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[Pages 81–100] 81 |
of redemption, teaching them how to acquire spiritual
qualities and attributes well-pleasing to God. Had the
people of Israel believed in that beauteous Countenance,
they would have girded themselves to serve and
obey Him heart and soul, and through the quickening
fragrance of His Spirit they would have regained their
lost vitality and gone on to new victories.
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Alas, of what avail was it; they turned away and opposed
Him. They rose up and tormented that Source
of Divine knowledge, that Point where the Revelation
had come down—all except for a handful who, turning
their faces toward God, were cleansed of the stain of
this world and found their way to the heights of the
placeless Realm. They inflicted every agony on that
Wellspring of grace until it became impossible for
Him to live in the towns, and still He lifted up the
flag of salvation and solidly established the fundamentals
of human righteousness, that essential basis of true
civilization.
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In the fifth chapter of Matthew beginning with the
thirty-seventh verse He counsels: “Resist not evil and
injury with its like; but whosoever shall smite thee on
thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.” And further,
from the forty-third verse: “Ye have heard that it
hath been said, ‘Thou shalt love thy neighbor, and
thou shalt not vex thine enemy with enmity.’
1
But I
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say unto you, love your enemies, bless them that curse
you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them
which despitefully use you, and persecute you; that ye
may be the children of your Father which is in heaven:
for He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the
good, and sendeth down the rain of His mercy on the
just and on the unjust. For if ye love them which love
you, what reward have ye? Do not even the publicans
the same?”
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Jesus, then, founded the sacred Law on a basis of
moral character and complete spirituality, and for those
who believed in Him He delineated a special way of
life which constitutes the highest type of action on
earth. And while those emblems of redemption were to
outward seeming abandoned to the malevolence and
persecution of their tormentors, in reality they had been
delivered out of the hopeless darkness which encompassed
the Jews and they shone forth in everlasting
glory at the dawn of that new day.
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That mighty Jewish nation toppled and crumbled
away, but those few souls who sought shelter beneath
83
the Messianic Tree transformed all human life. At that
time the peoples of the world were utterly ignorant,
fanatical and idolatrous. Only a small group of Jews
professed belief in the oneness of God and they were
wretched outcasts. These holy Christian souls now
stood up to promulgate a Cause which was diametrically
opposed and repugnant to the beliefs of the entire
human race. The kings of four out of the world’s five
continents inexorably resolved to wipe out the followers
of Christ, and nevertheless in the end most of them set
about promoting the Faith of God with their whole
hearts; all the nations of Europe, many of the peoples
of Asia and Africa, and some of the inhabitants of the
islands of the Pacific, were gathered into the shelter of
the oneness of God.
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Consider whether there exists anywhere in creation
a principle mightier in every sense than religion, or
whether any conceivable power is more pervasive than
the various Divine Faiths, or whether any agency can
bring about real love and fellowship and union among
all peoples as can belief in an almighty and all-knowing
God, or whether except for the laws of God there
has been any evidence of an instrumentality for educating
all mankind in every phase of righteousness.
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Those qualities which the philosophers attained
when they had reached the very heights of their wisdom,
those noble human attributes which characterized
them at the peak of their perfection, would be exemplified
by the believers as soon as they accepted the
84
Faith. Observe how those souls who drank the living
waters of redemption at the gracious hands of Jesus,
the Spirit of God, and came into the sheltering shade
of the Gospel, attained to such a high plane of moral
conduct that Galen, the celebrated physician, although
not himself a Christian, in his summary of Plato’s
Republic extolled their actions. A literal translation of
his words is as follows:
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“The generality of mankind are unable to grasp a
sequence of logical arguments. For this reason they
stand in need of symbols and parables telling of rewards
and punishments in the next world. A confirmatory
evidence of this is that today we observe a people
called Christians, who believe devoutly in rewards and
punishments in a future state. This group show forth
excellent actions, similar to the actions of an individual
who is a true philosopher. For example, we all see
with our own eyes that they have no fear of death, and
their passion for justice and fair-dealing is so great that
they should be considered true philosophers.”
2
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The station of a philosopher, in that age and in the
mind of Galen, was superior to any other station in the
world. Consider then how the enlightening and spiritualizing
power of divine religions impels the believers
to such heights of perfection that a philosopher like
85
Galen, not himself a Christian, offers such testimony.
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One demonstration of the excellent character of the
Christians in those days was their dedication to charity
and good works, and the fact that they founded hospitals
and philanthropic institutions. For example, the
first person to establish public clinics throughout the
Roman Empire where the poor, the injured and the
helpless received medical care, was the Emperor Constantine.
This great king was the first Roman ruler to
champion the Cause of Christ. He spared no efforts,
dedicating his life to the promotion of the principles
of the Gospel, and he solidly established the Roman
government, which in reality had been nothing but a
system of unrelieved oppression, on moderation and
justice. His blessed name shines out across the dawn of
history like the morning star, and his rank and fame
among the world’s noblest and most highly civilized is
still on the tongues of Christians of all denominations.
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What a firm foundation of excellent character was
laid down in those days, thanks to the training of holy
souls who arose to promote the teachings of the Gospel.
How many primary schools, colleges, hospitals, were
established, and institutions where fatherless and indigent
children received their education. How many
were the individuals who sacrificed their own personal
advantages and “out of desire to please the Lord”
3
devoted
the days of their lives to teaching the masses.
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When, however, the time approached for the effulgent
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beauty of Muḥammad to dawn upon the world,
the control of Christian affairs passed into the hands
of ignorant priests. Those heavenly breezes, soft-flowing
from the regions of Divine grace, died away, and
the laws of the great Evangel, the rock-foundation on
which the civilization of the world was based, turned
barren of results, this out of misuse and because of the
conduct of persons who, seemingly fair, were yet inwardly
foul.
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The noted historians of Europe, in describing the
conditions, manners, politics, learning and culture, in
all their aspects, of early, medieval and modern times,
unanimously record that during the ten centuries constituting
the Middle Ages, from the beginning of the
sixth century of the Christian era till the close of the
fifteenth, Europe was in every respect and to an extreme
degree, barbaric and dark. The principal cause of
this was that the monks, referred to by European peoples
as spiritual and religious leaders, had given up the
abiding glory that comes from obedience to the sacred
commandments and heavenly teachings of the Gospel,
and had joined forces with the presumptuous and tyrannical
rulers of the temporal governments of those
times. They had turned their eyes away from everlasting
glory, and were devoting all their efforts to the
furtherance of their mutual worldly interests and passing
and perishable advantages. Ultimately things
reached a point where the masses were hopeless prisoners
in the hands of these two groups, and all this
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brought down in ruins the whole structure of the religion,
culture, welfare and civilization of the peoples
of Europe.
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When the unworthy acts and thoughts and the discreditable
purposes of the leaders had stilled the sweet
savors of the Spirit of God (Jesus) and they ceased to
stream across the world, and the darkness of ignorance
and bigotry and of actions that were displeasing to God,
encompassed the earth, then the dawn of hope shone
out and the Divine spring drew on; a cloud of mercy
overspread the world, and out of the regions of grace
the fecund winds began to blow. In the sign of Muḥammad,
the Sun of Truth rose over Yathrib (Medina)
and the Ḥijáz and cast across the universe the lights of
eternal glory. Then the earth of human potentialities
was transformed, and the words “The earth shall shine
with the light of her Lord,”
4
were fulfilled. The old
world turned new again, and its dead body rose into
abundant life. Then tyranny and ignorance were overthrown,
and towering palaces of knowledge and justice
were reared in their place. A sea of enlightenment
thundered, and science cast down its rays. The savage
peoples of the Ḥijáz, before that Flame of supreme
Prophethood was lit in the lamp of Mecca, were the
most brutish and benighted of all the peoples of the
earth. In all the histories, their depraved and vicious
practices, their ferocity and their constant feuds, are a
matter of record. In those days the civilized peoples of
88
the world did not even consider the Arab tribes of
Mecca and Medina as human beings. And yet, after
the Light of the World rose over them, they were—because of the education bestowed on them by that
Mine of perfections, that Focal Center of Revelation,
and the blessings vouchsafed by the Divine Law—within a brief interval gathered into the shelter of the
principle of Divine oneness. This brutish people then
attained such a high degree of human perfection and
civilization that all their contemporaries marveled at
them. Those very peoples who had always mocked the
Arabs and held them up to ridicule as a breed devoid
of judgment, now eagerly sought them out, visiting
their countries to acquire enlightenment and culture,
technical skills, statecraft, arts and sciences.
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Observe the influence on material situations of that
training which is inculcated by the true Educator. Here
were tribes so benighted and untamed that during the
period of the Jáhilíyyih they would bury their seven-year-old
daughters alive—an act which even an animal,
let alone a human being, would hate and shrink from
but which they in their extreme degradation considered
the ultimate expression of honor and devotion to principle—and this darkened people, thanks to the manifest
teachings of that great Personage, advanced to such a
degree that after they conquered Egypt, Syria and its
capital Damascus, Chaldea, Mesopotamia and Írán,
they came to administer single-handedly whatever matters
89
were of major importance in four main regions of
the globe.
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The Arabs then excelled all the peoples of the world
in science and the arts, in industry and invention, in
philosophy, government and moral character. And
truly, the rise of this brutish and despicable element,
in such a short interval, to the supreme heights of human
perfection, is the greatest demonstration of the
rightfulness of the Lord Muḥammad’s Prophethood.
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In the early ages of Islám the peoples of Europe acquired
the sciences and arts of civilization from Islám
as practiced by the inhabitants of Andalusia. A careful
and thorough investigation of the historical record will
establish the fact that the major part of the civilization
of Europe is derived from Islám; for all the writings of
Muslim scholars and divines and philosophers were
gradually collected in Europe and were with the most
painstaking care weighed and debated at academic
gatherings and in the centers of learning, after which
their valued contents would be put to use. Today, numerous
copies of the works of Muslim scholars which
are not to be found in Islamic countries, are available
in the libraries of Europe. Furthermore, the laws and
principles current in all European countries are derived
to a considerable degree and indeed virtually in their
entirety from the works on jurisprudence and the legal
decision of Muslim theologians. Were it not for the
fear of unduly lengthening the present text, We would
cite these borrowings one by one.
90
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The beginnings of European civilization date from
the seventh century of the Muslim era. The particulars
were these: toward the end of the fifth century of the
hegira, the Pope or Head of Christendom set up a great
hue and cry over the fact that places sacred to the
Christians, such as Jerusalem, Bethlehem and Nazareth,
had fallen under Muslim rule, and he stirred up
the kings and the commoners of Europe to undertake
what he considered a holy war. His impassioned outcry
waxed so loud that all the countries of Europe responded,
and crusading kings at the head of innumerable
hosts passed over the Sea of Marmara and made
their way to the continent of Asia. In those days the
Fátimid caliphs ruled over Egypt and some countries
of the West, and most of the time the kings of Syria,
that is the Saljúqs, were subject to them as well. Briefly,
the kings of the West with their unnumbered armies
fell upon Syria and Egypt, and there was continuous
warfare between the Syrian rulers and those of Europe
for a period of two hundred and three years. Reinforcements
were always coming in from Europe, and time
and time again the Western rulers stormed and took
over every castle in Syria, and as often, the kings of
Islám delivered them out of their hands. Finally Saladin,
in the year 693 A.H., drove the European kings
and their armies out of Egypt and off the Syrian coast.
Hopelessly beaten, they went back to Europe. In the
course of these wars of the Crusades, millions of human
beings perished. To sum up, from 490 A.H. until
91
693, kings, commanders and other European leaders
continually came and went between Egypt, Syria and
the West, and when in the end they all returned home,
they introduced into Europe whatever they had observed
over two hundred and odd years in Muslim
countries as to government, social development and
learning, colleges, schools and the refinements of living.
The civilization of Europe dates from that time.
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O people of Persia! How long will your torpor
and lethargy last? You were once the lords
of the whole earth; the world was at your
beck and call. How is it that your glory has lapsed and
you have fallen from favor now, and crept away into
some corner of oblivion? You were the fountainhead of
learning, the unfailing spring of light for all the earth,
how is it that you are withered now, and quenched,
and faint of heart? You who once lit the world, how is
it that you lurk, inert, bemused, in darkness now?
Open your mind’s eye, see your great and present need.
Rise up and struggle, seek education, seek enlightenment.
Is it meet that a foreign people should receive
from your own forbears its culture and its knowledge,
and that you, their blood, their rightful heirs, should
go without? How does it seem, when your neighbors
92
are at work by day and night with their whole hearts,
providing for their advancement, their honor and prosperity,
that you, in your ignorant fanaticism, are busy
only with your quarrels and antipathies, your indulgences
and appetites and empty dreams? Is it commendable
that you should waste and fritter away in
apathy the brilliance that is your birthright, your native
competence, your inborn understanding? Again, We
have digressed from Our theme.
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Those European intellectuals who are well-informed
as to the facts of Europe’s past,
and are characterized by truthfulness and a
sense of justice, unanimously acknowledge that in
every particular the basic elements of their civilization
are derived from Islám. For example Draper,
5
the well-known
93
French authority, a writer whose accuracy, ability
and learning are attested by all European scholars,
in one of his best-known works, The Intellectual Development
of Europe, has written a detailed account
in this connection, that is, with reference to the derivation
by the peoples of Europe of the fundamentals of
civilization and the bases of progress and well-being
from Islám. His account is exhaustive, and a translation
here would unduly lengthen out the present work
and would indeed be irrelevant to Our purpose. If
further details are desired the reader may refer to that
text.
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In essence, the author shows how the totality of
Europe’s civilization—its laws, principles, institutions,
its sciences, philosophies, varied learning, its civilized
manners and customs, its literature, art and industry,
its organization, its discipline, its behavior, its commendable
character traits, and even many of the words
94
current in the French language, derives from the Arabs.
One by one, he investigates each of these elements in
detail, even giving the period when each was brought
over from Islám. He describes as well the arrival of
the Arabs in the West, in what is now Spain, and how
in a short time they established a well-developed civilization
there, and to what a high degree of excellence
their administrative system and scholarship attained,
and how solidly founded and well regulated were their
schools and colleges, where sciences and philosophy,
arts and crafts, were taught; what a high level of leadership
they achieved in the arts of civilization and how
many were the children of Europe’s leading families
who were sent to attend the schools of Cordova and
Granada, Seville and Toledo to acquire the sciences
and arts of civilized life. He even records that a European
named Gerbert came to the West and enrolled at
the University of Cordova in Arab territory, studied
arts and sciences there, and after his return to Europe
achieved such prominence that ultimately he was elevated
to the leadership of the Catholic Church and
became the Pope.
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The purpose of these references is to establish the
fact that the religions of God are the true source of the
spiritual and material perfections of man, and the
fountainhead for all mankind of enlightenment and
beneficial knowledge. If one observes the matter justly
it will be found that all the laws of politics are contained
in these few and holy words:
95
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“And they enjoin what is just, and forbid what is
unjust, and speed on in good works. These are of the
righteous.”
6
And again: “that there may be among
you a people who invite to the good, and enjoin the
just, and forbid the wrong. These are they with whom
it shall be well.”
7
And further: “Verily, God enjoineth
justice and the doing of good … and He forbiddeth
wickedness and oppression. He warneth you that
haply ye may be mindful.”
8
And yet again, of the
civilizing of human behavior: “Make due allowances;
and enjoin what is just, and withdraw from the ignorant.”
9
And likewise: “…who master their anger,
and forgive others! God loveth the doers of good.”
10
And again: “There is no righteousness in turning your
faces toward the East or the West, but he is righteous
who believeth in God, and the last day, and the angels,
and the Scriptures, and the Prophets; who for the love
of God disburseth his wealth to his kindred, and to
orphans, and the needy and the wayfarer, and those
who ask, and for ransom; who observeth prayer, and
payeth the legal alms, and who is of those who perform
their covenant when they have covenanted, and are
patient under ills and hardships, and in time of
trouble: these are they who are just, and these are they
96
who fear the Lord.”
11
And yet further: “They prefer
them before themselves, though poverty be their own
lot.”
12
See how these few sacred verses encompass the
highest levels and innermost meanings of civilization
and embody all the excellencies of human character.
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Alas, of what avail is it. When the weapons are in
cowards’ hands, no man’s life and property are safe,
and thieves only grow the stronger. When, in the same
way, a far-from-perfect priesthood acquire control of
affairs, they come down like a massive curtain between
the people and the light of Faith.
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Sincerity is the foundation-stone of faith. That is, a
religious individual must disregard his personal desires
and seek in whatever way he can wholeheartedly to
serve the public interest; and it is impossible for a
human being to turn aside from his own selfish advantages
and sacrifice his own good for the good of the
community except through true religious faith. For
self-love is kneaded into the very clay of man, and it
is not possible that, without any hope of a substantial
reward, he should neglect his own present material
97
good. That individual, however, who puts his faith in
God and believes in the words of God—because he is
promised and certain of a plentiful reward in the next
life, and because worldly benefits as compared to the
abiding joy and glory of future planes of existence are
nothing to him—will for the sake of God abandon his
own peace and profit and will freely consecrate his
heart and soul to the common good. “A man, too, there
is who selleth his very self out of desire to please
God.”
13
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There are some who imagine that an innate sense of
human dignity will prevent man from committing evil
actions and insure his spiritual and material perfection.
That is, that an individual who is characterized with
natural intelligence, high resolve, and a driving zeal,
will, without any consideration for the severe punishments
consequent on evil acts, or for the great rewards
of righteousness, instinctively refrain from inflicting
harm on his fellow men and will hunger and thirst to
do good. And yet, if we ponder the lessons of history
it will become evident that this very sense of honor
and dignity is itself one of the bounties deriving from
the instructions of the Prophets of God. We also observe
in infants the signs of aggression and lawlessness,
and that if a child is deprived of a teacher’s instructions
his undesirable qualities increase from one moment to
the next. It is therefore clear that the emergence of this
natural sense of human dignity and honor is the result
98
of education. Secondly, even if we grant for the sake
of the argument that instinctive intelligence and an
innate moral quality would prevent wrongdoing, it is
obvious that individuals so characterized are as rare as
the philosopher’s stone. An assumption of this sort cannot
be validated by mere words, it must be supported
by the facts. Let us see what power in creation impels
the masses toward righteous aims and deeds!
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Universal benefits derive from the grace of the Divine
religions, for they lead their true followers to sincerity
of intent, to high purpose, to purity and spotless
honor, to surpassing kindness and compassion, to the
keeping of their covenants when they have covenanted,
to concern for the rights of others, to liberality, to justice
in every aspect of life, to humanity and philanthropy,
to valor and to unflagging efforts in the service
of mankind. It is religion, to sum up, which produces
all human virtues, and it is these virtues which are the
bright candles of civilization. If a man is not characterized
by these excellent qualities, it is certain that he has
never attained to so much as a drop out of the fathomless
river of the waters of life that flows through the
teachings of the Holy Books, nor caught the faintest
breath of the fragrant breezes that blow from the gardens
of God; for nothing on earth can be demonstrated
99
by words alone, and every level of existence is known
by its signs and symbols, and every degree in man’s development
has its identifying mark.
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The purpose of these statements is to make it
abundantly clear that the Divine religions, the holy
precepts, the heavenly teachings, are the unassailable
basis of human happiness, and that the peoples of the
world can hope for no real relief or deliverance without
this one great remedy. This panacea must, however, be
administered by a wise and skilled physician, for in the
hands of an incompetent all the cures that the Lord of
men has ever created to heal men’s ills could produce
no health, and would on the contrary only destroy the
helpless and burden the hearts of the already afflicted.
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That Source of Divine wisdom, that Manifestation
of Universal Prophethood (Muḥammad), encouraging
mankind to acquire sciences and arts and similar advantages
has commanded them to seek these even in
the furthermost reaches of China; yet the incompetent
and caviling doctors forbid this, offering as their justification
the saying, “He who imitates a people is one
of them.” They have not even grasped what is meant
by the “imitation” referred to, nor do they know that
the Divine religions enjoin upon and encourage all the
faithful to adopt such principles as will conduce to
continuous improvements, and to acquire from other
peoples sciences and arts. Whoever expresses himself
to the contrary has never drunk of the nectar of knowledge
100
and is astray in his own ignorance, groping after
the mirage of his desires.
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Judge this aright: which one of these modern developments,
whether in themselves or in their application,
is contrary to the Divine commandments? If they mean
the establishment of parliaments, these are enjoined by
the very text of the holy verse: “and whose affairs are
guided by mutual counsel.”
14
And again, addressing
the Dayspring of all knowledge, the Source of perfection
(Muḥammad), in spite of His being in possession
of universal wisdom, the words are: “and consult them
in the affair.”
15
In view of this how can the question
of mutual consultation be in conflict with the religious
Law? The great advantages of consultation can be established
by logical arguments as well.
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Can they say that it would be contrary to the laws of
God to make a death sentence conditional on the most
careful investigations, on the sanction of numerous
bodies, on legal proof and the royal order? Can they
claim that what went on under the previous government
was in conformity with the Qur’án? For example,
in the days when Ḥájí Mírzá Aqásí was Prime Minister,
it was heard from many sources that the governor
of Gulpaygán seized thirteen defenseless bailiffs of
that region, all of them of holy lineage, all of them
guiltless, and without a trial, and without obtaining
any higher sanction, beheaded them in a single hour.
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1. | The King James Bible reads: “Ye have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy.” Scholars object to this reading because it is contrary to the known Law as set forth in Leviticus 19:18, Exodus 23:4–5, Proverbs 25:21, the Talmud, etc. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Cf. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, Some Answered Questions, ch. LXXXIV, and Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 385. See also Galen on Jews and Christians by Richard Walzer, Oxford University Press, 1949, p. 15. The author states that Galen’s summary here referred to is lost, being preserved only in Arabic quotations. [ Back To Reference] |
3. | From Qur’án 4:114; 2:207, etc [ Back To Reference] |
4. | Qur’án 39:69. [ Back To Reference] |
5. |
The Persian text transliterates this author’s name as “Draybár” and titles his work The Progress of Peoples. The reference is apparently to John William Draper, 1811–1882, celebrated chemist and widely-translated historian. Detailed material on Muslim contributions to the West, and on Gerbert (Pope Sylvester II) appears in the second volume of the work cited. Of some of Europe’s systematically unacknowledged obligations to Islám the author writes: “Injustice founded on religious rancour and national conceit cannot be perpetuated for ever.” (Vol. II, p. 42, Rev. ed.) The Dictionary of American Biography states that Draper’s father was a Roman Catholic who assumed the name John Christopher Draper when disowned by his family for becoming a Methodist, and that his real name is unknown. The translator is indebted to Mr. Paul North Rice, Chief of the New York Public Library’s Reference Department, for the information that available data on Draper’s family history and nationality are in conflict; The Drapers in America by Thomas Waln-Morgan (1892) states that Draper’s father was born in London, while Albert E. Henschel in “Centenary of John William Draper” (New York University “Colonnade,” June, 1911) has the following: “If there be among us any who trace their lineage to the sunny fields of Italy, they may feel a just pride in John William Draper, for his father, John C. Draper, was an Italian by birth…” The translator’s thanks are also due to Madame Laura Dreyfus-Barney for investigations in connection with this passage at the Library of Congress and the Bibliothèque Nationale. [ Back To Reference] |
6. | Qur’án 3:110. [ Back To Reference] |
7. | Qur’án 3:100. [ Back To Reference] |
8. | Qur’án 16:92. [ Back To Reference] |
9. | Qur’án 7:198. [ Back To Reference] |
10. | Qur’án 3:128. [ Back To Reference] |
11. | Qur’án 2:172. [ Back To Reference] |
12. | Qur’án 59:9. [ Back To Reference] |
13. | Qur’án 2:203. [ Back To Reference] |
14. | Qur’án 42:36. [ Back To Reference] |
15. | Qur’án 3:153. [ Back To Reference] |