Margaret Stevenson, the first New Zealand Bahá’í
was born on November 30th, 1865. Her first intimation of the Bahá’í Faith
was through reading “The Christian Commonwealth” and she admitted
later that “she did not think any more about it”. She received this journal
from her sister who was in London studying music and had heard
‘Abdu’l-Bahá address the congregation of St. John’s, Westminster at the
invitation of Canon Wilberforce. She was so impressed that when another
discourse given by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá at City Temple, London was printed in
“The Christian Commonwealth” dated March 27th, 1911, she sent a copy
of the journal to Margaret in New Zealand. In 1912, Miss Dorothea Spinney
arrived in Auckland from London and stayed with Margaret at her
home, “Clunie”, 3, Cowie Street, Parnell where she talked about the
Bahá’í Cause and her own meeting with ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. To quote Margaret’s
own words: “As a child, I used to wish I had lived when Christ was
on earth. As Miss Spinney spoke, I remembered my childhood wish, and
the thought came to me that I too might have denied Him as so many others
had done. It was this secret thought that made me seriously think of what I
heard from Miss Spinney, and through God’s grace and mercy I was
enabled to grasp and believe in Bahá’u’lláh and His Message”.
Margaret
spoke to others of her belief and obtained literature from America, becoming
a subscriber to “Star of the West”. Eventually a study group was
formed in Auckland and for ten years, Margaret’s home was a venue for
these classes. It was here that the first Bahá’í Feast in New Zealand took
place in January, 1923.