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The Promise of World Peace |
The Great Peace towards which people of good will throughout the centuries
have inclined their hearts, of which seers and poets for countless generations
have expressed their vision, and for which from age to age the sacred scriptures
of mankind have constantly held the promise, is now at long last within the reach
of the nations. For the first time in history it is possible for everyone to view
the entire planet, with all its myriad diversified peoples, in one perspective.
World peace is not only possible but inevitable. It is the next stage in the
evolution of this planet—in the words of one great thinker, “the planetization
of mankind”.
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Whether peace is to be reached only after unimaginable horrors precipitated
by humanity’s stubborn clinging to old patterns of behaviour, or is to be embraced
now by an act of consultative will, is the choice before all who inhabit the
earth. At this critical juncture when the intractable problems confronting
nations have been fused into one common concern for the whole world, failure
to stem the tide of conflict and disorder would be unconscionably irresponsible.
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Among the favourable signs are the steadily growing strength of the steps
towards world order taken initially near the beginning of this century in the
creation of the League of Nations, succeeded by the more broadly based United
Nations Organization; the achievement since the Second World War of independence
by the majority of all the nations on earth, indicating the completion of the
process of nation building, and the involvement of these fledgling nations
with older ones in matters of mutual concern; the consequent vast increase in
co-operation among hitherto isolated and antagonistic peoples and groups in
international undertakings in the scientific, educational, legal, economic and
cultural fields; the rise in recent decades of an unprecedented number of international humanitarian organizations; the spread of women’s and youth movements
calling for an end to war; and the spontaneous spawning of widening networks of
ordinary people seeking understanding through personal communication.
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The scientific and technological advances occurring in this unusually
blessed century portend a great surge forward in the social evolution of the
planet, and indicate the means by which the practical problems of humanity may
be solved. They provide, indeed, the very means for the administration of the
complex life of a united world. Yet barriers persist. Doubts, misconceptions,
prejudices, suspicions and narrow self-interest beset nations and peoples in
their relations one to another.
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“The winds of despair”, Bahá’u’lláh wrote, “are, alas, blowing from every
direction, and the strife that divides and afflicts the human race is daily
increasing. The signs of impending convulsions and chaos can now be discerned,
inasmuch as the prevailing order appears to be lamentably defective.” This
prophetic judgement has been amply confirmed by the common experience of
humanity. Flaws in the prevailing order are conspicuous in the inability of
sovereign states organized as United Nations to exorcize the spectre of war,
the threatened collapse of the international economic order, the spread of
anarchy and terrorism, and the intense suffering which these and other afflictions
are causing to increasing millions. Indeed, so much have aggression and conflict
come to characterize our social, economic and religious systems, that many have
succumbed to the view that such behaviour is intrinsic to human nature and
therefore ineradicable.
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With the entrenchment of this view, a paralyzing contradiction has developed
in human affairs. On the one hand, people of all nations proclaim not only their
readiness but their longing for peace and harmony, for an end to the harrowing
apprehensions tormenting their daily lives. On the other, uncritical assent is
given to the proposition that human beings are incorrigibly selfish and aggressive
and thus incapable of erecting a social system at once progressive and peaceful,
dynamic and harmonious, a system giving free play to individual creativity and
initiative but based on co-operation and reciprocity.
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As the need for peace becomes more urgent, this fundamental contradiction,
which hinders its realization, demands a reassessment of the assumptions upon
which the commonly held view of mankind’s historical predicament is based. Dispassionately examined, the evidence reveals that such conduct, far from expressing
man’s true self, represents a distortion of the human spirit. Satisfaction on
this point will enable all people to set in motion constructive social forces
which, because they are consistent with human nature, will encourage harmony and
co-operation instead of war and conflict.
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To choose such a course is not to deny humanity’s past but to understand it.
The Bahá’í Faith regards the current world confusion and calamitous condition in
human affairs as a natural phase in an organic process leading ultimately and
irresistibly to the unification of the human race in a single social order whose
boundaries are those of the planet. The human race, as a distinct, organic unit,
has passed through evolutionary stages analogous to the stages of infancy and
childhood in the lives of its individual members, and is now in the culminating
period of its turbulent adolescence approaching its long-awaited coming of age.
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A candid acknowledgement that prejudice, war and exploitation have been the
expression of immature stages in a vast historical process and that the human
race is today experiencing the unavoidable tumult which marks its collective
coming of age is not a reason for despair but a prerequisite to undertaking the
stupendous enterprise of building a peaceful world. That such an enterprise is
possible, that the necessary constructive forces do exist, that unifying social
structures can be erected, is the theme we urge you to examine.
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Whatever suffering and turmoil the years immediately ahead may hold,
however dark the immediate circumstances, the Bahá’í community believes that
humanity can confront this supreme trial with confidence in its ultimate outcome. Far from signalizing the end of civilization, the convulsive changes
towards which humanity is being ever more rapidly impelled will serve to
release the “potentialities inherent in the station of man” and reveal “the
full measure of his destiny on earth, the innate excellence of his reality”.
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