The other process dates back to the outbreak of the First World War that
threw the Great Republic of the West into the vortex of the first stage of a
world upheaval. It received its initial impetus through the formulation of
President Wilson’s Fourteen Points, closely associating for the first time that
Republic with the fortunes of the Old World. It suffered its first set-back
through the dissociation of that Republic from the newly-born League of Nations
which that President had laboured to create. It acquired added momentum
through the outbreak of the Second World War, inflicting unprecedented
suffering on that Republic, and involving it still further in the affairs of
all the continents of the globe. It was further reinforced through the
declaration embodied in the Atlantic Charter, as voiced by one of its chief
progenitors, Franklin D. Roosevelt. It assumed a definite outline through the
birth of the United Nations at the San Francisco Conference. It acquired added
significance through the choice of the City of the Covenant itself as the seat
of the newly-born organization, through the declaration recently made by the
American President related to his country’s commitments in Greece and Turkey,
as well as through the submission to the General Assembly of the United Nations
of the thorny and challenging problem of the Holy Land, the spiritual as well
as the administrative centre of the World Faith of Bahá’u’lláh. It must,
however long and tortuous the way, lead, through a series of victories and
31
reverses, to the political unification of the Eastern and Western Hemispheres,
to the emergence of a world government, and the establishment of the Lesser
Peace, as foretold by Bahá’u’lláh and foreshadowed by the Prophet Isaiah. It
must, in the end, culminate in the unfurling of the banner of the Most Great
Peace, in the Golden Age of the Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh.
(5 June 1947 to the Bahá’ís of West, published in “Citadel of
Faith: Messages to America 1947–1957” (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing
Trust, 1980), p. 6, pp. 32–33) [52]