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Chapter XIX: ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s Travels in Europe and America 279 |
The establishment of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh in the Western
Hemisphere—the most outstanding achievement that will forever
be associated with ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s ministry—had, as observed in the
preceding pages, set in motion such tremendous forces, and been
productive of such far-reaching results, as to warrant the active and
personal participation of the Center of the Covenant Himself in those
epoch-making activities which His Western disciples had, through
the propelling power of that Covenant, boldly initiated and were
vigorously prosecuting.
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The crisis which the blindness and perversity of the Covenant-breakers
had precipitated, and which, for several years, had so
tragically interfered with the execution of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s purpose,
was now providentially resolved. An unsurmountable barrier had
been suddenly lifted from His path, His fetters were unlocked, and
God’s avenging wrath had taken the chains from His neck and
placed them upon that of ‘Abdu’l-Ḥamíd, His royal adversary and
the dupe of His most implacable enemy. The sacred remains of the
Báb, entrusted to His hands by His departed Father, had, moreover,
with immense difficulty been transferred from their hiding-place in
far-off Ṭihrán to the Holy Land, and deposited ceremoniously and
reverently by Him in the bosom of Mt. Carmel.
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‘Abdu’l-Bahá was at this time broken in health. He suffered from
several maladies brought on by the strains and stresses of a tragic
life spent almost wholly in exile and imprisonment. He was on the
threshold of three-score years and ten. Yet as soon as He was released
from His forty-year long captivity, as soon as He had laid the Báb’s
body in a safe and permanent resting-place, and His mind was free
of grievous anxieties connected with the execution of that priceless
Trust, He arose with sublime courage, confidence and resolution to
consecrate what little strength remained to Him, in the evening of
His life, to a service of such heroic proportions that no parallel to it
is to be found in the annals of the first Bahá’í century.
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Indeed His three years of travel, first to Egypt, then to Europe
and later to America, mark, if we would correctly appraise their
historic importance, a turning point of the utmost significance in
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the history of the century. For the first time since the inception of
the Faith, sixty-six years previously, its Head and supreme Representative
burst asunder the shackles which had throughout the ministries
of both the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh so grievously fettered its
freedom. Though repressive measures still continued to circumscribe
the activities of the vast majority of its adherents in the land of its
birth, its recognized Leader was now vouchsafed a freedom of action
which, with the exception of a brief interval in the course of the War
of 1914–18, He was to continue to enjoy to the end of His life,
and which has never since been withdrawn from its institutions at
its world center.
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So momentous a change in the fortunes of the Faith was the
signal for such an outburst of activity on His part as to dumbfound
His followers in East and West with admiration and wonder, and
exercise an imperishable influence on the course of its future history.
He Who, in His own words, had entered prison as a youth and left it
an old man, Who never in His life had faced a public audience, had
attended no school, had never moved in Western circles, and was
unfamiliar with Western customs and language, had arisen not only
to proclaim from pulpit and platform, in some of the chief capitals
of Europe and in the leading cities of the North American continent,
the distinctive verities enshrined in His Father’s Faith, but to demonstrate
as well the Divine origin of the Prophets gone before Him, and
to disclose the nature of the tie binding them to that Faith.
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Inflexibly resolved to undertake this arduous voyage, at whatever
cost to His strength, at whatever risk to His life, He, quietly and
without any previous warning, on a September afternoon, of the
year 1910, the year following that which witnessed the downfall of
Sulṭán ‘Abdu’l-Ḥamíd and the formal entombment of the Báb’s
remains on Mt. Carmel, sailed for Egypt, sojourned for about a
month in Port Said, and from thence embarked with the intention
of proceeding to Europe, only to discover that the condition of His
health necessitated His landing again at Alexandria and postponing
His voyage. Fixing His residence in Ramleh, a suburb of Alexandria,
and later visiting Zaytún and Cairo, He, on August 11 of the ensuing
year, sailed with a party of four, on the S.S. Corsica, for Marseilles,
and proceeded, after a brief stop at Thonon-les-Bains, to London,
where He arrived on September 4, 1911. After a visit of about a
month, He went to Paris, where He stayed for a period of nine weeks,
returning to Egypt in December, 1911. Again taking up His residence
in Ramleh, where He passed the winter, He embarked, on
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His second journey to the West, on the steamship Cedric, on
March 25, 1912, sailing via Naples direct to New York where He
arrived on April 11. After a prolonged tour of eight months’ duration,
which carried Him from coast to coast, and in the course of
which He visited Washington, Chicago, Cleveland, Pittsburgh,
Montclair, Boston, Worcester, Brooklyn, Fanwood, Milford, Philadelphia,
West Englewood, Jersey City, Cambridge, Medford, Morristown,
Dublin, Green Acre, Montreal, Malden, Buffalo, Kenosha,
Minneapolis, St. Paul, Omaha, Lincoln, Denver, Glenwood Springs,
Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Oakland, Palo Alto, Berkeley, Pasadena,
Los Angeles, Sacramento, Cincinnati, and Baltimore, He sailed,
on the S.S. Celtic, on December 5, from New York for Liverpool;
and landing there He proceeded by train to London. Later He
visited Oxford, Edinburgh and Bristol, and thence returning to
London, left for Paris on January 21, 1913. On March 30 He
traveled to Stuttgart, and from there proceeded, on April 9, to Budapest,
visited Vienna nine days later, returned to Stuttgart on April 25,
and to Paris on May first, where He remained until June 12, sailing
the following day, on the S.S. Himalaya from Marseilles bound for
Egypt, arriving in Port Said four days later, where after short visits
to Ismá’ílíyyih and Abúqír, and a prolonged stay in Ramleh, He
returned to Haifa, concluding His historic journeys on December
5, 1913.
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It was in the course of these epoch-making journeys and before
large and representative audiences, at times exceeding a thousand
people, that ‘Abdu’l-Bahá expounded, with brilliant simplicity, with
persuasiveness and force, and for the first time in His ministry, those
basic and distinguishing principles of His Father’s Faith, which together
with the laws and ordinances revealed in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas
constitute the bed-rock of God’s latest Revelation to mankind. The
independent search after truth, unfettered by superstition or tradition;
the oneness of the entire human race, the pivotal principle and
fundamental doctrine of the Faith; the basic unity of all religions;
the condemnation of all forms of prejudice, whether religious, racial,
class or national; the harmony which must exist between religion and
science; the equality of men and women, the two wings on which
the bird of human kind is able to soar; the introduction of compulsory
education; the adoption of a universal auxiliary language;
the abolition of the extremes of wealth and poverty; the institution
of a world tribunal for the adjudication of disputes between nations;
the exaltation of work, performed in the spirit of service, to the rank
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of worship; the glorification of justice as the ruling principle in
human society, and of religion as a bulwark for the protection of all
peoples and nations; and the establishment of a permanent and universal
peace as the supreme goal of all mankind—these stand out as
the essential elements of that Divine polity which He proclaimed to
leaders of public thought as well as to the masses at large in the course
of these missionary journeys. The exposition of these vitalizing truths
of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh, which He characterized as the “spirit of
the age,” He supplemented with grave and reiterated warnings of an
impending conflagration which, if the statesmen of the world should
fail to avert, would set ablaze the entire continent of Europe. He,
moreover, predicted, in the course of these travels, the radical changes
which would take place in that continent, foreshadowed the movement
of the decentralization of political power which would inevitably
be set in motion, alluded to the troubles that would overtake
Turkey, anticipated the persecution of the Jews on the European
continent, and categorically asserted that the “banner of the unity of
mankind would be hoisted, that the tabernacle of universal peace
would be raised and the world become another world.”
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During these travels ‘Abdu’l-Bahá displayed a vitality, a courage,
a single-mindedness, a consecration to the task He had set Himself to
achieve that excited the wonder and admiration of those who had the
privilege of observing at close hand His daily acts. Indifferent to the
sights and curiosities which habitually invite the attention of travelers
and which the members of His entourage often wished Him to visit;
careless alike of His comfort and His health; expending every ounce
of His energy day after day from dawn till late at night; consistently
refusing any gifts or contributions towards the expenses of His
travels; unfailing in His solicitude for the sick, the sorrowful and
the down-trodden; uncompromising in His championship of the
underprivileged races and classes; bountiful as the rain in His generosity
to the poor; contemptuous of the attacks launched against
Him by vigilant and fanatical exponents of orthodoxy and sectarianism;
marvelous in His frankness while demonstrating, from
platform and pulpit, the prophetic Mission of Jesus Christ to the
Jews, of the Divine origin of Islám in churches and synagogues, or
the truth of Divine Revelation and the necessity of religion to
materialists, atheists or agnostics; unequivocal in His glorification of
Bahá’u’lláh at all times and within the sanctuaries of divers sects and
denominations; adamant in His refusal, on several occasions, to curry
the favor of people of title and wealth both in England and in the
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United States; and last but not least incomparable in the spontaneity,
the genuineness and warmth of His sympathy and loving-kindness
shown to friend and stranger alike, believer and unbeliever, rich
and poor, high and low, whom He met, either intimately or casually,
whether on board ship, or whilst pacing the streets, in parks or public
squares, at receptions or banquets, in slums or mansions, in the
gatherings of His followers or the assemblage of the learned, He,
the incarnation of every Bahá’í virtue and the embodiment of every
Bahá’í ideal, continued for three crowded years to trumpet to a world
sunk in materialism and already in the shadow of war, the healing, the
God-given truths enshrined in His Father’s Revelation.
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In the course of His several visits to Egypt He had more than
one interview with the Khedive, Abbás Ḥilmí Páshá II, was introduced
to Lord Kitchener, met the Muftí, Shaykh Muḥammad Bakhit,
as well as the Khedive’s Imám, Shaykh Muḥammad Rashíd, and associated
with several ‘ulamás, páshás, Persian notables, members of the
Turkish Parliament, editors of leading newspapers in Cairo and
Alexandria, and other leaders and representatives of well-known
institutions, both religious and secular.
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Whilst He sojourned in England the house placed at His disposal
in Cadogan Gardens became a veritable mecca to all sorts and conditions
of men, thronging to visit the Prisoner of ‘Akká Who had
chosen their great city as the first scene of His labors in the West.
“O, these pilgrims, these guests, these visitors!” thus bears witness
His devoted hostess during the time He spent in London, “Remembering
those days, our ears are filled with the sound of their footsteps—as they came from every country in the world. Every day, all day
long, a constant stream, an interminable procession! Ministers and
missionaries, oriental scholars and occult students, practical men of
affairs and mystics, Anglicans, Catholics, and Non-conformists,
Theosophists and Hindus, Christian Scientists and doctors of medicine,
Muslims, Buddhists and Zoroastrians. There also called: politicians,
Salvation Army soldiers, and other workers for human good,
women suffragists, journalists, writers, poets and healers, dressmakers
and great ladies, artists and artisans, poor workless people and
prosperous merchants, members of the dramatic and musical world,
these all came; and none were too lowly, nor too great, to receive the
sympathetic consideration of this holy Messenger, Who was ever
giving His life for others’ good.”
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‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s first public appearance before a western audience
significantly enough took place in a Christian house of worship, when,
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on September 10, 1911, He addressed an overflowing congregation
from the pulpit of the City Temple. Introduced by the Pastor, the
Reverend R. J. Campbell, He, in simple and moving language, and
with vibrant voice, proclaimed the unity of God, affirmed the fundamental
oneness of religion, and announced that the hour of the unity
of the sons of men, of all races, religions and classes had struck. On
another occasion, on September 17, at the request of the Venerable
Archdeacon Wilberforce, He addressed the congregation of St. John
the Divine, at Westminster, after evening service, choosing as His
theme the transcendental greatness of the Godhead, as affirmed and
elucidated by Bahá’u’lláh in the Kitáb-i-Íqán. “The Archdeacon,”
wrote a contemporary of that event, “had the Bishop’s chair placed
for his Guest on the chancel steps, and, standing beside Him, read
the translation of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s address himself. The congregation
was profoundly moved, and, following the Archdeacon’s example,
knelt to receive the blessing of the Servant of God—Who stood with
extended arms—His wonderful voice rising and falling in the silence
with the power of His invocation.”
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At the invitation of the Lord Mayor of London He breakfasted
with him at the Mansion House; addressed the Theosophical Society
at their headquarters, at the express request of their President, and
also a Meeting of the Higher Thought center in London; was invited
by a deputation from the Bramo-Somaj Society to deliver a lecture
under their auspices; visited and delivered an address on world unity
at the Mosque at Woking, at the invitation of the Muslim Community
of Great Britain, and was entertained by Persian princes,
noblemen, ex-ministers and members of the Persian Legation in London.
He stayed as a guest in Dr. T. K. Cheyne’s home in Oxford, and
He delivered an address to “a large and deeply interested audience,”
highly academic in character, gathered at Manchester College in that
city, and presided over by Dr. Estlin Carpenter. He also spoke from
the pulpit of a Congregational Church in the East End of London,
in response to the request of its Pastor; addressed gatherings in Caxton
Hall and Westminster Hall, the latter under the chairmanship of Sir
Thomas Berkeley, and witnessed a performance of “Eager Heart,”
a Christmas mystery play at the Church House, Westminster, the first
dramatic performance He had ever beheld, and which in its graphic
depiction of the life and sufferings of Jesus Christ moved Him to
tears. In the Hall of the Passmore Edwards’ Settlement, in Tavistock
Place, he spoke to an audience of about four hundred and sixty
representative people, presided over by Prof. Michael Sadler, called on
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a number of working women of that Settlement, who were on holiday
at Vanners’, in Byfleet, some twenty miles out of London, and paid
a second visit there, meeting on that occasion people of every condition
who had specially gathered to see Him, among whom were “the
clergy of several denominations, a headmaster of a boys’ public school,
a member of Parliament, a doctor, a famous political writer, the
vice-chancellor of a university, several journalists, a well-known poet,
and a magistrate from London.” “He will long be remembered,”
wrote a chronicler of His visit to England, describing that occasion,
“as He sat in the bow window in the afternoon sunshine, His arm
round a very ragged but very happy little boy who had come to ask
‘Abdu’l-Bahá for sixpence for his money box and for his invalid
mother, whilst round Him in the room were gathered men and
women discussing Education, Socialism, the first Reform Bill, and the
relation of submarines and wireless telegraphy to the new era on
which man is entering.”
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Among those who called on Him during the memorable days He
spent in England and Scotland were the Reverend Archdeacon Wilberforce,
the Reverend R. J. Campbell, the Reverend Rhonddha
Williams, the Reverend Roland Corbet, Lord Lamington, Sir Richard
and Lady Stapley, Sir Michael Sadler, the Jalálu’d-Dawlih, son of the
Zillu’s-Sulṭán, Sir Ameer Ali, the late Maharaja of Jalawar, who paid
Him many visits and gave an elaborate dinner and reception in His
honor, the Maharaja of Rajputana, the Ranee of Sarawak, Princess
Karadja, Baroness Barnekov, Lady Wemyss and her sister, Lady Glencomer,
Lady Agnew, Miss Constance Maud, Prof. E. G. Browne,
Prof. Patrick Geddes, Mr. Albert Dawson, editor of the Christian
Commonwealth, Mr. David Graham Pole, Mrs. Annie Besant, Mrs.
Pankhurst, and Mr. Stead, who had long and earnest conversations
with Him. “Very numerous,” His hostess, describing the impression
produced on those who were accorded by Him the privilege of a
private audience, has written, “were these applicants for so unique an
experience, how unique only those knew when in the presence of the
Master, and we could partly divine, as we saw the look on their faces
as they emerged—a look as though blended of awe, of marveling,
and of a certain calm joy. Sometimes we were conscious of reluctance
in them to come forth into the outer world, as though they would
hold fast to their beatitude, lest the return of things of earth should
wrest it from them.” “A profound impression,” the aforementioned
chronicler has recorded, summing up the results produced by that
memorable visit, “remained in the minds and memories of all sorts
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and conditions of men and women…. Very greatly was ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s
sojourn in London appreciated; very greatly His departure
regretted. He left behind Him many, many friends. His love had
kindled love. His heart had opened to the West, and the Western
heart had closed around this patriarchal presence from the East. His
words had in them something that appealed not only to their immediate
hearers, but to men and women generally.”
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His visits to Paris, where for a time He occupied an apartment
in the Avenue de Camoens, were marked by a warmth of welcome
no less remarkable than the reception accorded Him by His friends
and followers in London. “During the Paris visit,” that same devoted
English hostess, Lady Blomfield, who had followed Him to that city,
has testified, “as it had been in London, daily happenings took on
the atmosphere of spiritual events…. Every morning, according to
His custom, the Master expounded the principles of the teaching of
Bahá’u’lláh to those who gathered round Him, the learned and the
unlearned, eager and respectful. They were of all nationalities and
creeds, from the East and from the West, including Theosophists,
agnostics, materialists, spiritualists, Christian Scientists, social reformers,
Hindus, Sufis, Muslims, Buddhists, Zoroastrians and many
others.” And again: “Interview followed interview. Church dignitaries
of various branches of the Christian Tree came, some earnestly
desirous of finding new aspects of the Truth…. Others there were
who stopped their ears, lest they should hear and understand.”
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Persian princes, noblemen and ex-ministers, among them the
Zillu’s-Sulṭán, the Persian Minister, the Turkish Ambassador in Paris,
Rashíd Páshá, an ex-valí of Beirut, Turkish páshás and ex-ministers,
and Viscount Arawaka, Japanese Ambassador to the Court of Spain,
were among those who had the privilege of attaining His presence.
Gatherings of Esperantists and Theosophists, students of the Faculty
of Theology and large audiences at l’Alliance Spiritualiste were addressed
by Him; at a Mission Hall, in a very poor quarter of the city,
He addressed a congregation at the invitation of the Pastor, whilst
in numerous meetings of His followers those already familiar with
His teachings were privileged to hear from His lips detailed and
frequent expositions of certain aspects of His Father’s Faith.
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In Stuttgart, where He made a brief but never-to-be-forgotten
stay, and to which He traveled in spite of ill-health in order to establish
personal contact with the members of the community of His
enthusiastic and dearly beloved German friends, He, apart from
attending the gatherings of His devoted followers, bestowed His
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abundant blessings on the members of the Youth group, gathered at
Esslingen, and addressed, at the invitation of Professor Christale,
President of the Esperantists of Europe, a large meeting of Esperantists
at their club. He, moreover, visited Bad Mergentheim, in
Württemberg, where a few years later (1915) a monument was
erected in memory of His visit by one of His grateful disciples. “The
humility, love and devotion of the German believers,” wrote an eyewitness,
“rejoiced the heart of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, and they received His
blessings and His words of encouraging counsel in complete submissiveness.
…Friends came from far and near to see the Master. There
was a constant flow of visitors at the Hotel Marquart. There ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
received them with such love and graciousness that they became
radiant with joy and happiness.”
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In Vienna, where He stayed a few days, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá addressed
a gathering of Theosophists in that city, whilst in Budapest He
granted an interview to the President of the University, met on a
number of occasions the famous Orientalist Prof. Arminius Vambery,
addressed the Theosophical Society, and was visited by the
President of the Turanian, and representatives of the Turkish Societies,
army officers, several members of Parliament, and a deputation
of Young Turks, led by Prof. Julius Germanus, who accorded Him
a hearty welcome to the city. “During this time,” is the written
testimony of Dr. Rusztem Vambery, “His (‘Abdu’l-Bahá) room in
the Dunapalota Hotel became a veritable mecca for all those whom
the mysticism of the East and the wisdom of its Master attracted into
its magic circle. Among His visitors were Count Albert Apponyi,
Prelate Alexander Giesswein, Professor Ignatius Goldziher, the Orientalist
of world-wide renown, Professor Robert A. Nadler, the famous
Budapest painter, and leader of the Hungarian Theosophical Society.”
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It was reserved, however, for the North American continent to
witness the most astonishing manifestation of the boundless vitality
‘Abdu’l-Bahá exhibited in the course of these journeys. The remarkable
progress achieved by the organized community of His followers
in the United States and Canada, the marked receptivity of the American
public to His Message, as well as His consciousness of the high
destiny awaiting the people of that continent, fully warranted the
expenditure of time and energy which he devoted to this most important
phase of His travels. A visit which entailed a journey of
over five thousand miles, which lasted from April to December, which
carried Him from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast and back, which
elicited discourses of such number as to fill no less than three volumes,
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was to mark the climax of those journeys, and was fully justified
by the far-reaching results which He well knew such labors on His
part would produce. “This long voyage,” He told His assembled followers
on the occasion of His first meeting with them in New York,
“will prove how great is My love for you. There were many troubles
and vicissitudes, but in the thought of meeting you, all these things
vanished and were forgotten.”
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The character of the acts He performed fully demonstrated the
importance He attached to that visit. The laying, with His own
hands, of the dedication stone of the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár, by the
shore of Lake Michigan, in the vicinity of Chicago, on the recently
purchased property, and in the presence of a representative gathering
of Bahá’ís from East and West; the dynamic affirmation by Him
of the implications of the Covenant instituted by Bahá’u’lláh, following
the reading of the newly translated Tablet of the Branch, in
a general assembly of His followers in New York, designated henceforth
as the “City of the Covenant”; the moving ceremony in Inglewood,
California, marking His special pilgrimage to the grave of
Thornton Chase, the “first American believer,” and indeed the first
to embrace the Cause of Bahá’u’lláh in the Western world; the
symbolic Feast He Himself offered to a large gathering of His disciples
assembled in the open air, and in the green setting of a June day at
West Englewood, in New Jersey; the blessing He bestowed on the
Open Forum at Green Acre, in Maine, on the banks of the Piscataqua
River, where many of His followers had gathered, and which was to
evolve into one of the first Bahá’í summer schools of the Western
Hemisphere and be recognized as one of the earliest endowments
established in the American continent; His address to an audience
of several hundred attending the last session of the newly-founded
Bahá’í Temple Unity held in Chicago; and, last but not least, the
exemplary act He performed by uniting in wedlock two of His followers
of different nationalities, one of the white, the other of the
Negro race—these must rank among the outstanding functions associated
with His visit to the community of the American believers,
functions designed to pave the way for the erection of their central
House of Worship, to fortify them against the tests they were soon
to endure, to cement their unity, and to bless the beginnings of that
Administrative Order which they were soon to initiate and champion.
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No less remarkable were ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s public activities in the
course of His association with the multitude of people with whom
He came in contact during His tour across a continent. A full account
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of these diversified activities which crowded His days during
no less than eight months, would be beyond the scope of this survey.
Suffice it to say that in the city of New York alone He delivered
public addresses in, and made formal visits to, no less than fifty-five
different places. Peace societies, Christian and Jewish congregations,
colleges and universities, welfare and charitable organizations, members
of ethical cults, New Thought centers, metaphysical groups,
Women’s clubs, scientific associations, gatherings of Esperantists,
Theosophists, Mormons, and agnostics, institutions for the advancement
of the colored people, representatives of the Syrian, the Armenian,
the Greek, the Chinese, and Japanese communities—all were
brought into contact with His dynamic presence, and were privileged
to hear from His lips His Father’s Message. Nor was the press either
in its editorial comment or in the publication of reports of His lectures,
slow to appreciate the breadth of His vision or the character
of His summons.
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His discourse at the Peace Conferences at Lake Mohonk; His addresses
to large gatherings at Columbia, Howard and New York
Universities; His participation in the fourth annual conference of
the National Association for the Advancement of the Colored
People; His fearless assertion of the truth of the prophetic Missions
of both Jesus Christ and Muḥammad in Temple Emmanu-El, a
Jewish synagogue in San Francisco, where no less than two thousand
people were gathered; His illuminating discourse before an audience
of eighteen hundred students and one hundred and eighty teachers
and professors at Leland Stanford University; His memorable visit
to the Bowery Mission in the slums of New York; the brilliant reception
given in His honor in Washington, at which many outstanding
figures in the social life of the capital were presented to Him—these
stand out as the highlights of the unforgettable Mission He undertook
in the service of His Father’s Cause. Secretaries of State, Ambassadors,
Congressmen, distinguished rabbis and churchmen, and
other people of eminence attained His presence, among whom were
such figures as Dr. D. S. Jordan, President of Leland Stanford University,
Prof. Jackson of Columbia University, Prof. Jack of Oxford
University, Rabbi Stephen Wise of New York, Dr. Martin A. Meyer,
Rabbi Joseph L. Levy, Rabbi Abram Simon, Alexander Graham Bell,
Rabindranath Tagore, Hon. Franklin K. Lane, Mrs. William Jennings
Bryan, Andrew Carnegie, Hon. Franklin MacVeagh, Secretary
of the United States Treasury, Lee McClung, Mr. Roosevelt, Admiral
Wain Wright, Admiral Peary, the British, Dutch and Swiss Ministers
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in Washington, Yúsúf Díyá Páshá, the Turkish Ambassador in that
city, Thomas Seaton, Hon. William Sulzer and Prince Muḥammad-‘Alí
of Egypt, the Khedive’s brother.
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“When ‘Abdu’l-Bahá visited this country for the first time in
1912,” a commentator on His American travels has written, “He
found a large and sympathetic audience waiting to greet Him personally
and to receive from His own lips His loving and spiritual message.
…Beyond the words spoken there was something indescribable
in His personality that impressed profoundly all who came into His
presence. The dome-like head, the patriarchal beard, the eyes that
seemed to have looked beyond the reach of time and sense, the soft
yet clearly penetrating voice, the translucent humility, the never
failing love,—but above all, the sense of power mingled with gentleness
that invested His whole being with a rare majesty of spiritual
exaltation that both set Him apart, and yet that brought Him near
to the lowliest soul,—it was all this, and much more that can never
be defined, that have left with His many … friends, memories that
are ineffaceable and unspeakably precious.”
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A survey, however inadequate of the varied and immense activities
of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in His tour of Europe and America cannot leave
without mention some of the strange incidents that would often
accompany personal contact with Him. The bold determination of
a certain indomitable youth who, fearing ‘Abdu’l-Bahá would not be
able to visit the Western states, and unable himself to pay for a train
journey to New England, had traveled all the way from Minneapolis
to Maine lying on the rods between the wheels of a train; the transformation
effected in the life of the son of a country rector in England,
who, in his misery and poverty, had resolved, whilst walking
along the banks of the Thames, to put an end to his existence, and
who, at the sight of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s photograph displayed in a shop
window, had inquired about Him, hurried to His residence, and been
so revived by His words of cheer and comfort as to abandon all
thought of self-destruction; the extraordinary experience of a woman
whose little girl, as the result of a dream she had had, insisted that
Jesus Christ was in the world, and who, at the sight of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s
picture exposed in the window of a magazine store, had instantly
identified it as that of the Jesus Christ of her dream—an act which
impelled her mother, after reading that ‘Abdu’l-Bahá was in Paris,
to take the next boat for Europe and hasten to attain His presence;
the decision of the editor of a journal printed in Japan to break his
journey to Tokyo at Constantinople, and travel to London for “the
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joy of spending one evening in His presence”; the touching scene
when ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, receiving from the hands of a Persian friend,
recently arrived in London from Ishqábád, a cotton handkerchief
containing a piece of dry black bread and a shrivelled apple—the
offering of a poor Bahá’í workman in that city—opened it before His
assembled guests, and, leaving His luncheon untouched, broke pieces
off that bread, and partaking Himself of it shared it with those who
were present—these are but a few of a host of incidents that shed
a revealing light on some personal aspects of His memorable journeys.
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Nor can certain scenes revolving around that majestic and patriarchal
Figure, as He moved through the cities of Europe and America,
be ever effaced from memory. The remarkable interview at which
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, while placing lovingly His hand on the head of Archdeacon
Wilberforce, answered his many questions, whilst that distinguished
churchman sat on a low chair by His side; the still more
remarkable scene when that same Archdeacon, after having knelt
with his entire congregation to receive His benediction at St. John’s
the Divine, passed down the aisle to the vestry hand in hand with
his Guest, whilst a hymn was being sung by the entire assembly
standing; the sight of Jalálu’d-Dawlih, fallen prostrate at His feet,
profuse in his apologies and imploring His forgiveness for his past
iniquities; the enthusiastic reception accorded Him at Leland Stanford
University when, before the gaze of well nigh two thousand
professors and students, He discoursed on some of the noblest truths
underlying His message to the West; the touching spectacle at Bowery
Mission when four hundred of the poor of New York filed past Him,
each receiving a piece of silver from His blessed hands; the acclamation
of a Syrian woman in Boston who, pushing aside the crowd that
had gathered around Him, flung herself at His feet, exclaiming,
“I confess that in Thee I have recognized the Spirit of God and Jesus
Christ Himself”; the no less fervent tribute paid Him by two admiring
Arabs who, as He was leaving that city for Dublin, N. H., cast
themselves before Him, and, sobbing aloud, avowed that He was
God’s own Messenger to mankind; the vast congregation of two
thousand Jews assembled in a synagogue in San Francisco, intently
listening to His discourse as He demonstrated the validity of the
claims advanced by both Jesus Christ and Muḥammad; the gathering
He addressed one night in Montreal, at which, in the course of His
speech, His turban fell from His head, so carried away was He by
the theme He was expounding; the boisterous crowd in a very poor
quarter of Paris, who, awed by His presence, reverently and silently
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made way for Him as He passed through their midst, while returning
from a Mission Hall whose congregation He had been addressing;
the characteristic gesture of a Zoroastrian physician who, arriving in
breathless haste on the morning of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s departure from
London to bid Him farewell, anointed with fragrant oil first His
head and His breast, and then, touching the hands of all present,
placed round His neck and shoulders a garland of rosebuds and lilies;
the crowd of visitors arriving soon after dawn, patiently waiting on
the doorsteps of His house in Cadogan Gardens until the door would
be opened for their admittance; His majestic figure as He paced with
a vigorous step the platform, or stood with hands upraised to pronounce
the benediction, in church and synagogue alike, and before
vast audiences of reverent listeners; the unsolicited mark of respect
shown Him by distinguished society women in London, who would
spontaneously curtsy when ushered into His presence; the poignant
sight when He stooped low to the grave of His beloved disciple,
Thornton Chase, in Inglewood Cemetery, and kissed his tombstone,
an example which all those present hastened to follow; the distinguished
gathering of Christians, Jews and Muslims, men and women
and representative of both the East and the West, assembled to hear
His discourse on world unity in the mosque at Woking—such scenes
as these, even in the cold record of the printed page, must still have
much of their original impressiveness and power.
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Who knows what thoughts flooded the heart of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá as
He found Himself the central figure of such memorable scenes as
these? Who knows what thoughts were uppermost in His mind as
He sat at breakfast beside the Lord Mayor of London, or was received
with extraordinary deference by the Khedive himself in his palace,
or as He listened to the cries of “Alláh-u-Abhá” and to the hymns of
thanksgiving and praise that would herald His approach to the
numerous and brilliant assemblages of His enthusiastic followers and
friends organized in so many cities of the American continent? Who
knows what memories stirred within Him as He stood before the
thundering waters of Niagara, breathing the free air of a far distant
land, or gazed, in the course of a brief and much-needed rest, upon
the green woods and countryside in Glenwood Springs, or moved
with a retinue of Oriental believers along the paths of the Trocadero
gardens in Paris, or walked alone in the evening beside the majestic
Hudson on Riverside Drive in New York, or as He paced the terrace
of the Hotel du Parc at Thonon-les-Bains, overlooking the Lake of
Geneva, or as He watched from Serpentine Bridge in London the
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pearly chain of lights beneath the trees stretching as far as the eye
could see? Memories of the sorrows, the poverty, the overhanging
doom of His earlier years; memories of His mother who sold her gold
buttons to provide Him, His brother and His sister with sustenance,
and who was forced, in her darkest hours, to place a handful of dry
flour in the palm of His hand to appease His hunger; of His own
childhood when pursued and derided by a mob of ruffians in the
streets of Ṭihrán; of the damp and gloomy room, formerly a morgue,
which He occupied in the barracks of ‘Akká and of His imprisonment
in the dungeon of that city—memories such as these must surely
have thronged His mind. Thoughts, too, must have visited Him of
the Báb’s captivity in the mountain fastnesses of Ádhirbayján, when
at night time He was refused even a lamp, and of His cruel and
tragic execution when hundreds of bullets riddled His youthful
breast. Above all His thoughts must have centered on Bahá’u’lláh,
Whom He loved so passionately and Whose trials He had witnessed
and had shared from His boyhood. The vermin-infested Síyáh-Chál
of Ṭihrán; the bastinado inflicted upon Him in Ámul; the humble
fare which filled His kashkúl while He lived for two years the life
of a dervish in the mountains of Kurdistán; the days in Baghdád
when He did not even possess a change of linen, and when His followers
subsisted on a handful of dates; His confinement behind the
prison-walls of ‘Akká, when for nine years even the sight of verdure
was denied Him; and the public humiliation to which He was subjected
at government headquarters in that city—pictures from the
tragic past such as these must have many a time overpowered Him
with feelings of mingled gratitude and sorrow, as He witnessed the
many marks of respect, of esteem, and honor now shown Him and
the Faith which He represented. “O Bahá’u’lláh! What hast Thou
done?” He, as reported by the chronicler of His travels, was heard
to exclaim one evening as He was being swiftly driven to fulfil His
third engagement of the day in Washington, “O Bahá’u’lláh! May
my life be sacrificed for Thee! O Bahá’u’lláh! May my soul be
offered up for Thy sake! How full were Thy days with trials and
tribulations! How severe the ordeals Thou didst endure! How solid
the foundation Thou hast finally laid, and how glorious the banner
Thou didst hoist!” “One day, as He was strolling,” that same chronicler
has testified, “He called to remembrance the days of the Blessed
Beauty, referring with sadness to His sojourn in Sulaymáníyyih, to
His loneliness and to the wrongs inflicted upon Him. Though He
had often recounted that episode, that day He was so overcome with
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emotion that He sobbed aloud in His grief…. All His attendants
wept with Him, and were plunged into sorrow as they heard the tale
of the woeful trials endured by the Ancient Beauty, and witnessed
the tenderness of heart manifested by His Son.”
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A most significant scene in a century-old drama had been enacted.
A glorious chapter in the history of the first Bahá’í century had been
written. Seeds of undreamt-of potentialities had, with the hand of
the Center of the Covenant Himself, been sown in some of the
fertile fields of the Western world. Never in the entire range of
religious history had any Figure of comparable stature arisen to perform
a labor of such magnitude and imperishable worth. Forces were
unleashed through those fateful journeys which even now, at a distance
of well nigh thirty-five years, we are unable to measure or
comprehend. Already a Queen, inspired by the powerful arguments
adduced by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in the course of His addresses in support
of the Divinity of Muḥammad, has proclaimed her faith, and borne
public testimony to the Divine origin of the Prophet of Islám.
Already a President of the United States, imbibing some of the principles
so clearly enunciated by Him in His discourses, has incorporated
them in a Peace Program which stands out as the boldest and noblest
proposal yet made for the well-being and security of mankind. And
already, alas! a world which proved deaf to His warnings and refused
to heed His summons has plunged itself into two global wars of
unprecedented severity, the repercussions of which none as yet can
even dimly visualize.
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