of tolerance. Terrorism is rife.
Widespread uncertainty about the condition of the economy indicates a deep
disorder in the management of the material affairs of the planet, a condition
which can only exacerbate the sense of frustration and futility affecting the
political realm. The worsening state of the environment and of the health of
huge populations is a source of alarm. And yet an element of this change is
the amazing advances in communications technology making possible the rapid
transmission of information and ideas from one part of the world to the
other. It is against such "simultaneous processes of rise and fall,
of integration and of disintegration, of order and chaos, with their
continuous and reciprocal reactions on each other"(6), that
a myriad new opportunities for the next stage in the unfoldment of the
beloved Master's Divine Plan present themselves.
16 The burgeoning influence of
Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation seemed, with the imminence
of the Holy Year, to have assumed the character of an onrushing wind blowing
through the archaic structures of the old order, felling mighty pillars and clearing the ground for new conceptions of
social organization. The call for unity, for a new world order, is audible
from many directions. The change in world society is characterized by a
phenomenal speed. A feature of this change is a suddenness, or precipitateness,
which appears to be the consequence of some mysterious, rampant force. The
positive aspects of this change reveal an unaccustomed openness to global
concepts, movement towards international and regional collaboration, an
inclination of warring parties to opt for peaceful solutions, a search for
spiritual values. Even the Community of the Most Great
Name itself is experiencing the rigorous effects of this quickening wind as
it ventilates the modes of thought of us all, renewing, clarifying and
amplifying our perspectives as to the purpose of the Order of Bahá'u'lláh in the wake of humanity's suffering and
turmoil.
17 The situation in the world,
while presenting us with an acute challenge of the utmost urgency, calls to
mind the encouraging global vision of Shoghi
Effendi for the prospects of the Administrative Order during the second
century of the Bahá'í Era, whose midpoint we are rapidly approaching. In
1946, he wrote: "The second century is destined to witness a
tremendous deployment and a notable consolidation of the forces working
towards the world-wide development of that Order, as well as the first
stirrings of that World Order, of which the present Administrative System is
at once the precursor, the nucleus and pattern---an Order which, as it slowly
crystallizes and radiates its benign influence over the entire planet, will
proclaim at once the coming of age of the whole human race, as well as the
maturity of the Faith itself, the progenitor of that Order."(7)
18 Attention to the special
occasions of the Holy Year will surely equip us to undertake the urgent tasks
of the next stage in the evolution of the Divine Plan. This commemorative
period provides a befitting demarcation between the glories and triumphs of
the last one hundred years and the lustrous prizes yet to be garnered. At the
outset, we welcome with joyous and grateful hearts the further expansion and
consolidation of the Administrative Order which will accrue from the
formation this Ridván of twelve National and
Regional Spiritual Assemblies. How striking it is that the number of these
Assemblies is the same as the total number of National Spiritual Assemblies
which existed at the launching of the Ten Year World
Crusade in 1953! This is gratifying evidence of the rapidity of the expansion
of the Administrative Order in less than forty years. With these new Assemblies, and making allowance for the absorption of
Sikkim into India and the disruption of the Bahá'í Administration by the
unsettled situation in Liberia, the number of National Spiritual Assemblies
which will take part in the seventh International Bahá'í Convention next Ridván will reach 165.
19 We are pleased to announce
that the following Hands of the Cause of God will attend, as our
representatives, six of the founding Conventions. Amatu'l-Bahá
Ruhíyyíh Khánum
will attend the Conventions of Bulgaria and of Poland; Mr. `Alí Akbar Furútan will attend
those of the Baltic States and of Hungary; and Dr. `Alí-Muhammad
Varqá will attend those of Greenland and of the
Ukraine, Bielarus and Moldova. At the remaining Conventions our representatives will be Counsellors: Mr.
George Allen, the Congo Republic; Dr. Farzam Arbab, Central Asia; Mr. Rolf von Czekus,
Angola; Mrs. Parvin Djoneidi, Niger; Mr. Hartmut
Grossmann, Albania; and Mr. Mas`ud Khamsi, Azerbaijan.
20 Only a few weeks from now,
in the sacred precincts of the Shrine of Bahá'u'lláh,
a gathering of solemn purpose will take place to mark the one hundredth
anniversary of the Ascension of the Desire of the Nations. The scroll bearing
the Roll of Honour of the Knights of Bahá'u'lláh will, on the previous morning, 28 May, have
been deposited, as indicated by our beloved Guardian, at the entrance door of
the inner Sanctuary of the Most Holy Shrine, there to remain a symbol of the
historic victory that rewarded the unswerving determination of the lovers of
the Blessed Beauty who, in response to the call of the mighty Ten Year
Crusade, planted the banner of His Faith in virgin territories throughout the
world.
21 Subsequently, in November,
at the second Bahá'í World Congress, the hosts of Bahá
will gather in New York in their thousands to register, in a highly symbolic
gesture on behalf of their brethren throughout the world, their regard for
the Covenant which Bahá'u'lláh bequeathed, and to
evoke the memory of Him Who was appointed its Centre and Who exalted that
metropolis by bestowing upon it the designation "City of the Covenant"(8).
There they will also demonstrate the power of the unity that the Covenant is
meant to ensure to all the peoples of the world. It will be a moment of
capital importance to the Bahá'í community in the gaze of the world at large.
22 These two international
events are pivotal to the gatherings of similar intent in which the friends
in every corner of the world will take part. The spiritual character and
dignified manner of their participation will surely draw down confirmations
from on high and profoundly influence the constructive forces at work
throughout the earth.
23 Another source of blessings
to which we have long directed our hopes will also become manifest. Bahá'u'lláh has written: "While in prison We have
revealed a Book which We have entitled `The Most Holy Book'. We have enacted
laws therein and adorned it with the commandments of thy Lord, Who exerciseth authority over all that are in the heavens and
on the earth."(9) Hence,
it is with full cognizance of its world-shaking significance that we inform
you of the forthcoming publication during the course of this year of the
annotated English translation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
the Charter of the future world civilization which Bahá'u'lláh
revealed in the House of `Udi Khammar in `Akká some six score years ago.
24 And now, amid the eager
anticipations occasioned by the two major commemorative events and by the
imminent publication of the Mother Book of the Bahá'í Revelation, the Law of Huqúqu'lláh takes effect as part of the constant practice
of the members of our entire world community. May the promised divine
bounties associated with the activation of this holy law be showered upon the
beloved of the Lord in every land.
25 A year charged with
happenings of such sacred import is bound to yield consequences of
unimaginable potency. The immediate outcome is, however, impossible to
predict, nor can it be fruitfully speculated about. Rather should we direct
our thoughts to the meaning of the solemn occasions which this year is set
apart to memorialize. For the purpose of the Holy Year is not fulfilled by
public memorials alone, befitting as they will be. Essential to its purpose
is the opportunity it offers for inner reflection on the part of every Bahá'í
individual. Indeed, this is a special time for a rendezvous of the soul with
the Source of its light and guidance, a time to turn to Bahá'u'lláh,
to seek to obtain a deeper appreciation of His purpose, to renew allegiance
to Him. This is a time of retreat to one's innermost being, to the dwelling-place
of the Spirit of Bahá, that interior to which He
summons us when He says: "Turn thy sight unto thyself, that thou
mayest find Me standing within thee, mighty, powerful and self-subsisting."(10) This
is a time for recommitment to the Covenant, for rededication to duty, for
revitalizing the energy for teaching, the "most meritorious of all
deeds".(11)
26 As the foremost aid to your
reflections and actions, you will doubtless draw upon the insight and
inspiration of such of His words as these: "I am the Sun of Wisdom
and the Ocean of Knowledge. I cheer the faint and revive the dead. I am the
guiding Light that illumineth the way."(12)
"By My Life! Not of Mine own volition have I revealed Myself, but
God, of His own choosing, hath manifested Me."(13)
"I have come in the shadows of the clouds of glory, and am invested
by God with invincible sovereignty."(14)
"He that hath Me not is bereft of all things. Turn ye away from all
that is on earth and seek none else but Me."(15)
"Love Me, that I may love thee. If thou lovest
Me not, My love can in no wise reach thee. Know
this, O servant."(16)
"The Ancient Beauty hath consented to be bound with chains that
mankind may be released from its bondage, and hath accepted to be made a
prisoner within this most mighty Stronghold that the whole world may attain
unto true liberty. He hath drained to its dregs the cup of sorrow, that all
the peoples of the earth may attain unto abiding joy, and
be filled with gladness."(17)
27 Whatever our private
reflections or response to duty may lead us to do, of one thing we must be
sure: that the Name of Him Who is the Lifegiver of
the World becomes known throughout the earth among high and low alike.
Considering that it is already a whole century since the Blessed Beauty ascended, and given the crushing weight of the ills
burdening the peoples of the world, and seeing that a veritable cry of
anguish is issuing more loudly from the hearts of those who long for some
hope of relief, we, His avowed servants, can neither falter nor fail in this
primary and urgent duty. For He, Bahá'u'lláh, is
the Supreme Manifestation, the Unifier and Redeemer of all mankind, the
Fountainhead of Justice, the immortal Beloved; for, according to His own
unerring proclamation, "He Who is the Unconditioned is come, in the
clouds of light, that He may quicken all created things with the breezes of
His Name, the Most Merciful, and unify the world, and gather all men around
this Table which hath been sent down from heaven."(18) Let
us bear His Name with dignity to those who must hear It, offer It as a
treasure to those who must receive It, speak It with love to those who must
embrace It.
28 How laudable it would be
if, imbued by this desire to blazon abroad His Name, and as a demonstration
of our special love for the Abhá Beauty, we could
each of us mount a personal campaign of teaching, such that the collective
force and results of it throughout the world would bring to a resounding
conclusion the sacred exercises of this Holy Year and set the stage for the
launching of the impending Three Year Plan at Ridván 1993!
29 Finally, it is highly
fitting at this time to recall Bahá'u'lláh's
expression in the Most Holy Book of His will for us with regard to the nature
of our reactions to His passing: "Be not dismayed, O peoples of the
world," He wrote, "when the day-star of My beauty is set,
and the heaven of My tabernacle is concealed from your eyes. Arise to further
My Cause, and to exalt My Word amongst men. We are with you at all times, and shall strengthen you through the power of
truth. We are truly almighty. Whoso hath recognized Me, will arise and serve
Me with such determination that the powers of earth and heaven shall be
unable to defeat his purpose."(19)
30 Beloved friends, we shall
not forget to supplicate at the Holy Threshold that from His retreat of
deathless splendour the Blessed Beauty may fill the
souls of each and all of you with the revivifying breath of His celestial
power.
The Universal
House Of Justice
Footnotes
(1)
Selection
`Abdu'l-Bahá, section
5, paragraph 1, 1st sentence.
(2)
Advent,
p. 77;
paragraph 110, second quote
(3)
World
Order, p. 102;
paragraph 13, final sentence
(4)
Synopsis,
p. 27; section 21, paragraph 1 second sentence [Ed. note - Now included in
the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, par. 38]
(5)
Advent,
p. 77;
paragraph 110, eighth quote
(6)
Advent,
p. 72-3;
paragraph 103, 13th sentence
(7)
Messages
to America 1932-46, pp. 96-7;
letter 15-JUN-46,
"God Given mandate", paragraph 14, 2nd sentence
(8)
God
Passes By, p. 288;
chapter 19, paragraph 19, 2nd sentence
(9)
Tablets
of Bahá'u'lláh after Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
p. 262;
chapter 17, 20th excerpt, paragraph 4, 1st and 2nd
sentences
(10)
Hidden
Words, Arabic, No. 13
(11)
Gleanings,
p. 278;
section 128,
paragraph 10, 1st sentence
(12)
Tablets
of Bahá'u'lláh after Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
p. 169;
chapter 11, Lawh-i-Maqsúd, paragraph 19
(13)
Epistle,
p. 11;
paragraph 11 5th sentence
(14)
Gleanings,
p. 101;
section 47,
paragraph 1
(15)
Tablets
of Bahá'u'lláh after Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
p. 169;
chapter 11, Lawh-i-Maqsúd, paragraph 19, 4th
sentence
(16)
Hidden
Words, Arabic, No. 5
(17)
Gleanings,
p. 99;
section 45,
paragraph 1
(18)
Epistle,
p. 46;
paragraph 78, 6th sentence
(19)
Synopsis,
p. 14; Passages translated by the Guardian, section 6, paragraph 13 [Ed.
note: Now included in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
par. 38]
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