A new version of the Bahá’í Reference Library is now available. This ‘old version’ of the Bahá’í Reference Library will be replaced at a later date.
The new version of the Bahá’i Reference Library can be accessed here »
170. the use of opium … any substance that induceth sluggishness and torpor # 155 |
|
This prohibition of the use of opium is reiterated by
Bahá’u’lláh in the final paragraph of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas. In
this connection, Shoghi Effendi stated that one of the
requirements for “a chaste and holy life” is “total abstinence
… from opium, and from similar habit-forming drugs”.
Heroin, hashish and other derivatives of cannabis such as
marijuana, as well as hallucinogenic agents such as LSD,
peyote and similar substances, are regarded as falling under
this prohibition.
|
|
As to opium, it is foul and accursed. God protect us from
the punishment He inflicteth on the user. According to the
explicit Text of the Most Holy Book, it is forbidden, and its use
is utterly condemned. Reason showeth that smoking opium is a
kind of insanity, and experience attesteth that the user is
completely cut off from the human kingdom. May God protect
all against the perpetration of an act so hideous as this, an act
which layeth in ruins the very foundation of what it is to be
human, and which causeth the user to be dispossessed for ever and
ever. For opium fasteneth on the soul so that the user’s conscience
dieth, his mind is blotted away, his perceptions are eroded. It
turneth the living into the dead. It quencheth the natural heat.
No greater harm can be conceived than that which opium
inflicteth. Fortunate are they who never even speak the name of
it; then think how wretched is the user.
239
|
|
O ye lovers of God! In this, the cycle of Almighty God,
violence and force, constraint and oppression, are one and all
condemned. It is, however, mandatory that the use of opium be
prevented by any means whatsoever, that perchance the human
race may be delivered from this most powerful of plagues. And
otherwise, woe and misery to whoso falleth short of his duty to
his Lord.
|
|
Regarding hashish you have pointed out that some
Persians have become habituated to its use. Gracious God! This
is the worst of all intoxicants, and its prohibition is explicitly
revealed. Its use causeth the disintegration of thought and the
complete torpor of the soul. How could anyone seek the fruit of the
infernal tree, and by partaking of it, be led to exemplify the
qualities of a monster? How could one use this forbidden drug,
and thus deprive himself of the blessings of the All-Merciful?
Alcohol consumeth the mind and causeth man to commit
acts of absurdity, but this opium, this foul fruit of the infernal
tree, and this wicked hashish extinguish the mind, freeze the
spirit, petrify the soul, waste the body and leave man frustrated
and lost.
|
|