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An appreciation of the place of the Guardianship
in Bahá’í history must begin with an objective consideration of the
circumstances in which Shoghi Effendi’s mission had to be carried
out. Particularly important is the fact that the first half of this ministry
unfolded between wars, a period marked by deepening uncertainty
and anxiety about all aspects of human affairs. On the one hand,
significant advances had been made in overcoming barriers between nations
and classes; on the other, political impotence and a resulting economic
paralysis greatly handicapped efforts to take advantage of these openings.
There was everywhere a sense that some fundamental redefinition of the
nature of society and the role its institutions should play was urgently
needed—a redefinition, indeed, of the purpose of human life itself.
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In important respects, humanity found itself at the end of the
first world war able to explore possibilities never before imagined.
Throughout Europe and the Near East the absolutist systems that had
been among the most powerful barriers to unity had been swept away. To
a great extent, too, fossilized religious dogmas that had lent moral
endorsement to the forces of conflict and alienation were everywhere in
question. Former subject peoples were free to consider plans for their collective
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futures and to assume responsibility for their relationships with one
another through the instrumentality of the new nation-states created by
the Versailles settlement. The same ingenuity that had gone into
producing weapons of destruction was being turned to the challenging, but
rewarding, tasks of economic expansion. Out of the darkest days of the war
had come poignant stories, such as the impulse that had briefly moved
British and German soldiers to leave the slaughterhouse of the trenches
to commemorate together the birth of Christ, providing a flickering
glimpse of the oneness of the human race which the Master had tirelessly
proclaimed in His journeys across that same
continent. Most important of all, an extraordinary effort of imagination had brought the unification
of humanity one immense step forward. The world’s leaders, however
reluctantly, had created an international consultative system which,
though crippled by vested interests, gave the ideal of international order its
first suggestion of shape and structure.
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The post-war awakening expressed itself world-wide. Under the
leadership of Sun Yat-sen, the Chinese people had already thrown off
the decadent imperial regime that had compromised the country’s
well-being, and were seeking to lay foundations of a rebirth of that
country’s greatness. Throughout Latin America, despite terrible and repeated
setbacks, popular movements were likewise struggling to gain control
over their countries’ destinies and the use of their continent’s immense
natural resources. In India, one of the century’s most remarkable
figures, Mohandas Gandhi, embarked on an enterprise that would not only
revolutionize the fortunes of his country, but also demonstrate conclusively
to the world what spiritual force can achieve. Africa was still awaiting
its moment of destiny, as were the inhabitants of other colonial lands,
but for anyone with eyes to see, a process of change had been set in
motion that could ultimately not be suppressed, because it represented the
universal yearnings of humankind.
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These advances, however encouraging, could not conceal the
historic tragedy that had occurred. During the second half of the
nineteenth century, the proclamation of the Day of God addressed by
Bahá’u’lláh to the rulers of His day, in whose hands lay the destiny of
humankind, had been either rejected or ignored by its recipients in both East and
45
West. Reflection on so great a breach of faith throws into sobering
perspective the subsequent response that had met the mission
of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá to the West. However much one may rejoice in the
praise poured on the Master from every quarter, the immediate results of
His efforts represented yet another immense moral failure on the part of
a considerable portion of humankind and of its leadership. The
message that had been suppressed in the East was essentially ignored by a
Western world which had proceeded down the path of ruin long prepared for it
by overweening self-satisfaction, leading finally to the betrayal of the
ideal embodied in the League of Nations.
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In consequence, the two decades immediately after Shoghi
Effendi assumed his responsibility for the vindication of the Cause of God
were a period of deepening gloom throughout the Western world,
which seemed to reflect a massive setback in the process of integration and
enlightenment so confidently proclaimed by the Master. It was as
if political, social and economic life had fallen into a kind of limbo.
Grave doubts developed about the capacity of the liberal democratic tradition
to cope with the problems of the times; indeed, in a number of
European countries, governments inspired by such principles were replaced
by authoritarian regimes. Soon, the economic crash of 1929 led to a
world-wide reduction in material well-being, with all the further moral
and psychological insecurities that resulted.
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An appreciation of these circumstances helps us to understand
the magnitude of the challenge facing Shoghi Effendi at the outset of
his ministry. So far as the objective condition of humankind, as he
encountered it, was concerned, there was nothing that would have
inspired confidence that the vision of a new world bequeathed him by the
Founders of the Bahá’í Cause could be significantly advanced during
whatever span of years might be allowed him.
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Nor did the instrument available to him appear to possess the
strength, the resilience or the sophistication his task required. In 1923, when
Shoghi Effendi was eventually able to assume full direction of the Cause, the
core of Bahá’u’lláh’s followers consisted of the body of believers in Iran,
of whose number not even a reliable estimate could have then been
produced. Denied most of the means necessary to their promotion of the Cause, and
46
severely limited in the material resources at their disposal, the Iranian
community was hedged about by constant harassment. In North
America, charged with the daunting responsibilities of the Divine Plan, small
communities of believers found themselves struggling with the
simple challenges of making a livelihood for themselves and their families as
the economic crisis steadily deepened. In Europe, Australasia and the Far
East, even smaller Bahá’í groups kept the flame of the Faith alive, as did
isolated groups, families and individuals scattered throughout the rest of the
world. Literature, even in English, was inadequate, and the task of translating
the Writings into other major languages and of finding the funds to
publish them represented an almost impossible burden.
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Though the vision communicated by the Master burned as brightly
as ever, the means at their disposal must have appeared to Bahá’ís as
pitifully inadequate in the face of the conditions prevailing everywhere. The
hulking black foundation of the future Mother Temple of the West, rising
over the lake front north of Chicago, seemed to mock the brilliant
conception that had dazzled the architectural world only a few years before.
In Baghdad, the "Most Holy House", designated by Bahá’u’lláh as the
focal centre of Bahá’í pilgrimage, had been seized by opponents of the Faith.
In the Holy Land itself, the Mansion of Bahá’u’lláh was falling into ruin as
a result of neglect by the Covenant-breakers who occupied it, and the
Shrine housing the precious remains of both the Báb and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá had
progressed no further than the simple stone structure raised by the Master.
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A series of exploratory consultations with leading Bahá’ís made
it clear to the Guardian that even a formal discussion with qualified
believers about the creation of an international secretariat would be not
only useless, but probably counterproductive. It was alone, therefore,
that Shoghi Effendi set out on the task of propelling forward the vast
enterprise entrusted to his hands. How completely alone he was is
almost impossible for the present generation of Bahá’ís to grasp; to the
extent one does grasp it, the realization is acutely painful.
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Initially, the Guardian assumed that the members of the Master’s
extended family, whose distinguished lineage brought them
immense respect from Bahá’ís everywhere, would welcome the opportunity to
assist him in realizing the purpose that the Master’s Will had set out in
47
language so imperative and moving. Accordingly, he invited his
brothers, his cousins and one of his sisters, whose education made them
qualified for the purpose, to provide the administrative support that the
demanding work of the Guardianship required. Tragically, as time passed,
one after another of these persons proved dissatisfied with the supporting
role thus assigned and careless in the discharge of its functions. Far
more seriously, Shoghi Effendi found himself facing a situation in which
the authority conferred on him, although expressed in
uncompromising terms in the Will and Testament, was seen by those related to him as
relatively nominal in character. These individuals preferred to regard
the leadership of the Faith as essentially a family affair in which great
weight should be placed on the views of senior figures among them, who
were supposedly qualified to assume such a prerogative. Beginning
with demonstrations of sullen resistance, the situation steadily deteriorated
to a point where the children and grandchildren of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá felt free
to disagree with His appointed successor and to disobey his instructions.
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one must understand the old story of Cain and Abel, the story
of family jealousies which, like a sombre thread in the fabric of
history, runs through all its epochs and can be traced in all its events.
The weakness of the human heart, which so often attaches itself to
an unworthy object, the weakness of the human mind, prone to
conceit and self-assurance in personal opinions, involve people in
a welter of emotions that blind their judgment and lead them
far astray
. Even though this phenomenon of
Covenant-breaking seems to be an inherent aspect of religion this does not mean it
produces no damaging effect on the Cause.
Above all it does
not mean that a devastating effect is not produced on the Centre of
the Covenant himself. Shoghi Effendi’s whole life was darkened by
the vicious personal attacks made upon him.
1
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This sombre background casts in an all the more brilliant light
the achievements of the Greatest Holy Leaf, sister of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and last
48
survivor of the Faith’s Heroic Age. Bahíyyih
Khánum played a vital role in guarding the interests of the Cause after the Master’s death and
became Shoghi Effendi’s sole effective support. Her fidelity evoked from his
pen perhaps the most deeply moving passages he was ever to write. The
apostrophe he addressed to her after her passing in 1932 was set in a letter
to the Bahá’ís "throughout the West", which itself read in part:
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Only future generations and pens abler than mine can, and
will, pay a worthy tribute to the towering grandeur of her spiritual
life, to the unique part she played throughout the tumultuous stages
of Bahá’í history, to the expressions of unqualified praise that
have streamed from the pen of both Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá,
the Center of His covenant, though unrecorded, and in the main
unsuspected by the mass of her passionate admirers in East and
West, the share she has had in influencing the course of some of the
chief events in the annals of the Faith, the sufferings she bore, the
sacrifices she made, the rare gifts of unfailing sympathy she so
strikingly displayed—these, and many others stand so inextricably
interwoven with the fabric of the Cause itself that no future historian of
the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh can afford to ignore or
minimize.
Which of the blessings am I to recount, which in her unfailing solicitude
she showered upon me, in the most critical and agitated hours of
my life? To me, standing in so dire a need of the vitalizing grace of
God, she was the living symbol of many an attribute I had learned to
admire in ‘Abdu’l-Bahá.
2
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For long years, the Guardian felt that the protection of the
Cause required him to maintain silence about the deteriorating situation
in the Holy Family. Only as opposition finally burst into acts of open
defiance, eventually involving the family in shameful collaboration
and even marriages with members of the very band of
Covenant-breakers against whose treachery the Will and Testament of the Master
had warned in vehement language, as well as with a local family deeply
hostile to the Cause, did Shoghi Effendi eventually feel compelled
to expose to the Bahá’í world the nature of the delinquencies with
which he was having to deal.
3
49
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This sad history is of importance to an understanding of the Cause
in the twentieth century not only because of what the Guardian called
the "havoc" it wreaked in the Holy Family, but because of the light it casts
on the challenges the Bahá’í community will increasingly face in the
years ahead, challenges predicted in explicit language by both the Master
and the Guardian. Apart from the insincerity that marked all too many
of them, the relatives of Shoghi Effendi demonstrated little or no
awareness of the spiritual nature of the role conferred on him in the Will
and Testament. That the Revelation of God to the age of humanity’s
maturity should have brought with it, as a central feature of its mission, an
authority essential for the restructuring of social order represented a
spiritual challenge they seemed unable, or perhaps never sought, to
understand. Their abandonment of the Guardian is a lesson that will remain
with posterity down through the centuries of the Bahá’í Dispensation.
The fate of this most privileged but unworthy company of human beings
underlines for all who read their story both the significance that
the Covenant of Bahá’u’lláh holds for the unification of humankind and
the uncompromising demands it makes on those who seek its shelter.
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In considering the events of the ministry of Shoghi Effendi,
Bahá’ís need to make the effort of imagination to see, through his eyes, the
nature of the mission laid on him. Our guide is the body of writings he
has left. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá had proclaimed in countless Tablets and talks the
pivotal principle of Bahá’u’lláh’s message: "In this wondrous Revelation,
this glorious century, the foundation of the Faith of God and the
distinguishing feature of His Law is the consciousness of the Oneness
of Mankind."
4
‘Abdu’l-Bahá had been equally emphatic in asserting, as
already noted, that the revolutionary changes taking place in every field
of human endeavour now made the unification of humanity a realistic
objective. It was this vision that, for the thirty-six years of his
Guardianship, provided the organizing force of Shoghi Effendi’s work. Its
implications were the theme of some of the most important messages he wrote.
50
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The principle of the Oneness of Mankind—the pivot round
which all the teachings of Bahá’u’lláh revolve—is no mere outburst of
ignorant emotionalism or an expression of vague and pious hope.
Its appeal is not to be merely identified with a reawakening of the
spirit of brotherhood and good-will among men, nor does it aim solely
at the fostering of harmonious coöperation among individual
peoples and nations. Its implications are deeper, its claims greater than
any which the Prophets of old were allowed to advance. Its message is
applicable not only to the individual, but concerns itself primarily
with the nature of those essential relationships that must bind all
the states and nations as members of one human family
. It implies
an organic change in the structure of present-day society, a change
such as the world has not experienced
. It calls for no less than the
reconstruction and the demilitarization of the whole civilized
world—a world organically unified in all the essential aspects of its life,
its political machinery, its spiritual aspiration, its trade and finance,
its script and language, and yet infinite in the diversity of the
national characteristics of its federated
units.
5
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A concept that showed itself strongly in the Guardian’s writings was
the organic metaphor in which Bahá’u’lláh, and subsequently
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, had captured the millennia-long process that has carried humanity to
this culminating point in its collective history. That image was the
analogy that can be drawn between, on the one hand, the stages by which
human society has been gradually organized and integrated, and, on the
other, the process by which each human being slowly develops out of the
limitations of infantile existence into the powers of maturity. It
appears prominently in several of Shoghi Effendi’s writings on the
transformation taking place in our time:
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The long ages of infancy and childhood, through which the
human race had to pass, have receded into the background.
Humanity is now experiencing the commotions invariably associated with the
51
most turbulent stage of its evolution, the stage of adolescence,
when the impetuosity of youth and its vehemence reach their climax,
and must gradually be superseded by the calmness, the wisdom, and
the maturity that characterize the stage of
manhood.
6
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Deliberation on this vast conception was to lead Shoghi Effendi
to provide the Bahá’í world with a coherent description of the future
that has since permitted three generations of believers to articulate for
governments, media and the general public in every part of the world
the perspective in which the Bahá’í Faith pursues its work:
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The unity of the human race, as envisaged by Bahá’u’lláh,
implies the establishment of a world commonwealth in which all
nations, races, creeds and classes are closely and permanently united, and
in which the autonomy of its state members and the personal
freedom and initiative of the individuals that compose them are definitely
and completely safeguarded. This commonwealth must, as far as we
can visualize it, consist of a world legislature, whose members will, as
the trustees of the whole of mankind, ultimately control the entire
resources of all the component nations, and will enact such laws as
shall be required to regulate the life, satisfy the needs and adjust the
relationships of all races and peoples. A world executive, backed by
an international Force, will carry out the decisions arrived at, and
apply the laws enacted by, this world legislature, and will safeguard the
organic unity of the whole commonwealth. A world tribunal
will adjudicate and deliver its compulsory and final verdict in all and
any disputes that may arise between the various elements constituting
this universal system
. The economic resources of the world will be
organized, its sources of raw materials will be tapped and fully
utilized, its markets will be coördinated and developed, and the distribution
of its products will be equitably regulated.
7
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Writing a definitive interpretation of the Administrative Order
in "The Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh", Shoghi Effendi made particular
reference to the role that the institution he himself represented would play
in enabling the Cause "to take a long, an uninterrupted view over a series of
52
generations
." This unique endowment expressed itself with
particular clarity in his description of the dual nature of the historical process
that he saw unfolding in the twentieth century. The landscape of
international affairs would, he said, be increasingly reshaped by twin forces of
"integration" and "disintegration", both of them ultimately beyond
human control. In the light of what meets our eyes today, his previsioning of
the operation of this dual process is breathtaking: the creation of "a
mechanism of world inter-communication
functioning with
marvellous swiftness and perfect
regularity";
8
the undermining of the
nation-state as the chief arbiter of human destiny; the devastating effects that
advancing moral breakdown throughout the world would have on
social cohesion; the widespread public disillusionment produced by
political corruption; and—unimaginable to others of his generation—the rise
of global agencies dedicated to promoting human welfare,
coordinating economic activity, defining international standards, and encouraging
a sense of solidarity among diverse races and cultures. These and
other developments, the Guardian explained, would fundamentally alter
the conditions in which the Bahá’í Cause would pursue its mission in
the decades lying ahead.
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One of the striking developments of this
kind that Shoghi Effendi discerned in the Writings he was called on to interpret concerned the
future role of the United States as a nation, and, to a lesser extent, its
sister nations in the Western hemisphere. His foresight is all the more
remarkable when one remembers that he was writing during a period of
history when the United States was determinedly isolationist in both its
foreign policy and the convictions of the majority of its citizens. Shoghi
Effendi, however, envisioned the country assuming an "active and decisive part
in the organization and the peaceful settlement of the affairs of
mankind". He reminded Bahá’ís of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s anticipation that,
because of the unique nature of its social composition and political
development—as opposed to any "inherent excellence or special merit" of its
people—the United States had developed capacities that could empower it to
be "the first nation to establish the foundation of international
agreement". Indeed, he foresaw the governments and peoples of the entire
hemisphere becoming increasingly oriented in this
direction.
9
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O My beloved friends! You are the bearers of the name of God
in this Day…. You are the lowly, of whom God has thus spoken in
His Book: "And We desire to show favour to those who were brought
low in the land, and to make them spiritual leaders among men, and
to make them Our heirs." You have been called to this station; you
will attain to it, only if you arise to trample beneath your feet every
earthly desire, and endeavour to become those "honoured servants of His
who speak not till He hath spoken, and who do His bidding".
Heed
not your weaknesses and frailty; fix your gaze upon the invincible power
of the Lord, your God, the Almighty…. Arise in His name, put your
trust wholly in Him, and be assured of ultimate
victory.
10
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Let us pray to God that in these days of world-encircling
gloom, when the dark forces of nature, of hate, rebellion, anarchy and
reaction are threatening the very stability of human society, when the most
precious fruits of civilization are undergoing severe and
unparalleled tests, we may all realize, more profoundly than ever, that though but a
mere handful amidst the seething masses of the world, we are in this
day the chosen instruments of God’s grace, that our mission is
most urgent and vital to the fate of humanity, and, fortified by these
sentiments, arise to achieve God’s holy purpose for
mankind.
11
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Fully aware of the condition into which society had fallen, the
consequences of his betrayal at the hands of family members on
whose assistance he should have been able to rely, and the relative weakness of
54
the resources available to him in the Bahá’í community itself,
Shoghi Effendi arose to forge the means needed to realize the mission
bequeathed to him.
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shining lamps and heavenly gardens, from which the fragrances
of holiness are diffused over all regions, and the lights of knowledge
are shed abroad over all created things. From them the spirit of
life streameth in every direction. They, indeed, are the potent sources
of the progress of man, at all times and under all
conditions.
12
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It fell to Shoghi Effendi, however, to assist the community to
understand the place and role of these national and local consultative bodies in
the framework of the Administrative Order created by Bahá’u’lláh and
elaborated in the provisions of the Master’s Will and Testament. An
obstacle faced by a significant number of believers in this respect was
the unexamined assumption of many that the Cause was essentially a
"spiritual" association in which organization, while not necessarily
antithetical, did not constitute an inherent feature of the Divine purpose.
Emphasizing that the Kitáb-i-Aqdas and the Will and Testament "are not only
complementary, but
mutually confirm one another, and are inseparable parts
of one complete unit",
13
the Guardian invited the believers to reflect
deeply on a central truth of the Cause they had embraced:
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Few will fail to recognize that the Spirit breathed by
Bahá’u’lláh upon the world, and which is manifesting itself with varying
degrees of intensity through the efforts consciously displayed by His
avowed supporters and indirectly through certain humanitarian
organizations, can never permeate and exercise an abiding influence
upon mankind unless and until it incarnates itself in a visible Order,
which would bear His name, wholly identify itself with His principles,
and function in conformity with His laws.
14
55
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He went on to urge the Faith’s followers to realize the essential
difference between the Cause of Bahá’u’lláh, whose Revealed Texts
contain detailed provisions for such an authoritative Order, and those
preparatory Revelations whose Scriptures had been largely silent on
the administration of affairs and on the interpretation of their
Founders’ intent. In the words of Bahá’u’lláh: "The Prophetic Cycle hath,
verily, ended. The Eternal Truth is now come. He hath lifted up the Ensign
of Power
."
15
Unlike the Dispensations of the past, the Revelation
of God to this age has given birth, Shoghi Effendi said, to "a living
organism", whose laws and institutions constitute "the essentials of a
Divine Economy", "a pattern for future society", and "the one agency for
the unification of the world, and the proclamation of the reign of
righteousness and justice upon the
earth".
16
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The friends should strive to appreciate, therefore, the
Guardian urged, that the Spiritual Assemblies they were painstakingly
establishing throughout the world were the forerunners of the local and
national "Houses of Justice" envisioned by Bahá’u’lláh. As such, they were
integral parts of an Administrative Order that will, in time, "assert its claim
and demonstrate its capacity to be regarded not only as the nucleus but
the very pattern of the New World Order destined to embrace in the
fullness of time the whole of
mankind".
17
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For a few in the young communities of the West, such a
departure from traditional conceptions of the nature and role of religion proved
too great a test, and Bahá’í communities suffered the distress of seeing
valued co-workers drift away in search of spiritual pursuits more congenial
to their inclinations. For the vast majority of believers, however, great
messages from the Guardian’s pen, such as "The Goal of a New World
Order" and "The Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh", threw brilliant light on
precisely the issue that most concerned them, the relationship between
spiritual truth and social development, inspiring in them a determination to
play their part in laying the foundations of humanity’s future.
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The Guardian provided, as well, the organizing image for this
mighty work. The "Heroic Age" of Bahá’u’lláh’s Dispensation, he declared,
had ended with the passing of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. The Bahá’í community now
embarked on the "Iron Age", the "Formative Age", in which the
56
Administrative Order would be erected throughout the planet, its
institutions established and the "society building" powers inherent in it
fully revealed. Far ahead lay what Shoghi Effendi called the "Golden Age" of
the Dispensation, leading eventually to the emergence of the Bahá’í
World Commonwealth that will constitute the establishment on earth of
the Kingdom of God and the creation of a world
civilization.
18
The impulse that had been initially communicated to human consciousness through
the revelation of the Creative Word itself, whose revolutionary social
implications had been proclaimed by the Master, was now being translated by
their appointed interpreter into the vocabulary of political and economic
transformation in which the public discourse of the century was
everywhere taking place. Lending the process irresistible force, illuminating ever
new dimensions of Bahá’í experience, and serving as the mainspring of the
unification of humankind it proclaimed was the Covenant that
Bahá’u’lláh had established between Himself and those who turn to Him.
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Although not initially designated "Spiritual Assemblies", the
councils that local Bahá’í communities in Persia had been encouraged by
‘Abdu’l-Bahá to create had assumed responsibility for the
administration of their affairs. In the light of what was to follow, no one with a sense
of history can fail to be struck by the fact that the Faith’s first Spiritual
Assembly, that of Tehran, was founded in 1897, the year of Shoghi
Effendi’s own birth. Under the Master’s guidance, intermittent meetings held by
the four Hands of the Cause in Persia had gradually evolved into this
institution that served simultaneously as Persia’s "Central Spiritual Assembly"
and as the governing body of the local community in the capital. By the
time of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s passing, there were more than thirty Local Spiritual
Assemblies established in Persia. In 1922 Shoghi Effendi called for the
formal establishment of Persia’s National Spiritual Assembly, an achievement
delayed until 1934 by the demands related to the taking of a reliable
census of the community as a basis for the election of delegates.
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Outside Persia, the believers in
‘Ishqábád, in Russian
Turkestan, elected their first Local Spiritual Assembly, a body that assumed an
important role in the project for the construction of the first
Bahá’í Mashriqu’l-Adhkár in
‘Ishqábád. In North America a variety of
consultative arrangements—"Boards of Council", "Council Boards", "Boards of
57
Consultation" and "Working Committees"—performed analogous
functions, evolving gradually into elected bodies that constituted
the forerunners of Spiritual Assemblies. By the time of the Master’s
passing, there were perhaps forty such councils functioning in North
America. These developments prepared the way for the eventual emergence of
the first National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of the United States
and Canada, which evolved from the "Temple Unity Board", a body
created in 1909 to coordinate construction of the future House of Worship.
It was formed in 1923, although the administrative requirements set by
the Guardian for this step were met only in 1925. Before this latter date
arrived, National Assemblies had been established in the British Isles,
in Germany and Austria, in India and Burma, and in Egypt and the
Sudan.
19
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As the formation of National and Local Spiritual Assemblies was
taking place, the Guardian began to lay emphasis on the importance of
their securing recognition as "corporate persons" under civil law. By
securing such formal incorporation, in whatever fashion proved practicable,
Bahá’í administrative institutions would be enabled to hold property, enter
into contracts, and gradually assume a range of legal rights vital to the
interests of the Cause. The importance Shoghi Effendi attached to this
new stage of administrative evolution becomes clear in the photocopies
of such civil instruments that began to become a major feature of the
photographic coverage of the expansion of the Faith in successive volumes
of The Bahá’í World. Indeed, once the Mansion at Bahjí had been
repossessed and fully restored to its original condition, and
appropriately furnished, Shoghi Effendi put together a collection of this much
valued documentation for display there as an encouragement and education
for the growing stream of pilgrims to the World Centre.
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The processes of civil incorporation began with the adoption in
1927 of a Declaration of Trust and By-Laws for the National Spiritual
Assembly of the United States and Canada, which gained civil recognition as
a voluntary trust two years later. On 17 February 1932 the first local
Bahá’í Assembly, that of Chicago, adopted papers of incorporation which,
together with those adopted by that of New York City on 31 March of
that year, were to become a pattern for such instruments throughout
the world. By 1949, the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of
58
Canada—formed when the two North American Bahá’í
communities had separated the previous year—was able to secure formal recognition
of its status under civil law through a special Act of Parliament, a
victory which Shoghi Effendi hailed as "an act wholly unprecedented in the
annals of the Faith in any country, in either East or
West".
20
|
These pressing administrative demands did not distract
Shoghi Effendi from other tasks that were vital to shaping the spiritual life of
a global community. The most important of these was the arduous
work that he alone could perform in providing the growing body of the
believers who were not of Persian background with direct and reliable access
to the Writings of the Faith’s Founders. The Hidden Words, The
Kitáb-i-Íqán, the priceless treasury brought together with so much love and insight
under the title Gleanings from the Writings of
Bahá’u’lláh, Prayers and Meditations of Bahá’u’lláh
and Epistle to the Son of the Wolf provided
the spiritual nourishment the work of the Cause urgently required, as
did Shoghi Effendi’s translation and editing of Nabíl’s "Narrative" under
the title The Dawn-Breakers.
|
Bahá’í pilgrims found spiritual enrichment of yet another kind in
the Holy Places and historic sites that the Guardian acquired—often at
the cost of protracted and wrenching negotiations—and lovingly
restored. Shoghi Effendi was equally responsive to unexpected opportunities
that offered themselves to his historical perspective. In 1925, a Sunni
Muslim religious court in Egypt denied civil recognition to marriages
contracted between Muslim women and Bahá’í men, insisting that "The
Bahá’í Faith is a new religion, entirely independent" and that "no Bahá’í,
therefore, can be regarded a Muslim" (and therefore qualified to enter
into marriage with someone who was).
21
Seizing on the larger implications
of this apparent defeat, the Guardian made wide use of the court’s
definitive judgement to reinforce the claim of the Cause in international circles
to be an independent Faith, separate and distinct from its Islamic roots.
|
As the Bahá’í community was constructing administrative
foundations which would permit it to play an effective role in human affairs, the
59
accelerating process of disintegration that Shoghi Effendi had
discerned was undermining the fabric of social order. Its origins, however
determinedly ignored by many social and political theorists, are
beginning, after the lapse of several decades, to gain recognition at international
conferences devoted to peace and development. In our own time, it is
no longer unusual to encounter in such circles candid references to the
essential role that "spiritual" and "moral" forces must play in
achieving solutions to urgent problems. For a Bahá’í reader, such belated
recognition awakens echoes of warning addressed over a century earlier
by Bahá’u’lláh to the rulers of human affairs: "The vitality of men’s belief
in God is dying out in every land.
The corrosion of ungodliness is
eating into the vitals of human
society
."
22
|
The responsibility for this greatest of tragedies, the Guardian
emphasized, rests primarily on the shoulders of the world’s
religious leaders. Bahá’u’lláh’s severest condemnation is reserved for those
who, presuming to speak in God’s name, have imposed on credulous
masses a welter of dogmas and prejudices that have constituted the greatest
single obstacle against which the advancement of civilization has
been forced to struggle. While acknowledging the humanitarian services
of countless individual clerics, He points out the consequences of the
way in which self-appointed religious elites, throughout history, have
interposed themselves between humanity and all voices of progress,
not excluding the Messengers of God Themselves. "What ‘oppression’
is more grievous," He asks, "than that a soul seeking the truth, and
wishing to attain unto the knowledge of God, should know not where to
go for it
?"
23
In an age of scientific advancement and widespread
popular education, the cumulative effects of the resulting
disillusionment were to make religious faith appear irrelevant. Impotent themselves
to deal with the spiritual crisis, most of those clerics of various
Faiths who became aware of Bahá’u’lláh’s
message either ignored the moral influence it was demonstrating or actively opposed
it.
24
|
Recognition of this feature of history does not diminish the
harm done by those who have sought to take advantage of the spiritual
vacuum thus left. The yearning for belief is inextinguishable, an inherent part
of what makes one human. When it is blocked or betrayed, the rational soul
60
is driven to seek some new compass point, however inadequate or
unworthy, around which it can organize experience and dare again to
assume the risks that are an inescapable aspect of life. It was in this
perspective that Shoghi Effendi warned the members of the Faith, in
unusually strong language, that they must try to understand the spiritual
calamity engulfing a large part of humankind during the decades between the
two world wars:
|
God Himself has indeed been dethroned from the hearts of men,
and an idolatrous world passionately and clamorously hails and
worships the false gods which its own idle fancies have fatuously created,
and its misguided hands so impiously exalted
. Their high priests are
the politicians and the worldly-wise, the so-called sages of the age;
their sacrifice, the flesh and blood of the slaughtered multitudes;
their incantations, outworn shibboleths and insidious and irreverent
formulas; their incense, the smoke of anguish that ascends from
the lacerated hearts of the bereaved, the maimed, and the
homeless.
25
|
Like opportunistic infections, aggressive ideologies took
advantage of the situation created by the decline of religious vitality.
Although indistinguishable from one another in the corruption of faith
they represented, the three belief systems that played a dominant role in
human affairs during the twentieth century differed sharply in
their secondary and more conspicuous characteristics to which the
Guardian drew attention. In denouncing "the dark, the false, and crooked
doctrines" that would bring devastation on "any man or people who
believes in them", Shoghi Effendi warned particularly against "the triple gods
of Nationalism, Racialism and
Communism".
26
|
Of Fascism’s founding regime, created by the so-called "March
on Rome" in 1922, little need be said. Long before it and its leader
had been swept into oblivion during the concluding months of the
second world war, Fascism had become an object of ridicule among the
majority of even those who had originally supported it. Its significance
lies, rather, in the host of imitators it spawned and which were to
proliferate throughout the world like some malignant series of mutations,
in the decades since then. Fuelled by a manic nationalism, this aberration
61
of the human spirit deified the state, discovered everywhere
imaginary threats to the national survival of whatever unhappy people it had
fastened upon, and preached to all who would listen the notion that
war has an "ennobling" influence on the human soul. The comic opera
parade of uniforms, jackboots, banners and trumpets usually
associated with it should not conceal from a contemporary observer the
virulent legacy it has left in our own age, enshrining in political vocabulary
such anguished terms as desaparecidos ("the disappeared").
|
While sharing Fascism’s idolatry of the state, its sister ideology
Naziism made itself the voice of a far more ancient and insidious
perversion. At its dark heart was an obsession with what its proponents called
"race purity". The single-minded determination with which it pursued its
murderous ends was in no way weakened by the demonstrably false
postulates upon which it was based. The Nazi system was unique in the sheer
bestiality of the act most commonly associated with its name,
the programme of genocide systematically carried out against
populations considered either valueless or harmful to humanity’s future, a
programme that included a deliberate attempt literally to exterminate the
entire Jewish people. Ultimately, it was Naziism’s determination that a
"master race" of its own conception must rule over the entire planet which
was principally responsible for fulfilling ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s prophetic warning
of twenty years earlier that another war, far more terrible than the
first, would ravage the world. Like Fascism, Naziism has left a detritus in
our own time. In its case, this takes the form of a language and
symbols through which fringe elements in present-day society, demoralized by
the economic and social decay around them and made desperate by the
absence of solutions, vent their impotent rage on minorities whom
they blame for their disappointments.
|
The false god that the Master was moved to identify explicitly,
and the one denounced by name by Shoghi Effendi, had demonstrated
its character at its outset by brutally destroying, during the latter part
of World War I, the first democratic government ever established
in Russia. For long years, the Soviet system created by Vladimir Lenin
succeeded in representing itself to many as a benefactor of humankind
and the champion of social justice. In the light of historical events, such
62
pretensions were grotesque. The documentation now available
provides irrefutable evidence of crimes so enormous and follies so abysmal as
to have no parallel in the six thousand years of recorded history. To a
degree never before imagined, let alone attempted, the Leninist
conspiracy against human nature also sought systematically to extinguish faith
in God. Whatever view of the situation political theorists
may currently hold, no one can be surprised that such deliberate violence to the
roots of human motivation led inexorably to the economic and political
ruin of those societies luckless enough to fall under Soviet sway. Its
longer-term spiritual effect, tragically, was to pervert to the service of its
own amoral agenda the legitimate yearnings for freedom and justice of
subject peoples throughout the world.
|
From a Bahá’í point of view, humanity’s worship of idols
of its own invention is of importance not because of the historical events
associated with these forces, however horrifying, but because of the lesson
it taught. Looking back on the twilight world in which such
diabolical forces loomed over humanity’s future, one must ask what was the
weakness in human nature that rendered it vulnerable to such influences.
To have seen in someone like Benito Mussolini the figure of a "Man
of Destiny", to have felt obliged to understand the racial theories of
Adolf Hitler as anything other than the self-evident products of a
diseased mind, to have seriously entertained the reinterpretation of human
experience through dogmas that had given birth to the Soviet Union
of Josef Stalin—so wilful an abandonment of reason on the part of a
considerable segment of the intellectual leadership of society demands
an accounting to posterity. If undertaken dispassionately, such an
evaluation must, sooner or later, focus attention on a truth that runs like
a central strand through the Scriptures of all of humanity’s religions.
In the words of Bahá’u’lláh:
|
Upon the reality of man
He hath focused the radiance of all of
His names and attributes, and made it a mirror of His own Self.
These energies
lie, however, latent within him, even as the flame is
hidden within the candle and the rays of light are potentially present
in the lamp…. Neither the candle nor the lamp can be lighted through
63
their own unaided efforts, nor can it ever be possible for the mirror
to free itself from its dross.
27
|
The consequence of humanity’s infatuation with the ideologies
its own mind had conceived was to produce a terrifying acceleration of
the process of disintegration that was dissolving the fabric of social life
and cultivating the basest impulses of human nature. The brutalization
that the first world war had engendered now became an omnipresent
feature of social life throughout much of the planet. "Thus have We
gathered together the workers of iniquity", Bahá’u’lláh warned over a century
earlier. "We see them rushing on towards their idol…. They hasten
forward to Hell Fire, and mistake it for
light."
28
64
65
|
1. | Rúḥíyyih Rabbání, The Priceless Pearl (London: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1969), pp. 121, 123. [ Back To Reference] |
2. | Shoghi Effendi, Bahá’í Administration, op. cit., pp. 187–188, 194. [ Back To Reference] |
3. | In case after case, the open misbehaviour of Shoghi Effendi’s brothers, sisters and cousins left him finally with no alternative but to advise the Bahá’í world that these individuals had violated the Covenant. [ Back To Reference] |
4. | Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 36. [ Back To Reference] |
5. | ibid., pp. 42–43. [ Back To Reference] |
6. | ibid., p. 202. [ Back To Reference] |
7. | ibid., pp. 203–204. [ Back To Reference] |
8. | Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 203. [ Back To Reference] |
9. | Shoghi Effendi, The Advent of Divine Justice, op. cit., pp. 90, 19, 85. [ Back To Reference] |
10. | Nabíl-i-A‘ẓam, The Dawn-Breakers: Nabíl’s Narrative of the Early Days of the Bahá’í Revelation (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1999), pp. 92–94. [ Back To Reference] |
11. | Shoghi Effendi, Bahá’í Administration, op. cit., p. 52. [ Back To Reference] |
12. | Selections from the Writings of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, op. cit., pp. 85–86, (section 38.5). [ Back To Reference] |
13. | Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 4. [ Back To Reference] |
14. | ibid., p. 19. [ Back To Reference] |
15. | Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 60, (section XXV). [ Back To Reference] |
16. | Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 19. [ Back To Reference] |
17. | ibid., p. 144. [ Back To Reference] |
18. | Shoghi Effendi, God Passes By, op. cit., p. 26. [ Back To Reference] |
19. | The Bahá’í World, vol. X (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing Committee, 1949), pp. 142–149, provides a detailed survey of the expansion of the Cause up to the conclusion of the first Seven Year Plan. [ Back To Reference] |
20. | Shoghi Effendi, Messages to Canada, 2nd ed. (Thornhill: Bahá’í Canada Publications, 1999), p. 114. [ Back To Reference] |
21. | Shoghi Effendi, God Passes By, op. cit., p. 365. [ Back To Reference] |
22. | Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., p. 200, (section XCIX). [ Back To Reference] |
23. | Bahá’u’lláh, The Kitáb-i-Íqán (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1983), p. 31. [ Back To Reference] |
24. | "In Europe at the start of the twentieth century, most people accepted the authority of morality . [Then] reflective Europeans were also able to believe in moral progress, and to see human viciousness and barbarism as in retreat. At the end of the century, it is hard to be confident either about the moral law or about moral progress": Jonathon Glover, Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth Century (London: Jonathan Cape, 1999), p. 1. Glover’s study concentrates particularly on the rise and influence of twentieth century ideologies. [ Back To Reference] |
25. | Shoghi Effendi, The Promised Day is Come, op. cit., pp. 185–186. [ Back To Reference] |
26. | ibid. [ Back To Reference] |
27. | Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, op. cit., pp. 65–66, (section XXVII). [ Back To Reference] |
28. | ibid., pp. 41–42, (section XVII). [ Back To Reference] |